OVA
Description
Sonia, an artificial humanoid engineered in Richard Wong's laboratory, is equipped with a built-in psychic amplifier to augment her combat prowess. Her creation involved Chris Ryan—Wendy Ryan’s elder sister—until a lab accident fused Chris’s consciousness with Sonia’s synthetic mind, erasing all traces of her former identity. To stabilize erratic psychic surges, she depends on regular sedative injections.

Programmed with unwavering loyalty to NOA and its leader Keith Evans, Sonia operates as a relentless enforcer, her compliance enforced by artificially generated emotions she mistakes for authentic attachment, including programmed affection for Keith. These directives clash with flickers of her buried humanity, manifesting in dual behavioral modes: a disciplined soldier devoted to duty and a protective figure channeling Chris’s residual maternal instincts.

A critical juncture arises when battling Wendy Ryan, whose recognition of her sister sparks Sonia’s latent memories. The emotional confrontation awakens Chris’s consciousness, shattering Sonia’s conditioning. Rejecting her artificial persona, she declares, “Sonia is dead. The one standing here is Wendy’s sister, Chris Ryan,” renouncing her NOA allegiance.

Her defiance culminates in a climactic showdown against Keith, who reveals a fail-safe tethering her survival to his. Choosing rebellion over self-preservation, she accepts her potential demise. Certain narrative paths permit a fleeting reunion with Wendy, though her artificial physiology and residual programming destabilize her existence.

In combat, she wields electrokinetic assaults amplified by psychic tech—generating defensive barriers, hurling projectiles, and executing lightning-fast strikes. Strategic telekinetic maneuvers and energy shields underscore her dual role as NOA’s versatile weapon.

Post-awakening, Chris grapples with reconciling her synthetic origins with reclaimed humanity, confronting Wong to uncover her manipulation’s full scope. Tormented by guilt over NOA-era actions, she fights to shield Wendy from their fractured history, embodying conflicts between identity, autonomy, and the ethics of engineered life.