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- How This “Ranked by Fans” List Was Built
- The 10 Best Female Characters From ‘Black Lagoon,’ Ranked By Fans
- #10: Fabiola Iglesias The “Small but Not Safe” Professional
- #9: Sister Yolanda The Sweet Grandma Who Runs a Gun-Running Church
- #8: Greenback Jane The Hot Mess Genius With Surprisingly Sharp Edges
- #7: Yukio Washimine The Tragic Heir Who Never Really Had a Choice
- #6: Frederica Sawyer (“Sawyer the Cleaner”) Horror Aesthetic, Surprisingly Real Feelings
- #5: Shenhua The Stylish Specialist With Zero Patience for Your Nonsense
- #4: Eda The Sunglasses-Over-the-Habit Chaos Agent
- #3: Roberta (“The Bloodhound”) The Myth That Walks Like a Person
- #2: Balalaika Roanapur’s Coldest Operator (And the One Everyone Respects)
- #1: Revy (“Two Hands”) The Face of Black Lagoon, the Argument That Never Ends
- Honorable Mentions (Because Roanapur Has Too Many Icons)
- Final Thoughts: Why These Women Keep Winning Fan Rankings
- Fan Experiences: of What It Feels Like to Fall for These Characters
Roanapur is the kind of city where “customer service” means “don’t ask questions,” and “conflict resolution” means “duck.” In a setting this chaotic, it’d be easy for characters to turn into walking bullet points (pun intended). But Black Lagoon does something rarer than a quiet day at the Yellow Flag: it gives its women real presencepersonalities that fill a scene even when they’re not the loudest gun in the room.
Fans have argued for years about which women define the series mostacross polls, forums, rewatches, reviews, and the endless stream of “okay but hear me out” posts. The result is a shared fan consensus: some characters feel essential to Black Lagoon’s identity, while others are beloved because they add a sharp new flavor to the show’s already spicy chaos.
Content note: Black Lagoon is a mature crime-action series with heavy themes and frequent violence. This ranking focuses on character writing, impact, and fan popularitywithout getting graphic.
How This “Ranked by Fans” List Was Built
This list reflects fan-favorite momentum across multiple places where Black Lagoon discussion stays alive: popularity polls, streaming chatter, long-running fan threads, character-focused write-ups, and official English-release descriptions. It’s not a scientific election with ballot boxes and stickersmore like a big messy group project where everyone shows up yelling “Revy is #1” and somehow they’re still correct.
In other words: this ranking blends vote-style popularity with how often fans cite a character as unforgettable, plus the character’s impact on major arcs like Greenback Jane, Fujiyama Gangsta Paradise, and Roberta’s Blood Trail.
The 10 Best Female Characters From ‘Black Lagoon,’ Ranked By Fans
#10: Fabiola Iglesias The “Small but Not Safe” Professional
Fabiola enters the story with a vibe that can be summed up as: “Yes, I’m polite. No, that doesn’t mean I’m harmless.” As the Lovelace household’s second combat-trained maid, she’s introduced in the shadow of Robertano easy job, because Roberta’s shadow is basically a whole weather system.
Fans appreciate Fabiola because she brings discipline and principle into a show where everyone’s moral compass is either broken or being used as a dartboard. She’s tough, capable, and visibly uncomfortable with Roanapur’s casual crueltywhich makes her a perfect contrast character. In a series that often asks, “What does survival cost?” Fabiola quietly answers: “Sometimes, it costs your innocenceso guard it like your life depends on it.”
#9: Sister Yolanda The Sweet Grandma Who Runs a Gun-Running Church
If Black Lagoon had a “most likely to shock you in one sentence” award, Sister Yolanda would win it while smiling warmly and offering you tea. As the leader of the Rip-Off Church (also known as the Church of Violence), she’s proof that Roanapur doesn’t discriminate: anyone can be terrifying, including an elderly nun with calm manners and iron authority.
Fans love Yolanda because she’s the show’s deadpan punchline made flesh: the soft-spoken boss who commands loyalty from people who clearly fear nothing. She doesn’t need to posture. She already owns the room. And in a series packed with ego and chaos, that kind of quiet control stands out like a halo in a gun store.
#8: Greenback Jane The Hot Mess Genius With Surprisingly Sharp Edges
Jane (aka “Greenback Jane”) is a fan favorite because she’s not a super-soldier or a feared underworld generalshe’s a brilliant specialist who makes terrible life choices at full speed. She’s the kind of character who can talk big, panic bigger, and still remain weirdly competent when the pressure hits.
Her arc works because it’s one of Black Lagoon’s best “Roanapur onboarding experiences.” Jane arrives thinking she can outsmart the ecosystem, and the ecosystem responds by reminding her it has teeth. Fans tend to remember her for being funny, frantic, and painfully humana character who doesn’t glide through danger like an action icon, but stumbles through it like someone who suddenly realizes their plan was mostly vibes.
#7: Yukio Washimine The Tragic Heir Who Never Really Had a Choice
Yukio’s story hits fans differently because it’s one of the series’ clearest examples of “the world doesn’t care what you wanted.” She’s a young heir to a yakuza group who gets shoved into leadership, identity, and consequence all at oncewithout the emotional tools to survive it cleanly.
Fans rank Yukio high not because she’s the strongest fighter, but because she’s one of the most emotionally resonant characters. Her arc forces the show to slow down and stare at something uncomfortable: the way power and tradition can swallow people whole. Yukio also connects strongly to Rock’s internal conflictwhat it means to be pulled toward the underworld, and what it costs to pretend you can step out whenever you want.
#6: Frederica Sawyer (“Sawyer the Cleaner”) Horror Aesthetic, Surprisingly Real Feelings
Sawyer is the definition of “a character concept that should be ridiculous, but somehow works.” She’s known as Roanapur’s cleanersomeone crime syndicates hire when they want problems erased. Her visual design is instantly iconic, and fans regularly cite her as one of the series’ most memorable side characters.
But what keeps Sawyer in fan rankings isn’t just the look; it’s the odd emotional shading underneath. There’s a sense that she’s not merely an edgy gimmickshe’s a person shaped by a brutal environment, doing a brutal job, and coping in the only ways she can. Fans who rewatch the series often come away liking her more the second time, when they notice how Black Lagoon lets even its strangest characters feel grounded in the world’s ugly logic.
#5: Shenhua The Stylish Specialist With Zero Patience for Your Nonsense
Shenhua is a fan magnet because she’s pure confidence: fast, sharp, and allergic to hesitation. Her fighting style and attitude make her feel like a living reminder that Roanapur is full of professionals who don’t need to be the “main character” to steal the scene.
Fans also enjoy Shenhua’s dynamic with Revyless “hero vs villain” and more “two hurricanes arguing over who gets to be the weather.” Their rivalry adds spice to group scenes, because the tension is always there: a blend of mutual respect, ego, and the unspoken understanding that if things went truly sideways, it would get ugly fast. Shenhua’s popularity is the popularity of style plus competenceand Black Lagoon fans never resist that combo.
#4: Eda The Sunglasses-Over-the-Habit Chaos Agent
Eda’s appeal is simple: she’s funny, dangerous, and never acts like she’s impressed by anything. As part of the Church of Violence crew, she brings an “I have a job to do and it includes lying to your face” energy that fans eat up.
What pushes Eda into top-tier fan territory is that she feels like Roanapur distilled into one person: opportunistic, clever, and casually ruthlessyet still charismatic enough that you almost forget she’s always playing angles. Fans also love that she can swap between “messy troublemaker” and “hyper-competent operator” depending on the situation. She’s a reminder that in Black Lagoon, humor doesn’t cancel danger. It often delivers it.
#3: Roberta (“The Bloodhound”) The Myth That Walks Like a Person
Roberta is one of the most famous characters in the franchise for a reason: she’s written like a legend people whisper about, and then the story makes the legend show up and start rearranging the room. Fans consistently rank Roberta near the top because she brings big arc energywhen she enters the narrative, the stakes inflate.
But she isn’t only a “power” character. Roberta resonates because her story carries tragedy and devotion, and it asks uncomfortable questions about identity: Can someone really “become normal,” or is that just a costume they wear until life tears it off? Fans remember her for intense presence, yesbut also for emotional weight. In a series where many people run from their past, Roberta is someone who tries to bury it… and learns it doesn’t stay buried.
#2: Balalaika Roanapur’s Coldest Operator (And the One Everyone Respects)
Balalaika is the fan favorite who wins with authority. She doesn’t need to shout. She doesn’t need to prove she’s dangerous. Everyone already behaves like they’ve done the math and don’t like the answer.
Fans rank Balalaika high because she’s one of the best examples of Black Lagoon’s “crime world as politics” theme. She runs Hotel Moscow like a military machine, but she’s also sharp at negotiation, alliances, and power balance. Her scenes often feel like chess matches where every piece is also a grenade. And the character designscars, composure, commandcements her as iconic. In most stories, Balalaika would be the final boss. In Black Lagoon, she’s part of the ecosystem. That’s why she’s unforgettable.
#1: Revy (“Two Hands”) The Face of Black Lagoon, the Argument That Never Ends
Revy takes #1 because she is Black Lagoon’s identity for a huge portion of the fandom. She’s the character people name first, cosplay first, quote first, and defend in comment sections like it’s a full-time job with benefits.
What makes Revy more than just “cool gunfighter” is the friction inside her. She’s impulsive, cynical, and openly hostile to anything that smells like moral comfortbut she’s also perceptive, wounded, and painfully honest about the world she lives in. Fans love her dynamic with Rock because it’s the show’s most reliable source of character debate: what do you do when you’re trapped in a violent world and someone keeps insisting you’re still human?
Revy isn’t a role model. She’s a warning sign with charisma. And that’s exactly why fans keep ranking her at the top: she’s thrilling, messy, and written with enough sharp edges to cut through the genre.
Honorable Mentions (Because Roanapur Has Too Many Icons)
- Le Majeur A newer fan favorite from later manga arcs, often praised for bringing fresh tension into Roanapur’s power games.
- Gretel A haunting presence in one of the series’ darkest storylines (handled carefully here, but frequently cited by fans for impact).
- Revy’s “supporting orbit” Characters like Feng and other arc-specific standouts often rise in fan rankings depending on which storyline someone watched most recently.
Final Thoughts: Why These Women Keep Winning Fan Rankings
Black Lagoon’s best female characters don’t feel like “the girl characters.” They feel like the charactersfully integrated into the world’s power structure, humor, tragedy, and chaos. Revy, Balalaika, and Roberta tend to dominate fan rankings because they’re iconic and central. But the deeper you go, the more you see why fans keep shouting out Eda, Shenhua, Sawyer, and the rest: they each represent a different survival strategy in a city that eats people alive.
If you’re building your own list, you’re not wrongyou’re just revealing which kind of Roanapur energy lives rent-free in your head. And honestly? That’s the most Black Lagoon thing possible.
Fan Experiences: of What It Feels Like to Fall for These Characters
Ask ten fans how they experienced Black Lagoon’s women for the first time, and you’ll get ten variations of the same story: “I thought I was here for action, and then the characters grabbed me by the collar.” That’s the show’s trick. It sells itself as a crime-action ride, but the women become the reason people stay, rewatch, and argue online like they’re defending a thesis.
The “Revy Shock” is real. A lot of viewers describe an early moment when they realize Revy isn’t written to be likable in a polite, audience-approved way. She’s written to be compelling. Fans often remember the first time Revy and Rock clash over moralitybecause it doesn’t feel like a simple “good vs bad” debate. It feels like two people speaking different emotional languages. Revy’s popularity comes from that tension: she’s action-forward, but the writing hints at everything she refuses to say out loud.
Balalaika inspires a different kind of fandom. With her, the reaction is usually less “I want to be her best friend” and more “I want to watch her run a room.” Fans love quoting her vibe even when they don’t quote her lines: calm, controlled, inevitable. People who rewatch the series often say Balalaika scenes get better the second time, because you start noticing how she moves pieces around without rushing. In a show full of impulsive violence, her patience becomes its own weapon.
Roberta splits the roomin the best way. Some fans call her the most intense character in the franchise, and others call her the most tragic. Both can be true. Viewer experiences often hinge on whether they saw her as a “legend character” first or a “broken person” first. Either way, Roberta tends to leave a mark. After her arc, fans frequently revisit earlier episodes and notice how the show quietly prepared them for her kind of devotion-and-destruction story.
Then there’s the “side-character attachment” phase. This is when fans start saying things like, “Okay, but Eda is secretly the funniest person alive,” or “Shenhua is pure style,” or “Why do I feel bad for Sawyer?” It’s a hallmark of Black Lagoon that even characters who appear less often can create strong loyalty. Rewatch communities love spotting background reactions, faction politics, and small character tellsespecially in Roanapur scenes where alliances shift mid-conversation.
Finally, fans start building personal rankings. Some lists prioritize raw icon status (Revy/Balalaika/Roberta). Others prioritize nuance (Yukio’s tragedy, Jane’s chaos, Yolanda’s deadpan authority). That’s part of the fun: the show gives you enough variety that “best female characters” turns into “which type of danger do you respect the most?”
If you’re new to the series, the best fan advice is simple: don’t binge it like fast food. Give the arcs room to breathe. You’ll notice more. You’ll argue more. And you’ll probably end up with a favorite you didn’t expectbecause Roanapur has a talent for that.