Fairy Tail Fanon Wiki

Important notice at this link!

READ MORE

Fairy Tail Fanon Wiki
Advertisement
MotherofPlaceholders

"I'm just a passing through fanfiction writer. Remember that!"

This article, Hatoe, is the sole property of The Z-Meister, and cannot be mentioned, used or even edited, without my permission.

"'"
— Hatoe

HatoeProfile
Hatoe
Kanji
ハトエ
Rōmaji
Hatoe
Characteristics
Status
Active
Race
Human
Gender Identity
Female
Age
19
Blood Type
A
Appearance
Hair Color
Black
Eye Color
Dark
Height
ft.
Weight
lbs.
Professional Status
Affiliation
Myriad Fang
Direwolf3 Direwolf (loosely)
Previous Affiliation
Occupation
Base of Operations
Personal Status
Sexuality
Unknown
Marital Status
Single
Allies
Faustamarius Quill
Powers & Equipment
Magic
Whiteout (White Magic) (unconfirmed)
Spiritual Art
Unnamed
Image Gallery
"'"
Zeon

Hatoe (ハトエ Hatoe?) is the assumed name of the main female protagonist of Fairy Tail: Horizon. A girl from Elentir, she arrives in Minstrel of Earth Land with no memories and only her companion, the Exceed Faustimarius Quill ("Faust" for short), by her side. She soon falls under the care of Direwolf and begins participating in Myriad Fang's missions.

Appearance[]

HatoeFull

Hatoe's full appearance and outfit.










Personality[]

Relationships[]

History[]

Synopsis[]

Intro arc[]

Magic, Spiritual Arts, and Abilities[]

Whiteout (白滅(ホワイトアウト) Howaitoauto): A variant of White Magic that seems to allow Hatoe to restrict or disperse magic and, at great cost of magical energy, use it herself, though she cannot control the users of the magic she targets. Roukan, studying her magical energy, seems to have noted that this very same magic was used on her herself, which may explain its lesser potency and effectiveness.


Unnamed Spiritual Art: In lieu of using Whiteout, Hatoe makes the most common use of a currently-unknown Spiritual Art, powered by manipulated Suspiria.

Equipment[]

Battles & Events[]

Trivia[]

  • Hatoe's name is derived from the actual Japanese name (鳩江 Hatoe?), which contains the character for "dove" or "pigeon". This duality was an intentional choice, playing off the two birds' contrasting colors and trying to evoke the idea of "one who was pure white, dyed black".

References[]

Navigation[]

Advertisement