Personality
Kito approaches the world with a sharp, analytical mind, rarely rushing into decisions without first observing and dissecting every detail. Her natural inclination is to study, to understand, and to uncover the truth behind what she sees before she acts. Yet, her youth and the scars of her past sometimes betray that discipline — impulsive choices rising from moments of anger, fear, or longing.
Outwardly, she presents a calm, almost deadpan demeanor that makes her difficult to read. She often frames her words and actions in curiosity rather than overt expression, but there are times when her emotions break through, raw and unguarded. She clings to her mask of stoicism and to her thirst for vengeance, both shields against a galaxy that has taken much from her.
Beneath those defenses, however, lies something far more fragile: a lost child, carrying a deep need for belonging. For all her strength and determination, Kito's heart longs for a place where she is more than her anger, more than her trauma — where she might simply be accepted.
Biography
Kito was born the youngest child of a proud fire-shaping clan on Kro Var, renowned for their long line of warriors. Her family's legacy was one of strength and discipline, passed down through generations of shapers who kept their art pure by refusing to bend to outside powers. Her grandfather had been the staunchest defender of that tradition, resisting both Jedi and Sith alike to protect their independence. Under his guidance, the clan remained neutral, their fire untamed by outside doctrine.
But after his death, the clan's fortunes faltered. Her father, struggling to provide for their people, made quiet bargains with Sith agents. In exchange for food and coin, he gave them the services they demanded. Few knew the true cost of these dealings, and even fewer questioned them while their families were fed. Yet when he could no longer meet their demands, the Sith punished the entire village. They descended without mercy, burning homes to ash and cutting down all who resisted.
Kito returned from chasing a runaway farm animal to find her home engulfed in flames. Her clan was slaughtered, her family murdered one by one. Her father, broken and bloodied, was displayed as a warning to all Kro Var. The smoke and fire left her with nothing — no family, no people, no place to belong.
Alone and desperate, Kito leaned into the light, clinging to the Force as a radicalized anchor. She was taken in by an aging Ashlan Crusader, a zealot who taught her to harness the Force beyond her shaping. Though stern, he was merciful, insisting that even Sith could be redeemed through discipline, devotion, and worship of Ashla. Kito obeyed, but she could never accept his belief.
That doubt became truth when they faced a rogue Sith. Her master was disarmed, helpless before a killing blow. Without hesitation, Kito slipped behind the Sith and ended his life with a decisive strike. She expected praise for her bravery, but instead her act was condemned. Her master's enclave cast her out, demanding penance: redeem one hundred Sith before she would ever be welcomed back.
But no one had told her how redemption was to be measured. To Kito, the answer became clear. Only death and rebirth could free a Sith from corruption. She began to see darksiders as less than human, twisted shells unworthy of pity. In her mind, the blade offered the only path to redemption.
Thus, Kito walks a narrow line between light and dark, driven by duty, vengeance, and her own warped understanding of justice. She wears her mask and feeds her thirst for retribution, but beneath it all lingers the truth: she is still the lost child who came home to fire and ruin, searching for belonging in a galaxy that took everything from her.