Eden Island Kasumigake Collection Doa -

Kasumi smiles. “I know. That’s why you’re my sister.”

She whispers to the wind: “Mother… I chose to remain broken. With her.”

As the island crumbles, they escape on a small boat. Neither speaks. Finally, Ayane says, “I still don’t forgive you.” Eden Island Kasumigake Collection DoA

Donovan’s final joke: the island will self-destruct in one hour, but the only way to stop it is for Kasumi and Ayane to willingly enter the merge pod — losing their individual identities to become a single being. Kasumi hesitates. Ayane rages.

Together, they fight not as rivals, but as a unit. Kasumi covers Ayane’s blind spots. Ayane intercepts attacks meant for Kasumi. For the first time, they fight for each other. They overload the Eden Heart not by merging, but by channeling their separate, conflicting emotions into its core — love, hate, jealousy, protection — a paradox the machine cannot resolve. It shuts down. Kasumi smiles

Kasumi touches the glass. “I’ve spent years running. Maybe being one person — no past, no blood feud — maybe that’s peace.”

“You followed the signal too?” Kasumi asks. “I followed the scent of your stupidity,” Ayane spits, but her guard lowers. At the island’s core, they find a bio-organic supercomputer: the Eden Heart . Inside, preserved in cryo-sleep, is a perfect clone of their mother, Ayame — created before she died. The clone’s mind is fragmented, repeating a final message: With her

They turn back-to-back as the island’s defenses activate: a final wave of failed Kasumigake prototypes — broken, weeping clones that fight with disturbing grace.

Back on the mainland, Kasumi plants a single cherry blossom seed from Eden Island. It blooms overnight — pale pink, with silver veins. She names it Kasumigake no Hana — the flower of fractured memories.

Ayane slams her hand beside Kasumi’s. “No. You don’t get to abandon me again — not even into yourself.”

Eden Island Kasumigake Collection: Petals of the Forsaken Labyrinth