Melty Blood - Characters

Characters

As of Melty Blood: Actress Again Current Code Ver. 1.07, there are 31 playable characters.

Tsukihime characters

  • Shiki Tohno (遠野 志貴, Tōno Shiki): Kenji Nojima
  • Arcueid Brunestud (アルクェイド・ブリュ ンスタッド, Arukueido Buryunsutaddo): Ryōka Yuzuki
  • Ciel: (シエル, Shieru) Kumi Sakuma
  • Akiha Tohno: Hitomi
  • Hisui & Kohaku
  • Hisui: Miyu Matsuki
  • Kohaku: Naoko Takano
  • Nrvnqsr Chaos: Jōji Nakata
  • Miyako Arima: Miwa Kōzuki
  • Satsuki Yumizuka: Omi Minami
  • Aoko Aozaki: Kotono Mitsuishi
  • Michael Roa Valdamjong: Ken Narita

Kagetsu Tohya characters

  • Shiki Nanaya: Kenji Nojima
  • Len: Kaori Mizuhashi
  • Kouma Kishima: Jūrōta Kosugi

Kara no Kyoukai characters

  • Ryougi Shiki (両儀式, Ryōgi Shiki): Maaya Sakamoto

New characters

  • Sion Eltnam Atlasia: Rio Natsuki
  • The Night of Wallachia (ワラキアの夜, Warakia no Yoru?): Yasunori Masutani
  • Mech-Hisui: Miyu Matsuki
  • White Len: Kaori Mizuhashi
  • Riesbyfe Stridberg (リーズバイフェ・ストリンドヴァリ, Rīzubaife Sutorindovari?): Akeno Watanabe
  • Dust of Osiris (Boss of Melty Blood: Actress Again and vampiric full form of Sion Eltnam Atlasia): Rio Natsuki

Alternative/bosses and hidden characters

  • Akiha Vermillion (紅赤朱秋葉, Kurenai Sekishu Akiha?) or 赤主秋葉 Sekishu Akiha: Hitomi
  • Sion TATARI (吸血鬼シオン, Kyūketsuki Shion?): Rio Natsuki
  • G-Akiha (G秋葉?)
  • Red Arcueid (暴走アルクェイド, Bōsō Arukueido?): Ryōka Yuzuki
  • Neco-Arc (猫アルク/ネコアルク, Neko Aruku/Neko Aruku?)
  • Neco-Arc Chaos (ネコアルク・カオス, Neko Aruku Kaosu?): Jōji Nakata
  • Damien Armies (ダミアン・アーミー, Damian Āmī?)
  • Neco Chaos Black G666 (ネコカオス・ブラックG666, Neko Kaosu Burakku G666?)
  • Koha & Mech
  • Neco & Mech
  • Seifuku Akiha
  • Archetype:Earth (True Ancestor Arcueid|真祖アルクェイド): Ryōka Yuzuki
  • Powerd Ciel (Executioner Ciel|完全武装シエル): Kumi Sakuma

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Famous quotes containing the word characters:

    For our vanity is such that we hold our own characters immutable, and we are slow to acknowledge that they have changed, even for the better.
    —E.M. (Edward Morgan)

    It is open to question whether the highly individualized characters we find in Shakespeare are perhaps not detrimental to the dramatic effect. The human being disappears to the same degree as the individual emerges.
    Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872)