Daemon

is a member of Kara.

Background
Daemon and his sister were equipped with Shinobi-Ware by Amado in his hopes of bringing down Isshiki Ōtsutsuki's host Jigen. After learning that Daemon and his sister are among the cyborgs with the capabilities to defeat him, Isshiki ordered their destruction. Boro, who was captivated by Ada, had secretly hid the siblings and the other cyborgs away at one of his hidden establishments.

Personality
Daemon is a very energetic and mischievous child. He enjoys playing with others and is fiercely protective of his sister. Once engaging in battle, he is very sadistic and remorseless.

Appearance
Daemon is a young boy with short, dark hair that has a light-coloured streak in it. He wears a dark jacket over a light-colored shirt, dark shorts tied with a belt and dark sandals.

Abilities
As with most members in Kara, Daemon has been modified with Scientific Ninja Tools by Amado. While the true depths of his power are unknown, Amado has noted that his combat abilities exceed Jigen's. He is shown to rather fast and stealthy, able to instantly sneak out of his pod and catch Code off-guard. He also has advanced taijutsu skill, able to break a grown man's neck with a single kick.

Daemon's signature ability is to instantly turn an opponent's attack on him against them. Ada claims that the mere mental image of the killing scene is enough to trigger a reflection, which scales with killing intent. She considers Daemon the only non-Ōtsutsuki capable of killing her.

Post-Kawaki Arc
After Ada had awoken and formed a partnership with Code, she ordered Bug to awaken Daemon. Daemon quickly jumped out of his stasis pod to ride Code's back, questioning if he is his sister's "new man". He quickly calmed down when Ada assured him that Code was only a new friend and not her type of man. When Boro's guards learned of Code's intrusion, they attacked the cyborgs, only for Daemon to use his ability to reflect their attacks back them.

Trivia

 * Daemon is a program that runs continuously and exists for the purpose of handling periodic service requests that a computer system expects to receive.