The Land of Dawn has seen plenty of assassins. Shadow hunters. Blood-drunk duelists. Vengeful spirits. But Hero 133 carries something different: a debt she's willing to die for.
Her name is Hirara. She is a geisha-ninja from the Scarlet Shadow, and everything about her kit, her story, and her weapon tells you exactly who she is before you even load into your first game with her.
#Who Is Hirara?
Hirara is a charming ninja geisha from the Scarlet Shadow, the same secretive shinobi organization that Hanabi leads in the Cadia Riverlands. She is the wielder of a legendary ninja weapon, a pair of ornate fans called Meisen-e and Kaerazu, and she did not earn them through glory or bloodshed. She earned them through sacrifice.
The story goes like this: when Hirara was a child, Hanabi saved her life. That debt never left her. When she learned of a legendary ninja tool with the power to protect what she loved, Hirara made a choice that most people would call madness. She descended into hell, literally, to claim it.
She survived. But what she saw there, Hanabi suffering, the cost of strength passed down through a clan that demands everything of its members, changed her. Hirara returned not just with power, but with purpose. She fights not for glory or vengeance. She fights to repay a debt that can never fully be repaid.
That connection to Hanabi also places her inside one of MLBB's most layered lore threads. Hanzo, one of the Scarlet Shadow's most powerful ninjas, betrayed the clan and stole the Ame no Habakiri, making himself an enemy of both the Scarlet and Shadow factions. Hirara enters this world with unfinished business on multiple fronts.
She is Hero 133, the newest member of the Cadia Riverlands roster, and she is expected to release in Season 41.
#Her Weapon: Two Fans, One Philosophy
Before getting into skill numbers, you need to understand what Hirara is holding.
Most assassins have a single weapon. A sword. A pair of daggers. Hirara uses two fans: Meisen-e and Kaerazu. They are not just weapons. In her lore, they are the legendary ninja tools she descended into the underworld to claim. Each fan represents half of her power, and in her kit, each fan has its own role.
This is MLBB doing what it does best when it builds a hero right: the weapon is the mechanic. The lore is the gameplay.
#Hirara's Skills Breakdown
Hirara's kit is built around a dual-mark system. Each of her main skills applies a different type of mark to enemies. When both marks land on the same target at the same time, they trigger an immobilize. That one interaction is the spine of her entire playstyle.
She is not a hero you mindlessly spam. She is a hero who rewards sequencing.
Passive: Maple Fan Combo
Hirara's passive tracks her skill usage and enables her core combo mechanic. When she combines Skill 1 and Skill 2 in sequence, she unlocks a follow-up combo skill called Falling Maple, where she merges Meisen-e into Kaerazu to cast a powerful combo strike. The passive essentially turns her two separate fans into one unified weapon when the timing is right.
Think of it like Gusion's dagger mechanic but with a different rhythm: you are setting up marks and then detonating them with the right follow-up, not just chain-casting as fast as possible.
Skill 1: Maple Fan Slash
Hirara slashes a fan forward in a targeted direction. The skill deals damage on contact and applies a mark to any enemy it hits. After a short delay, the area where she slashed explodes for a second burst of damage.
The delayed explosion matters. It rewards positioning. You use Skill 1 to tag a target and set up the detonation, then weave in Skill 2 before the explosion fires. When both marks land together, the immobilize triggers and you have your window.
Skill 2: Reserved String / Internal Torrent
Hirara fires a quick ranged attack applying the second mark type. Used alone, it is a short-range poke. Used into Skill 1's mark, it completes the dual-mark condition and locks down the target. The cooldown on this skill sits around 1.0 seconds between combo uses, which means the window to chain her skills is tight but readable.
The skill also has a directional component, requiring decent aim to consistently land both marks on a fast-moving target. That skill ceiling is intentional. Hirara rewards players who put in the practice.
Ultimate: Falling Maple
This is where Hirara becomes genuinely dangerous. Her ultimate functions as a snowball mechanic: a high-damage strike that resets or extends its own cooldown when it eliminates a target. Land it on one kill, and you can immediately chain into another target.
In theory, a fed Hirara can chain her ultimate through an entire enemy team during a teamfight, cycling back to back if the kills keep coming. Early reports from the advanced server describe it as one of the most explosive ultimate mechanics a new assassin has had in recent memory. The ceiling is high and the floor requires solid setup, which is exactly the profile MLBB players have been asking for.
#Combo Potential
The core Hirara combo looks like this:
- Open with Skill 1 (Maple Fan Slash) to apply the first mark and start the delayed explosion timer
- Immediately follow with Skill 2 (Reserved String) to apply the second mark
- Both marks trigger together, immobilizing the target
- Detonate with the Passive combo skill (Falling Maple merge)
- If the target is eliminated, the Ultimate resets and you pick the next
The faster you can execute steps 1 through 3 cleanly, the less time your target has to react. Community content from the advanced server suggests the full rotation has roughly a 60ms execution window between Skill 1 landing and the explosion firing, which gives you a brief but workable gap to land Skill 2 before it all goes off.
For assassin players who already run heroes like Gusion or Lancelot, Hirara's combo structure will feel familiar. Mark-based sequencing, a tight window, and a punishing payoff for getting it right.
#How Hirara Fits the Meta
Season 39's assassin meta has leaned heavily on burst heroes with built-in mobility and single-target lockdown. Hirara delivers both.
Her immobilize combo gives her reliable crowd control that most pure damage assassins lack. The ability to lock down a target without relying on a teammate's CC makes her a genuine solo-carry threat in the jungle role. Her ultimate's kill-extension mechanic also means she scales with team fight momentum, not just individual skill.
The community's first read from advanced server footage is cautiously optimistic. Several high-level players noted her engage and pick-off potential alongside her built-in healing compatibility with items like Haas's Claws, suggesting she will not fall off in extended fights the way some glass-cannon assassins do.
She will not be a free-win hero out of the gate. The mark-and-combo system has a learning curve. But for players who commit to her, the payoff looks like one of the most satisfying mechanical kits MLBB has added in a long time.
#Expected Release: Season 41
Hirara first appeared in the official MLBB hero survey in mid-February 2026 and has since been confirmed for Season 41 release. Hero surveys typically precede a hero's release by one to two seasons, and given her advanced server presence with what appears to be near-final skill effects and animations, Season 41 is the consensus target from the community.
No official release date has been announced as of February 27, 2026. Keep an eye on the MLBB patch notes and official channels for a confirmed timeline.
#Community Reaction
The response has been loud. Hirara dominated MLBB social media in the week after her hero survey dropped, with content creators immediately labeling her "the most broken assassin yet" based on advanced server footage of her ultimate chaining through multiple targets.
The design has drawn comparisons to Temari from Naruto for the fan weapon aesthetic, though Hirara's lore and visual style are distinctly rooted in the MLBB universe. The geisha-ninja archetype is nothing new in games, but the Scarlet Shadow setting gives Hirara a specific cultural identity rather than a generic one.
The other piece of community conversation? Her connection to Hanabi. Lore readers on Reddit have already pointed out that Hirara's presence adds a second generation to the Scarlet Shadow narrative, and that her relationship with Hanabi could set up future story content that revisits the Hanzo betrayal arc.
That is the kind of storytelling that makes a hero more than a kit.
#Frequently Asked Questions
When does Hirara release in MLBB? Hirara is confirmed for Season 41. No official date has been announced as of late February 2026. The hero survey appeared in mid-February 2026, suggesting a release within one to two seasons from that point.
What role does Hirara play? Hirara is an Assassin, designed for the jungle role. Her kit is built around burst damage, mark-based immobilization, and a kill-extending ultimate.
Is Hirara connected to Hanabi in the lore? Yes. Hirara is from the Scarlet Shadow, the same ninja organization Hanabi leads. Hirara descended into hell to claim her legendary fans as a way to repay Hanabi for saving her life as a child.
How hard is Hirara to play? She has a learning curve. Her damage relies on landing two different marks from Skill 1 and Skill 2 in quick succession to trigger an immobilize. Players familiar with Gusion or Lancelot will adapt faster than those coming from simpler heroes.
What is Hirara's ultimate? Her ultimate is a powerful strike that resets or extends when she eliminates a target, allowing her to chain kills in teamfights.