Some wrestlers are born under the spotlight, groomed in gleaming dojos and whispered about like folklore. Others claw their way up through the cracked tiles and cigarette burns of the undercard. Mirai Maiumi — born Mirai Ito — didn’t arrive at the ball with glass slippers. She showed up in boots that had kicked down better doors, fists that spoke in uppercuts, and a backstory built on gravel and unfinished business.
Before she was MIRAI, the two-time Cinderella winner who tore through Stardom like a thunderstorm with eyeliner, she was a half-forgotten rookie in Tokyo Joshi Pro. The kind of name you’d skip in a ten-woman tag just to find Maki Itoh on the card. A bee in “BeeStar.” A third or fourth name in a press release. But even back then, something simmered in her strikes — like she was hitting back against a life that owed her interest. She teamed with Suzume, with Neko, with Pom Harajuku — sweet girls with sparkle in their eyes. Mirai had fury.
And when that fury couldn’t pay the bills in TJPW, she packed up and walked straight into the buzzsaw.
Enter Stardom.
Not with confetti or a marketing package — she debuted as a damn silhouette. A masked silhouette, smashing bodies and egos with Thekla until Giulia finally called it official: these two hellraisers were Donna Del Mondo material. She stepped out of the shadows like a bar brawler stepping into opera, and suddenly the suits were watching.
But Mirai wasn’t meant for curtain calls. She was too blunt for DDM’s elegance. Too raw. Too carved-from-stone-to-hit-not-pose. She didn’t need a gimmick. She needed a fistfight. When Syuri opened the gates to God’s Eye — the shoot-style holy ground — Mirai walked in like she’d been baptized in fire.
And then, she won.
She didn’t just win — she conquered.
2022 Cinderella Tournament? Hers. 2023? Hers again. That made her only the second to do it twice. She wasn’t Cinderella. She was the steel-toed boot that kicked the fairy godmother in the teeth. No coach, no gown, just fury in motion. Mirai was a hurricane in the shape of a girl — a competitor who didn’t climb the Stardom ladder so much as she ripped the rungs off and built her own damn platform.
She won the Wonder of Stardom Championship by beating Tam Nakano, a wrestler made of feelings and dance sequences. Mirai beat her with something simpler — violence, technique, and that twitch in her jaw that says, “I’m not here for your dream sequence. I’m here to break your ribs.”
She held it until Dream Queendom 2023, where Saori Anou finally pinned the gas tank empty. And even then, Mirai didn’t drop the belt. She tossed it to Anou like a used napkin and walked out like someone who knows she’ll be back.
Let’s talk about the tag titles.
With Ami Sourei, she became one-half of “The New Eras.” They weren’t flashy. They didn’t do synchronized dances or sell merch with cartoon caricatures. They just hurt people. They beat 7Upp (Nanae Takahashi and Yuu), who looked like they’d been winning since before Mirai was born. They held the gold until Rose Gold (Mina Shirakawa and Mariah May) flash-pinned their way to Instagram fame.
Mirai shrugged. Titles were temporary. Pain was currency. She had plenty left in the vault.
And then came Marigold.
When Rossy Ogawa got ousted from Stardom, some called it a coup. Mirai called it a moving day. She followed the man with the vision to Dream Star Fighting Marigold — a name that sounded like a perfume and hit like a brass knuckle. Mirai was one of the first signings, and it fit. You don’t build a house without bricks, and Mirai’s the kind of brick that breaks hammers.
She teamed with Mai Sakurai to become the inaugural Twin Star Champions on July 30, 2024. Sakurai brought the lace, Mirai brought the warhammer. It wasn’t pretty, but it got the job done — and that’s been the story of Mirai’s entire career. She’s not here to be the face of a brand. She’s here to punch holes in it and wear its bones as armor.
She’s a wrestler in the purest, cruelest sense of the word.
Mirai doesn’t cut promos; she delivers statements in suplexes. She doesn’t need to cry on cue or play cosplay with idols. She’s got a grip like concrete, a spine like rebar, and the kind of eyes that make lesser talents forget their lines. When she strikes, you don’t hear applause — you hear air leaving lungs.
She isn’t Stardom’s favorite daughter, and Marigold hasn’t handed her the crown. But give it time. MIRAI doesn’t need the main event handed to her — she will headbutt her way into it.
And when she does?
No magical dress, no talking mice.
Just sweat, silence, and the thud of another wish fulfilled the hard way.
