Height: 5'6
Weight: 56 kilograms
Hair Color: As Black as the Black King
Eye Color: Topaz
Name: Haruka Fujiyama
Age: 16
History: Haruka Fujiyama was orphaned at a young age, not because of anything particularly depressing such as a car accident or a serial killer, but simply because her parents didn't have enough money to raise a child. Instead, they were forced to pass her on to a foster home, in which she was soon adopted by a rich philanthropist. She never hated her biological parents for that though. In Haruka's mind, they were always good people, who knew what sometimes, good things could only come through sacrifice, either by sacrificing themselves, or sacrificing others. And because they were good people, they chose to give up their own happiness in order to give her a better life.
She could accept that. What she could not accept was the system that categorized people depending on their fighting capabilities in a video game. Despite never showing it outright, forever playing the role of a grateful foster daughter who strived to excel in academics and sports, Haruka loathes the concept behind the Deep Ground Program. Logically, it makes no sense that combat capability is equal to intelligence and people-managing skills in the real world. How does having a high win-loss ratio mean that you're a more capable person in the real world than, say, someone who works hard but is a pacifist?
She harbors such feelings, but Haruka still knows the reality of such things. Money is power, and the Deep Ground Program, which ensures a good life as long as you play the game well, has gotten rather rich. Television broadcasts of matches between high-ranking players in the game constantly show up during primetime, while the international nature of the game has pretty much erased the concepts of racism and prejudice from younger generations. Violent confrontations have, mainly, been settled online, and scientific experimentation had improved by leaps and bounds in the new realm of a virtual reality capable of turning hypothetical situations into reality.
The child knew, at an early age, that she needed power. More than that, she knew how to get such power. Haruka needed to reach the level of a King, to have hundreds of players be WILLING to lose matches against her. She needed to amass an obscene amount of wins, and maintain no less than a 90% win ratio. She needed fame, reputation, and everything else.
And when she joined Deep Ground, when she reached the level of three and attained her unique skill, everything began to fall into place for Haruka.
At the age of 14, she amassed dozens of followers.
At the age of 15, she became a high-ranking member of the Ivory Masks.
And at the age of 16, she overthrew the previous White King, taking the throne for herself.
Of course, you can't make a hundred thousand friends without making a few enemies along the way, but that's a different story.
Personality: Despite how fearsome her 'legend' in Deep Ground is, Haruka Fujiyama, at her very core, is a naive, idealistic young lady who manages to smile despite how cynical and realistic her goals are. She's a level-headed person, one that gives off a very genuine atmosphere, but she's also a liar and an actor. Her actions often seem to be on a whim, her decisions ones that she makes at a moment's notice, but there is almost always an underlying reason for it. She probably just hasn't thought out what reason that would be. To some outsiders, she may appear to be a tyrannical King who mercilessly lowers the win ratios of her own Guild Members in order to improve herself, but Haruka shrugs that off quite easily. Those who stay in the Ivory Masks have signed away their own futures for the sake of empowering hers, and as a King, she has the duty to repay them in kind after she steps back into the real world.
Anyways, she had already disclosed her identity to every single person in the Deep Ground, so if she ever goes back on her promises...well, security doesn't protect against an army. In this case, many had likened her as the opposite of the Black King. It helps that, for whatever stupid kiddie reason, the Black King hates her.