Hazuki never asked for the crown, the spotlight, or the gold-plated promises of wrestling sainthood. She just showed up, fists clenched and eyes burning, like a girl who ran out of dreams and started swinging at ghosts instead. In a world where most wrestlers march in like debutantes with Instagram filters and smile-plastered merchandise, Hazuki stormed in like a Bukowski poem wrapped in barbed wire—bruised, beautiful, and just a little unhinged.
Born Reo Hazuki in September 1997, she was Stardom’s punk rock siren before she was even old enough to legally drink the regret away. Debuting in 2014, she was barely out of high school and already dancing on the razor’s edge. Wrestling wasn’t a fairy tale to her—it was a battleground where survival meant reinventing yourself just before the blade dropped.
She paid her dues early, suffering through beatings that would have sent most aspiring idols back to part-time café jobs and lukewarm dreams. But Hazuki wasn’t built for resignation. She had that kamikaze spirit in her chest—the kind of soul that wakes up craving violence and vindication in equal measure.
Her first real splash came under the Queen’s Quest banner in 2016, when she changed her name to HZK and joined Io Shirai and Momo Watanabe, forming a trio that made locker rooms nervous and title belts nervous-er. They didn’t just win—they wrecked. Hazuki won the Artist of Stardom Championship three times with that crew. Not bad for someone who once lost her debut match in under five minutes.
But Hazuki wasn’t content with being the third-best anything, even if it meant riding shotgun with legends. In 2018, she ditched the monarchy and defected to Oedo Tai, the cultish band of misfits that made anti-authority cool again. There, she dropped the vowels and the decorum, ditching HZK to become simply “Hazuki”—a name that sounded like the first syllable of a curse and the last sound before a slap.
She took the High Speed Championship from Mary Apache like she’d been owed it in a past life. For 208 days she held onto that belt like a grudge, defending it with the fury of someone who’d been overlooked just one too many times. But glory’s a fickle drunk. It kisses you one night and kicks you out the next. She lost the title in a triple threat she never should’ve been booked in, then vanished in a cloud of rumors, cigarettes, and unfinished business.
She “retired” in 2019. But retirements in wrestling are like breakups in bad romance novels—temporary, messy, and destined to be undone. Sure enough, she returned in 2021, sauntering back into Stardom with the swagger of a woman who realized the only thing she hated more than wrestling… was not wrestling.
Hazuki joined STARS, Mayu Iwatani’s stable of lovable weirdos and underdog dreamers. Some fans said she was a bad fit, like sticking a lit cigarette in a flower vase. But Hazuki wasn’t trying to fit—she was trying to burn the whole place down. Teaming with Koguma, she formed FWC, a tag team with enough chemistry to cook crack on a cold night. Together they captured the Goddesses of Stardom Championship—twice—and defended it like bouncers at a punk show.
She fought in steel cages, tag wars, and tournament nightmares. She bled through the Cinderella Tournament and bruised her way into 5 Star Grand Prixs, scoring 14 points in 2022, which is another way of saying: She left parts of herself in every ring and still came out grinning. Not because she enjoyed the pain, but because she’d learned how to weaponize it.
Hazuki was more than just another glitter-painted joshi grappler—she was Stardom’s necessary contradiction. Polished but vicious. A riot in a velvet dress. She wasn’t a heel, wasn’t a face—she was an exposed nerve in the body of a company that sometimes forgot how good wrestling could hurt.
In 2023, she squared off against Mercedes Moné (née Sasha Banks), in a three-way IWGP Women’s Championship match at Sakura Genesis. The mainstream spotlight hit her dead-on… and Hazuki, ever the rebel, didn’t blink. She didn’t win, but she proved something deeper than gold. She belonged on that stage. With the world watching, Hazuki gave the performance of a woman who’d been fighting for validation since the day she laced up her boots.
Then came 2025. Hazuki and Koguma—still wrecking shop as FWC—left STARS after Mayu Iwatani stepped away. There was no drama. Just evolution. They weren’t sidekicks anymore. They were headliners. Leaders of a movement that didn’t need glitter to gleam. They dubbed their future “FWC Worldwide,” and you could almost hear the sound of new empires being stitched together in back rooms and foreign locker rooms.
Hazuki’s legacy isn’t just in belts or matches or even in that Madison Square Garden moment with NJPW. It’s in the way she walked—like every match was her last confession. It’s in the way she slapped respect into opponents twice her size. It’s in how she made fans believe that being overlooked was just the start of something dangerous.
If wrestling were a bar, Hazuki would be that lone drinker in the corner booth—scars on her knuckles, a half-smile on her lips, and a reputation you don’t speak of unless you’ve got the guts to back it up. She’s the wrestler you think about long after the bell rings. The one who doesn’t just fight. She leaves a mark.
So here’s to Hazuki—Stardom’s smoky-eyed wildfire, still burning holes through the rulebook, one scream at a time. She may not be the company’s prettiest face or safest bet, but damn if she isn’t its most honest. And in a business of illusions, that makes her priceless.
