TV-Series
Description
Ocoho is a young woman from Cyfandir, brown-skinned with brown eyes and long greenish-black hair usually braided on the left. She serves as an apprentice Sorcerer-Knight of Cyfandir under Queen Boudica, trained by Lord Brangoire alongside partners Mordred and Sagramor. Her life is marked by a curse: a mark below her right ear compels her to obey commands without memory when touched. Despite this vulnerability, she dedicates herself to knightly ideals, focusing on protecting her community rather than her condition.

She typically wears a white tunic over black shirt and pants, leather boots, arm guards, and a hooded green cape. In battle, she summons armor via crystals, including a breastplate, spaulders, tassets, and shoulder and knee guards. Her distinctive knee guards are skull-shaped and function as feather weapons emitting Fantasia. Feather-adorned bracelets transform into retractable shields for offense and defense.

Ocoho manipulates Fantasia. Her Gysoni spell links senses for long-distance communication and allows control over her Draccoon mount. Deine channels Fantasia into her knee guards for direct strikes or projectiles. She exhibits exceptional combat pragmatism, wielding her shields both defensively and offensively.

During the Cyfandir arc, she uncovers a conspiracy involving Baron Merchants and Mordred, resulting in Sagramor's death and Mordred's betrayal. Her actions expose corruption, leading Queen Boudica to name her princess and heir. This role shifts her focus from knighthood as a title to serving broader principles of justice. She subsequently joins Seth's quest to find the Radiant, viewing it as an extension of her protective duty.

Her relationship with Seth develops mutual trust from their first meeting in Caislean Merlin. Shared missions deepen their bond, leading to confirmed romantic feelings by Volumes 18 and 19, including awkward, failed kiss attempts. She also shares a close, empathetic bond with her Draccoon.

Ocoho's journey involves resilience against discrimination, particularly the Sorcerer-Knights' bias requiring minimal visibility of infections. Her growth from aspiring knight to leader challenges this prejudice, redefining strength through inclusivity and principled action.