< Popotan

Popotan/Characters


A list of characters appearing in Popotan.



Shared tropes

  • Adaptational Badass -- Ai, Mai, Mii and Mea didn't have any powers in the visual novel (or top-billing, for that matter).
  • Aerith and Bob -- The normalcy of the characters' names are all over the place, ranging from the quintessentially Japanese Ai to the not-so-Japanese Keith. Then there's Mea, which is not a name to begin with.
  • Ensemble Cast -- The three sisters and Mea are pretty much equal in regards to importance.
  • Establishing Character Moment -- Each main character's general personality is presented when Daichi is found out in episode 1. The more tragic sides to them are revealed later in the series.
  • Intergenerational Friendship -- Daichi and the sisters, specifically Ai.
  • Generation Xerox -- Both Konami and her daughter are great painters who meet the sisters while in high school. The only difference is that Konami is very friendly, while her daughter is far from it.
  • Long Hair Is Feminine -- Zig-Zagged. Ai and Konami are straight examples, along with the short-haired and tomboyish Mai. However, Mii and Mea have some masculine traits in spite of their long hair (Mii's only appears short), while Nono and Shizuku are both very feminine and short-haired.
  • Nice to the Waiter -- Ai, Mai and Mii treat Mea as respectfully as they do each other. Given that they're travelling partners, it's to be expected.
  • Opposites Attract -- Mai and Konami are, on the whole, rather dissimilar. They still become friends.
    • Birds of a Feather -- As their relationship deepens, it becomes apparent that they do share certain traits. They're both Determinators who stop at nothing to help their friends, for example.
  • Power Glows -- Any character with a special ability glows while performing it.
    • Good Colors, Evil Colors -- The sisters glow green while Keith is red. It might be because he's male, or he's using another source altogether.
    • Battle Aura -- Since Mai and Keith can use their abilities while fighting, which they do in episode 7, the glowing essentially doubles as this.
  • Punny Name/Theme Naming -- The sisters' name are puns on pronouns, in case it wasn't clear. Furthermore, mea is Latin for "my", but the intended meaning seems to be the Japanese pronunciation of "mare".

Spoiler tropes:

  • Pals with Jesus -- Shizuku and the protagonists are quite amicable towards each other, all things considered.


Main characters

Ai

Voice actresses: Sayaka Ohara (JP), Nicole Oliver (EN)

The oldest of the three sisters. A kind woman who has more or less come to accept the limitations the sisters' time travel has on her life, and as such acts as a parental figure to Mai and Mii.


Associated tropes:


Mai

Voice actresses: Masumi Asano (JP), Nicole Bouma (EN)

The tomboyish middle sister. Her age puts her in a bit of a dilemma: she's mature enough to understand what her journey does to her and the friends she makes during it, but not mature enough to cope with it. This makes her the most outspoken denouncer of the sisters' mission, and the one who suffers the most from it.


Associated tropes:

  • A-Cup Angst -- The opening has her stuffing her shirt with pads, and that's just the beginning.
  • A Friend in Need -- She decides to help Konami's daughter find her sketchbook, despite the latter not wanting to even talk to her.
  • Action Girl -- She takes on Keith. She loses, but it's the thought that counts.
  • Age-Appropriate Angst -- Given her age, her feelings about her inability to build lasting relationships are rather understandable.
  • Boyish Short Hair
  • Broken Bird -- It starts out bad and only gets worse, before culminating in finding out that her best friend died before she could return.

The Rossman: Mai is like the poster child for mentally abused teenagers on the verge of suicide. So sad.

  • Buxom Is Better -- Not enough to warrant constant mention, unlike her younger sister, but she is undoubtedly disappointed in her size.
  • Character Development -- She changes the most out of all the other characters, going from a cynic who hates having to leave her friends behind to a realist who has come to accept it.
  • Curtains Match the Window -- Reddish pink.
  • Defrosting Ice Queen -- To a degree, albeit not a large one.
  • Determinator -- Whatever goal she has, she sees it through to the best of her abilities; the clearest example is trying to befriend Konami's daughter, and the clearest subversion is trying to meet Konami again.
  • Dull Eyes of Unhappiness/Hidden Eyes -- Sports these when sad, which is often.
  • Foolish Sibling, Responsible Sibling -- Responsible, in spite of not being the oldest.
  • Four-Philosophy Ensemble -- The Cynic: She wants nothing to do with her journey and would gladly end it as soon as possible, regarding it as nothing but a pain.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble -- Choleric.
  • Freudian Trio -- The Superego, but with hints of the Ego.
  • Friendless Background -- Enforced by herself, as a way to not having to lose friendships when she eventually has to leave. Konami snaps her out of it, but it only makes things worse.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends/I Just Want to Be Normal -- Her driving emotions.
  • Inelegant Blubbering -- Not as extreme an example as, say, Makoto Konno, but let's just say that when Mai gets really sad in this series, you'll notice.
  • Heterosexual Life Partners -- With Konami in episode 12, when they can finally stay together. Wether they live together is never shown, but given that Mai is currently alone and a teenager, it's a possibilty.
  • Knight in Sour Armor -- She's only travelling because she has to, and makes this perfectly clear to the others. Exactly how sour she is depends on the episode.
  • Manic Pixie Dream Girl -- She serves as this towards Konami's daughter, returning the favor of Konami being this to her earlier.
  • Not as You Know Them -- In-universe: Konami mentions that Mai has become much more feminine and esoteric in episode 12, and that she misses the old Mai.
  • Only Sane Man -- Mostly in comparison to her sisters.
  • Perpetual Frowner -- When the negative aspects of the journey get to her (primarily in episode 2), although the trope is somewhat downplayed.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni -- Like Ai, it depends on present company. Mostly, she's on the red side (though with more common sense than what that usually implies).
  • Rose-Haired Girl -- She's much less optimistic than most of them, but just as compassionate.
  • Super Speed/Jump Physics -- Her specialty.
  • Technicolor Eyes -- They're pink.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl -- She's the tomboy to effectively everyone else in the cast, especially Konami and the younger Mai.
  • Who Wears Short Shorts? -- Black bike shorts. Ironically, she's never wearing them when she actually uses her bicycle.
  • You Gotta Have Pink Hair
  • Younger Than They Look/Older Than They Look -- She manages to be both at the same time in episode 6. During the time she has spent away from the mansion, she hasn't aged, so she is five years younger than she pretends to be. However, chronologically speaking she has aged five years, making her older than she was when she was accidentally left behind.


Mii

Voice actresses: Halko Momoi (JP), Jocelyne Loewen (EN)

The youngest member of the family. Friendly and energetic, she tries to make friends wherever she goes, and cares little about her journey.


Associated tropes:


Mea

Voice actresses: Mai Kadowaki (JP), Anna Cummer (EN)

The sisters' maid. A woman of few words who may or may not be fully human in the first place, but nevertheless cares deeply for her household. She works for Shizuku as the sisters' guard who's meant to protect them from danger, and has played this role for at least one other family before.


Associated tropes:


Secondary Characters

Unagi

Voice actresses: Ayako Kawasumi (JP), Tabitha St. Germain (EN)

The sisters' pet ferret (actually a hondo stoat). She has the power to transform into a human in the "Next episode" segments, but it's not shown whether she can do this in-universe.


Associated tropes:


Daichi

Voice actress/actors: Yuki Kaida and Kenichi Suzumura (JP), Reece Thompson and Kirby Morrow (EN)

A young boy who enters the sisters' house in search for ghosts, hoping to take pictures to show his classmate Asuka. They agree to help him if he shows them where they can find the nearest dandelion field.

Daichi reappears later in the series, thirty years older, where he further investigates the mystery of the sisters he met so many years ago.


Associated tropes:

  • Accidental Pervert -- He not only stumbles across Ai naked (and faces the consequences), but also accidentally takes a picture of the event that he almost shows to Asuka. Which he then decides to keep, so "accidental" might not be the whole truth.
  • Brooding Boy, Gentle Girl -- With Asuka, although it's downplayed on his part.
  • Cross-Dressing Voices -- Yuki Kaida is not a little boy. Reece Thompson, while not exactly Daichi's age at the time of dubbing, averts this trope in the English version.
  • Curtains Match the Window -- Brown.
  • Hot for Teacher -- When Ai becomes his teacher in episode 12, he's not exactly subtle about how he feels.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni -- Blue, when compared to Ai.
  • Secret Keeper -- In his second appearance, he finds out about the supernatural nature behind the sisters' journey. He promises to not tell anyone (deleting his photos in the process) and that he will wait until Ai feels ready before he asks further questions.
  • Supporting Protagonist -- In the first episode.
  • Timeshifted Actor
  • Victorious Childhood Friend -- He eventually marries Asuka, making the two of them this towards each other.


Konami

Voice actresses: Tomoko Kawakami (JP), Tabitha St. Germain (EN)

A classmate of Mai in episode 2. She tries to befriend her, knowing herself how difficult it is to make friends as a new student.

In episode 9, she is revealed to have mothered a child named Mai after her best friend. She is also revealed to have died young, waiting for Mai's return.


Associated tropes:

Spoiler tropes:

  • Posthumous Character -- Played with. Although she's alive in episodes 2 and 12, any development of her in episode 9 is this. This includes the fact that she became a renowned painter, her apparently feeling betrayed by Mai and the scene where she decides what to name her daughter.


Nono

Voice actresses: Sakura Nogawa (JP), Brenna O'Brien (EN)

A shrine maiden who lives next door to the sisters in episode 8. She has taken a liking to everything Christmas-related, finding herself staring through the window to their Christmas shop, but her interests are frowned upon by her conservative grandfather.


Associated tropes:


Mai (Konami's daughter)

Voice actresses: Tomoko Kawakami (JP), Maggie Blue O'Hara (EN)

The child and duplicate of Konami, with the opposite personality. She resents any attempts to become friends with her, and has an intense dislike for the older Mai, who never came back to see her mother during her lifetime.


Associated tropes:

  • Curtains Match the Window -- Same as her mother's.
  • Defrosting Ice Queen -- A trait she shares with her namesake, although she's a more extreme example.
  • Embarrassing First Name -- She hates her first name, since the person she was named after never returned to her mother before her death despite promising to do so.
  • Friendless Background -- Also enforced, but for a different reason: her mother was "betrayed" by her high school friend, and as such she does not find the idea of forming friendships very appealing.
  • Jerkass -- At first. Saying that you despise your name when someone with the exact same one is standing next to you is not exactly a nice thing to do.
  • Loners Are Freaks -- Her classmates seem to thinks so.
  • Meaningful Name -- Named after her mother's friend.
  • Perpetual Frowner -- Before the older Mai changes her outlook on relationships.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni -- She remains blue and never changes, unlike her mother.
  • Strong Family Resemblance -- She's the spitting image of Konami when she was the same age, down to having the same voice actress in the Japanese version. Their personalities, on the other hand, couldn't be more different.
  • Zettai Ryouiki -- For the same reason as Konami.


Keith

Voice actors: Yuuji Takada (JP), Brian Drummond (EN)

A man who comes to Ai's aid in episode 7 when the adult Daichi confronts her. He appears at first to be understanding and helpful, but has a less than friendly agenda: he is the sisters' guide, working on orders from Shizuku, and it's his job to make sure they get to meet her.


Associated tropes:


Shizuku

Voice actress: Rumi Shishido (JP)

The person the sisters are looking for, appearing for the first time in episode 5 and making her speaking debut in episode 11. She is essentially a goddess of dandelions, and is able to monitor the sisters from another dimension; when they meet her, she gives them the choice to either continue travelling or stay in a specific time period.

Associated tropes:

Spoiler tropes:

  • Anti-Villain -- While as far from villainous as one can be, she is still technically the closest this show has to a main antagonist (Wikipedia lists her as one in their character section, for one thing).
  • God Is Good -- If "good" means "nice".
  • Light Is Not Good -- Pretty much everything associated with her is shining, from the light emitted from the mansion when it teleports to her nice personality. She's still the reason the sisters have to make their journey.
  • Odd Job God -- She's the goddess of dandelions.
  • Physical God
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