Junko Enoshima
Kanji | 江ノ島 盾子 |
Rōmaji | Enoshima Junko |
Epithet | Ultimate Fashionista (超高校級の「ギャル」, chō kō ... |
Gender | Female |
How does Junko get executed in Danganronpa manga? Junko is then placed down on a guillotine. Tears stream down her face before she’s swiftly beheaded, after which her decapitated head is then shown lying on the floor with blood dripping from its mouth.
Why is Junko so evil? What Makes Her Pure Evil. Due to her boredom as the Ultimate Analyst, she found a new obsession towards causing despair and, to that end, set about completely crushing the concept of hope. She abused and bullied her sister Mukuro Ikusaba everytime.
Trivia
Ah...hello. It’s a pleasure to meet you. I admire you greatly. *Holds your hand out for a hand shake* Woah! Dude this is sick!!! It’s so great to meet you! You’re awesome!
Danganronpa: Trigger Happy HavocJunko Enoshima (江ノ島 盾子), is a student in Hope's Peak Academy's Class 78th, and a participant of the Killing School Life featured in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc. Her title is the Ultimate Fashionista (超高校級の「ギャル」 lit.
YasukeJunko had romantic feelings for Yasuke, referring to them as "lovers", though Yasuke denied this. Junko had a strong desire to "paint the world in despair" and planned to start The Tragedy, the worst, most despair-inducing incident in the history of mankind.
The name Junko is primarily a female name of Japanese origin that means Obedient, Genuine, Pure.
Junko Enoshima (in Japanese: 江ノ島 盾子, Enoshima Junko) is the main antagonist of the Danganronpa franchise. In the video games, she was titled Ultimate Fashionista and founder of Ultimate Despair.
It doesn't look like Danganronpa is on Netflix at the moment. There is no clear answer as to why the streaming network has yet to acquire the series despite the show being out almost eight years now and the show having such an immense die-hard fandom.
However, paradoxically, it was also indicated that Junko did truly love her sister and that her betrayal was meant to send them both into despair (for Junko, the despair of killing her sister, and for Mukuro, the despair of being betrayed and killed by her sister).
0:140:39How to Pronounce Junko Tabei? (CORRECTLY) - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clipTabay pretty straightforward once you know.MoreTabay pretty straightforward once you know.
Her striking appearance and erratic personality instantly turned her into one of the most intriguing characters in the entire series. In fact, Junko's popularity was so high in 2018 that she bagged the Guinness World Record for being the most popular game character for cosplay.
Junko is a young woman who is around 19 years old at the time of the original Danganronpa. She has a tall, hourglass figure, light blue eyes, and long, thick, strawberry blonde hair tied in two pigtails.
In Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair, Junko is revealed to have used Chihiro's Alter Ego technology to transfer her consciousness into Monokuma at the moment of her death as an A.I.
Chapter 6 - This is the End Goodbye Academy of Despair Later, during the final class trial, Monokuma transforms into his true form which is Alter Ego Junko.
Junko Enoshima (江ノ島 盾子, Enoshima Junko) is a character featured in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc....Junko EnoshimaAnimeDanganronpa: The Animation Episode #12Light NovelDanganronpa/Zero24 more rows
The identity of Junko is also adopted by her fraternal twin sister and body double Mukuro Ikusaba ( Japanese: 戦刃 むくろ, Hepburn: Ikusaba Mukuro), the pair and their cult being known as the Despair Sisters ( Japanese: 絶望の姉妹, Hepburn: Zetsubō no shimai), and by the showrunners of the Danganronpa reality television series.
Junko Enoshima ( Japanese: 江ノ島 盾子, Hepburn: Enoshima Junko) is a fictional character and the primary antagonist of Spike Chunsoft 's Danganronpa series. Junko is featured as the main antagonist and mastermind in the first two games of the series as the true identity of the robotic teddy bear headmaster Monokuma ( Japanese: モノクマ, Hepburn: Monokuma, lit. Monobear), in the spin-off Danganronpa Another Episode: Ultra Despair Girls in the guises of Monokuma variants Shirokuma ( Japanese: シロクマ, Hepburn: Shirokuma, lit. Whitebear) and Kurokuma ( Japanese: クロクマ, Hepburn: Kurokuma, lit. Blackbear), and in the anime Danganronpa: The Animation and the "Despair Arc" of Danganronpa 3: The End of Hope's Peak High School.
In the "Despair Arc" of Danganronpa 3: The End of Hope's Peak High School, set before the events of the first game, Junko is collected from the airport by Mukuro in a limo after she blows up her taxi. While alluding to their incestuous relationship, the pair attempt to see if they can kill one another and experience the "Ultimate Despair", before Junko explains that the pair have been scouted to attend Hope's Peak Academy, Mukuro as the "Ultimate Soldier", and Junko as both the "Ultimate Fashionista" and "Ultimate Analyst". At their entrance ceremony, Junko sketches a picture of Monokuma. Two years later, Junko and Mukuro slaughter their way to confront and destroy Hope's Peak Academy's "Ultimate Hope" Izuru Kamukura, intending to kill him, only for the pair to be easily defeated. After sharing their love for despair with him and pitching that they join their cause, Izuru deduces the "Despair Sisters" are too bored with the world and share similar analytical abilities to himself, agreeing to join their cause, before knocking the pair out so that he may escape. Later, Junko and Mukuro recruit the "Ultimate Animator" Ryota Mitarai, whom they share as a lover, to develop a brainwashing anime to serve their cause, which they test on the "Ultimate Nurse" Mikan Tsumiki, who pledges herself to the sisters in the name of despair. Contacting Izuru once again, Junko and Mukuro arrange for their first "killing game" with the Academy's student council, trapping them on a floor of the school and providing blackmail on their elite parents' various scandals, with Izuru partaking in the event and killing the final survivor. Junko subsequently betrays Izuru by sending a mass e-mail to the students of the Reserve Course exposing his existence along with the footage of her killing game and how their funding had been used for human experimentation, leading to a mass riot and protest dubbed "The Parade".
In the first game, Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Junko fakes her death by having Mukuro pose as her so she can kill her under her Monokuma guise , using the event to encourage her former classmates at Hope's Peak Academy to participate in a "killing game", both actions serving to feed her desire to fuel an "ultimate despair " within herself and them. Throughout the game, Junko (in the form of a robotic stuffed bear dubbed Monokuma) provides various motives to turn the students against one another, overseeing the subsequent class trials and performing the various executions while broadcasting the events to the world at large, culminating in her presenting Mukuro's corpse in an attempt to frame the "Ultimate Detective" Kyoko Kirigiri without breaking the rules she set for herself for the "killing game", and ultimately agreeing to execute herself after being exposed as the mastermind .
Junko Enoshima has generally been praised by critics for being depicted as a thoroughly irredeemable character with a realistic profession, praised as "a powerful and dynamic figure [whose] legacy lives on in [all] subsequent games." In 2019, Polygon ranked her as the 35th best video game character of the decade while Comic Book Resources ranked her as the villain with the 3rd highest body count in manga and anime in 2020. In 2013 poll from Anime Trend, Junko was voted as the ninth best female character from the year based on her appearances in Danganronpa: The Animation. In a Danganronpa: The Animation poll, Junko took the ninth place. Comic Book Resources listed her as the third most intelligent character from the franchise, citing how she manipulates most of the game's characters to entertain herself even if costs her own sister's life. Kotaku praised her characterization in the Danganronpa Zero light novel for providing more depth to her characterization in contrast to her lack of screentime in the first game as a result of appearing in the final act.
Junko subsequently betrays Izuru by sending a mass e-mail to the students of the Reserve Course exposing his existence along with the footage of her killing game and how their funding had been used for human experimentation, leading to a mass riot and protest dubbed "The Parade".
Whitebear) and Kurokuma ( Japanese: クロクマ, Hepburn: Kurokuma, lit. Blackbear), and in the anime Danganronpa: The Animation and the "Despair Arc" of Danganronpa 3: The End of Hope's Peak High School.
Junko was originally envisaged as an early murder victim, but due to creator and scenario writer Kazutaka Kodaka’s personal aversion for the common sympathetic villain trope, he envisioned her as a wholly unsympathetic villain with no tragic past to explain away her acts.
Junko fakes her death in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc by having Mukuro pose as her so she can kill her under her Monokuma guise, using the event to encourage her former Hope’s Peak Academy classmates to participate in a “killing game,” both actions feeding her desire to fuel a “ultimate despair” within herself and them.
While Junko has many skills that she uses throughout the series, she's initially introduced as the "Ultimate Fashionista", being a model featured on magazine covers that can also predict fashion trends. As things progress, however, it becomes apparent that her analytical abilities are her true talent.
Hope and despair are themes that are prevalent throughout the Danganronpa series, yet it appears that in Junko's case they're also things that she can sense herself. Junko has the ability to feel the hope and despair inside of others, she herself using this information to her advantage.
Junko's intelligence and analytic abilities are some of her greatest strengths, but it's a double-edged sword. Junko can predict almost everything with near-perfect accuracy and that makes her easily bored. Her boredom is so extreme that she even gets tired of her own personality and feels the need to switch to a new one constantly.
As a part of her masterplan, Junko set up Monokuma to be the Headmaster of Hope's Peak Academy and killed Mukuro (disguised as Junko) to keep her cover while she controlled all the bear's actions. In truth Monokuma's personality is just another side of Junko 's.
The mascot of the Danganronpa series and the original game master behind the "Mutual Killing Game", the crazy and wild teddy bear called Monokuma is as insane as Junko herself. There's a good reason for that too, Junko is the one controlling this robot bear.
This alter-ego of Junko's had no desire for despair and was generally more innocent and not at all violent.
While they may not share the same last name or even much of a resemblance to each other, Junko is actually related to another student at Hope's Peak Academy , the "Ultimate Soldier", Mukuro Ikusaba. Unlike her sister, Mukuro is a lot less sadistic and way more emotionless.
Junko has Mukuro masquerade as her in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc so that she can die in her place in a moment of “Ultimate Despair,” while she utilises her Monokuma persona to carry out her killing game.
Junko Enoshima fakes her death in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc by having Mukuro pose as her so she can kill her under her Monokuma guise, using the event to encourage her former Hope’s Peak Academy classmates to participate in a “killing game,” both actions feeding her desire to fuel a “ultimate despair” within herself and them.
Junko is picked up from the airport by Mukuro in a limo after blowing up her taxi in Danganronpa 3: The End of Hope’s Peak High School’s “Despair Arc,” which takes place before the events of the previous game.
Junko Enoshima also features in the Enterbrain-published Japanese manga version of the series, written and illustrated by Touya Hajime, as well as the spin-off Killer Killer. Enterbrain USA published the series in the United States.
Critics have commended Junko Enoshima for portraying a completely irredeemable heroine with a realistic career, calling her “a powerful and dynamic figure [whose] legacy lives on in [all] following games.”
Junko Mochida (持田 潤子), a minor character in the hentai anime series Bible Black. Junko Saotome (早乙女淳子), a fictional character from Nana. Junko Takei (竹井醇子), a fictional character from Strike Witches. Junko Wallop, a fictional character in the animated television series Storm Hawks.
Junko can be written using different kanji characters and can mean any of the following: 純子, "pure, child". 順子, "order, child". 淳子, "pure, child". 潤子, "rich/favor/wet, child". 準子, "conform, child". 洵子, "truth, child". The name can also be written in hiragana or katakana .
Junko Enoshima (江ノ島 盾子), a fictional character and the main antagonist of the "Hope's Peak Academy" arc in Danganronpa. Junko Hattori (服部 絢子), a fictional character in the light novel series Ichiban Ushiro no Daimaou. Junko Konno, a character from the MAPPA idol anime series Zombie Land Saga.
Junko Wallop, a fictional character in the animated television series Storm Hawks. Junko (純狐), boss character from Legacy of Lunatic Kingdom, a Touhou Project game. Name list. This page or section lists people that share the same given name.
Junko Enoshima (Japanese: 江ノ島 盾子, Hepburn: Enoshima Junko) is a fictional character and the secondary antagonist of Spike Chunsoft's Danganronpa series. Junko is featured as the main antagonist and mastermind in the first two games of the series as the true identity of the robotic teddy bear headmaster Monokuma (Japanese: モノクマ, Hepburn: Monokuma, lit. Monobe…
Originally conceived as an early murder victim, the idea of Junko as an antagonist was conceived by creator and scenario writer Kazutaka Kodaka as a fully unsympathetic villain with no tragic backstory to explain away her actions, due to his personal dislike for the popular sympathetic villain trope. Kodaka elaborates that Junko's appears to have toxic love towards her classmates du…
At the time of Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Junko has Mukuro pose as her so that she may die in her place in a moment of "Ultimate Despair", while she uses her Monokuma persona to embark on her killing game. Upon being exposed as the mastermind, Junko embodies a series of personas revealed in Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair to be based on the personalities of her cult of followers, the "Ultimate Despair." Junko additionally manages to cheat her own self-imposed e…
In the first game, Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, Junko fakes her death by having Mukuro pose as her so she can kill her under her Monokuma guise, using the event to encourage her former classmates at Hope's Peak Academy to participate in a "killing game", both actions serving to feed her desire to fuel an "ultimate despair" within herself and them. Throughout the game, Junko (in the form of a robotic stuffed bear dubbed Monokuma) provides various motives to turn …
Junko Enoshima has generally been praised by critics for being depicted as a thoroughly irredeemable character with a realistic profession, praised as "a powerful and dynamic figure [whose] legacy lives on in [all] subsequent games." In 2019, Polygon ranked her as one of the best video game characters of the 2010s decade while Comic Book Resources ranked her as the villain with the 3rd highest body count in manga and anime in 2020. In 2013 poll from Anime Trend, Jun…