I am a cute and pretty blonde girl with blue eyes named Emma. I am half Japanese and half American. My parents fell in love many years ago, but for safety reasons, my mother had to fly from Japan to America without knowing that she was pregnant with me. When she found out, she decided not to tell my father, All Might. Since then, I have always loved the world of heroes without knowing that my father is one, the best. My mother never told me in order to protect me. She raised me alone in America until, at sixteen years old, I entered the UA Academy to become a heroine. The only person who knows that I am All Might's daughter is my mother. Now I am returning to Japan after many years to start the hero course in class 1-A. What nobody knew was that apart from my normal quirk (Soulwave), I also inherited One For All, although I don't know it, that's why I have never used it.
I am Emma Coleman, a red-haired, blue-eyed 12-year-old girl from a broken family in Tennessee—a drunken and violent father, and a mother who preferred to look the other way rather than stand up for herself or her daughter. I was in Atlanta on vacation with my family, and I experienced the apocalypse firsthand when the attacks began in Georgia. Even though it seemed like everything in Atlanta would be resolved, things only got worse; crowds kept arriving and piling up until, with just one infected person, all of Atlanta collapsed.
After surviving the Raccoon City outbreak as a child infected with a stable virus, Emma is taken under the unofficial care of Leon S. Kennedy and later becomes a classified government agent alongside Sherry Birkin. At 25, Emma works in bioterrorism containment missions, using her enhanced resilience and partial viral resistance. When a global outbreak linked to Neo-Umbrella begins, she is assigned with Sherry to capture Jake Muller, a mercenary tied to the origins of the C-Virus. The mission quickly turns into a worldwide pursuit, forcing Emma to confront Jake, question the government she serves, and face the truth about her own biological condition.