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Krone from The Promised Neverland
"Sister Krone helps run Grace Field House orphanage together with Isabella (that place where they raise human children as livestock). Not enough people are talking about what a racist caricature she is."
Do you like this character design?
Yes
No
It's Complicated
Let’s Talk About Sister Krone, The Promised Neverland, and the Flaws of Western Media Criticism
I’ve been watching the discourse surrounding Sister Krone from The Promised Neverland for a while now, and I am begging some of you to step out of your Western internet bubbles for five minutes and actually look at the narrative and artistic reality of this character.
The common takeaway on socials seems to be: "Krone has big lips, a broad nose, a muscular build, and aggressive expressions, therefore she is a racist caricature." Not only is this take completely superficial, but it actively relies on a massive double standard that denies the reality of actual diverse human features. Let’s break down why writing Krone off as a "stereotype" is not only wrong, but incredibly hypocritical.
1. The Erasure of Natural African Features
There is a deeply uncomfortable irony when Western fans demand that every dark-skinned character in anime have a tiny button nose, razor-thin lips, and a slender, Eurocentric facial structure to be considered "good representation."
Features like full lips, a broad nose, and a strong, muscular frame are real, natural, and beautiful physical traits possessed by millions of people globally. Posuka Demizu (the manga artist) didn’t just draw a white character and color them in dark; she drew a character with unmistakably distinct traits. Labeling these features as inherently "offensive," "ugly," or a "caricature" simply because they exist on an antagonist says a lot more about some peoples biases than the artist’s intent.
2. It’s a Horror Manga. Everyone’s Face Glitches.
People love to complain about Krone’s "aggressive" or "terrifying" facial distortions in the manga, completely ignoring the genre. The Promised Neverland is a psychological horror thriller. The art style relies heavily on gritty, distorted, and intensely exaggerated expressions to convey raw madness, terror, and desperation.
When Isabella is losing her mind, her face looks demonic. When Emma is terrified, her features stretch and warp, same with Ray. Krone is an antagonist hunting children in a horrific system—of course she is going to have intense, scary expressions. Treating Krone with kid gloves and refusing to let her have the same range of terrifying horror expressions as the lighter-skinned characters just because of her race would be the actual discrimination.
3. The Canary Double Standard
The hypocrisy becomes crystal clear when you compare Krone to a character like Canary from Hunter x Hunter.
Canary: Has a natural afro texture, full lips, and is literally an obedient servant/butler to a wealthy family. The fandom universally praises her as "amazing representation" because she fits a safe, cute, stoic anime aesthetic.
Krone: A fully grown, muscular woman who is loud, terrifying, and actively plotting to overthrow her oppressor to survive.
Critics are completely fine with dark-skinned characters only if they are polite, conventionally cute, and physically toned down. But the moment a character is allowed to be a physically imposing, unhinged horror villain with unapologetically prominent features, people panic.
4. American Hyper-Fixation vs. Global Identity
A lot of this discourse comes down to American and Western fans projecting their own specific domestic racial history onto Japanese media.
If you ask people from the African continent about their identity, they don't look at the world through a catch-all American "Blackness" lens. They identify by their countries and their specific cultures—they are Nigerian, Kenyan, Somali, Yoruba, Zulu, etc. In a majority-dark-skinned region, skin tone isn't the primary marker of who you are, and the hyper-vigilant obsession with "media representation" boxes is a very specific Western luxury. Forcing a Japanese creator (writing for a Japanese audience) to follow strict American Twitter rules on how to draw a dark-skinned character is just a weird form of cultural imperialism.
5. Her Writing is Phenomenal
To focus entirely on her "aggression" means you completely ignored her actual character arc. Krone is a genius playing a high-stakes psychological game of chess. She isn't fiercely independent because of a stereotype—she is a literal prisoner in a dystopian farm system doing whatever it takes to survive.
In the manga, her backstory completely humanizes her. We see her as a young girl before the system broke her, drawn beautifully with those exact same features. And in the end, her intelligence and her final actions—leaving the pen and the data for the kids—are what allowed them to escape. She is a tragic, complex anti-hero who literally saved the protagonists.
The Bottom Line
Posuka Demizu explicitly stated in a 2017 Shonen Jump interview that Krone was her absolute favorite character to draw because of how dynamic, expressive, and full of presence she is, not to mention the fact that there are other beautiful unique dark skinned characters such as Vincent, Aisha, Don, and Phil, who dont have such "exaggerated features".
Stop reducing complex, brilliant, and visually unique characters down to a surface-level checklist of Western political aesthetics. Krone isn't a caricature; she’s a masterclass in horror character design and a beautifully tragic human being. Let diverse features exist without calling them inherently bad.
Sister krone scares the living EVERYTHING out of me ☹
Hi! I've seen your Collector design and I honestly wanna eat it.
Is there any symbolism behind Collie's antlers or is it purely design choice?
Ahshdjdk thank youuuu 🥹
And yes they do!! All of their horns/antlers/etc. have some symbolic meaning
Edit: Tumblr absolutely destroyed the quality 🫠 click for something that's not a blurry mess of pixels
Who would you want to adopt as a pair if all of them became five years old again?
Emma and Don
Ray and Gilda
Norman and Anna
Phil and Jemima
Isabella and Leslie
Yuugo and Krone
Lucas and Violet
Mujika and Rossi
Nat and Gillian
Zazie and Ayshe
Nigel and Conny
No one from this list/nuance
Book challenge !
Book : Krone (Antoine Bordon)
Its a style challenge but with a book i got on Ulule and i liked it. Alot mosaïque style. A bit hard to do the same but it was so Nice so i wanted trie.