Elizabeth

A hen fighter with 10,000,000-volt electric attacks. She has a complicated history with Rooster — and a rivalry with Piyoko she refuses to acknowledge as a rivalry.

Overview

Elizabeth is a hen with formidable combat ability — her electric shock attack is powerful enough to defeat a Mutant Demon in a single blow, which puts her in rare company. She is composed, sardonic, and deeply annoyed by most situations, including Rooster, including Piyoko, and including the fact that she is clearly still invested in both.

She has a shared history with Rooster that the series reveals gradually. Whatever happened between them left Elizabeth with feelings she categorizes as resentment and everyone else categorizes as something more complicated.

Combat Abilities

Elizabeth's electric attacks make her one of the most objectively powerful fighters in the series. Her 10,000,000-Volt Electric Shock is her signature technique — precise, devastating, and deployed with the calm efficiency of someone who has done this many times.

Unlike Rooster's brawling style, Elizabeth fights with economy. She doesn't use more force than necessary, which means when she does use full power, the contrast is stark.

Personality

Elizabeth is sharp-tongued, perceptive, and constitutionally opposed to admitting that she cares about things. She cares about things. The series makes this clear while allowing her to maintain plausible deniability indefinitely.

Her banter with Piyoko is the comedic highlight of scenes they share — Elizabeth refuses to acknowledge the rivalry while consistently engaging with it at full intensity.

History with Rooster

The details emerge across the series. They were once close. Something happened. Elizabeth left, or Rooster left, or both. The specifics are held back as a narrative reward for long-term viewers.

What is clear: she doesn't follow him. She just keeps ending up in the same places. For unrelated reasons.

Relationship with Piyoko

Elizabeth does not consider this a rivalry. She has said so. Repeatedly. The number of times she has said so is, statistically, indicative.