Shiina: Momo
This makes her a dark mirror to characters like Sumireko Usami, who romanticizes Gensokyo from the Outside. Momo has no romanticism left. She has only resignation. Her quiet demeanor, her avoidance of conflict, and her tendency to blend into the background are not signs of weakness; they are symptoms of a person who has already lost one world and is desperately trying not to be noticed by the next one that might consume her. Momo’s most significant narrative function occurs in Cheating Detective Satori , where the titular detective, Satori Komeiji, can read minds. In a cast where nearly every character is an open book to Satori, Momo stands out as an anomaly—not because she has mental defenses, but because her mind is banal .
There is a profound courage in this. Every day, Momo walks into a room filled with beings like Suika Ibuki (an oni who could level a mountain) or Yuuma Toutetsu (a being of bottomless appetite) and hands them a bowl of noodles. She does not flinch. She does not run. She has internalized the Lotus Eaters theme: that coexistence is not about victory in battle but about the small, repeated acts of daily life. Momo Shiina
But there is a deep, unspoken tragedy to her. In Chapter 12 of Lotus Eaters , when confronted with an urban legend that manifests one’s deepest regrets, Momo sees a vision of her old apartment, her old loneliness, and the life she abandoned. She doesn't want to go back. That is the heartbreaking revelation. Gensokyo, a land where youkai might eat you, is preferable to the Outside World she knew. Her "normalcy" is not a choice but a survival mechanism. She has accepted the bizarre because the alternative—returning to a mundane existence that rejected her—is worse. This makes her a dark mirror to characters
And that is exactly why she is indispensable. In a franchise that often drowns in its own lore, power levels, and esoteric references, Momo Shiina is the . She reminds us that Gensokyo is, for the average person, a terrifying place. She reminds us that survival is not about winning but about enduring. And she embodies the quiet, uncelebrated truth of the Touhou universe: that the boundary between the real and the fantastic is maintained not by shrine maidens or sages, but by the ordinary, stubborn, and deeply human act of living one more day. Her quiet demeanor, her avoidance of conflict, and
Momo Shiina doesn’t want to be the hero. She wants to close the soba shop on time. And in Gensokyo, that might be the bravest thing of all.
Reimu and Marisa have lived with the supernatural for so long that their perception is warped. A youkai eating a human is a minor inconvenience; a new god appearing is a Tuesday. They lack a baseline for "normal." Momo Shiina, however, is a recent transplant to Gensokyo—a human from the Outside World who stumbled in or was brought in (the circumstances remain deliberately vague). She works an unglamorous job at a soba restaurant, worries about rent, and has no combat abilities whatsoever.