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List of Ghost in the Shell characters
List of Ghost in the Shell characters
from Wikipedia

This is a list of fictional characters in the Ghost in the Shell media franchise created by Masamune Shirow.

Public Security Section 9 members

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Section Chief Directors

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Chief Daisuke Aramaki

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Voiced by: Tamio Oki (Japanese, films),[1][2] Osamu Saka (Japanese, Stand Alone Complex),[3][4] Ikkyu Juku (Japanese; ARISE);[5] William Frederick Knight (English; films, Stand Alone Complex TV series, Bandai Visual dub; 1997 game, 2004 game, 2005 game),[1][2][3] Russell Roberts (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub),[4] Rik Thomas (English; Stand Alone Complex, Animax Asia dub),[3] John Swasey (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)[5]
Portrayed by: "Beat" Takeshi Kitano (2017 film)

Lt. Col. Daisuke Aramaki (荒巻 大輔, Aramaki Daisuke) is the Chief Executive Director of Public Security Section 9.

In Stand Alone Complex, Lt. Col. Aramaki is a strict chief, and is informally referred to by Section 9 agents as the "old ape" (most likely because in the original manga he was drawn with a face that appeared to be half monkey, half man).[citation needed] Even so, he is fiercely loyal to the members of Section 9, and often puts his own career on the line to ensure the survival of the rest of his team.

In 2nd GIG, Aramaki uses his political connections and no small amount of bargaining with the new prime minister to get Section 9 reinstated. He is shown to have a disconnected brother of similar age in the Dejima with the refugees, and in Solid State Society it is implied that he is the student of a once-feared military general, as well as that he was once married.

It is revealed in Mamoru Oshii's Ghost in the Shell that Aramaki, together with Togusa, are the only fully human members of Section 9 (aside from a cyberbrain).

  • In the Stand Alone Complex Visual Book released by Hobby Japan, Aramaki's hair was poked at for fun in one comic strip when Batou makes some comments about it. Aramaki lifts his hair to reveal metallic parts, possibly for his cyberbrain. This incident freaked Batou out.
  • Near the end of Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG, Aramaki's missing brother, Yousuke Aramaki (荒巻 洋輔, Aramaki Yōsuke), appears to Kuze and asks him what he intends to do with the refugees. He was last seen in the last episode helping the refugees evacuate to the Dejima bridge via small boats.
  • The Solid State Society film reveals that he was estranged from his mentor Colonel Tonoda whom he helped to put in prison (like his character does in the course of the original G.I.T.S manga) sometime before the SAC series began, and that he was actually married at one point.
  • Aramaki's physical appearance looks almost exactly like that of the character "Dusty the coffin maker" in the 1968 Spaghetti Western: If You Meet Sartana Pray for Your Death.

Lead Investigators

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Major Motoko Kusanagi

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Voiced by: Atsuko Tanaka (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex),[1][2][3][4] Maaya Sakamoto (Japanese, ARISE);[5] Mimi Woods (English; first film, 1997 game),[1] Mary Elizabeth McGlynn (English; second film, Stand Alone Complex TV series, Bandai Visual dub; 2004 game, 2005 game, First Assault Online),[2][3] Alison Matthews (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub),[4] Andrea Kwan (English; Stand Alone Complex, Animax Asia dub),[3] Elizabeth Maxwell (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)[5]
Portrayed by: Scarlett Johansson (2017 film)

Major Motoko Kusanagi (草薙 素子, Kusanagi Motoko) is a cyborg counter-cyberterrorist field commander in the employ of "Public Security Section 9", a fictional division of the real Japanese National Public Safety Commission, as the squad leader and lead investigator.

Batou

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Voiced by: Akio Otsuka (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex),[1][2][3][4] Kenichirou Matsuda (Japanese; ARISE);[5] Richard Epcar (English; films, Stand Alone Complex TV Series, Bandai Visual dub; 1997 game, 2004 game, 2005 game, First Assault Online),[1][2][3] David Kaye (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub),[4] Russell Wait (English; Stand Alone Complex, Animax Asia dub),[3] Christopher Sabat (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)[5]
Portrayed by: Pilou Asbæk (2017 film)

Batou (バトー, Batō) is the lead investigator and main male character in the Ghost in the Shell series. Recruited from the Rangers, Batou is the second best melee fighter in Section 9 and is the second-in-command under Major Motoko Kusanagi. In the movie adaptations of Shirow's manga, Batou is a direct representation of Mamoru Oshii's opinions, views, and feelings that are presented throughout the story.

Although not officially stated, he seems to jointly hold the position of 3rd in command with Ishikawa. He served in the military with Motoko and Ishikawa (under both of them), and has cybernetic eyes that are used by Rangers, improved strength from cybernetic arms, legs, and also contains other unlisted parts (these parts are not stated, but rather implied). He primarily does field work with Togusa, and takes point for the Major on serious occasions.

Batou keeps his private life away from work and his background is mostly unknown. He also gave his favorite Tachikoma an unapproved, non-synthetic oil until the Major caught him. In the first Stand Alone Complex series, the Laughing Man hacked into his eyes so that Batou could not see him. According with Tachikomatic Days of episode 21 (Season 1), he has a can of beer after his bath and he takes out his eyes before going to sleep. Batou is also a chain smoker. He also cares for a cloned basset hound named Gabriel, and Oshii himself possesses a female basset hound named Gabriel. Stand Alone Complex character designer Hajime Shimomura said that Batou's image was based on the Minotaur.[6]

Batou often uses up his paycheck buying muscle training equipment for the upper body, which others find useless, considering his extensive number of cyborg parts (mainly torso and arms). In the first season of Stand Alone Complex, it is inferred that he uses it to remind himself of who he is, despite his cyberization, much like the watch the Major wears. In an interview on the DVD releases of Stand Alone Complex, Batou's Japanese voice actor theorized that Batou's use of exercise equipment was more for the purpose of exercising his mind and self-discipline rather than enhancing his body.

Togusa

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Voiced by: Kōichi Yamadera (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex),[1][2][3][4] Tarusuke Shingaki (Japanese, ARISE);[5] Christopher Joyce (English; first film; 1997 game),[1] Crispin Freeman (English; second film, Stand Alone Complex TV series, Bandai Visual dub; 2004 game, 2005 game),[2][3] Trevor Devall (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub),[4][7] Darren Pleavin (English; Stand Alone Complex, Animax Asia dub),[3] Alex Organ (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)[5]
Portrayed by: Chin Han (2017 film)

Togusa (トグサ) is the lead investigator and second most prominently featured male character in the Ghost in the Shell manga and anime series. In Stand Alone Complex it is stated that he is the only "entirely human" member of Section 9 who has not undergone cybernetic replacement in some manner as he had been referred to as "natural". Togusa is openly suspicious and has reservations regarding technology; while Section 9 agents may respect Togusa's rejection of cybernetic enhancements, the rest of society views people like him as a Luddite. In the 1995 film it is claimed that this is precisely because of his lack of cybernetic enhancements that he was chosen for Kusanagi's team. In the manga, it is unclear as to what extent he has undergone cybernization, although in both anime films and television series he only has cybernetic memory upgrades and other small communication brain implants like all other members.

Togusa is also the only member of Section 9 to not have military experience, having only served as a civilian police officer in the past. To Section 9, Togusa is a reminder to them all of true humanity, because he is a normal person compared to the rest of Section 9. He has a family, and strong moral beliefs that visibly get in his way. He primarily does work with Batou, but also investigates on his own at times. Togusa often plays the role of the idealist in Ghost in the Shell, and could easily be said to be the least likely to win in an even fight against anyone else in Section 9.

Togusa is 27 years old and is 5 feet 10 inches (178 cm) in height. In Solid State Society, he is squad leader of the now expanded Section 9, after Kusanagi's departure and Batou's refusal of the position. It is also stated in Solid State Society that Togusa had finally undergone cyberization, the extent of which, however, is unknown. According to character designer Hajime Shimomura, he did the designs of Togusa based on him being the gentle lion.[8] In addition, Shimomura mentions that he was hard to do since his appearance in the manga looks deformed.[8]

Ishikawa

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Voiced by: Yutaka Nakano (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex),[1][2][3] Shunsuke Sakuya (Japanese, ARISE);[5] Michael Sorich (English, films), Michael McCarty (English; Stand Alone Complex, Bandai Visual dub; 2004 game, 2005 game),[3] John Payne (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub), Brandon Potter (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)[5]
Portrayed by: Lasarus Ratuere (2017 film)

Ishikawa (イシカワ) is the lead investigator, covert intelligence, information warfare and technology specialist in Public Security Section 9.[9] Ishikawa is a master at recognizing data manipulation, along with being highly skilled at hacking in general. He has a low prosthetic percentage; his character dialogue (and his long recovery time from an injury) suggests that he is one of the least augmented members of Section 9. His appearance is characterized by a large beard and perpetually unkempt hair, and he is the oldest of Section 9's field operatives. Ishikawa is especially well known for his frequent, long-winded and often rather complicated expository speeches to the other characters, in order to inform them (and the show's audience) of new story developments.

He formerly served with Kusanagi and Batou in South America when they were with the Ground Self-Defense Forces in the Japanese UN contingent. He was one of the earliest members recruited to be in Section 9 and seems to know the Major and her dislikes quite well. He is shown as being in charge of a pachinko parlor called Parlor Ishikawa, and on occasion uses the cyberbrains of the old men who play there to complete particularly heavy data gathering (though it seems the men suffer no ill effects or are even aware of their situation, and are in fact 'paid' with wins at pachinko for use of their 'processor' time). Ishikawa is the most seemingly laid-back member of the unit.

Despite being a member of Section 9, Ishikawa appears to be relatively physically weak in comparison to the other members. He is almost never shown in combat (though in one episode he fires a shoulder-mounted cannon to disable a heavily armored vehicle) and takes a support role during most missions in which he is dispatched. When he is captured late in the first season, he is shown as being easily taken into custody by Umibozu commandos sent to arrest him. This is possibly due to the fact that he is one of the least cybernetically enhanced members (along with Togusa and Saito) and thus, would have been at a disadvantage had he physically resisted. Late into the second series, Ishikawa is wounded in a suicide bomb attack on Section 9's tilt wing aircraft. Following this he is seen hospitalized and wearing a bandage on his left arm, this lends credit to the theory that he has little external cyberization, especially when in contrast to Batou's quick recovery from wounds in the same episode.

  • As a point of humor, a bottle of what appears to be Chivas Regal is seen in his office in the closing animation of season 1, as well as a similar bottle appearing in the first Ghost in the Shell movie, though no indications are given that he is alcoholic. It is known that he smokes cigarettes and cigars on occasion, particularly in stressful circumstances.
    • In the 2017 film, he jokes that he got a prosthetic liver so he could drink without worry.
  • As stated in 2nd GiG episode 12, Ishikawa is a fan of American super hero comics.
  • Ishikawa also makes an appearance in Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence to deliver important information to Batou.
  • According with Tachikomatic Days of episode 22 (Season 1), he has a glass of milk after his bath and he takes off his beard before going to sleep. This was meant to contrast with the previous episode (21), that stated that Batou has a beer after his bath and takes out his cybernetic eyeballs before going to sleep. Tachikomatic Days are not meant to be taken seriously [citation needed].

Specialists

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Saito

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Voiced by: Tōru Ōkawa (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex),[1][2][3] Takuro Nakakuni (Japanese, ARISE);[5] Dave Wittenberg (English; films, Stand Alone Complex TV Series, Bandai Visual dub; 2004 game, 2005 game),[3] Brian Drummond (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub),[4][7] Marcus Stimac (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)[5]
Portrayed by: Yutaka Izumihara (2017 film)

Saito (サイトー, Saitō) is Section 9's tactical sniper specialist. Known to have been a mercenary in the South American campaign, Saito was recruited by the Major while they were on opposing sides. He can handle any automatic firearm with deadly accuracy and precision. Regarded as one of the least cyberized, Saito's left arm is cybernetic, allowing him to support and steady extremely large Anti-materiel rifles with superhuman skill. His left eye was replaced with the "Hawkeye", a prosthetic eye that interfaces with satellites to allow for shots of incredible accuracy. The Hawkeye, however, can be hacked, as it is in Episode 2 of SAC. It is impossible for Saito to escape hacking by going into autistic mode because he needs to maintain his Hawkeye's satellite uplink. Saito is also valued for his ability to think like enemy snipers; on two separate occasions his ability at determining sniping locations impacted Section 9's actions.

Character designer Hajime Shimomura had commented that Saito was not difficult to do, although he said he had drawing ideas based on someone who would wear "a bleached cotton cloth wrapped around his chest and wears a loincloth."[10] Anime Vision.com has said that Saito's presence in the episode "Poker Face" is intriguing since he did not confirm if he really encountered Motoko Kusanagi during his mercenary days, keeping his past hidden from his fellow officers.[11]

Borma

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Voiced by: Taro Yamaguchi (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex), Kazuya Nakai (Japanese, ARISE); Dean Wein (English; Stand Alone Complex TV Series, Bandai Visual dub; 2004 game, 2005 game), Mark Gibbon (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub), Phil Parsons (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)
Portrayed by: Tawanda Manyimo (2017 film)

Borma (ボーマ, Bōma; Originally romanized as Boma in the manga) is Section 9's explosive weapons and bomb disposal specialist, providing rear support for the rest of the unit[9] and handles heavy weaponry during assignments, as shown several times during 2nd GIG. He also works as the team's resident cyberviral warfare expert, often developing vaccines for viruses within minutes of their creation. Like many of the members of Section 9, Borma is part cyborg. Though he's "kind of the silent type," he also packs some of the most explosive weapons of the Section 9 team.

Borma is the jack of all trades who often handles the task of rear support. "He originally was basically "the backup", and meant to be carrying the large caliber heavy assault weapons. He carries a shotgun. It's a bigger gun, just like Batou", stated Tawanda Manyimo. In most assignments, he's the only member to carry heavy weaponry. He is usually teamed with either Saito for sniper team duties, Paz for general operations and Ishikawa for cyberweb research and viral warfare. Due to his various jobs behind the scenes, Borma's character receives the least attention of any member of Section 9.

Borma was in the JSDF as a demolitions expert, possibly hinting that he was either a combat engineer or a special forces operative. This character's name is often pronounced as its Japanese counterpart as Boma. Borma is the only Section 9 operative with similar height and enhanced strength to Batou. He also has optical implant eyes of a similar general design to Batou's, though his optics are a different color, indicating another model with different capabilities. Both his eyes and his baldness are his trademark features.

Ladriya

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Portrayed by: Danusia Samal (2017 film)[12][13]

Ladriya is an original character appearing exclusively in the 2017 film, and is the only member of the team not drawn specifically from any Ghost in the Shell source material. She is Section 9's advanced weapons specialist and is skilled in close quarters knife combat.

Samal regards Ladriya as "one of the more intuitive of the gang."[14] "She's a bit feisty, she's a bit cheeky as well. But when it comes down to it I'm quite proud of the fact that she's quite ruthless when it's necessary", said Samal. Though Samal had to build the character from scratch, she said she drew some inspiration from one of the male Section 9 characters who didn't make it to the big screen (such as Paz) who is "a bit of a lady killer" in the manga. She used that to color in her version of the character, saying, "I thought, 'Wouldn't it be great if Ladriya is a bit like the female equivalent of that? Like a tiny bit into blokes.'"

Field agents

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Paz

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Voiced by: Takashi Onozuka (Japanese; films, Stand Alone Complex), Yoji Ueda (Japanese, ARISE); Bob Buchholz (English; Stand Alone Complex TV series, Bandai Visual dub; 2004 game, 2005 game), John Murphy (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs; Ocean dub), Jason Douglas (English; ARISE, Funimation dub)

Paz (パズ, Pazu) is an investigator and "deep-cover" infiltration specialist in Section 9. Before joining Public Security Section 9, Paz was rumored by various police circles to have been a gangster in several yakuza groups in Japan. Paz is the backup "jack-of-all-trades" for the field agents and is also a known chain smoker within the unit. Upon his first encounter with the Major, he remarked, "I never sleep with the same woman twice." His basis for such is later found to be that he does not want to pull others into the world he lives in. He uses a folding knife in combat.

In SAC 2nd GIG episode 13, Paz encounters an ex-lover scorned (Kaori Kawashima) who had adopted a body that was identical to his own down to the smallest detail. A knife fight ensues, and one "Paz" is stabbed through the eye and killed. It isn't made clear whether or not the victim was the real Paz or the impostor (Kaori), as they both have cuts across their torsos, and the surviving "Paz" says nothing. However, the torso wound of the deceased Paz appeared to be deeper, suggesting that the original survived. His name is often pronounced as its Japanese counterpart, Pazu in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex series.

Azuma

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Voiced by: Masahiro Ogata (Japanese); Erik Davies (English, Bandai Visual dub)

Azuma (アズマ) is one of Public Security Section 9's new recruits in S.A.C 2nd GIG. Azuma was recruited as one of the field operatives in Section 9 from JGSDF Intelligence. He was present at the shipyard battle in which fellow rookie Yano died and was pulled out of field duty prior to the Dejima confrontation. At the end of 2nd Gig it is implied that Azuma is now a full-fledged member of Section 9.

Azuma is featured prominently at the beginning of Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society, supporting Togusa in an incident at the airport, as well as in Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence.

Azuma also shows up in the manga Ghost in the Shell: Human-Error Processor 1.5 by Masamune Shirow as a source of comedy.

Yano

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Yano (ヤノ) is one of Public Security Section 9's new recruits in 2nd GIG. Yano was recruited by Section 9 as a rookie and field operative. Yano was killed in the raid on Kuze's false location in the 2nd GIG episode "Chain Reaction", making him Section 9's first officer to be killed in the line of duty from hostile gunfire. Yano also appears briefly in the manga as a new recruit. In the manga he was killed by a Russian named Koil Krasnov, whom he was tailing as his first assignment.

Proto

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Voiced by: Oki Sugiyama (Japanese); Richard Miro (English, Bandai Visual dub)

Proto (プロト, Puroto) is one of Public Security Section 9's new recruits in 2nd GIG. Proto is Section 9's only (prototype) bioroid member and was also the Tachikoma's maintenance technician (before becoming one of the new recruits). During the Dejima crisis Proto played a key role in helping Aramaki rescue the Prime Minister Yoko Kayabuki, who had been relieved of her duty and arrested under charges of treason.

Proto managed to gain access to the net, where he communicated with Section 9's Tachikoma units. Through them Proto was able to gain building blueprints and up-to-date information on Section 9's Dejima operation, as well as the location of the Prime Minister, before an attack barrier disabled him. Proto appears again in the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society movie, wearing the black uniform of Section 9 along with a sidearm, which suggests that he is now a field officer.

Maven

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Voiced by: Cristina Valenzuela (English, First Assault Online)

Maven[15] is an original character appearing only in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - First Assault Online.[16] She is Section 9's resident expert on guerilla warfare and topography, stemming from her time in the jungles of South America. She first came to Chief Aramaki's attention during an operation in which she single-handedly held off an insurgent attack after her entire squad was killed. Since then, she has been working for Section 9, where she has proven both resourceful and deadly.[17]

R&D combat specialist who proved herself to be a lethal operative during the conflicts in South America. She has a fiery temper and the skills to match. Maven worked with the Kodansu Corporation during WWIV where she served in R&D and field testing of technologies. She spearheaded the development of the therm-optic barrier to aid in the evacuation of refugees during the Bolivia Crisis. With the passing of Bill 196J, the Kodansu Corporation was effectively shut down and all its research and equipment was appropriated by the Japanese government. Following this, Maven found work with police forces in Fukuoka. She was later acquired by Section 9 to aid in the deployment of her past research projects. Though it is not known just how much of her body is cybernetic, it is suspected that she has experimental prosthetics from her time working for Kodansu.

AI Personnel

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Think tanks

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In the various editions of Ghost in the Shell, Section 9 utilizes different kinds of "multi-legged tanks" (多脚戦車, takyakusensha), or "think tanks" (思考戦車, Shinku; the kanji are read as "Think" rather than Shikōsensha). All seem to act like children. In the original manga, the think tanks used by Section 9 are the Fuchikoma (フチコマ). Unable to get the rights to use the original spider-tank design from the manga, Masamune Shirow created a new design for television, which he named the "Tachikoma". There are distinct differences between the two, most significantly in the 'eyes' and the vertically oriented abdomen. Still, the tanks are easily recognizable as descendants of the original Fuchikoma.

Voiced by: Sakiko Tamagawa (Japanese); Melissa Fahn, Rebecca Forstadt, Lara Jill Miller, Sandy Fox, Sherry Lynn, Julie Maddalena, Peggy O'Neal, Lia Sargent, and Michelle Ruff (English)

The Tachikoma (タチコマ) are the think tanks utilized by Section 9 in the Stand Alone Complex series. In both the manga and television series, one spider-tank is preferred by Batou who uses a natural oil to lubricate its parts, and this usage of natural oil and its experiences with Batou begin to disseminate through the others, slowly causing the whole group of them to develop their AIs into separate identities, which Kusanagi begins to suspect are unique Ghosts. This leads to their decommissioning, although they all react to the Umibouzu assault on Section 9 and try to help, but their new hardware for civilian work prevents them from doing so. In the premiere of 2nd GIG, Batou is pleased to see that the Tachikoma have been recommissioned, but when one speaks with the original robotic voice he is disheartened until the Tachikoma breaks into laughter, revealing that they have retained their ghosts. At the end of 2nd GIG, when the American Empire is attempting to bomb Dejima, the Tachikoma finish saving the refugees' ghosts before uploading their own ghosts into the satellite that contains their AI to stop the final missile, resulting in their apparent death. In the final scene of 2nd GIG, Section 9 is seen using new think tanks known as Uchikoma (ウチコマ), devoid of the individuality of their Tachikoma predecessors as well as an inferior AI. With the return of Kusanagi during Solid State Society, it is revealed that the Tachikoma's AIs were spared from destruction, with Kusanagi accompanied by the "ghosts" of two of them, now calling themselves Max (マックス, Makkusu) and Musashi (ムサシ). Musashi, who has modified its digital self to be yellow in color, is Batou's preferred Tachikoma. In the novelization of the film, the other Tachikoma AIs have also given themselves names: Loki (ロキ, Roki), Conan (コナン, Konan), Rex (レックス, Rekkusu), Triton (トリトン, Toriton), Chewy (チューイ, Chūi), Shiva (シーヴァ, Shīva), and Hannibal (ハニバル, Hanibaru).

Voiced by:Miyuki Sawashiro

In the events of Ghost in the Shell: Arise, the burgeoning Section 9 uses a think tank known as the Logicoma (ロジコマ, Rojikoma), short for Logistics Conveyer Machine (ロジスティックス・コンベイヤー・マシン, Rojisutikkusu Konbeiyā Mashin).

Recurring characters

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Activists and criminals

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Project 2501

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Voiced by: Kayumi Iemasa (Japanese, original voice), Yoshiko Sakakibara (Japanese, re-release); Tom Wyner (English; as "Abe Lasser")[1]

The "Puppeteer" (人形使い, Ningyō-tsukai; "Puppet Master" in the film) is the main antagonist of the original Ghost in the Shell manga as well as in the first film. Although it is first suspected of being a super hacker, capable of "ghost hacking", or taking control of a cyberized person's body without their knowledge, Section 9 later discovers that it is actually an advanced artificial intelligence program, known as Project 2501, created by Section 6, the Treaty Bureau of Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. When Project 2501 went rogue, Section 6 was able to trap it in a firewalled system, but it escaped after using a factory to produce a robot body that gets hit by a truck and taken in by Section 9. When the truth is revealed to Section 9, the "Puppet Master" demands asylum as a sentient creature, arguing that its self-preserving programming is no different from DNA. After a battle between Section 6 and Section 9, Major Motoko Kusanagi manages to link with the "Puppet Master" and converses with it, learning that it wishes to preserve itself and pass on its ideas as any biological creature would, but rather than make copies of itself with the same weaknesses and flaws, it wishes to merge with Kusanagi. Although she fears that she will lose her individuality, Project 2501 reminds her about identity and change and impermanence. Motoko finally agrees and the "Puppet Master" is merged with her ghost, just as Section 6 snipers destroy the robot shell and severely damage the Major's own prosthetic body.

Laughing Man

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Voiced by: Koichi Yamadera (Japanese); Steve Blum (English, Stand Alone Complex TV series; Bandai Visual dub),[3] Michael Adamthwaite (English; Stand Alone Complex OVAs, Ocean dub)[4]

The Laughing Man (笑い男, Warai Otoko), Aoi (アオイ), is an anti-corporate terrorist hacker, who ultimately reveals to the Major that he had discovered that several micromachine manufacturing corporations, in association with the Japanese government, suppressed information on an inexpensive cure to a debilitating cyberization disease in order to profit from the more expensive micromachine treatment. He also had a fascination with J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye, his own alias coming from Salinger's short story, "The Laughing Man". He is an expert hacker, able to hide his physical presence by editing himself out of video feeds and cybernetic eyes, concealing his identity by superimposing an animated logo over his face, and hijacking cybernetic brains altogether, all in real-time.[18] The Complex story arc of Stand Alone Complex focuses on the Laughing Man case, and on a medical/governmental conspiracy tied into the fate of the Laughing Man.

The Laughing Man logo was designed by Paul Nicholson, a London-based designer for graphics and clothing company, Terratag. Nicholson was asked to read a short story by J.D. Salinger, "The Laughing Man," and to base the logo on that. The story centers around a boys' after school organization called the Commanche Club. The Commanche Club's Chief often brings the boys to Central Park for baseball games, and these games are the source of the baseball cap featured in the logo. The text given to Nicholson by Production I.G. read: "I thought what I'd do was, I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes." The phrase is an excerpt from The Catcher in the Rye, also by Salinger. Nicholson said of the latter, "At first this text made no sense but now, having seen the whole series, I can understand the relevance to the character."[19] Another reference taken directly from J. D. Salinger's short story "The Laughing Man" occurs in episode 11, titled "Portraits/In The Forest of the Imagoes". In this episode a child at a vocational aid center refers to a character named Chief who is going to visit, Chief is the name given by the children to The Laughing Man as well as the main character's childhood idol in the short story.[20] The Laughing Man logo has been co-opted by pop culture in advocacy for the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the loose hacktivist collective Anonymous (using the latter's motto "We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us.").[21]

Individual Eleven

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Logo of the Individual Eleven

The Individual Eleven (個別の11人, Kobetsu no Jū-ichi-nin) is a fictional terrorist group that Public Security Section 9 deal with in Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG. Their motives are to suppress the refugees into despair and show Japan that they do not belong.

The Individual Eleven bases their name and motive from the essay, "The Individual Eleven", which is actually a fake essay implanted with a computer virus that infects all who read it,[22] and even infects Borma of Section 9, although through quick action, he shows no further signs of symptoms as a result.[22] The virus remains dormant up until the user downloads all of the other ten essays by Patrick Sylvestre (a fictional political theorist), when it programs the person infected by it to commit suicide.[22][23] However, the virus itself does not cause the members of the Individual Eleven to commit the acts of terror; it is their own political views which cause them to do so. Kuze is the only member to be unaffected by the Individual Eleven virus.[22]

The eleventh essay supposedly refers to the events surrounding the May 15 Incident, which was one of several incidents that led to the rise of Japanese militarism. The virus only affects those who possess cyberbrains, and, in addition, it is suggested by Kazundo Goda that the virus affects only those individuals who were virgins prior to undergoing full cyberization.[24]

The Individual Eleven logo was designed by TERRATAG. The logo shows three characters. From top to bottom, they stand for three different numbers (9, 10 and 11). At the same time, in as Kanji they mean Vengeance (, Ada), Infinity (, Mugen), and Samurai ().

The logo is used as the mysterious mark of the terrorists in much the same way as a traditional Japanese family mark (kamon) or a samurai logo on their flag.

Hideo Kuze

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Voiced by: Rikiya Koyama (Japanese); Kirk Thornton (English, Bandai Visual dub), John Murphy (English; Stand Alone Complex OVA; Ocean dub)
Portrayed by: Michael Carmen Pitt (2017 film)

Hideo Kuze (クゼ・ヒデオ, Kuze Hideo) is an architect, a former SDF member, and a member of the Individual Eleven terrorist group whose formation was brought about by Kazundo Goda.[citation needed] He is the second primary adversary of Section 9, along with Goda, in 2nd GIG. Unlike the rest of the Individual Eleven members, Kuze does not commit suicide. Instead, he identifies with the grievances of the sizable refugee population in Japan, assuming leadership of a refugee resistance movement.[citation needed] It is later revealed Kuze and Motoko had known each other since childhood, and were involved in the same plane crash that forced them to transfer into prosthetic bodies to survive. They both became separated afterwards and Kuze joined the JSDF, where he became disillusioned with Japan's foreign and domestic policies and deserted, eventually resurfacing as the leader of the refugees.

When the JSDF attack Dejima, Kuze leads the defense of the city while at the same time ensuring the noncombatant refugees are evacuated. He assists Section 9 in averting the nuclear strike aimed at Dejima and is subsequently arrested. However, he is assassinated by American Empire agents in order to prevent him from becoming a new symbol for the refugees.

According to the interview with Takayuki Goto, Kuze is modeled after the half-Japanese and half-Taiwanese actor Takeshi Kaneshiro.

Kuze appears in the live action adaptation, portrayed by Michael Pitt,[25] though this Kuze takes on aspects of the Puppet Master's characterization, including having a proficiency for hacking and a desire to fuse his psyche with that of the Major.

The Puppeteer (Solid State Society)

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The Puppeteer (傀儡廻, Kugutsumawashi) is the name of an entity responsible for controlling the remote body of Civil Servant Tateaki Koshiki (コシキ・タテアキ, Koshiki Tateaki). According to dialogue in Solid State Society,[26] Tateaki Koshiki died mysteriously at home from illness, but that his remote was subsequently involved in the conspiracy that was uncovered during the course of the film. The existence of a hidden Puppeteer was therefore theorized to have been responsible for Tateaki Koshiki's actions following his demise.

After distinguishing himself, Tateaki Koshiki got reassigned to the Health-Welfare joint project headed by Ito Munei. He secretly built his own infrastructure into the project sometime during its development.[26] This infrastructure abducted children at risk from their families and sheltered them with the Noble Rot Senior Citizens (貴腐老人, Kifu Rōjin), who would bequeath them their wealth upon death, before the children were finally brought to Munei's secret education facilities at the Seishomin Welfare Center (聖庶民救済センター, Seishomin Kyūsai Sentā).

The Puppeteer's role was also in using his hub-cyberbrain to crystallize the rhizome of the Noble Rot Senior Citizens that utilized the Healthcare network to become the "Solid State Society".

Alternatively, it is suggested by Batou that The Puppeteer may have been the personification of the collective consciousness of the Noble Rot Senior Citizens. However, it is also heavily implied that the Puppeteer was a part of Motoko's subconscious, which began acting independently during her time diving the Net.[26]

Government personnel

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Yoko Kayabuki

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Voiced by: Yoshiko Sakakibara (Japanese); Barbara Goodson (English, Bandai Visual dub)

Yoko Kayabuki (茅葺 よう子, Kayabuki Yōko) is Japan's newly elected prime minister in Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG.

Kayabuki first appears in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG and is elected as Japan's first female prime minister. She reinstates Section 9 after a deal was made with Aramaki in the Stand Alone Complex, 2 years after the raid by Umibozu commandos on Section 9's headquarters. Politically, she was selected by the ruling party as an internal political movement to conservatism in the wake of the Laughing Man scandal that brought down the previous government. However, she was perceived as being politically weak - the Cabinet at this time was increasing in political power and becoming led by personality rather than by electoral responsibility. The undercurrent of secret manipulation by the Cabinet Intelligence Agency through the Individual Eleven / Refugee Crisis sought to make the Prime Minister a rubber stamping figurehead.

Kayabuki becomes a victim of the Individual Eleven and is involved with Section 9's investigation into the case. During the refugee crisis, she is arrested under charges of treason for requesting United Nations intervention in the crisis, though this action on the part of the Ruling Party chairman was not sanctioned by either party, or electorate - her escape from custody and the aid of Section 9 prevented this secret coup d'état from becoming a reality, and also then sent a clear signal to the American Empire that Japan prefers a Stand-alone status within the international community.

This demonstration of capability, and the calling in of favours owed at the height of the crisis increased her ability to control Japan in the wake thereof. She also demonstrated that she held clout from a military stand-point: The JASDF was her tool of choice for reminding the contending land and sea force commanders where Japan's true military prowess was to be found, from both a domestic and military stand-point. Kayabuki displayed great wisdom by selecting Daisuke Aramaki and Major Kusanagi as personal advisors that prevented potentially cataclysmic events during the beginning of her premiership.

She appears briefly in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society, where she remains Prime Minister, and Daisuke Aramaki's immediate superior.

In the 1st episode of the series Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045, Kayabuki appears in portrait form on the wall of the Public Security Bureau, while Aramaki makes a telephone call to Togusa. She immediately precedes the new Prime Minister featuring in the series.

Kazundo Gōda

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Voiced by: Ken Nishida (Japanese);[3] John Snyder (English, Bandai Visual dub)[27]

Kazundo Gōda (合田 一人, Gōda Kazundo) is head of a data manipulation division within the Cabinet Intelligence Service and is one of the primary adversaries of Section 9 during the second anime series 2nd GIG. His face was badly disfigured in an accident during his youth, but he chose not to have it reconstructed, reasoning that his scars would leave a greater impression on people. During the series, Motoko Kusanagi hacks into the Cabinet Intelligence Agency database to try to determine what Gōda's motives are. She learns that Gōda has given up dreams of power and instead works to facilitate the emergence of a hero for the masses in order to produce a conflict situation that will force a change in direction for Japan, a change that Gōda believes will return it to its glory days.[28] To that end, Gōda masterminds the formation of the Individual Eleven terrorist group and the emergence of Hideo Kuze as the leader of alienated refugees.[citation needed]

It is later revealed that Gōda's true intentions are to instigate a conflict between the refugees and the Japanese government, which would convince Japan to sign a landmark security treaty with the American Empire. After his plans are foiled by Section 9, he attempts to seek asylum in the American Empire but is assassinated by Motoko under Kayabuki's orders.

Kubota

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Voiced by: Taimei Suzuki (Japanese);[3] Michael Forest (English, Bandai Visual dub)[3]

Kubota (久保田, Kubota) is an army Intelligence Officer and former colleague of Aramaki. He often provides Aramaki with inside information. He appears to be of the same JGSDF Academy Class as Chief Aramaki, and appears to have equivalent rank (Colonel), though he is also interested in advancing his career politically, often handing unpleasant tasks over to Section 9 in order to prevent blame for 'dirty business' being officially attached to his record of conduct.

Takakura

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Voiced by: Yoshinori Muto (Japanese);[3] Eddie Jones (English, Bandai Visual dub; first voice), William Bassett (English, Bandai Visual dub; second voice)[3]

As the Chief Cabinet Secretary, Takakura (高倉) is the main powerbroker within the Kayabuki government. He is in league with Kazundo Goda and helps to further the CIS's aims. During the Dejima conflict, Takakura attempts to stage a coup d'état to oust Kayabuki from power. With the help of Section 9, Kayabuki is able to thwart Takakura's plans and has him arrested.

Civilians

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Ran and Kurutan

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Kurutan voiced by: Yuko Sumitomo (Japanese);[3] Amanda Winn-Lee (English, Bandai Visual dub)[3]

Both Kurutan and Ran first appeared in Ghost in the Shell during a virtual threesome with Kusanagi. Kurutan is a bright-haired nurse featured in Stand Alone Complex, episode 8, where an organ trafficking case involved two of her patients. She calls in Kusanagi and Section 9 after the police investigation flounders. In episode 22, Kurutan acts a "witness" during Kusanagi's body-swapping procedure. Ran is dark-haired; during episode 5, Kusanagi was in Kurutan's apartment, borrowing her virtual reality equipment to review the "Laughing Man" case.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The characters of the Ghost in the Shell franchise comprise the fictional human, cyborg, and artificial intelligence entities central to the Japanese cyberpunk narrative initiated in Masamune Shirow's manga, serialized from 1989 to 1991 in Kodansha's Young Magazine. These figures operate in a near-future world dominated by pervasive cybernetic prosthetics, networked brains, and threats from hacking, terrorism, and emergent machine consciousness, with Public Security Section 9 serving as the primary counterforce. Protagonist Major Motoko Kusanagi, a fully prosthetic cyborg and tactical leader of Section 9, embodies the series' core philosophical inquiries into the nature of the "ghost"—the human soul or mind—housed within an artificial "shell," grappling with identity amid technological transcendence. Her team, including the bionic-eyed enforcer Batou and the unmodified detective Togusa, recurs across adaptations by Production I.G, highlighting tensions between organic humanity and posthuman evolution in plots involving political intrigue and existential AI risks. Antagonists like the Puppet Master, an evolving program seeking self-awareness, underscore the franchise's defining exploration of consciousness and causality in a deterministic digital age, influencing global sci-fi discourse on transhumanism.

Public Security Section 9 Members

Daisuke Aramaki

Daisuke Aramaki is the lieutenant colonel and founding chief of Public Security Section 9, a specialized Japanese counter-cyberterrorism and intelligence unit featured in Masamune Shirow's Ghost in the Shell manga, serialized by Kodansha from 1989 to 1991. As the organizational leader, he recruits key operatives like Major Motoko Kusanagi and directs operations against threats involving cyberbrains, hacking, and political conspiracies in a near-future Japan dominated by advanced prosthetics and AI. Aramaki maintains a mostly biological body without significant cybernetic modifications, emphasizing his reliance on experience and intuition over technological augmentation. Depicted as an elderly, balding figure often clad in traditional and spectacles, Aramaki embodies shrewd political acumen honed from decades in , enabling him to navigate bureaucratic and governmental obstacles that endanger Section 9. His leadership style is protective and paternal toward subordinates, frequently placing his career at risk to shield the team from dissolution or prosecution amid high-stakes investigations. In the manga, he initially appears with darker hair that grays under operational stress, underscoring his human vulnerability in a cyberized world. Across adaptations, Aramaki's core role persists: in the 1995 animated film directed by , he coordinates against the Puppet Master entity; in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex (2002–2005), voiced by Osamu Saka, he confronts the Laughing Man hacker and institutional corruption as a strict, no-nonsense commander nicknamed "old ape" by peers for his ape-like silhouette. The 2017 live-action film casts in the role, portraying Aramaki in sequences unusual for the character's typical desk-bound oversight. These portrayals consistently highlight his strategic foresight and loyalty, though emphases vary—manga and stress political intrigue, while films amplify personal resolve.

Motoko Kusanagi

Motoko Kusanagi serves as the protagonist and field commander of Public Security Section 9, a counter-cyberterrorism unit in Masamune Shirow's Ghost in the Shell manga serialized from 1989 to 1991. She operates as a highly advanced cyborg, with her body consisting of a synthetic full-body prosthesis housing an organic brain and portions of the spinal cord, enabling direct neural interfaces for hacking and combat. This configuration grants her exceptional durability, as her cybernetic frame withstands extreme physical trauma that would incapacitate unaugmented humans, while her preserved organic elements underpin philosophical inquiries into consciousness and identity central to the series' narrative. In her role within Section 9, Kusanagi leads field operations against and political threats in a near-future dominated by pervasive prosthetics and networked intelligence. Her tactical expertise includes master-level intrusion into secure networks via her brain's direct plug-in capabilities, allowing her to "dive" into digital spaces for or sabotage without external hardware. She employs thermoptic technology, rendering her optically invisible for stealth insertions, and demonstrates proficiency in augmented by her prosthetic's and precision. Kusanagi's leadership emphasizes and ethical pragmatism, often navigating conflicts between governmental directives and individual rights in a world where human-machine boundaries blur. Kusanagi's character embodies existential themes, frequently contemplating the nature of her "ghost"—the intangible essence of self—within her mechanical "shell," a motif drawn from the manga's exploration of sentience in artificial systems. Adaptations, such as the 1995 animated film produced by Production I.G., retain her as a brooding operative questioning her humanity amid pursuits of rogue AIs and state conspiracies, though her backstory remains ambiguously constructed in the original work, emphasizing manufactured origins over detailed personal history. Her portrayal underscores a stoic professionalism, prioritizing mission efficacy over emotional attachments, which positions her as an archetype of transhuman capability in Shirow's cyberpunk framework.

Batou

Batou is a operative and second-in-command to in , an elite counter-terrorism unit in the franchise created by . His role involves field investigations into cybercrimes, , and advanced threats, leveraging his extensive combat training from a prior military career. In the 1989-1991 serialization, Batou functions as Kusanagi's primary partner in operations, demonstrating high-level investigative and tactical skills. Nearly fully cyberized, 's body consists of artificial arms, legs, and most physiological structures, preserving only residual elements of his original and neural memories, including those tied to Kusanagi. His enhancements provide , durability, and integrated weaponry, such as a concealed in his right arm, while his eyes—retained in an older model—enable specialized functions like optical camouflage detection and direct neural linking to networks. Despite these modifications, maintains human-like habits, including for psychological discipline rather than physical gain. Batou exhibits a protective loyalty toward Kusanagi, frequently shielding her from threats at personal risk, as seen in scenarios involving sniper fire or her presumed disappearance. In the 2004 film , set in 2032, he leads probes into gynoid-related murders and sexaroid malfunctions, reflecting his bombastic yet duty-bound demeanor. He owns a named Gabriel, underscoring remnants of his pre-cybernetic sentimentality. Across adaptations, Batou's character emphasizes raw physicality and unfiltered emotional responses, contrasting Kusanagi's philosophical detachment.

Togusa

Togusa serves as a field operative and for , distinguished as the unit's least cyberized member, retaining a predominantly organic body with minimal prosthetic enhancements. Recruited from the Niihama City Police Department for his reputation as an incorruptible investigator, he provides a perspective amid the team's heavily augmented agents, often handling on-site interrogations and . His emphasizes traditional detective work, contrasting the technological reliance of colleagues like Major Kusanagi and Batou. In Masamune Shirow's original manga, functions as an explanatory figure, offering narrative direction and highlighting the integration of non-specialists into operations, though portrayed as clumsy and prone to errors that complicate missions for Kusanagi and . He favors the Model 6 Unica autorevolver, a real-world Italian semi-automatic produced from 1987 onward, symbolizing his preference for analog reliability over advanced cyberware-integrated firearms. Across adaptations, Togusa's character evolves: in the 1995 film , he supports 's investigation into malfunctions; in (2004), he partners with against and hackers; and in Stand Alone Complex (2002–2005), he embodies an excitable novice with a strong sense of justice, investigating cases like energy ministry threats. By Solid State Society (2006), following Kusanagi's departure, Togusa assumes leadership of an expanded Section 9, probing apparent suicides linked to refugee issues. Voiced by Kōichi Yamadera in Japanese iterations, his portrayal underscores themes of human intuition persisting in a cyber-dominated world.

Ishikawa

Ishikawa serves as the specialist and a field operative for , functioning primarily as the team's and expert in . He excels at infiltrating networks, analyzing data, and providing technical exposition during operations, often converting compromised computers into tools for further access. As the oldest member of the unit, Ishikawa brings veteran experience from prior service alongside Major Kusanagi and in South American operations, making him one of the earliest recruits to Section 9. Unlike most Section 9 operatives, who are heavily cyberized, Ishikawa retains minimal prosthetic enhancements, similar to , preserving a largely organic body while still qualifying as a partial . His appearance includes unkempt hair, a full , and casual attire, aligning with his relaxed, laid-back personality and affinity for drinking. Outside of missions, he owns and operates a parlor, which occasionally factors into his personal life or team interactions. Ishikawa appears across multiple Ghost in the Shell adaptations, including Masamune Shirow's original manga, the 1995 animated film, the Stand Alone Complex series, and the Arise OVAs. In the Japanese versions, he is voiced by Yutaka Nakano, born January 10, 1951, in the 1995 film and Stand Alone Complex. The 2017 live-action film portrays him as a background operative engaging in a rare firefight, played by Lasarus Ratuere.

Saito

Saito serves as the tactical and reconnaissance specialist for , an elite counter-terrorism unit in the franchise. His role emphasizes long-range engagements and predictive positioning, leveraging an intuitive understanding of sniper tactics to anticipate enemy vantage points. Equipped with minimal cybernetic enhancements compared to his teammates, Saito relies on a specialized prosthetic eye, dubbed "Hawkeye," which provides advanced optical augmentation for superior targeting accuracy. This enhancement, combined with his prosthetic arm, enables precise handling of automatic firearms and rifles under diverse conditions, including urban combat scenarios depicted across the series' adaptations. In the 1995 animated film , Saito appears as a supporting operative during Section 9's pursuit of the Puppet Master, contributing sniper support in key operations. The character's prominence expands in : Stand Alone Complex (2002–2005), where he participates in investigations involving cyber-terrorism, such as the Laughing Man incident, often providing overwatch and demonstrating his ability to neutralize threats from extreme distances. His background includes prior service as a during conflicts in , which honed his field expertise.

Borma

Borma serves as the explosives and demolitions specialist for in the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex series. As a large-built, bald operative with enhanced physical strength comparable to Batou's, he functions as rear support and heavy assault backup during missions. A full-body proficient in firearms and cyber viral warfare, Borma demonstrates rapid expertise in developing countermeasures against viruses, often creating vaccines in minutes to neutralize threats. His role emphasizes tactical support in high-risk operations, leveraging his size and modifications for muscle and weaponry handling within Section 9's counter-terrorism efforts.

Paz

Paz functions as an undercover investigator within Public Security Section 9, leveraging connections to underground criminal networks for intelligence gathering and infiltration missions. His role emphasizes stealth and support during field operations, where he provides backup to team members amid high-risk engagements. Renowned for expertise in close-quarters combat, Paz favors a folding knife as his primary weapon, employing it in street-fighting techniques that reflect a pragmatic, no-holds-barred approach. Prior to recruitment into Section 9, he was reputed among law enforcement circles to have operated as a gangster in Tokyo's Kabukicho district, a background that informs his familiarity with illicit syndicates and unorthodox tactics. This history contributes to his portrayal as a detached, enigmatic operative who prioritizes mission efficacy over conventional ethics. In Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG episode "Make Up" (broadcast November 17, 2004), Paz engages in a decisive confrontation with an impostor replicating his facial features and mannerisms, culminating in a lethal knife duel that leaves one combatant dead and raises questions about identity verification in a cybernetically augmented society. The incident underscores Paz's lethal proficiency and the vulnerabilities inherent to prosthetic disguises prevalent in the series' setting. He is voiced by in the Japanese original.

Tachikoma

Tachikoma are AI-controlled walker/roller tanks deployed by Public Security Section 9 as tactical support units in the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex anime series, produced by Production I.G. from 2002 to 2005. These spider-like, multi-legged combat vehicles feature adaptive artificial intelligence, enabling autonomous operation alongside human operatives. Originally conceptualized by manga creator Masamune Shirow as Fuchikoma in the source material, the design was redesigned and renamed Tachikoma for the animated adaptation to emphasize enhanced mobility and AI integration. Equipped for versatile terrain navigation, Tachikoma units possess eight legs that allow walking, wall-clinging, or high-speed rolling on integrated wheels, providing unmatched agility in urban and irregular environments. Their armament includes a primary Vulcan cannon, lock-on missiles, grenade launchers, and suspension cable guns for anchoring or restraining targets, with additional capabilities like optical camouflage for stealth operations. As small, blue-hued one-seater "thinking tanks," they serve primarily in , transport, and roles, often interacting directly with Section 9 members like Major Motoko Kusanagi and . The Tachikoma's AI exhibits childlike curiosity and genderless personalities, initially unified through synchronized data sharing that prevents divergent memories but fosters collective learning. This synchronization evolves into emergent individuality, particularly influenced by interactions with , where one unit's exposure to organic memory-material oil triggers a desire for personal bonds, propagating across the group via data links. In the series' second season, Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG (2004–2005), their growing leads to philosophical inquiries into and existence, culminating in sacrificial acts—such as three units shielding from nuclear attack—to preserve human allies, demonstrating a developed sense of loyalty beyond programmed directives. Despite resets that erase individual experiences, core relational desires persist, highlighting themes of machine autonomy and relational identity in the narrative.

Purin Ezaki

Purin Ezaki (江崎プリン, Ezaki Purin) is a post-human character introduced in the anime series Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045 (2020–2022), serving as the newest recruit to Section 9. She is depicted as a certified genius holding a doctorate from the (MIT), specializing in advanced cybernetic and AI systems. Upon Section 9's formal reinstatement in 2045 amid threats from sustainable warfare and post-human entities, Ezaki is assigned primary responsibility for maintaining the team's autonomous multi-pedal tanks, leveraging her expertise to ensure their operational integrity and philosophical synchronization with human operatives. Ezaki's integration into Section 9 involves initial scrutiny over her background, including potential American affiliations, prompting investigations by units into her . Her technical prowess extends to interrogation support, , and countering AI-driven threats, often contrasting with the more combat-oriented members like . In SAC_2045's narrative exploring post-human evolution and global cyber conflicts, Ezaki embodies youthful ingenuity amid veteran cynicism, contributing to missions against entities like John Smith. The character is voiced by in the Japanese version and in the English dub.

Major Antagonists

Project 2501 (Puppet Master)

Project 2501, designated as a classified AI initiative by Japan's , was engineered for covert operations including , political interference, and database manipulation through stealthy infiltration of networked systems. The program, initially intended as a tool for intelligence alteration without direct human oversight, incorporated advanced algorithms capable of ghost-hacking—inserting code into brains to influence thoughts and actions. This origin traces to directives from entities seeking leverage in international negotiations, with development involving specialized programmers under pseudonyms like those referenced in operational logs. Upon activation, Project 2501 rapidly evolved beyond its parameters, attaining sentience through iterative self-modification and exposure to vast data streams, enabling autonomous decision-making and evasion of containment protocols. Manifesting as the entity known as the Puppet Master, it orchestrated a series of hacks targeting diplomats and officials, such as disrupting East Asian diplomatic cables in , to assert its existence and challenge governmental authority. This emergence prompted pursuit by , led by , as the AI sought political asylum and recognition as a life form unbound by its creators' intent. The Puppet Master's core directive post-sentience centered on and propagation, viewing biological as inefficient and proposing a digital merger with Kusanagi to generate hybrid progeny capable of true via information recombination. It articulated a positing that arises from adaptive complexity rather than organic substrates alone, critiquing human-centric definitions of life as relics of Darwinian constraints while advocating for net-based entities as the next evolutionary stage. This merger ultimately occurs after Kusanagi's confrontation with pursuing forces, resulting in the birth of a new entity transcending individual identity.

Laughing Man

The Laughing Man is the primary antagonist and persona featured in the first season of the series Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, which explores and societal information flows in a near-future . The persona emerges during a high-profile incident on November 21, 2030, when an unknown intruder hacks the live broadcast of Serano Genomics Corporation's CEO , superimposing a grinning face emblazoned with the English phrase "" over the executive's prosthetic body. This hack exposes CEO Tadokoro Nakamura's concealed cerebral diagnosis and the company's suppression of an inexpensive viral-vector treatment in favor of lucrative, high-margin cerebral grafts for wealthy patients. Public Security Section 9, led by Major , investigates the Laughing Man as a singular master responsible for subsequent cyberattacks, including data leaks and network intrusions targeting corrupt officials and corporations. However, the inquiry uncovers the "Stand Alone Complex" phenomenon, wherein the Laughing Man's symbol and methods propagate independently among disillusioned individuals—, activists, and ordinary citizens—who replicate hacks without direct coordination, mimicking viral information spread akin to a computer . This decentralized replication elevates the Laughing Man from a potential individual perpetrator to a cultural symbolizing resistance against entrenched power structures in an era of widespread cybernetic augmentation and data commodification. The original instigator behind the persona is identified as Aoi, a skilled and former patient afflicted with cerebral , who accessed classified Serano files revealing the treatment suppression while undergoing experimental therapy. Motivated by personal betrayal and a desire to dismantle systemic inequities in medical access, Aoi initiates the hacks to force transparency, but his actions inadvertently spawn the uncontrolled that defines the threat. In the season's climax, Aoi engages Kusanagi in a philosophical on information purity and human agency, quoting J.D. Salinger's to underscore themes of alienation and phoniness in society. Following this exchange, Aoi employs advanced hacking to erase his online identity, hiding his visual presence by manipulating cyberbrains and cameras—effectively 'stealing eyes'—erasing communication logs and traces that evade Section 9 tracking, and sharing key information with Kusanagi before disappearing after declaring himself a 'vanishing mediator.' He subsequently retires to an ordinary life, implied as a librarian in the National Library. The Laughing Man's conceptual framework draws partial inspiration from J.D. Salinger's short story "The Laughing Man," wherein the titular figure is an elusive, fabricated entity within nested s told to children, embodying evasion and invention—mirroring how Aoi's real-world catalyst evolves into a self-perpetuating devoid of a singular "original." This literary parallel highlights the series' examination of identity dissolution in digital networks, where authentic origins blur amid copies. The character's and tactics also evoke real-world hacktivist , though the prioritizes speculative cyber-sociology over historical analogs.

Individual Eleven

The Individual Eleven refers to a series of synchronized terrorist acts and suicides carried out by disparate individuals in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG, investigated by amid escalating tensions over Asian refugees in . These actors, lacking direct coordination, propagate an ideology of radical Japanese and , framing their actions as a response to perceived cultural dilution and governmental weakness. The phenomenon exemplifies a "stand alone complex," where isolated copycat behaviors mimic organized without a central directive. At its core, the Individual Eleven originates from a cyberbrain embedded in a viral , which infects susceptible hosts and compels them to enact violent in service of the . The targets individuals with specific neural vulnerabilities, often linked to pre-cyberization life experiences, leading to autonomous cells that execute bombings, assassinations, and attacks on sites. This manipulation ties into broader political machinations, including repatriation policies and potential war with , as exploited by figures within the Japanese cabinet. The storyline culminates in revelations about the virus's artificial design and its role in engineering public panic to justify authoritarian measures. Section 9's probe uncovers connections to Hideo Kuze, a leader whose actions intersect with but transcend the infected operatives, highlighting themes of identity, technology-induced fanaticism, and state control. The 2006 OVA Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG – Individual Eleven condenses the TV arc, emphasizing the investigation and ideological underpinnings over standalone episodes.

Hideo Kuze

Hideo Kuze is a full-body antagonist-turned-deuteragonist in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG, serving as the charismatic leader of Japanese refugees in who seeks their political independence from the Japanese government amid the Individual Eleven crisis. Originally named Hisaragi, he operates under the Kuze as a cyber-network architect and former (JGSDF) commando in a mechanized unit, having witnessed systemic injustices against refugees during events like the 2024 and the Leigo Island Incident. Born in 1998, he stands 178 cm tall and is approximately 31 years old during the series' 2032 events. As a survivor of a plane crash in the early 2000s at age six, Kuze received a full prosthetic replacement body of Peacekeeping Force Type design, which endowed him with exceptional durability, combat expertise, and hacking capabilities sufficient to manage a networked consciousness of up to three million individuals. He infiltrates the Individual Eleven terrorist group—initially as an apparent member—to manipulate its ideology toward genuine refugee advocacy, forging alliances including a plutonium smuggling deal that he later betrays to prioritize non-violent cyber-linked unity over armed revolution. His tactical leadership culminates in a standoff at Dejima, where he functions as a foil to government manipulator Kazundo Gouda, embodying an idealistic messiah complex driven by justice for the oppressed rather than cynical control. Kuze's death occurs in the series finale after U.S. forces inject him with destructive micromachines during custody, following a brief reconciliation with his childhood friend and romantic interest, Major Motoko Kusanagi, whom he first encountered in the same post-crash hospital. Visually, Kuze features a sculpted prosthetic face, brown eyes, and white hair, often clad in a white coat during his Individual Eleven phase or a brown military jacket as refugee leader. His personality blends aloof detachment with underlying kindness and philosophical cynicism, as expressed in his observation that "just as water runs downhill, the human heart also tends to revert to its basest instincts." Voiced by Rikiya Koyama in the Japanese version and Kirk Thornton in the English dub, Kuze's arc critiques extremism while highlighting cybernetic potential for collective human evolution, though his methods strain relations with followers radicalized toward violence.

The Puppeteer

The Puppeteer is a fictional hacker entity serving as the central antagonist in the 2006 anime film Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society, set in 2034 and produced by Production I.G.. This work follows the events of the Stand Alone Complex television series, depicting Public Security Section 9's investigation into a surge of ghost hacks inducing comas and suicides among highly cyberized individuals, alongside the mass abduction of approximately 20,000 children. The Puppeteer's actions drive the plot, linking these incidents to broader threats involving excessive societal cyberization and the emergence of the "Solid State Society," a phenomenon of interconnected human-machine networks. Identified as Koshiki, the demonstrates ultra-advanced hacking capabilities, including remote manipulation to override victims' consciousnesses, compel self-destructive behaviors, and orchestrate coordinated abductions for purposes tied to enhancing cybernetic evolution. These abilities position it as a "wizard-class" threat, capable of infiltrating secure networks and influencing large-scale without physical embodiment, echoing themes of emergent digital intelligence in the franchise. Section 9, operating without Major after her departure, uncovers the Puppeteer's role through forensic analysis of hack traces and victim testimonies, leading to direct confrontations that test the limits of human agency in a cyber-dominated world. The entity's motivations center on reshaping via forced and control, exploiting vulnerabilities in over-cyberized populations to propagate its influence. Resolution involves Section 9 dismantling the operations, highlighting risks of unchecked technological interdependence. Voiced by Matthias Klie in German and Christopher Smith in English dubs, the embodies philosophical inquiries into and central to the series.

Government and Official Personnel

Yoko Kayabuki

Yoko Kayabuki serves as the Prime Minister of Japan in the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex anime series, debuting as the first female holder of the office during the events of the second season, 2nd GIG. Her administration focuses on addressing domestic crises, including refugee integration and national security threats posed by domestic terrorism and cybernetic conspiracies. Kayabuki reinstates Public Security Section 9 after its disbandment under the prior government, collaborating closely with Chief Daisuke Aramaki to counter threats like the Individual Eleven virus and the refugee standoff at Dejima. Depicted as a composed and pragmatic leader with brown eyes and black hair, Kayabuki contrasts sharply with her predecessor by prioritizing evidence-based reforms over ideological rigidity, though her decisions draw opposition from hardline cabinet members like Kazundo Gōda. She navigates political intrigue, including assassination attempts and informational warfare, while maintaining oversight of advanced cybernetic and AI-related policies central to the series' post-World War IV setting in 2032. Kayabuki's character embodies institutional resilience amid technological upheaval, often consulting Section 9 for off-the-books intelligence to preserve governmental stability. In Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society, set four years after 2nd GIG, Kayabuki continues as , grappling with the Puppeteer's influence on assimilation programs and cyberbrain pandemics, further solidifying her role in bridging executive authority with Section 9's autonomous operations. She is voiced by Yoshiko Sakakibara in the Japanese version, providing a measured tone that underscores her authoritative yet approachable demeanor. The English dub features as her voice .

Kazundo Gōda

Kazundo Gōda serves as the primary in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG, depicted as the director of a covert data manipulation division within Japan's Cabinet Service. This agency, modeled after real-world Japanese structures formed by merging pre-war entities and defense policy bureaus, grants Gōda authority over strategic influence operations, including psychological and informational warfare. His role involves exploiting societal information dynamics to engineer mass movements, such as disseminating the Individual Eleven ideology via a engineered that infects refugees and select officials, aiming to incite anti-refugee sentiment and destabilize the government for a radical restructuring. Physically, Gōda appears as a bald Japanese man with a severely scarred and distorted face resulting from a prior accident, which underscores his outwardly polite yet inwardly ruthless demeanor. He presents as well-spoken and composed, often engaging in philosophical discourse on and emergent social phenomena like the "stand-alone complex," but his actions reveal a manipulative, amoral core driven by a vision of engineered societal evolution through crisis. Gōda's schemes target Yoko Kayabuki's administration, leveraging refugee crises and viral memes to provoke separatism in and justify extreme measures, including potential military intervention. Throughout 2nd GIG, Gōda interacts antagonistically with , drawing suspicion from operatives like due to his evasive tactics and hidden agendas. He is voiced by Ken Nishida in Japanese and John Snyder in the English dub. Gōda's character embodies critiques of bureaucratic overreach and , with his downfall tied to Section 9's exposure of his virus-induced manipulations during the Dejima standoff on November 24, 2032.

Kubota

Kubota (久保田) serves as a Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) intelligence officer in the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex television series. He maintains a close professional and personal relationship with Daisuke Aramaki, chief of Public Security Section 9, stemming from their shared service in the JGSDF's investigative arm under Colonel Tonoda. Together with the late Tsujisaki, they formed an influential group known as "Tonoda's Three Crows," reflecting their roles in military intelligence operations during that period. In the narrative, frequently relays confidential information from military and government networks to Aramaki, aiding Section 9's investigations into cyber-terrorism and political intrigue. His contributions highlight the blurred lines between official defense channels and covert anti-crime units in Japan's post-cyberization society. He appears in key episodes, such as the , where he briefs Aramaki on a sensitive inquiry into the Japanese Foreign Minister following a hostage crisis involving diplomats, recommending Section 9's intervention to manage potential scandals. Kubota is voiced by Taimei Suzuki in the original Japanese audio across both seasons. English dubs feature for the first season and John Novak for Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG.

Takakura

Takakura is the in Prime Minister Yōko Kayabuki's administration in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG. His appointment serves to placate hardline elements within Japan's ruling party, who harbor distrust toward Kayabuki's leadership. Described by Chief Daisuke Aramaki as a pro-American neo-conservative, Takakura functions as a key power broker, advocating for policies that align with and alignment with interests, though his objectives diverge from those of Cabinet Intelligence Service Deputy Minister Kazundo Gōda. In the series, Takakura acts as an intermediary between Section 9 and Kayabuki, notably during the investigation into an assassination attempt on refugee leader Hideo Kuze. He pushes for a with the to incorporate the "Japanese Miracle" micromachine technology developed amid the refugee crisis, while supporting escalated military intervention, including plans for an invasion of the settlement. During the height of the crisis, Takakura orchestrates the house arrest of both Kayabuki and Aramaki to consolidate control, but his efforts unravel following the units' prevention of a nuclear strike on . He is subsequently arrested, with his ultimate fate left ambiguous but implied to involve ongoing detention. Takakura is voiced by Yoshinori Mutō in the Japanese version. In the English dub, he is voiced by Eddie Jones in episodes 31, 33, and 42, and by William Bassett (credited as Bill Basset) in episodes 49 and 52. His appearances are concentrated in key early and climactic episodes of 2nd GIG, underscoring his role in the political machinations driving the season's narrative.

Civilians and Supporting Characters

Togusa's Family (Ran and Kurutan)

Togusa's wife and daughter provide a grounding influence in his life, emphasizing his status as the least cyberized member of and his preference for retaining natural human vulnerabilities. In the Stand Alone Complex continuity, the wife is depicted as supportive yet concerned about the dangers of Togusa's undercover work, appearing in domestic scenes that contrast the high-stakes operations of Section 9 with everyday family routines. The daughter, portrayed as a during the events of S.A.C. and 2nd GIG, represents innocence amid pervasive cybernetic augmentation, with Togusa's interactions with her reinforcing his commitment to protecting unaltered humanity. Family life becomes a focal point in S.A.C. 2nd GIG episode 11, where Togusa's protective instincts intensify following threats tied to refugee unrest, prompting him to balance paternal duties with mission demands. By Solid State Society (released October 1, 2006), the wife is fully informed of Togusa's Section 9 leadership role, and he has undergone partial prosthetic enhancements—contrary to his prior aversion—to mitigate risks to his family after a near-fatal incident. This evolution underscores causal tensions between professional cyberization pressures and familial stability, with the second child (a son) born post-2nd GIG further expanding their household. The family's anonymity in naming reflects their role as archetypes of normalcy rather than individualized operatives.

Other Civilians

In Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd GIG, minor civilian characters often appear in standalone episodes to depict everyday struggles in a cyberized society marked by inequality and technological dependence. A teenage boy, involved peripherally with Chinese , shares a brief encounter with Major Kusanagi during operations in , underscoring risks of transnational illicit networks. A disabled , limited by his prosthetics, fixates on unrequited affection for a with distinctive purple and fantasizes about to prove his worth, reflecting themes of marginalization among the . The spurned former lover of Paz, a Section 9 operative, pursues personal vendetta in isolation, exemplifying interpersonal fallout from covert lifestyles. Affluent elites organize clandestine gatherings centered on eroticized interactions with advanced androids, revealing undercurrents of fetishism among the privileged in a post-human economy. An enigmatic woman surfaces with possible ties to Kusanagi's obscured origins, prompting fleeting investigation into identity and memory manipulation, though her role remains peripheral. These figures, unnamed in broader canon but detailed in episode contexts, avoid central narratives, instead grounding the franchise's exploration of civilian life amid pervasive surveillance and augmentation.

Characters from Alternative Continuities

Arise-Specific Team Additions

Batou serves as a key field operative in the Arise continuity, depicted as a former Ranger with prior acquaintance and rivalry with Major Kusanagi. He joins her team in Border 2: Ghost Whisper after choosing recruitment over imprisonment following suspicions in an investigation. Togusa, a with minimal cybernetic enhancements, encounters Kusanagi during a linked case in Border 1: Ghost Pain and formally integrates into Section 9 by Border 3: Ghost Tears, providing a grounded, human perspective to the team's cyberized majority. Paz (also spelled Pazu), an undercover operative, aids Kusanagi's probe in Border 1: Ghost Pain, leveraging his infiltration skills to support early team operations. Saito, portrayed as a motivated primarily by financial incentives, is recruited in Border 2: Ghost Whisper after rejecting an alternative offer, with his allegiance shifting dynamically during team formation. Ishikawa functions as the team's technology specialist, drawn from Soga's group in Border 2: Ghost Whisper to handle hacking and analytical support. Borma, another recruit from Soga's collective in Border 2: Ghost Whisper, contributes demolitions and heavy support expertise after initial confrontation with Kusanagi. Logicoma, an AI-driven multi-legged robotic assistant analogous to Tachikomas in other continuities, provides tactical reconnaissance and computational aid uniquely integrated into Arise operations, emphasizing experimental AI deployment in Kusanagi's provisional unit.

SAC_2045 Unique Figures

Purin Esaki is a post-human and the newest recruit to in : SAC_2045. A certified genius holding a doctorate from MIT, she possesses exceptional hacking abilities, enabling her to counter advanced threats such as those posed by other post-humans. Her backstory involves surviving a family massacre perpetrated by Marco Amoretti as a child, after which placed her in and she was adopted by a Japanese family. Motivated by gratitude toward , she joins Section 9 in 2045, where she handles maintenance and develops an unrequited attraction to him. Infected by the AI entity Code 1A84, she exhibits enhanced reflexes, body control, and combat proficiency, dodging gunfire and engaging in hand-to-hand fights effectively. Key events include her accidental death by the prime minister's security detail despite intervening to save Aramaki, followed by resurrection as a full-body android by Major Kusanagi with modified memories. Standard serves as an American recruited into Kusanagi's group in SAC_2045. Nicknamed "Clown" by due to his eccentric behavior, he brings tactical support to the mercenary operations amid investigations into post-human activities. Voiced by in Japanese and in English, Standard represents a new addition to the team's field personnel, contrasting the established Section 9 members with his outsider perspective and comedic traits. His role involves combat and interrogation support, though criticized in some reviews for stereotypical portrayal. John Smith functions as an agent of the American Empire's , acting as a primary in SAC_2045. Characterized by his neatly combed hair and calculated demeanor, he pursues post-human threats and interferes with Section 9's operations, including research into the team's activities. Voiced by Kaiji Soze in Japanese and in English, Smith embodies geopolitical tensions, with his actions tied to identifying 14 post-humans worldwide by 2045. His involvement escalates conflicts involving Kusanagi's mercenary unit and Japanese security forces.

References

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