Riki-Oh - Characters

Characters

Saiga Riki-Oh (雑賀力王, Saiga Riki-ō?, meaning "Mighty King", "Power King", or "Strength King")

The main character of the story, he was separated from his younger brother Nachi since childhood and was adopted by the affluent Saiga family. He has a scar in the shape of the Hexagram on his right hand which is the source of his great strength and skill. This scar is also a sign that he's destined to overthrow his real father.

Nachi (那智?, meaning "What wisdom?" or "What reason?")

Gifted with strong telekinetic powers, he's the younger brother of Riki-Oh from whom he was separated when he was still a child. He has a scar in the shape of a Swastika on his right hand since birth.

Mizuguchi (水口?, meaning "Water spout")
Aku-Oh (悪王, Aku-ō ?, meaning "Evil King" or "Vice King")

An android that resembles Riki-Oh in appearance constructed by Obinata. It was sent on a mission to kill Riki-Oh but, after a long fight in a wood, it is accidentally sucked into quicksand with Riki-Oh with the latter surviving after having carved a shelter in the abdomen of the android.

Aneyama (姉山?, meaning "Older sister mountain")

Washizaki (鷲崎?, meaning Eagle Cape)

A general armed with an ancient blade infused with qi, Washizaki is an extremely capable fighter. Easily dodged Riki-Oh's punch once, and knocked him out with the weapon. Washizaki came to manipulate him later (thanks to his comrade Otto), but soon found himself at Riki-Oh's mercy and is killed by Nachi.

Robotomi 560SEL-Mark. II (ロボトミSEL-マークⅡ, Robotomi SEL-MākuⅡ?)

A cyborg weighing 300 kg (661.4 lbs) who wasn't viewed by anyone other than Riki-oh as a real person. Originally he was a slave robot constructed from a human body. Becoming this way allowed him to work in a power plant in the Cape, an environment too intense for non-cybernetic humans. He volunteered as fighter in the Pankration, a death match show, in order to get revenge against the humans for denying his brethren freedom. It was after this he meets Riki-Oh, then is made to kill his friend, and nearly does, but after Nachi interferes, realizes his true enemy is Washizaki. Robotomi is known as Atomic Robo (アトミック・ロボ, Atomikku Robo?) in the OVA.

Obinata (小日向?, meaning "Facing the Little Sun" or "Toward the Little Day")

A scientist at the dependence of Aneyama.

The Baron (男爵, Danshaku?) meaning literally "Baron"

He's the chief charged with the accomplishment of a plan whose goal is to accelerate the coming of Judgement Day. In order to achieve this goal, he needs to give birth to the so-called "chosen one", a being created from the union of Nachi's head with the body of Riki-Oh.

Zhāng Shàn-Guǐ (張 善鬼, Chou Zenki ?, meaning "Good Stretching Ghost")

A Chinese man who stopped Riki's suicide attempt in front of his mother's grave, he later became Riki's sensei whom taught him the art of Qigong. He used to be Chiang Kai-Shek's elite bodyguard.

Wáng Měi-Lì (王 美麗, Ō Birei ?, meaning "Beauty Queen")

Also known as Hisano Akiyama (秋山久乃, Akiyama Hisano?). Riki-Oh and Nachi's biological mother, she was executed by hanging for allegedly poisoning thirteen infants twenty-five years ago. Before her death sentence, with help from a friend, Riki and Nachi managed to escaped from prison. She foretold that one day her death will be avenged by her son and that evil will never conquer the good. Although Jewish and Japanese, she uses a Chinese name. Her birth name was Hanna, and was raised in Shanghai with her foster family.

Read more about this topic:  Riki-Oh

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)

    No one of the characters in my novels has originated, so far as I know, in real life. If anything, the contrary was the case: persons playing a part in my life—the first twenty years of it—had about them something semi-fictitious.
    Elizabeth Bowen (1899–1973)

    The first glance at History convinces us that the actions of men proceed from their needs, their passions, their characters and talents; and impresses us with the belief that such needs, passions and interests are the sole spring of actions.
    Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831)