TV-Series
Description
Ramuda Amemura, designated as the first clone engineered by Rei Amayado for Chuohku’s Party of Words, defied his creators’ intent as a sterile tool by unexpectedly developing emotions—a flaw that spurred rebellion. His existence relies on consuming specialized candy, a lifeline sustaining his unstable physiology.

Emerging with hostility and nihilism, Ramuda grappled with his synthetic identity until encountering Hanabi Maijou, a designer who reshaped his trajectory. Invited to model for her brand Empty Flower, he absorbed her warmth, forging his first authentic smile. Inheriting the rebranded Empty Candy after her departure, he adopted her playful affectation, masking his turmoil beneath a whimsical facade.

As a linchpin of The Dirty Dawg, Ramuda covertly manipulated Japan’s rap underground under Party orders. His machinations included orchestrating the coma of Jakurai Jinguji’s adoptive son, Yotsutsuji, fracturing the group and cementing Jakurai’s enmity. Though he blames Jakurai for their disbandment, Ramuda’s own betrayals linger as unresolved wounds.

Commanding Shibuya’s Fling Posse, he recruited rapper Gentaro Yumeno and gambler Dice Arisugawa as pawns, yet their bond gradually softened his calculated edge. Behind a high-pitched, childlike guise lies a strategist wielding a colder, deeper voice, reserved for moments of venom—particularly toward Party enforcer Ichijiku Kadenokoji, whose demise he quietly covets.

His rap ability, *Dazzle*, weaponizes hallucinatory illusions, mirroring his duplicitous charm. During Division battles, Party directives compelled him to deploy a lethal Hypnosis Mic, thwarted only by Gentaro and Dice—a turning point revealing fragile trust. Uncharacteristic vulnerabilities surface in his terror of ghosts, contrasting sharply with his controlled exterior.

Driven by Hanabi’s legacy, Ramuda seeks a realm where self-expression eclipses conformity, defying his origin as a disposable asset. His evolution—from hollow creation to a figure entangled in loyalty, deception, and fleeting sincerity—echoes the paradox of manufactured life yearning for authentic connection.