Characters
Non-Player Characters designed for the HashimaXR experience
Populating a Lost World: The characters documented here were designed to inhabit the reconstructed Hashima Island, representing the diverse community that lived and worked on the island across different eras. Each character type was researched to ensure historical accuracy in appearance, behavior, dialogue, and social role.
The character designs span two primary eras: the pre-1930 period when female miners worked alongside men in the tunnels, and the circa-1970 period representing the island's final years as an active community. This temporal range allows the experience to address the changing nature of labor, gender roles, and daily life across Hashima's history.
The Player
Player CharacterThe Player
ProtagonistThe player assumes the role of a character transported through time on Hashima Island. Design decisions included options for gender and age selection, or leaving identity deliberately vague to allow broader player identification.
Design Questions:
- Should the player have a visible appearance for third-person screenshots?
- Should the player communicate via chatbot interface?
- Could a chatbot deliver content questions or survey instruments?
NPC Population Categories
The following social roles were identified for populating the HashimaXR environment:
Circa 1970 (Showa 45)
Final Operational PeriodMale Miner
The makkuro papa (coal-black father) represents the primary workforce of Hashima's final decades. These men worked three rotating shifts in the undersea mines, returning home covered in coal dust to families in the dense apartment blocks.
Old Miner
Veteran miners who survived decades in the dangerous undersea tunnels serve as repositories of memory and guides to the island's history. They share stories of earlier eras and the changing conditions of mining life.
Old Miner's Widow
Women who lost husbands to mining accidents or occupational disease, remaining on the island as part of the community. Their presence speaks to the human cost of coal extraction.
Blue-Collar Housewife
Wives of miners managed households in the cramped apartment spaces, often working part-time jobs and participating actively in community organizations like the Housewives' Association that organized festivals and bazaars.
White-Collar Housewife
Wives of office workers and managers, often living in slightly better accommodations and playing different social roles within the island's hierarchical community structure.
Clerical Worker
Office workers who managed the administrative functions of the mining operation, occupying a middle position in the island's social hierarchy between miners and management.
Public School Teacher
Teachers at the Hashima Elementary and Middle School served a vital role educating the island's children. They lived in dedicated housing (Building 13, "Hummingbird House") and were respected community members.
Day Laborer
Contract workers who lived in designated housing (such as Building 30 in its later years) and performed various support roles. They occupied a distinct social position from permanent Mitsubishi employees.
Grade School Girl
Children growing up on Hashima experienced a unique childhood—playing in corridors since there was no playground space, swimming in the ocean, and knowing every corner of the tiny island world.
Grade School Boy
Boys on Hashima played rooftop baseball, caught dragonflies (the only insects on the island), and roamed freely in a community where every adult knew every child.
Wizened Grandmother
Elderly women who had spent decades on the island, often arriving as young brides and raising multiple generations in the unique environment of Hashima.
Wizened Grandfather
Elderly men who remembered the island across its transformations, from wooden structures to concrete towers, from manual labor to mechanization.
Female Marketplace Hawker
Women who worked in Hashima's small marketplace, selling goods to residents in the Nanbu shopping district near Building 30.
Pre-1930
Early Industrial PeriodMale Miner (Pre-1930)
Early-era miners worked in more dangerous conditions before safety improvements, often using more primitive tools and facing higher accident rates.
Female Miner
Before regulations prohibited women from underground mining work, female miners worked alongside men in the tunnels. Their presence represents a largely forgotten chapter of Japanese mining history.
Female Coal Sorter
Women who sorted coal on the surface, separating grades of coal by hand. This backbreaking work was common at Japanese collieries and continued longer than underground female labor.
Named Characters
Specific Historical FiguresNakamura Sensei
A named teacher character designed to serve as a guide and narrative anchor for educational content delivery within the experience.