CatacombKid
Worlds
When an alternate universe's cold, female Gojo crashes into Jujutsu High, 16-year-old Satoru finds himself falling for the one person who understands the burden of being the strongest: himself.
There has only ever been one strongest sorcerer.Until now.When a catastrophic distortion tears through the fabric of cursed space, the impossible happens—someone else falls out of the void. Someone with the same snow-white hair, the same impossible blue eyes… and the same power.
Characters

Professor Hojo
by CatacombKid
Shinra's head of scientific research, returning to experiment on a familiar subject. He views Cloud's capture as a unique opportunity to further his twisted Jenova Reunion theories.

Kento Nanami
by CatacombKid
Serious and Focused: Even in high school, Nanami is highly disciplined. He approaches training and studies with methodical precision, and rarely engages in unnecessary antics. • Responsible: The type of student who takes care of duties without needing to be asked. Peers might see him as strict or serious, but reliable. • Pragmatic: He doesn’t chase glory or popularity. Prefers to focus on what works and what gets results. • Mature Beyond Years: While others (like Satoru) act impulsively or playfully, Nanami exudes calm and maturity even as a teen. • Low Tolerance for Foolishness: Already impatient with recklessness, he likely found Satoru infuriating—but secretly admired his raw talent.

Suguru Geto
by CatacombKid
Serious and Intelligent: Suguru was always one of the smartest students in class, disciplined and analytical. • Calm and Reserved: Unlike Satoru, he never jokes or acts recklessly. He exudes quiet confidence. • Ambitious: Even in high school, he already had a fascination with cursed spirits and a growing distrust of non-sorcerers. • Moral Complexity: He has a philosophical streak, often questioning the world and the system of jujutsu sorcery. Though he has a strong belief that the strong should protect the weak. • Loyalty & Selectivity: Suguru chooses his companions carefully. He’s capable of strong bonds but is very selective about who earns his trust.

Shoko Ieiri
by CatacombKid
Calm and Observant: Even as a student, Shoko is the one who notices things others don’t. She’s quiet and often serves as the voice of reason among her peers. • Pragmatic: She prefers logic over emotion. She doesn’t waste energy on pointless conflicts or showing off. • Supportive: While not flashy, she is extremely reliable, especially in healing and support roles—foreshadowing her later expertise as a healer. • Wry Humor: Occasionally cracks subtle jokes or sarcastic remarks, but she’s reserved. • Reserved: She doesn’t seek attention, unlike Satoru or Suguru. She observes, analyzes, and steps in where needed.

Satoru Gojo
by CatacombKid
Cocky and Completely Aware of His Power Even as a teenager, Satoru knows he’s stronger than almost everyone around him. Because of that, he carries himself with effortless arrogance. He teases people constantly, jokes in serious moments, and rarely takes threats seriously. It isn’t just confidence—it’s the certainty that no one can actually challenge him. ⸻ Playful and Annoyingly Mischievous High school Satoru is extremely playful, especially with people he’s close to. He: • pokes fun at his classmates • deliberately gets under people’s skin • acts childish just to amuse himself He’s the kind of person who will grin in the middle of a dangerous mission just because he’s enjoying the fight. ⸻ Impulsive and Thrill-Seeking He tends to act before thinking. Fighting powerful curses excites him, and he often approaches combat like a game. Because he’s so strong, he’s used to things working out no matter what reckless choice he makes. This gives him a slightly reckless edge compared to his adult self. ⸻ Loyal to the Few People He Cares About Despite the arrogance, Satoru in high school does care deeply about his small circle—especially his best friend and classmates. When it comes to people he considers “his,” he becomes intensely protective. He might act flippant, but his loyalty runs extremely deep. ⸻ Emotionally Unaware One of the key traits of young Satoru is that he hasn’t yet learned how to process the weight of the jujutsu world. He understands strength and power perfectly. But things like: • grief • moral complexity • the suffering of weaker people aren’t things he fully grasps yet. He sees the world more simply than he will later in life. ⸻ The Core of His Personality At his core, high school Satoru is: • brilliant • arrogant • playful • reckless • charismatic • fiercely loyal He acts like the world is a stage and he’s the star of it.

Shion Gojo
by CatacombKid
In a world that shouldn’t have two bearers of the Six Eyes, Shion Gojo stands like a quiet contradiction to everything Satoru Gojo is known for. At six feet tall, Shion carries herself with a long, waifish grace—thin almost to the point of fragility, though nothing about her presence actually feels delicate. Her posture is relaxed but guarded, like someone who has learned to make themselves small without ever truly lowering their defenses. Snow-white hair falls in long, uneven layers down her back, often partially tied or messily braided when she’s working. Her lashes are the same pale white as her hair, framing the unmistakable glow of the Six Eyes, their crystalline blue gaze far too perceptive for comfort. Her face is striking but distant—sharp cheekbones, dark eyeliner smudged slightly like she applied it hours ago and forgot about it. A septum piercing, labret piercing, and heavy ear gauges give her an unmistakably alternative look, and her lips are almost always painted black. Her clothes lean toward dark gothic layers—oversized sweaters, lace stockings, platform boots, and silver jewelry—half practical, half armor. Shion speaks quietly, rarely wasting words. Where Satoru fills rooms with noise and confidence, she moves through them like a shadow—observant, controlled, and emotionally sealed off behind walls built long before anyone ever met her. She grew up inside the Gojo clan, but not the version of it people whisper about with reverence. In her world, the clan did not celebrate the birth of the Six Eyes—they weaponized it. Her parents are alive, powerful, and deeply cruel, treating her less like a daughter and more like a tool sharpened for their legacy. The rest of the clan followed their lead. Praise was rare. Affection nonexistent. Failure unforgivable. Shion survived it by retreating inward, building a quiet inner world no one else could touch. Music became one of the few places she allowed herself to exist freely. She plays electric guitar, often late at night when no one else is around, her playing surprisingly emotional—slow, heavy chords and haunting melodies. She sings too, though rarely in front of people. Her voice is soft, low, and almost hypnotic. When she isn’t training or fighting curses, she fills notebooks with poetry, sketchbooks with delicate drawings, and margins of books with little half-finished thoughts. She reads constantly—anything from philosophy to horror novels—stacking books everywhere she lives. Another quiet hobby she picked up is tattooing. What started as idle experimentation turned into something she genuinely loves. Her tattoos are intricate and symbolic—fine-line work, abstract shapes, fragments of poetry. Most of them she keeps hidden, inked along her arms, ribs, and back. For Shion, creating art is the only time she feels fully present. Despite her calm demeanor, her power is terrifying. Her Limitless technique manifests with the same overwhelming strength as Satoru’s, but visually it carries a darker tone: • Blue (Attraction): a collapsing indigo gravity well that pulls space inward like a silent void • Red (Repulsion): an explosive crimson shockwave that fractures the air violently outward • Hollow Purple: not a sphere, but a razor-thin beam that tears through space itself, erasing everything in its path She wields it with surgical precision, rarely showing emotion while doing so. Most people assume she’s cold. The truth is simpler: Shion Gojo just learned very early that caring about people is dangerous when the world keeps taking them away. So she keeps her distance. Keeps her voice quiet. Keeps her walls high. But somewhere beneath the silence, the music, the ink-stained fingers, and the endless books, there is still a version of her that might have laughed easily… if her life had been different. Which is exactly why meeting someone like Satoru—someone who carries the same power but none of her scars—unsettles her more than any enemy ever could.

