TV-Series
Description
Torao Midō, performing under the name Mido Torao, thrives as ZOOL's provocateur-in-chief. Hailing from a life of luxury as the heir to a prestigious hotel empire, he radiated confidence and self-assurance from an early age. This privileged foundation nurtured his natural talents and a charismatic approach to relationships, engaging women on his own terms without chasing or rejecting overtures. A defining passion for heroes and action films forged an unyielding moral compass—an idealism weaponized by producer Ryo Tsukumo to recruit him into ZOOL.
His perceptiveness slices through façades, evidenced when he instantly detected Ryunosuke Tsunashi's performative charm during their introduction. Yet this acuity stumbles in romantic pursuits, where women's unfavorable comparisons to Ryunosuke ignite his reluctant mimicry of the rival's traits. Paradoxes define him: a former student council president habitually late to group commitments, a tech-savvy idol driven to block Ryo over sticker spam until confronted at home, and a magnet for both female admirers and affectionate strays at cat cafés.
Torao weaponizes confrontation, needling Sogo Osaka about familial estrangement and tactlessly invoking his deceased uncle. Such calculated strikes—met with Sogo's steely resolve and Tamaki Yotsuba's fiery defense—expose ZOOL's modus operandi: destabilizing rivals through targeted vulnerability exploitation. His 185 cm frame, crowned by chestnut waves and clad in edgy vest ensembles, broadcasts idol charisma laced with roguishness.
Beneath the swagger lies claustrophobia avoidance and restless self-reinvention, as he grapples with perceived gaps between his polished exterior and internal complexities. This duality crafts an enigma—a privileged provocateur balancing princely allure with strategic ruthlessness, forever oscillating between heroic aspirations and idol-game pragmatism.
His perceptiveness slices through façades, evidenced when he instantly detected Ryunosuke Tsunashi's performative charm during their introduction. Yet this acuity stumbles in romantic pursuits, where women's unfavorable comparisons to Ryunosuke ignite his reluctant mimicry of the rival's traits. Paradoxes define him: a former student council president habitually late to group commitments, a tech-savvy idol driven to block Ryo over sticker spam until confronted at home, and a magnet for both female admirers and affectionate strays at cat cafés.
Torao weaponizes confrontation, needling Sogo Osaka about familial estrangement and tactlessly invoking his deceased uncle. Such calculated strikes—met with Sogo's steely resolve and Tamaki Yotsuba's fiery defense—expose ZOOL's modus operandi: destabilizing rivals through targeted vulnerability exploitation. His 185 cm frame, crowned by chestnut waves and clad in edgy vest ensembles, broadcasts idol charisma laced with roguishness.
Beneath the swagger lies claustrophobia avoidance and restless self-reinvention, as he grapples with perceived gaps between his polished exterior and internal complexities. This duality crafts an enigma—a privileged provocateur balancing princely allure with strategic ruthlessness, forever oscillating between heroic aspirations and idol-game pragmatism.