I wanted to decorate it with her this year, but...Ahh, so you're looking for the hina dolls. A set of dolls representing the Imperial Court, put out on a tiered display as part of the aforementioned festival's celebration.My bad!!That is a prized photograph taken during tactical maneuvers in "Operation Hina Festival"!...now I can't remember where I put them......wuzzis?I'm looking for something!It's already March, and that means the Hina Festival!...agents who have overthrown countless evil organizations.Even saying that, to start looking now...ODAIRI-SAMA AWESOOOOOOOOOOOOOOME!Mission Impossibleba-bump ba-bumpIn Japan, they're commonly referred to as just "Odairi-sama".Oyakata-sama? Is there a reason you're throwing things around again...? In feudal Japan, "oyakata-sama" was used by samurai when directly addressing their liege lord. Its only modern usage refers to a sumo coach, but the characters in this series seem to make a habit of occasionally using archaic terms by virtue of being really quite old.Those circles show the location of "Team Odairi-sama"'s "Obina" and "Mebina"... "Odairi-sama" refers to two dolls of the royal couple at the top of a hina display. However, the term is often misinterpreted as an emperor doll.
"Obina" or "Ohina-sama", literally means "male hina doll", refers the Emperor doll, and "Mebina" or "Mebina-sama", literally means "female hina doll", refers the Empress doll.
A Portrait of Days Gone ByOW!!thumk...you really thought that would fool me?It was just after the war, I think... you broke them playing darts, but said, "Probably just as well, we never used the things anyhow."※Do not, under any circumstances, try this at home.