TV-Series
Description
Catherine Sabathra is a young dark-skinned woman with a slender, buxom frame, vibrant pink hair swept into twin tails, and piercing blue eyes. Her non-combat uniform within the Neo-Britannian Empire’s Einberg Order blends stark white fabric with pink accents, baring her arms, midriff, and upper thighs—a deliberately provocative design contrasted by a black skirt, setting her apart from fellow members.

As a child, Catherine narrowly escaped abduction after her parents were slain resisting their assailant. Rescued by Norland von Lunebelg, who executed the kidnapper, she forged an unshakable devotion to him, molding her philosophy around merciless strength and survival. This loyalty propelled her rise as the Einberg Order’s "Weiss Queen," commanding the Knightmare Frame Queen Curaca—a nimble, gun-and-knife-armed mech designed for fluid, dance-like combat maneuvers.

Outwardly playful and coquettish, Catherine embraces hyperfeminine aesthetics, adorning herself and her Knightmare in pink hues and indulging in cockpit selfies. Yet beneath this façade lies a ruthless enforcer of Neo-Britannia’s supremacist doctrines, deriding those she deems inferior, especially individuals of Japanese descent. She scorns Sakura, the disguised Sumeragi princess Sakuya, for her apparent fragility and dependence on others.

A combat prodigy, Catherine overwhelms foes with lethally efficient agility and pinpoint strategy, outperforming most peers. Her blind allegiance to Norland fractures when he deactivates her Knightmare during a critical battle, casting her aside as expendable. This betrayal, paired with Sakura’s unyielding resolve and echoes of her parents’ fatal defiance, forces Catherine to confront the hollowness of Neo-Britannia’s ideals, sparking a reluctant journey toward redemption.

Her relationships mirror her contradictions: she idolizes Norland as strength incarnate, clashes with fellow Einberg member Narah Vaughn—whose masculine presentation, honor-bound combat ethos, and critique of Neo-Britannia highlight Catherine’s indoctrinated biases—and gradually shifts from loathing to uneasy respect for Sakura, whose quiet tenacity bridges Catherine’s fractured past and uncertain future.