Pretty Cure Mirai Spark

Pretty Cure Mirai ~ Spark! is a Pretty Cure fanseries by cyanfox27.

Hiroko Tsubasa arrives at Mirai Academy hoping to find a sense of purpose. On her first day, she meets a variety of people, including the tomboyish gymnast Izumi, the Headmistress' stoic daughter Yasu, and the excitable Jun, who is actually Muse, an emissary from the Hallowed Wellspring. Muse informs Hiroko that she, along with two others with high levels of "Spark Energy", was chosen to become a Pretty Cure, one of the city's guardians. When a monster attacks the campus, Hiroko takes on this duty; soon afterward, Izumi and Yasu also become Cures.

The newly-formed Cure trio must thwart the plans of the corrupt Devil King Aseimera, who seeks to tear down a barrier between the world of demons and Earth, with potentially cataclysmic results, by sending his servants to destroy the barrier's energy and target Pretty Cure's predecessors. Two more teammates eventually join their group: Muse herself and Haruki, Yasu's younger brother.

Pretty Cure:

Allies:

  • Kisu: The other mascot, a young mouse who holds the power to create a new seal for Kyukai.
  • Elder Sol: Muse's father, who was acquainted with the previous Cures and occasionally drops in to play an advisor role.
  • Shun Siegel (Licht Panzer): A boyish-looking racer and cousin to the previous Cure team's leader. Befriends the Cures early on and later joins the team.

Devil Kingdom:


Tropes used in Pretty Cure Mirai Spark include:
  • Absurdly Powerful Student Council: Well, not really, but Nanami thinks she's running one.
  • All Your Colors Combined: Pretty Cure Mirai Storm. The Magnificent Trio has their own version, the Magnificent Tempest, which debuts much earlier... and fails horribly every time it shows up.
  • Anticlimactic Sibling: Hiroko spends a bit of episode 8 worrying about Chiaki's visit to Kyukai, convinced that her teammates will abandon her in favor of her more talented older sister as soon as they meet. When Chiaki actually shows up, nothing of the sort actually happens, and everyone spends a fairly ordinary (off-screen) afternoon together.
  • Anti-Villain: Seimono is a type I - he's shown to have actual standards and is only really serving Aseimera because because he believes himself fated to do so. Most of the Magnificent Trio also lean toward type I territory (with the exception of Kooyoo, who's more of a type IV), although Kae will swear up and down that this isn't the case.
  • Applied Phlebotinum: Spark Energy.
  • Arbitrary Skepticism: In episode 11 - despite being a Magical Girl Warrior who fights Youkai-inspired enemies and answers to a talking cat and a magical mouse, Izumi refuses to believe that ghosts actually exist. She hits the roof after finding out that yes, they actually are real.
  • Ascended Fanon: The notion that some citizens of the Devil Kingdom are transformed humans was first posited (albeit in a slightly different form) on a forum thread by one of the author's readers. The author liked the idea so much that she decided to work it in, and it does become a backstory point for one of the characters.
  • Beach Episode: Episode 18.
  • Big Sister Bully: Hiroko's sister Chiaki is implied to have been a milder version of this. Hiroko doesn't seem to resent her too much for it, though. Kimiko was an Older Cousin Bully towards Shun when they were kids. She's mellowed out a lot over the years, but she still likes teasing Shun.
  • By the Power of Greyskull: "Transmute! Pretty Cure Henshin!"
  • Call Back: In episode 8:

Muse: Why were you all sad for? You're not under a spell, are you?

Cure Draco: "The hidden azure scales, Cure Draco!"
Cure Kame: "The forceful black shell, Cure Kame!"
Cure Tora: "The shining silver fangs, Cure Tora!"
Cure Phoenix: "The intense scarlet wings, Cure Phoenix!"

Cure Kirin: "The musical gold hooves, Cure Kirin!"
All: "Live in tomorrow, fight for today! We are Pretty Cure!"
    • The Magnificent Trio have their own version, which only shows up once:

Kae A. Dama: "The double-effective leader, Kae Asjun Dama!"
R. Kooyoo: "The never-ending fighter, Rasa Kooyoo!"

P. Tobi: "The razor-sharp planner, Potai Tobi!"
All: "Fight for glory, live in the moment! We are the Magnificent Trio!"
  • Lower Deck Episode: Episode 21 is told entirely from the perspective of the Student Council and focuses on Nanami's quest to dig up more information on Pretty Cure.
  • Meaningful Name: Just about every important or semi-important character has one.
  • Memento MacGuffin: Yasu and Haruki's father bought a Maneki Neko statue to bring good luck into the house a few months before he died. Yasu is not happy when said statue gets stolen in episode 3.
  • Mid-Season Upgrade: The Cure Arms[2]), although they come a bit earlier than mid-season. The mid-season proper adds two more Cures, who subsequently earn upgrades of their own.
  • Minion Shipping: Seimono and Kamryou, who also fall under May-December Romance.
  • Motif:
  • Monster of the Week: Dogou, which also come in Mook form.
  • Mr. Fanservice: Spoofed with the Show Within a Show, Chrome Detective Tetsu. Hiroko wonders if Tetsu's ability to lose his shirt every five minutes is one of of his super powers. (Fittingly, his sidekick, Anna is Ms. Fanservice... at least for Izumi.)
  • Nonuniform Uniform: Izumi wears her uniform in a much more disheveled fashion, while the Student Council (yes, including Shinobu) all wear unique, color-coded neck ribbons. Shun used to wear Kyukai Public's male uniform and later dons it again when passing herself off as a high school student.
  • Not Now, We're Too Busy Crying Over You!: Izumi tells Shun this almost verbatim after the latter recovers from her Disney Death in episode 10.
  • Not What It Looks Like: Nanami proposes to become Muse's big sister at the beginning of episode 6. From her body language and the way she starts her request, Kaoru assumes she's proposing something else.
  • Official Couple: Seimono/Kamryou is strongly implied, while Yuriko/Shiori is flat-out stated. Izumi and Shun are already showing signs of eventually becoming this.
  • One Head Taller: Shun and Izumi, Yamato and Mei. On the villainous side, Seimono and Kamryou take it into Huge Guy, Tiny Androgyne territory.
  • "On the Next Episode of..." Catchphrase: "Let's reach towards a new tomorrow!"
  • Our Demons Are Different: In this case, "demon" is a catchall term for nonhuman beings who hail from Another Dimension. Most of them aren't any more antagonistic than humans.
  • Pink Girl, Blue Boy: Yasu wears a pink uniform and Haruki wears a blue one. Their accessories and some of their rooms' decor, including the nameplates Yasu created for their doors are also appropriately color-coded.
  • Power Trio
  • Precocious Crush: Jirou, Nanami's seven-year-old brother develops one on Izumi after she saves him from a gang of bullies. She's not very happy about it. There's also Yasu's crush on her English teacher, Alan Bell.
  • Quicksand Sucks: The cake Dogou in episode 5 acts like this.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: Aseimera and the main Triumvirate members employ this color scheme in their attire. The Black Palace's decor is also themed this way.
  • Reluctant Monster: Episode 19 has Madoka, a plant-monster Dogou capable of transforming into a human boy and feeling emotions. He's created to infect the plants around Kyukai and entrap at least one of the Cures but soon decides he'd rather live like a normal human. He doesn't get the chance - he eventually reverts into a mindless monster, and Pretty Cure is forced to destroy him.
  • Sadistic Choice: The climax of episode 12 hinges on Hinyu forcing Marina to make one - sacrifice herself and weaken the barrier between the worlds or save herself and put Pretty Cure - and many of their classmates - in mortal danger.
  • Sentai: The Cures and the Magnificent Trio, complete with synchronized posing. The latter takes it a step farther by sometimes summoning monsters that act like Combining Mecha.
  • Serious Business: Izumi is very passionate about pizza. Way too passionate, in fact. Kae is also a repeat offender - apparently being a "fearsome criminal gang leader" means freaking out over trivialities like someone "stealing" your intro speech.
  • Shout-Out: Numerous.
    • Kou tries to mention Lucio Fulci in episode 8 before Marina says, "Kou, the zombies can wait."
    • As mentioned above, three of the dresses in the Fashion Shop Fashion Show came from a Fan Art the author requested from a friend; the author liked the resulting designs so much that she decided to incorporate them into the story somehow.
  • Show Within a Show: At least two - Space Team Cross-3, a Sentai anime and manga that Kae (badly) cobbles ideas from, and Chrome Detective Tetsu a (suspiciously fanservice-laden) tokusatsu series about a cyborg police detective.
  • Sick Episode: Episode 20.
  • Single-Minded Twins: Kou's Annoying Younger Siblings, Takeru and Maya.
  • Sixth Ranger: Haruki, Muse, and Shun for the initial trio, a fact that was spoiled as soon as the author first started sharing ideas for the story. Nanami invokes this during the Lower Deck Episode, temporarily allowing Kou to follow the Council along just so they'll also have five members to parallel Pretty Cure.
  • Sneeze Cut: Used in the beginning of episode 2.
  • Spot the Impostor: Tamakushi tries catching Pretty Cure off guard during episode 4 by using her doppelgangers to impersonate their loved ones (Chiaki, Shun, and Haruki, respectively); later on, she assumes Izumi's form during episode 9 in an attempt to alienate her from the team (and steal their Puricells while she's at it). Both times, she's outed by fudging important details about the people she's imitating.
  • Supervillain Lair: The Triumvirate and Aseimera have the Black Palace, while the Trio have Club Tsukikage.
  • Those Two Guys: Emi and Kou, to an extent. Nanami and Kaoru combine this with Heterosexual Life Partners.
  • Through Their Stomachs: One of Hiroko's favored befriending techniques. This is also why Izumi decides to seemingly drop out of character and enter a cake contest - she's convinced that baking something for her parents will help them understand her feelings. Unfortunately, she's, well...
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Izumi loves pizza, Shouji loves soba noodles. They fight over which is better at one point. Shun is also inordinately fond of pancakes, while Kaoru enjoys donuts. Izumi also has a trademark hated food in miso, which becomes a minor plot point in one episode.
  • Transformation Trinket: Pretty Cure's cellphone-esque Puricells and Shun's wrist-mounted Mirai Changer.
  • Twin Tropes: Kae and Shahei embody a few of them.
  • Unsettling Gender Reveal: During his first year at Mirai, Kou gave a love confession to the council's "adorable secretary", Shinobu... who then revealed that "she" was a boy. He still gets flak about this, primarily from Shinobu himself.
    • Hiroko develops a crush on Shun at first sight... and immediately loses it after learning "his" actual gender. Later on, Kae forcefully "hires" Shun as a replacement henchman, remaining unaware of her actual gender until Kooyoo finally points it out. Kae decides to just ignore that piece of information, to Shun's mounting annoyance.
  • Unusually Uninteresting Sight: Most of the villains seem a bit... off when passing as humans. Few people in Kyukai seem to notice unless said villains are actively causing trouble.
  • Verbal Tic: Muse tends to end sentences with "~nya" in mascot form, and every member of the Magnificent Trio has their own personal sentence-ender. Yuriko also tags many of her sentences with "ya know?".
  • Villains Out Shopping: Primarily with the Magnificent Trio, who spend a good deal of their off-time hanging around Kyukai playing pachinko machines, fetching lunch, shopping, etc.
  • Villain Teleportation
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: A type 1 example with Kooyoo and Tobi - the former thinks the latter is one of his "best buds", the latter usually tolerates the former at best. There are also type 2 examples with the bickering "siblings" Izumi and Shouji and loyal but argumentative cousins Kimiko and Shun.
  • When Trees Attack: The sentient Rage Tree, whose fruits give rise to the Monster of the Week. It also apparently feeds off of liquid despair.
  • Whole-Episode Flashback: Episode 23.
  • Wholesome Crossdresser: Shinobu and Shun, each of whom throws at least one person off during the series.
  • You Gotta Have Blue Hair
  • Youkai: Most of the villains are patterned off of them.
  1. According to Word of God, this is because the author trusts Midoriri with her characters, but she doesn't trust herself with Midoriri's characters.
  2. (and yes "Cure Arms" is singular and plural
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