OVA
Description
Rita, a genetically engineered human crafted by supercomputer Dorothy through the G Project to eradicate threats to its authority, bears classification Type-G002 with an RX-negative chromosomal anomaly. Created alongside siblings Birdman, Rainheart, and Cain under the Sirius Family designation, she emerged from a Mushroom Tower uterine replicator on May 31, 2520, her genetic blueprint sourced from an unidentified human donor.
Her striking appearance features vivid crimson hair, almond-shaped eyes hinting at partial Asian heritage, and a lean physique. She dons a white halter top, a black mini-skirt secured by crossed shoulder straps, knee-high boots, and wrist cuffs masking scars from past suicide attempts. Rita wields advanced psychokinesis, manipulating objects and levitating atop floating combat platforms, her abilities fueled by D-Felon or Melatropin—drugs that risk lethal neurological "shorts" with prolonged use.
Coldly efficient yet tormented, she oscillates between merciless aggression toward targets like virus-carrying Lilia Pascalle and private anguish over her artificial existence. Rainheart, her younger brother, remains her sole emotional tether, their bond offering rare respite from her self-destructive spiral.
Her narrative unfolds with a Babylon Hotel ambush on Rion Steiner alongside Rainheart, aiming to extract Lilia’s location. Following Rainheart’s death by Rion’s hand, she injects a potent purple PPEC—Breakaron or Appolinar—to amplify her powers, triggering a fatal short. Overwhelmed by psychic feedback, she shares a final psychic exchange with Rion, denouncing Dorothy’s control and begging for death as release. Rion complies, ending her agony.
The OVA intensifies her demise’s brutality, underscoring her self-loathing. Posthumously, Dorothy weaponizes her image as a mental phantom to dissuade Rion, who rejects the illusion. Lore notes prior suicide attempts via wrist-cutting, foiled by her regeneration, and ambiguous final words implying awareness of Rion’s cloned origins.
Pre-Galerian records cite academic prowess and sporadic school conflicts before her hospitalization at 18 for psychic evaluation—a process culminating in her death, cloning, and reprogramming. Alternate timelines, like the Manhattan scenario, depict recurring struggles with drug dependency and the lingering terminal PPEC, hastening her end with each psychokinetic surge.
Her striking appearance features vivid crimson hair, almond-shaped eyes hinting at partial Asian heritage, and a lean physique. She dons a white halter top, a black mini-skirt secured by crossed shoulder straps, knee-high boots, and wrist cuffs masking scars from past suicide attempts. Rita wields advanced psychokinesis, manipulating objects and levitating atop floating combat platforms, her abilities fueled by D-Felon or Melatropin—drugs that risk lethal neurological "shorts" with prolonged use.
Coldly efficient yet tormented, she oscillates between merciless aggression toward targets like virus-carrying Lilia Pascalle and private anguish over her artificial existence. Rainheart, her younger brother, remains her sole emotional tether, their bond offering rare respite from her self-destructive spiral.
Her narrative unfolds with a Babylon Hotel ambush on Rion Steiner alongside Rainheart, aiming to extract Lilia’s location. Following Rainheart’s death by Rion’s hand, she injects a potent purple PPEC—Breakaron or Appolinar—to amplify her powers, triggering a fatal short. Overwhelmed by psychic feedback, she shares a final psychic exchange with Rion, denouncing Dorothy’s control and begging for death as release. Rion complies, ending her agony.
The OVA intensifies her demise’s brutality, underscoring her self-loathing. Posthumously, Dorothy weaponizes her image as a mental phantom to dissuade Rion, who rejects the illusion. Lore notes prior suicide attempts via wrist-cutting, foiled by her regeneration, and ambiguous final words implying awareness of Rion’s cloned origins.
Pre-Galerian records cite academic prowess and sporadic school conflicts before her hospitalization at 18 for psychic evaluation—a process culminating in her death, cloning, and reprogramming. Alternate timelines, like the Manhattan scenario, depict recurring struggles with drug dependency and the lingering terminal PPEC, hastening her end with each psychokinetic surge.