
The suit has black accent stripes near the shoulder seams that follow inward, going down the length of her body.
#Bayonetta and jeanne skin
She wears a new outfit, a skin tight biker suit with angular shoulders and a vertical stripe design. She has used magic to considerably lengthen and grow her hair to thigh-length, with it covering some of her face and reaching down her back (thus similar to Cereza's long hair in the first game). Jeanne makes a reappearance in Bayonetta 2 with a makeover of her own. Her glasses are red and feature a wing design followed by a few black feathers over her right ear.

She has black furry cuffs on her arms, as well as wearing red open-toe heels, revealing perfectly manicured toes. The suit has a rather large renaissance style collar that is worn similarly to a tie with her Umbran Watch resting right in the center of her bust. The buttons open up, revealing a white layer underneath on the front of her right leg and on the back of her left leg. Jeanne wears her signature body suit made by the clothing line "d'arc." It is red with a button design starting from the left side of her chest down to her right heel. Jeanne is portrayed as a tall, slender, youthful looking woman with porcelain skin and a short, platinum silver hair, similar to pixie cut. Her previous aggressive attitude to Bayonetta dissipates when she is freed from Balder's mind control and both her and Bayonetta maintain an air of friendly rivalry in their renewed friendship. In fact, it is shown that she cares more about the Umbran legacy than her own life by one of her taunts. However, in the end it is shown that she did it to protect both Bayonetta and the Left Eye and that it was a task she completed with great sadness. Through Bayonetta's flashbacks, it is revealed that Jeanne was the one who stabbed her in the heart all those years ago, presumably leading to her being abandoned in a coffin at the bottom of a lake with few memories of her former self. This is once again shown in the second game where she pushes Bayonetta out of a rampaging Gomorrah'sway with no regard to the consequences: her soul being knocked out from her body and dragged to Inferno. She is incredibly rash, a trait she has apparently carried for years, as show in flashbacks to the past where she blatantly disregards Umbran law when challenging Bayonetta to combat.

She appears to always be one step ahead of Bayonetta, knowing more about her own past than she does, taunting her for it. In the first game, she seems to enjoy both testing and taunting Bayonetta and has very little patience for the Laguna she works with, often killing them or abandoning them to their fate at Bayonetta's hands. Jeanne's fights always end with her loss but, to her, this is merely a means to an end.Ĭompared to Bayonetta, Jeanne is far more serious and aggressive in her personality. Her role in the game is to test Bayonetta in order to get her to reach her "true potential" and to help Bayonetta remember her past. It is revealed early on that Jeanne was heiress to the Umbra clan 500 years ago, and her rivalry with Bayonetta has apparently existed for as long.
