Ryuji Sakamoto | |
---|---|
Persona character | |
First game | Persona 5 (2016) |
Designed by | Shigenori Soejima |
Portrayed by | Kouhei Shiota (stage play) |
Voiced by | |
Motion capture | Yu Jurry [lower-alpha 1] |
In-universe information | |
Affiliation | Phantom Thieves of Hearts |
Nationality | Japanese |
Ryuji Sakamoto (坂本 竜司, Sakamoto Ryūji, Japanese pronunciation: [sakamotoɾʲɯꜜːʑi] ) is a fictional character in the 2016 video game Persona 5 . He is one of the Phantom Thieves of Hearts, and one of the first to join the group after awakening to his Persona, Captain Kidd, adopting the Phantom Thief nickname Skull (スカル, Sukaru). He is a bullied student, a victim of physical abuse by one of the game's antagonists, Suguru Kamoshida. He joins with the protagonist, Joker, after they both found themselves entering another world and eventually gain powers to fight against corrupt people and abusers, including Kamoshida. His Persona eventually transforms into the Persona Seiten Taisei. He is portrayed by Mamoru Miyano in Japanese and Max Mittelman in English.
Since his role in Persona 5, he has received generally mixed reception, regarded as one of the less popular characters in the game, although some fans found it surprising that he ranked so low. His treatment as comic relief, particularly through comic violence, has also been criticized, with writer Kenneth Shepard suggesting that the fact that he was a victim of abuse that is taken seriously in the story is undercut when he is so often the victim of such comic violence.
Ryuji Sakamoto was created for Persona 5 by designer Shigenori Soejima, going by the Phantom Thief nickname Skull to avoid giving away his identity. Director Katsura Hashino described Ryuji as having a "mischievous personality." [1] Artist Azusa Shimada found it difficult to draw Ryuji correctly, finding that he can be neither too handsome or too relaxed, and after drawing him, finding that he is unrecognizable. Soejima also felt him the most difficult to draw, stating that he created and provided Ryuji's design to the animation company in a rush, and when the concept art based on Hanako Oribe came back, he didn't recognize him. [2] Ryuji's Persona is Captain Kidd, which eventually becomes Seiten Taisei when Captain Kidd awakens. The decision to use Seiten Taisei as his awakened Persona was due to multiple factors, including his personality and backstory. They also included him because Seiten Taisei in his most famous Japanese depiction is that of the blonde monkey. The fact that Captain Kidd rides a boat and Seiten Taisei rides a cloud similarly was also a factor. [3]
He is voiced in Japanese by Mamoru Miyano and in English by Max Mittelman. [4] Mittelman did not audition for the role, but was given the opportunity by Atlus to voice for Persona 5, submitted for a role in the game. He was discovered by Atlus after he performed a role in Shin Megami Tensei IV: Apocalypse as the character Hallelujah. Atlus felt that he would be a good fit for Ryuji, with him being told that no one else could voice Ryuji. Mittelman speculated that he would have been given only the protagonist, Joker or Ryuji, hoping that he would be picked for Ryuji. During the voice work, the directors allowed him to do what he wanted to do, though he was unsure if it was because they wanted him to do what he wanted or because he did a good job matching the Japanese performance. [5] Mittelman discussed how much he enjoyed voicing Ryuji due to how "explosive" he was, as well as how justified his anger. He discussed how he put a lot of himself into Ryuji, as he found Ryuji relatable. [6] When asked who of the characters he voiced he related to the most, he picked Ryuji, as he related to growing up with a desire to rebel against authority. [5]
Ryuji Scenario writer and choreographer Teppei Kobayashi for Persona 5: Dancing Star Night compared Ryuji to Junpei Iori from Persona 3 , discussing how difficult it was to keep their dance styles from being too similar due to their similar personalities and the fact that Yu Jurry performed motion capture for both Ryuji and Junpei. Kobayashi discussed how Ryuji's personality was still relatively new compared to Junpei's, and the team discussed which traits they would develop in this game. They did not want to focus too much on him being a delinquent, as they worried it would be too similar to Kanji Tatsumi from Persona 4 , also performed by Jurry in Persona 4: Dancing All Night . He described Ryuji as having the feel of a dropout, but still being earnest and passionate, wanting that to be reflected in his dancing. During a partner dance between Ryuji and Morgana, Ryuji air guitars; this idea was conceived by Jurry. [7]
Ryuji first appeared in 2016's Persona 5 as one of the earliest members of the Phantom Thieves of Hearts. He also appears in Persona 5 Royal, the enhanced re-release. He later appears in multiple spinoffs, including Persona 5 Strikers , Persona Q2: New Cinema Labyrinth , Persona 5: Dancing Star Night , and Persona 5 Tactica . In Dancing Star Night, Ryuji has multiple alternate outfits, including one based on Ryuji Goda from the Yakuza series and one based on Aleph from Shin Megami Tensei II , the latter requiring that they make a backside for the outfit due to one not existing in the game. [8]
Ryuji has received mixed reception since his appearance in Persona 5 . Ryuji was the second-to-last party member on a poll of favorite Persona 5 Royal characters, which left Rock Paper Shotgun writer Kaan Serin shocked, who said that his placement resulted in strong reactions from fans. He suggested that his English voice actor may have helped make him more popular in the west. [9] However, he his characterization was criticized by others. [10] The A.V. Club writer Clayton Purdom felt that his archetype did not make sense, and that it caused his plot arc to be confused. [11] USgamer writer Caty McCarthy felt that he defied the archetype, which had previously been used for Junpei Iori and Yosuke Hanamura from Persona 3 and Persona 4 respectively. She discussed how this archetype is "loud and annoying," but Ryuji's personality elevates beyond that, citing his rough background and calling him a "sweet kid" who cares about his friends and justice. [12] In her first playthrough of Persona 5, Kotaku writer Amanda Yeo expected to hate Ryuji due to the negative fan response, thinking that he had done something significant to earn the ire. Yeo noted that there were multiple traits that would make people dislike him, including his interactions with women and Morgana, but also called him "straightforward, honest, loyal and willing to speak up against injustice." Yeo drew comparisons between Makoto Niijima and Ryuji, noting that some fans believe that people who love Ryuji would hate Makoto, and vice versa. They disliked Makoto at first, finding her cold, but coming to appreciate her as she developed, much like she did with Ryuji. [10] Fanbyte writer Kenneth Shepard was critical of Persona 5's propensity to use Ryuji as the source of most physical comedy, arguing that him being a victim of physical abuse cast that trend in a negative light. He felt that this took away Ryuji's dignity and downplays Ryuji's abuse. [13] Screen Rant writer John Tibbetts felt similarly disappointed by how much of Ryuji's role is relegated to comic relief, feeling like they undermine both Persona 5 Strikers and Ryuji himself. He felt that the character Akira Konoe should have been contrasted with Ryuji, deriding that the team seemed to only be interested in Ryuji as a joke character. [14]
Kotaku writer Ria Teitelbaum felt that a lack of a romantic relationship between Ryuji and Joker was a missed opportunity, feeling that Ryuji had more emotional depth with Joker than Joker's potential romance options have. They found that the game avoided the idea of a relationship between them because the series has an issue with homophobia, citing two "predatory" gay men in Persona 5 and cut content where Persona 4 character Yosuke Hanamura confessed his love for protagonist Yu Narukami. He suggested that the change in staff, particularly with the introduction of director Katsura Hashino, was the cause of the series becoming less progressive. [15] Writer Martin Ivančić discussed how Ryuji's linguistic profile served as the representative of "casual/informal vernacular," describing it as "youthful, loud, and energetic, filled with slang and expletives." He suggested that his use of slang and expletives serve to emphasize both his emotional and rebellious nature, contrasting Japanese society, which is more polite and respectful. [16] Writer David Daniel Ribeiro da Silva discussed the choice of associating William Kidd with Ryuji, commenting how it reflected Ryuji's personality due to Captain Kidd's duality of behaving amorally while still seemingly having a moral code. He pointed to various qualities of Ryuji, including "blunt but kind" personality, his tendency to resort to violence and immaturity, and his desire to protect others even if he has to commit crimes as examples of points of comparison. He also discussed their similar backgrounds, namely that both grew up without a father, [17]
A pair of Ryuji's shoes garnered controversy in South Korea due to the imagery of the Rising Sun Flag, which has a negative connotation to some South Koreans due to war crimes committed by Japan on South Korea. Kotaku writer Brian Ashcraft noted that rather than the presence of the Rising Sun Flag indicating any association with war crimes, its use indicates that Ryuji is a yankii, specifically in the bōsōzoku subculture. [18]
Persona 3, released outside Japan as Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 3, is a 2006 role-playing video game developed by Atlus that is the fourth main installment in the Persona series, which is part of the larger Megami Tensei franchise. It was originally released for the PlayStation 2 in Japan in 2006 and in North America in 2007. It has received several enhanced re-releases and ports: Persona 3 FES, an extended version featuring a new playable epilogue and other changes, was released for the PlayStation 2 in Japan in 2007 and worldwide in 2008. An abridged PlayStation Portable version, Persona 3 Portable, was released in Japan in 2009, North America in 2010, and Europe in 2011, and ported to the Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S in 2023. Persona 3 Reload, a remake of the core game for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S, was released on February 2, 2024.
Atlus's 2006 role-playing video game Persona 3 focuses on the exploits of the Specialized Extracurricular Execution Squad (SEES), a group of high-schoolers defending their home city from monsters known as Shadows. Persona 3 is set in a fictional Japanese city in the year 2009. Due to past events, there is a hidden period between one day and the next, known as the "Dark Hour", during which most people become unconscious, and Shadows feed on the minds of those still aware of their surroundings. In addition, a large tower called Tartarus, filled with Shadows, rises out of the ground during the Dark Hour. SEES is composed of students attending Gekkoukan High School. The player names and controls the game's protagonist, who leads SEES in its exploration of Tartarus. Persona 3 mixes elements of role-playing and simulation games: during the day, the player attends school, and is able to spend time with other characters, forming relationships known as Social Links. These Social Links, when formed, have gameplay benefits, increasing the player's proficiency in battle.
Persona 5 is a 2016 role-playing video game developed by P-Studio and published by Atlus. The game is the sixth installment in the Persona series, itself a part of the larger Megami Tensei franchise. It was released for PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 in Japan in September 2016 and worldwide in April 2017. It was published by Atlus in Japan and North America, and by Deep Silver in PAL territories. An enhanced version featuring new content, Persona 5 Royal, was released for PlayStation 4 in Japan in October 2019 and worldwide in March 2020. It was published by Atlus in Japan and worldwide by its parent company Sega. Persona 5 Royal was later released for Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S in October 2022.
Chie Satonaka is a fictional character from the 2008 video game Persona 4. There, she appears as a high school student who starts investigating a dimension labeled as the TV World alongside her friends. The kidnapping of her best friend Yukiko Amagi leads Chie to join the Investigation Team in working in a murder case where the victims are sent to the TV World to be killed by creatures known as Shadows.
Mitsuru Kirijo is a fictional character in the Persona series, appearing as a main character in Persona 3. She is the unofficial leader of an organization called SEES, which the main characters of the game participate in to fight creatures called Shadows.
The protagonist is a character from Persona 3, a 2006 role-playing video game developed by Atlus. In the game, the protagonist is an orphan who transfers to Gekkoukan High School in Iwatodai City and discovers a phenomenon called the Dark Hour during which supernatural entities called Shadows roam freely. After awakening an ability called Persona, the protagonist joins their classmates in forming the Specialized Extracirricular Execution Squad (S.E.E.S.), dedicated to eliminating the Dark Hour and the threat of the Shadows. In the original release of Persona 3 and the updated versions Persona 3 FES and Persona 3 Reload the protagonist is male; for Persona 3 Portable, Atlus added the option to play as a different character, who is female, to provide more options to returning players and attract a female demographic.
Kanji Tatsumi is a fictional character introduced in the 2008 PlayStation 2 video game Persona 4 by Atlus. In the game Kanji is a high school student who becomes famous in television after fighting delinquents in the streets. Kanji becomes a victim of a series of kidnappings where the person is thrown to a dimension known as the TV World and the main cast of characters goes to save him from his alternate self, his Shadow. After Kanji is saved from the experience with the Shadow being turned into a power known as Persona, he joins the Investigation Team, befriending them in the process. He has also appeared in other works such as the fighting game Persona 4 Arena and the crossover Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth. He is voiced by Tomokazu Seki in Japanese, and Troy Baker in English in Persona 4, Persona 4 Golden, Persona 4: Arena, and the first twelve episodes of Persona 4: The Animation; his English voice actor for the remainder of Persona 4: The Animation, as well as all subsequent games, is Matthew Mercer.
Shigenori Soejima is a Japanese video game artist, best known for his work in the Persona series of role-playing video games by Atlus. Inspired in his work as an artist from an early age, he initially worked in minor roles on several games after joining Atlus. His first major work as an artist was on the strategy role-playing game Stella Deus: The Gate of Eternity (2004). From Persona 3 (2006) onwards, he took over as the character designer from his mentor Kazuma Kaneko.
Maxwell Braden Mittelman is an American voice actor who provides voices for English versions of anime, animation and video games. Some of his major roles include Saitama in One-Punch Man, Kousei Arima in Your Lie in April, Hikari Sakishima in A Lull in the Sea, King from The Seven Deadly Sins, Ritsu Kageyama in Mob Psycho 100, Inaho Kaizuka in Aldnoah.Zero, Atsushi Nakajima in Bungo Stray Dogs and Io Flemming in Mobile Suit Gundam Thunderbolt, Kira Yamato in Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Remastered and Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny Remastered, Nacht Faust from Black Clover, and Plagg from Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir. In video games, he voices McBurn and Lechter Arundel in The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel II, Shigure Rangetsu in Tales of Berseria, Ryuji Sakamoto in Persona 5, Troy Calypso in Borderlands 3, Peter Boggs in Grounded, Fidel Camuze in Star Ocean: Integrity and Faithlessness, Andy Arlington on The PBSKGo! Series M&M, Claude Wallace in Valkyria Chronicles 4, Louis in Code Vein, Red XIII in Final Fantasy VII Remake and Arataki Itto in Genshin Impact.
Persona 5, a 2016 role-playing video game by Atlus, is set in Tokyo beginning in April of the year "20XX". It centers on the Phantom Thieves of Hearts, a masked vigilante group of high-school students working to change people's hearts and have them confess their crimes. They do this by defeating a physical manifestation of their subconscious in a mysterious realm known as the Metaverse, accessed through a mobile app on their smartphones. The playable characters can be controlled in the game's many locations, such as "Palaces", which are created by people with great desires and a distorted perception of the world.
Joker, also known as Ren Amamiya, is the protagonist of Persona 5, a 2016 role-playing video game by Atlus. He is a second-year high school student who is expelled due to being falsely accused of assault by a corrupt politician. As a result, he leaves his hometown and moves in with a family friend in Tokyo to serve a one-year probation. Upon transferring to a new school, he and a group of other students awaken to a supernatural power known as the Persona. Soon after, they form a vigilante group known as the Phantom Thieves of Hearts to explore the Metaverse, a realm consisting of the physical manifestations of humanity's subconscious desires, and remove malevolent intent from people to cause a change of heart within them.
Yusuke Kitagawa is a character in the 2016 video game Persona 5. He is one of its main characters, being a member of the group Phantom Thieves of Hearts, who aim to change the hearts of those who do wrong to others. He joins the group after awakening to his Persona, Goemon, adopting the Phantom Thief nickname Fox. He is an eccentric artist who works under the tutelage of Ichiryusai Madarame, a prestigious artist, who becomes a target of the Phantom Thieves after hearing that he was abusing his students, and that he had killed Yusuke's mother.
Ann Takamaki is a character in the 2016 video game Persona 5. She is a Japanese teenage girl and a second-year student at the fictional Shujin Academy. She is also one of the founding members of the Phantom Thieves of Hearts, a group formed with the intention of stopping wrongdoers from hurting others. She helps establish this group in part to get revenge on one of her teachers, Suguru Kamoshida, who had been sexually harassing her and drove her friend to attempt suicide. While in a world called the Metaverse, Takamaki gets supernatural powers which come from her Persona, Carmen, motivated by her anger over Kamoshida. She then adopts the Phantom Thief nickname Panther. She has received mixed reception since her debut, with some critics regarding her as an example of sexual objectification.
Makoto Niijima, whose Phantom Thief code name is Queen, is a character in the Persona series, first appearing in Persona 5 as one of its main characters. She is the student council president of Shujin Academy who lives a double life as a Phantom Thief.
Goro Akechi, who uses the code name Crow, is a fictional character in the Persona series, first appearing in Persona 5. A high school detective nicknamed "The Second Coming of the Detective Prince", Akechi opposes the Phantom Thieves' actions and becomes both a rival and foil to Joker, the group's leader. For Persona 5 Royal, his characterization was further explored in order to appeal more to players. Besides printed and animated versions of the series, he has also been featured in the spin-offs Persona 5: Dancing in Starlight and Persona Q2: New Cinema Labyrinth.
Nanako Dojima is a character in the 2008 PlayStation 2 video game Persona 4 by Atlus. She is initially shy to player-character and cousin Yu Narukami, but eventually grows more comfortable. She struggles through the game with loneliness, the loss of her mother, and concern over her father Ryotaro Dojima, who is often absent due to his job as a detective. She appears as a playable character in Persona 4: Dancing All Night, where designers made a point to try to avoid her dancing style seem too adult. She has been well-received and is regarded as one of the best characters in Persona 4. Multiple critics held her as an example of a quality child character in video games.
Futaba Sakura is a fictional character in the 2016 video game Persona 5 as one of its main characters. She starts the game as a shut-in who does not go to school, leave her house, or have any friends, due to the grief and self-loathing she experienced over her mother, Wakaba Isshiki, seemingly taking her life and blaming Futaba for it. She is adopted by Sojiro Sakura. She is first anonymous, seeking to utilize the protagonist and his group, the Phantom Thieves of Hearts, to cure her of her issues, which included suicidal ideation, which is accomplished somewhat by discovering that her mother did not commit suicide. She eventually joins the Phantom Thieves, and is one of multiple female characters the player-character Joker can date. While the others are directly playable, she serves as a navigator who assists them in combat.
Haru Okumura is a character in the 2016 video game Persona 5. She is a member of the protagonist's group, the Phantom Thieves of Hearts, and one of the final members to join it, going by the Phantom Thief name Noir. She was created by Shigenori Soejima, and is a "sweet and shy" character raised in an affluent family, becoming obedient to her father. She wanted to take her father's heart, which would change his evil ways.
Suguru Kamoshida is a fictional character in the 2016 video game Persona 5. He is the first antagonist that the protagonist, Joker, faces, being a champion volleyball player and current high school coach, who is routinely protected from scrutiny. He regularly exerts violence against multiple characters, including Ryuji Sakamoto and Ann Takamaki, and preemptively discredits anyone he deems a threat, including Joker. He uses his position to abuse male students and sexually harass female students, including Ann's friend, Shiho Suzui, who attempts suicide as a result. He is one of several characters with a Palace, a manifestation of strong desires, where he is depicted as the king of a castle. The principal's failure to protect Shujin Academy's students from him leads to the formation of the Phantom Thieves of Hearts, kickstarting the events of the game.
Papyrus is a character introduced in the 2015 video game Undertale. He is a skeleton with a large ego who aspires to join the Royal Guard, and also the brother of Sans and friend of Undyne. He is eternally optimistic, and despite wanting to capture the human to prove himself, finds himself befriending the human instead. He does not appear in Deltarune, but has been alluded to. He was created by Toby Fox with support from Temmie Chang. He was originally envisioned as a creepy person who wears a fedora and has no redeeming qualities, though Fox did not like this idea, so he scrapped it. His character communicates with the Papyrus typeface, which had to be changed to a "faux hand-drawn vertical script" when translated into Japanese.