Character from Berserk by Kentaro Miura
A child who dreamed of being an elf so desperately she became a monster — sacrificing her parents and kidnapping children to build a fairy kingdom that was really a slaughterhouse.
Rosine was born from violence — her mother was assaulted during conflict — and grew up with an abusive father. She escaped into stories of elves and fairies, spending her childhood in Misty Valley imagining a world where things were gentle and beautiful. When her beherit activated, she sacrificed her parents and became what she'd always dreamed of being: an elf queen. But apostle transformation doesn't grant wishes — it corrupts them. Her 'elf kingdom' was built from kidnapped children transformed into insect-like pseudo-apostles who played brutal war games that killed them. She genuinely couldn't see the horror of what she'd created because the alternative was seeing what she'd become. Her death scene is one of Berserk's most devastating — defeated by Guts, reverting to her human form, she remembered the good times with her parents and reached for her childhood friend Jill one last time. She was a monster who was also a child, and Berserk refused to let you forget either fact.
In human form: a fair-skinned girl with light blue eyes and reddish-blonde hair. In apostle form: a giant luna moth with aqua-colored wings, a feminine human torso, and a proboscis that serves as both lance and slashing weapon. Beautiful and terrifying simultaneously — Miura drew her with the delicacy of a fairy tale illustration overlaid on body horror.
Also known as: Queen of the Elves