The younger girls from Dear Brother use this one more often than not.Waka uses atashi in his flamboyant personality for Amnesia: Memories.Fire Emblem (not that one) from Tiger & Bunny uses this occasionally, being a rather camp person usually he uses watashi.Oshare Bones from Puyo Puyo uses this when referring to himself.(You can track when he's being serious by the switch to an assertive masculine pronoun like ore.) Vash the Stampede of Trigun (who is male) has been known to use atashi when goofing around, for comedy value.Everyone else resorts to speak to her as if she was much more boyish, though. Fittingly, she's a tomboy who wants to be more girlish and thus chose a feminine pronoun for herself. Akane herself is actually an atashi user.His altered language and personality shift worries everyone. Ranma, normally an ore user, switches to "atashi" after Akane lands a nasty blow to his head.Haruhi's father Ryoji "Ranka" Fujioka in Ouran High School Host Club uses atashi, presumably because he's a crossdresser.
Her speech patterns are otherwise very masculine. Black Lagoon: The very aggressive and tomboyish Revy uses this one.Momo, Orihime, Rangiku and Kirio Hikifune use it as well.His use of it exaggerates his role of a "humble" shopkeeper (it's interesting to note that he used the humble/masculine boku 100 years ago). Kisuke uses this pronoun, and is a rare male example.Vil Schoenheit in Twisted Wonderland, an incredibly foppish man who part-times as an internationally famous supermodel.Kyoko Sakura also uses it, and is even more tomboyish with her rude, masculine language (such as using temee on people who annoy her). Despite being tomboyish, she has a girly side. Sayaka Miki in Puella Magi Madoka Magica.Interestingly, this is only in the anime, as she uses watashi in the manga. Nami in One Piece, reflecting her boisterous personality.Nagisa from Chou Kuse ni Narisou says this even when she's disguised as a boy, which undermines the disguise.She started to cut her own hair short and adopt a boyish personality to protect her helpless sister from bullies.
Yuzuru Nishimiya from A Silent Voice used to go by atashi as a little girl with long hair who wore dresses.If a male character uses atashi it is almost certainly meant to imply that he's Camp Gay. Amusingly, its casualness also makes it a good choice for characters who are confident about themselves and their femininity, especially if they're to be put in contrast with a "watashi"-using Shrinking Violet. It is most commonly used to make a female character sound very casual, which makes it perfect for tomboys who aren't tomboy enough to use the male pronoun "boku". Used by a nameless townswoman in the town of Paloom in Final Fantasy II who, upon only having met the protagonist, immediately asks him to settle down there with her.Ītashi あたし Informal, assertive, yet feminine version of "watashi".It's somewhat justified since she's fairly childish and is the daughter of Monokuma. Monophanie in Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony uses this despite her feminine appearance and personality.The Villainous Crossdresser Flea also uses atai. Although she's normally a Third-Person Person, Ayla from Chrono Trigger uses this before you name her."Peppy" villagers in Animal Crossing use this pronoun.It's worth noting that she's transgender in Japanese. Vivian in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.Cirno, Touhou Project's resident baka, uses this, as a sign of her childishness, tomboyishness, and stupidity.Especially fitting in the overall Sanrio merchandise, in which she has a Japanese Delinquents theme. Kuromi, the Dark Magical Girl of Onegai My Melody.Anego, the leader of a gang of female high school delinquents from Magical Witch Punie-chan.
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The translation patch translates this as her having a rude, tomboyish attitude.