Mitsuru Kirijo | |
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Persona character | |
![]() Mitsuru Kirijo, as she appears inPersona 3. | |
First game | Persona 3 (2006) |
Voiced by |
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Portrayed by | Asami Tano (musical) |
In-universe information | |
Nationality | Japanese |
Mitsuru Kirijo (Japanese:桐条 美鶴,Hepburn:Kirijō Mitsuru) is a fictional character in thePersona series, appearing as a main character inPersona 3. She is the unofficial leader of an organization called SEES (Specialized Extracurricular Execution Squad), which the main characters of the game participate in to fight creatures called Shadows.
Mitsuru Kirijo is the only child of the head of the Kirijo Group, Takeharu Kirijo and a top-rankingvaledictorian and student council president. In battle, she wields one-handed swords such asrapiers andsabers and Ice-based magic. Her Personas arePenthesilea (ペンテシレア,Penteshirea) andArtemisia (アルテミシア,Arutemishia) ofThe Empress Arcana.
She is voiced byRie Tanaka in Japanese andTara Platt in English.[2][3] Shigenori Soejima created Mitsuru to be a tough-looking woman on the exterior, but with a weak side in the interior.[4] She is portrayed byAsami Tano inPersona 3: The Weird Masquerade,[5] thePersona 4 Arena stage play,[6] and thePersona 4 Arena Ultimax Song Project stage play.[7]
Mitsuru appears inPersona 3. She has been battling Shadows since she was a little girl, as the unofficial leader of SEES (Special Extracurricular Execution Squad). At the beginning of the game she avoids battle and acts as a support character, offering analysis and advice. She joins the party in combat only after the discovery ofFuuka Yamagishi, whose Persona's analysis power is much stronger. Throughout the story, Mitsuru hides many details about Tartarus and the Dark Hour from the group, due to feelings of guilt over her family's involvement in the accident that created them. Since her grandfather was responsible for everything, she believes that she alone bears the burden of setting the world right. Her Persona was artificially induced to allow her to participate in the battle against the Shadows. Mitsuru is the only SEES member that had her ability to summon a Persona forced on her. Mitsuru loses all will to fight afterIkutsuki kills her father, since restoring the family honor is meaningless without a family. She regains her resolve thanks to some intervention fromYukari. She decides to take over leadership of the Kirijo Group after the conflict with Nyx is finished and she graduates high school.
Mitsuru appears as a playable character inPersona 4 Arena, which takes place over two years after the events of "The Answer". Now 20 years old, Mitsuru is a university student and the leader of the Shadow Operatives, a group composed of Persona users that fights Shadows. She joinsAigis andAkihiko to search for the Anti-Shadow weapon Labrys that disappeared from her plane. Her Persona is Artemisia.[8]
Mitsuru has received generally positive reception. She was named one of the 10 bestPersona characters by Kimberley Wallace ofGame Informer. She praised Mitsuru for being a self-actualizing person and for how caring she is.[9] Wallace also regarded her as the best female character in role-playing games and noted the relationship between thePersona 3 protagonist and her as "thoroughly enjoy[able]."[10][11] Sam Marchello ofRPGamer called her a "babe," while Chris Moyse ofDestructoid called her "the coolest character" inPersona, praising her for her fashion sense.[12][13] Meghan Sullivan ofIGN also ranked her among the bestPersona characters, similarly praising her for being a caring and strong character.[14] Ben Lee ofDigital Spy called her the "standout" member of the cast due to her being "intelligent, tough-minded" and knowing "what she wants."[15] Mike Fahey ofKotaku called her the series "greatest heroine," identifying her "power" and "confidence" as two of her strong qualities.[16]Destructoid Steven Hansen, who was reluctant about thechibi art style ofPersona Q, felt less so after seeing Mitsuru, who he felt was cute and was convincing.[17]
When playing as a male character inPersona 3,Cassandra Khaw ofUSGamer found her "accomplished and elegant"; however, when she played as a female character, she found her "too distant."[18]Kotaku writer Leigh Alexander discussed how her perspective changed between playingPersona 3 as a male character and as a female character regarding Mitsuru; where she found Mitsuru admirable when playing as a male character, she found her "irritatingly perfect."[19]
In "Comparative Analysis of Storytelling Technique in Kingdom Hearts II (2005) and Persona 3 Portable (2009)" Shazwin Bt. Sahmir and Norlela Ismail fromUniversity Teknologi Mara noted that the character's relationship with the protagonist tends to depend inPersona 3 Portable depending on the gender chosen. The male's bad choice will say she is unreliable while the female ones willask in worry about her wellbeing.[20] In "Rules, Rhetoric, and Genre: Procedural Rhetoric in Persona 3" T. Harper fromGames and Culture noted Mitsuru'scharacter arc goes along Yukari Takeba's as both evolve their Personas when they discover more knowledge about their parents.[21] The Journal of Intercultural Mediation and Communication commented the localization emphasises her background as well as her social status, the original Japanese version of the game made the Japanese Mitsuru say English lines. In contrast, the English localization changed it by letting Mitsuru use French words occasionally. When the game enters its battle phase, players can often unleash a palette of magic powers, each with a name specifically designed for the fictional storyworld of the game. The only localisation here was to provide English transliterations for the original.[22]
Her portrayal in thePersona 4 Arena musical received praise from Richard Eisenbeis ofKotaku, calling her portrayal "perfect" and praising the chemistry between her and Akihiko.[23]VentureBeat expressed similar comments calling her "like a sword-wieldingEmma Peel".[24]
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