10 ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Characters By Likability
Stage lights hit, demons crash the schedule, and suddenly “practice at noon” turns into “fight evil before dinner.” Some characters show up already feeling like fan favorites, like they skipped the introduction and went straight to center stage, while others take a minute and then quietly take over anyway.
Ranking them gets chaotic fast, because picking favorites here feels less like a list and more like starting an argument that nobody plans to win.
Disclaimer: Character descriptions and ranking positions in this article reflect editorial opinion based on publicly available information about KPop Demon Hunters and its characters.
1. Rumi

Carrying the whole story on her shoulders sounds exhausting, yet Rumi makes it look almost effortless. A mix of pressure, secrecy, and quiet vulnerability gives her more emotional range than nearly anyone else in the film.
Each scene feels like a looming deadline staring back at her, and she shows up anyway.
That kind of resilience becomes the line fans keep quoting. At the core of Huntrix, she remains the beating heart, full stop.
2. Zoey

Bright, electric energy carries every entrance like a phone buzz delivering good news.
Within Huntrix, Zoey brings a firecracker presence that is genuinely hard not to love. Youthful spark drives her character without reducing her to a sidekick.
She secures her place in the lineup through pure personality, becoming someone you root for before the chorus even drops.
3. Mira

Cool without being cold is a rare balance, and Mira handles it like second nature. Something about her pulls focus every time she steps into a scene, even when the spotlight belongs somewhere else.
Watching her feels like catching glimpses of a completely different movie running in parallel.
By the time anything shifts, she is already halfway out the door, bag ready, momentum intact.
4. Jinu

Rivals are often easy to dismiss, yet a layered backstory makes that nearly impossible in this case. Caught between antagonist and tragic figure, Jinu carries a depth most side characters never reach.
Plenty of viewers who stayed with the film long enough found themselves rooting for him in ways they did not expect.
Complicated works as praise here, and proof sits in how easily a well-written rival can steal scenes without taking over the spotlight.
5. Bobby

Not every fan favorite has to fight demons.
Bobby’s energy as Huntrix’s manager reads like the person who somehow keeps everything running when nobody else has time to breathe. He is the kettle clicking off at exactly the right moment.
Supporting characters with his kind of warmth tend to become sleeper favorites, and Bobby earns that status honestly. Fun is his whole brand.
6. Celine

Former demon hunter turned foster parent is not a role built for flashy fight sequences, yet Celine carries emotional weight that lingers long after the credits. Connection with Rumi gives the story some of its quietest and most affecting moments.
Energy feels like a calm morning before the rest of the house wakes up. Gradually, importance settles in without asking for attention.
Understated, absolutely essential, and impossible to overlook once the film is over.
7. Baby Saja

Limited screen time does nothing to stop Baby Saja from leaving a strong impression. Among the Saja Boys, Baby leaves a memorable impression even with limited screen time.
Fans who walked out humming the soundtrack were likely also thinking about Baby Saja.
Memorable without being loud is a difficult trick to pull off, and Baby Saja handles it with what feels like zero effort.
8. Mystery Saja

Within the Saja Boys, each member brings something different, and Mystery leans fully into the intrigue.
Being the unknown quantity inside a group of demons creates a specific kind of charm, like a song with no title that somehow becomes a favorite.
Curiosity drives the appeal just as much as warmth. Desire to know more keeps the momentum going, and that pull does a lot of the work.
9. Romance Saja

Built to be memorable, and the execution lives up to that promise. Romance Saja carries a built-in appeal that is hard to argue with, even when the role sits more comfortably within the ensemble than at the center of the story.
Like a pop song playing during a montage, the presence somehow fits perfectly.
Ensemble characters with that kind of flair help keep the pacing alive. Lovable by design, and the design works.
10. Abby Saja

Rounding out the Saja Boys is Abby, whose appeal comes through more in the group dynamic than in solo spotlight. As the final piece of a well-constructed set, the role still carries real weight.
Like the last track on a great album, value remains clear even when attention lands elsewhere first.
Over time, appreciation grows strongest among those invested in the full Saja Boys picture. That kind of loyalty ends up feeling fully earned.
