K1-B0

Kiibo (キーボ Kībo) is a character featured in New Danganronpa V3: Everyone's New Semester of Killing.

He has the title of Ultimate Robot (超高校級の「ロボット」 chō kōkō kyū no "robotto"), owing to his robot body.

Appearance
Kiibo is a robot, having a fully mechanical body. Most of his body is made up of black metal resembling armored plating, and he does not wear clothes. He has two glowing spots on his chest, another two on his stomach, and two on his both wrists. His waist, which resembles a belt, has a glowing red spot on the each side of his front. He also has quite short stature.

While obviously synthetic, his voice and head resemble those of a normal human. Still, he has very pale skin and his straight, white hair appears unusually sharp for a human, including a very large ahoge sticking from the top. His blue eyes are also notably mechanical and it seems he can make them glow. There are thick black lines around and below his eyes.

Kiibo appears to have no neck, instead his "neck" consists of a large metallic collar. The collar appears to include a black screen with moving and glowing green text. He has headphone-shaped objects instead of ears, and they also include black screen and green text.

Personality
Kiibo tends to speak in a formal and polite manner. However, he becomes offended and angered if he is discriminated for being a robot. He also dislikes getting rusty.

Quotes

 * “I have memory functions, you know. I'll deal with your discrimination later. ”

Trivia

 * Kiibo's name is a pun on the Japanese word for hope (希望, kibō).
 * Kiibo, along with Maki Harukawa and Kaito Momota, was one of the first new characters revealed for New Danganronpa V3 in November 2015. However, their names and talents weren't revealed until ten months later in September 2016.
 * Kiibo was originally speculated as a possible protagonist before it was revealed to be Kaede Akamatsu.
 * Kiibo has the largest ahoge in the series.
 * His name is written "Ki-Bo" in the Japanese trailer. However, "Kiibo" is the correct spelling, as "-" is used in Japan to denote a repeated vowel.