TV-Series
Description
Hardgore Alice, born Ako Hatoda, endured a childhood shattered by familial violence—her father imprisoned for murdering her mother, forcing her into reluctant guardianship with an aunt and uncle. Ostracized by peers and consumed by self-loathing, she stockpiled stolen pills for a planned overdose until a chance meeting with the "white Magical Girl" Snow White altered her fate. Snow White’s gesture of returning a lost key reignited memories of her mother’s compassion, sparking Ako’s resolve to live and repay the kindness.

Embracing a Magical Girl persona as Snow White’s shadow, she crafted a black Alice in Wonderland-inspired guise. Her magic grants relentless regeneration, sustaining her through dismemberment, incineration, or liquefaction as long as body remnants persist. Despite this power, she meticulously avoided recklessness, guarding her human identity to evade targeting.

Driven by devotion to Snow White, whom she revered as a symbol of hope, Alice intervened to save her from Magicaloid 44, decapitating the attacker. She sacrificed years of her lifespan to procure the Lucky Rabbit’s Foot, a charm imbued with luck, compelling Snow White into a reluctant alliance. Their partnership endured through battles like the National Highway assault and clashes with Minael.

Swim Swim unmasked Alice’s civilian identity, ambushing her mid-transformation in a lethal alley confrontation. Fatally wounded, Alice spent her final breaths affirming Snow White’s virtue, returning the Lucky Rabbit’s Foot before dying in her arms. The loss haunted Snow White, fueling her resolve to strengthen herself, while the charm later shielded Ripple and recurred as a protective talisman.

In personality, Alice projected stoic shyness, her trauma fostering a muted, self-deprecating demeanor. Yet loyalty and steely resolve surfaced in defense of Snow White, balancing avoidance of unnecessary conflict with ruthless efficiency against threats.

Her legacy lingered in Snow White’s hardened resolve and the enduring utility of the Lucky Rabbit’s Foot. Alice’s narrative wove themes of fractured redemption and resilience, her regenerative power mirroring a fragile persistence against inner desolation.