Name | |
---|---|
English | Fei Chang |
Japanese | 張菲(フェイ・チャン) |
Romanji | Chan Fei (Fei Chan) |
Aliases | Agent 009-6 |
Characteristics | |
Race | Cyborg |
Gender | Female |
Professional Status | |
Affiliation | Nine Number Group Zero Zero Organization |
Occupation | Secret Agent |
Appearances | |
Manga debut | N/A |
Anime debut | Episode 8 - Calendar of the Past |
Voice Actors | |
Japanese | N/A |
English | N/A |
Spanish | N/A |
Portuguese | N/A |
Chang Fei (Fei Chang in Western order), known as 009-6, is a minor character in 009-1. She is part of the Nine Number Group, and exclusive to the anime adaptation. She is modeled after Chang Changku/006 from Cyborg 009.
Despite never majorly featuring in the series itself, she was profiled in a booklet that came with the sixth DVD release, which briefly noted her origin and powers.
Her specialty is her built-in flamethrower guns in both breasts that emit flames hot enough to melt steel. She is also able to detect the presence of poisons in food, due to her keen sense of taste.
Appearance[]
Fei has dark violet hair, styled into a pair of braids tied off with white ribbons. Her eyes have no visible white sclerae, and are a sparkly black.
In the flashback in episode 8, she is depicted wearing the blue Nine Number jumpsuit and a white scarf. In the original TV broadcast, her jumpsuit was yellow and the scarf was orange. She also had blonde hair, which was corrected for the DVD.
History[]
While the circumstances that lead to Fei joining the organization are unknown, she is most notably shown on patrol with Mia (009-7) in episode 12.
She is noted to be a chef, although rather terrible at her own cooking despite the fact that she herself has excellent taste in food as a gourmet.
Anime Appearances[]
Fei appears in two brief, non-speaking cameos throughout the series, first in episode 8 and then in episode 12.
Notes[]
- As with 006, her surname could more accurately be "Zhang" in the Pinyin alphabet, while "Chang" would be based from the Wade-Giles reading. There are other alternative readings of the name based upon different forms of Romanization of Chinese (eg: Cheung in the Cantonese dialect used in Hong Kong).