TV-Series
Description
Noir stands as the primary antagonist across the series, emerging from events a century before the main narrative. His initial conflict ignited when the legendary patissière Lumière refused his demand for exclusive service in baking sweets, sparking a vendetta. He vowed to corrupt all creativity and joy tied to sweets, developing the power to drain positive Kirakiraru energy from both confections and human hearts. This act replaced the energy with a dark essence that blackened it and twisted victims. The stolen Kirakiraru fueled Noir's strength and spawned monstrous entities to advance his agenda.
He preyed on core negative human emotions—fear, loneliness, jealousy—poisoning them into conduits for siphoning Kirakiraru. Victims lost their creative spirit, visualized as fleeing origami birds, before petrifying into stone. The drained energy birthed Inklings, monsters engineered to leach color and vitality from the world. This erosion targeted Earth’s inherent magic, aiming to free his sealed master, though the master’s identity remains separate from Noir’s personal objectives.
Noir commanded a century-cultivated hierarchy of corrupted subordinates, the Kirakiraru Thieves: Julio (later Pikario), Bibury, Elisio, Grave, and Diable. Each bore dark powers channeled through star-emblazoned red belts or artifacts, enabling Kirakiraru drainage and monstrous transformations. Julio wielded swords and mimicked Precure attacks; Diable functioned as a revived fragment of Noir’s power from Strawberry Mountain’s past; Bibury manipulated a doll named Iru, animated by stolen Kirakiraru, to generate monsters. Typically masked and robed, Noir orchestrated schemes from shadows while his minions engaged the Precure directly.
As events escalated, Noir possessed Elisio to confront the Precure personally. This clash unveiled Noir’s history, including his century-old defeat by Lumière. Exposed, Elisio betrayed Noir, forcibly merging him with Lumière into a single card. This fusion imprisoned both entities, their combined energies harnessed for Elisio’s independent ambitions, concluding Noir’s active role in the conflict.
He preyed on core negative human emotions—fear, loneliness, jealousy—poisoning them into conduits for siphoning Kirakiraru. Victims lost their creative spirit, visualized as fleeing origami birds, before petrifying into stone. The drained energy birthed Inklings, monsters engineered to leach color and vitality from the world. This erosion targeted Earth’s inherent magic, aiming to free his sealed master, though the master’s identity remains separate from Noir’s personal objectives.
Noir commanded a century-cultivated hierarchy of corrupted subordinates, the Kirakiraru Thieves: Julio (later Pikario), Bibury, Elisio, Grave, and Diable. Each bore dark powers channeled through star-emblazoned red belts or artifacts, enabling Kirakiraru drainage and monstrous transformations. Julio wielded swords and mimicked Precure attacks; Diable functioned as a revived fragment of Noir’s power from Strawberry Mountain’s past; Bibury manipulated a doll named Iru, animated by stolen Kirakiraru, to generate monsters. Typically masked and robed, Noir orchestrated schemes from shadows while his minions engaged the Precure directly.
As events escalated, Noir possessed Elisio to confront the Precure personally. This clash unveiled Noir’s history, including his century-old defeat by Lumière. Exposed, Elisio betrayed Noir, forcibly merging him with Lumière into a single card. This fusion imprisoned both entities, their combined energies harnessed for Elisio’s independent ambitions, concluding Noir’s active role in the conflict.