She walks to the ring with a lullaby in her voice and stars in her eyes. A train conductor’s cap perched neatly above her bangs, pastel gear glistening like candy under the house lights. Raku doesn’t look like a wrestler. She looks like the opening credits to a dream sequence.
And yet, beneath the sugary veneer, there’s steel.
You just have to watch long enough to see it.
Raku — real name undisclosed, past life quiet — debuted in 2018 for Tokyo Joshi Pro Wrestling, Japan’s factory of quirk and charm. But if you think she’s just cosplay in motion, think again. She’s part of a newer breed — the kind of wrestler who disarms you with innocence, then floors you with a clothesline she learned while humming a pop melody.
She is contradiction wrapped in glitter. And in this strange, sparkling underworld of joshi puroresu, contradiction is currency.
The Idol With the Elbow Drop
Raku’s journey didn’t begin in a dojo with drills and calloused palms. It began in a dance studio — as one of the successful candidates of the Up Up Girls (Pro Wrestling) audition project in 2017. A strange hybrid: idol first, wrestler second. Born not to strike but to sing.
She made her idol debut onstage at @JAM EXPO, swaying to the beat next to Hikari Noa, Miu Watanabe, and Hinano. Just a month later, they were all suiting up for training under the DDT umbrella.
On January 4, 2018, she debuted in the ring — teaming with Hikari Noa in a losing effort to Miu Watanabe and Pinano Pipipipi. The match itself was an afterthought on the card. But what mattered was that Raku walked out of it still smiling — and determined to keep getting better.
Bukowski once said, “What matters most is how well you walk through the fire.” Raku did it in knee socks and a bow.
Punches with Politeness
Her style? Unorthodox.
She doesn’t move like a powerhouse. She doesn’t fly like a daredevil. She doesn’t strike like a technician. Raku wrestles like she’s trying not to wake the neighbors.
And that’s the genius of it.
She lulls you with a “Good night!” elbow drop — a move so whimsical it borders on parody — then nearly knocks the wind out of you. Her offense is built on rhythm and surprise, like a lullaby that ends with a cymbal crash.
She lost her first singles match against Yuka Sakazaki in March 2018. She lost in the first round of the Tokyo Princess Cupin 2019, bowing to Maki Itoh, the queen of heartbreak turned headbutting icon.
But Raku never broke character.
Because her character isn’t a gimmick. It’s armor. It’s therapy. It’s resilience in ribbons.
DDT Detours and Dream Parades
Tokyo Joshi Pro shares blood with DDT — the absurdist circus that built itself on exploding dolls, fake ladders, and ironic genius. So naturally, Raku found herself moonlighting in DDT rings, teaming with comedians, idols, and chaos incarnate.
At DDT Tokyo Idol Festival 2018, she joined her Up Up Girls in a twelve-person tag match that was less wrestling and more fever dream. The kind of spectacle where you don’t remember who won, just that you smiled.
In 2019, she entered the Ironman Heavymetalweight Title scene — a championship so unstable it has been held by ladders, dogs, and invisible men. Raku didn’t win, but she didn’t have to. She existed in that space — a gentle gust in a hurricane.
She later appeared in Ultimate Party 2019, CyberFight Festivals, and other crossover chaos events. Her name never headlined the posters. But her presence was unmistakable.
Raku doesn’t scream for attention. She lingers.
A Festival Flower with Thorns
Raku isn’t a perennial champion. She’s not booked as a killer. But her moments — when they happen — are earned.
On April 29, 2023, at TJPW Precious Time, she stood side by side with Pom Harajuku and Yuki Aino. The trio — charming, chaotic, endearing — won the Shinagawa Three Woman Festival. It wasn’t a world title. It wasn’t a main event. But it was theirs. And Raku soaked in that win like rain after drought.
And that’s the pattern. She may never win the Tokyo Princess Title. But she doesn’t need to.
She wins over time. Match by match. Smile by smile. Elbow by lullaby.
The Soul of Soft Style
Raku doesn’t talk trash. She doesn’t scream into microphones or threaten to end careers. She sings. Literally.
In between matches, she and the Up Up Girls perform idol sets, giving fans something sweeter than merch tables. She’s the only wrestler in Japan who might tuck you in after she suplexes you.
But that doesn’t make her weak.
In fact, it makes her dangerous. Because you never see the storm coming when it’s wrapped in sunshine.
Underneath the songs, the softness, the sleepy theatrics — there’s someone who keeps showing up. Someone who’s taken more losses than wins. Someone who still believes in the long haul.
Bukowski might’ve called her naive. But then he’d watch her drop an elbow with her eyes closed and admit — that girl’s tougher than I am.
Dreaming Loud, Standing Firm
Raku is 27 now. In a business that eats youth and spits out regret, she’s still dreaming.
Still entering festivals. Still training. Still performing. Still finding new ways to tell the same story: that strength doesn’t always roar. Sometimes it whispers.
She’s an idol, yes.
But she’s also a wrestler.
And if you watch her closely — if you see the way she absorbs punishment, the way she sells emotion, the way she refuses to give up her color — you’ll realize: Raku doesn’t need to change the world.
She just needs to exist in it. Softly. Unapologetically. Unbroken.