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Nata (ナタ) Voiced by: Riho Sugiyama[12] (Japanese); Jennifer Losi[7] (English) One of the new girls at the academy, who gets tangled up in the adults' scheme. Shino
Kaminaka (上仲 詩乃, Kaminaka Shino) Voiced by: Masako Isobe[12] (Japanese); Anzu Lawson[7] (English) The elderly paraplegic director of the facility. Mina (ミーナ) Voiced by: Aya Hisakawa[2] (Japanese); Lisa Ortiz[7] (English) The artificial intelligence running the facility. Yuuko Aoshima (青島 裕子, Aoshima Yūko) Voiced by: Atsumi Tanezaki[12] (Japanese); Jennifer Sun Bell[7] (English) A nurse and interpreter in the facility who gets promoted to assistant director. Sawatari (猿渡) Voiced by: Tadashi Mutou[12] (Japanese); Nick Martineau[7] (English) A doctor working in the facility. The Outside[edit] Robin Inazaki (稲崎 露敏, Inazaki Robin) Voiced by: Kazuya Nakai[12] (Japanese); Eric Vale[3] (English)
Kiruko's childhood friend and a sort of mentor who went missing years ago. Totori (トトリ) Voiced by: Misato Matsuoka[13] (Japanese); Deneen Melody[7] (English) Totori is a young girl who works with bandits in trapping and robbing people. Mizuhashi (水橋) Voiced by: Seiko Tamura[12] (Japanese);
Marcy Edwards[3] (English) Mizuhashi is the leader of the Liviumen cult, who are disgruntled by technology replacing their body, supposedly in the name of human experiments. Kuwata (桑田) Voiced by: Yutaka Aoyama[12] (Japanese); Brook Chalmers[3] (English) Kuwata is Mizuhashi's right-hand man, who has an agenda of his own. Juichi (ジューイチ, Jūichi) Voiced by: Shunsuke Sakuya[14] (Japanese); Jonah Scott[7] (English) A scavenger and con artist with a dark past who encounters Maru and Kiruko during their travels. Production[edit] Development[edit] Yumeno Kyūsaku was a major influence to Ishiguro's work in the manga After leaving the manga magazine Young King OURs due to a writer's block, Masakazu Ishiguro started drawing Heavenly Delusion with unintentional similarities to his favorite work, Akira, such as the postapocalyptic setting and the dynamic of Maru and Kiruko.
Archived from the original on June 21, 2020. Retrieved March 7, 2020. ^ ジャンプSQ. 2015年5月号.
Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for
Cultural Affairs.
03. Internacional, looks and moves a lot like your typical anime series. Angel's Friends, for the transformation sequences and magical girl motif. The characters look more akin to that of a normal anime as well. Puppy in My Pocket: Adventures in Pocketville, another Mondo TV production, has an art style reminiscent of anime from the mid-to-late 2000s and other animesque cartoons of the time (with characters having consistent shading and some like Kate having notable hair highlights) and a
slight magical girl motif with the scenes where Kate or Ava use the Friendship Heart for anything from the Friendship Ceremony to Pocketpedia activations. Sophie et Virginie, for its very Japanese character designs and animation style; not surprising considering it was
animated in Japan.