Otoma Raga

Otoma-Raga (Officially stylized as Otoma=Raga) is a character from The King of Fighters series, introduced in The King of Fighters XV as the game's main antagonist and final boss.

It is unknown who voices her.

Personality
Otoma=Raga speaks in a tongue that humans cannot understand, so it is hard to tell her true intentions. She is a dominating and tenacious figure, fueled by rage and the desires to escape from her void and kill anything in her way.

She has various symbols in her body, similar to the seen in Dolores' body.

Powers

 * Crystal Control - Otoma=Raga has crystals growing out of her arms and out of her head, akin to pigtails. She can use this crystalline material to warp her terrain, use them as projectiles, or extend them to use them as weapons.
 * Teleportation - Otoma=Raga has the ability to instantly teleport to another location.
 * Nigh-Invulnerability - When in dire straits, Otoma=Raga can power herself up, changing her crystals from blue to red, which allows her to hit a lot harder and endure more.
 * Levitation - Being a deity, Otoma=Raga floats around in place of walking.

Fighting Style
Otoma=Raga uses the crystals forming on her body to strike her opponent, able to transform them into battering rams, individual projectiles, waves, and even shields.

Music
Enforcement - The King of Fighters XV (Round 1)

Absolute Denial - The King of Fighters XV (Round 2)

Games

 * The King of Fighters XV

Trivia

 * Otoma=Raga is the first and only female final boss in the history of The King of Fighters series.
 * Otoma=Raga and Re Verse are the only female bosses of their debut game.
 * Overall, Otoma=Raga is the fifth boss in The King of Fighters main storyline.
 * Otoma=Raga's presence and role as a final boss in her own series is a callback to Samurai Shodown series, which has two female final bosses (Mizuki Rashojin and Shizuka Gozen).


 * It is currently unexplained why Otoma=Raga's name in Roman English is stylized with double-dashes that look like the equal sign. What is known however, is that double-dashes are used for transliterated Japanese names using Katakana to prevent it from being confused with the Japanese prolonged sound character. Ironically, Otoma=Raga's name in Japanese does not use double-dashes, due to being written in Hiragana.