Suenaga (末永), also known as The Headmistress, is a character in Yakuza 2/Yakuza Kiwami 2
Yakuza Kiwami 2[]
- Main article: Supporting Sunflower
On Showa Street, Suenaga approaches Kazuma Kiryu and tells him that the Sunflower Orphanage has been struggling recently. She asks if Kiryu is able to make donations to the orphanage. After donating 50.000 yen, she mentions about a boy named Hayato, who is struggling to make friends. Later, Kiryu gets a dog named Pochitaro from Mogusa and gives to her and she will tell you that the children at the orphanage love the dog.
- Main article: Renovating Sunflower
On Showa Street, Suenaga once again has a problem with the Sunflower Orphanage. She tells Kiryu that a leaking roof is causing many of the children to fall ill and that it will cost 250,000 yen to repair the roof. Kiryu decides to donate the money. After donating 250,000 yen, Suenga reveals that the contractor demanded 5 million yen because there were problems with the foundation. Kiryu, believing that this is a scam, tells her to have him talk to the contractor. Later, Kiryu returns to Suenga. She gives him a Children's Drawing.
- Main article: Sunflower in Bloom
On Nakamichi Street, Suenaga informs Kiryu that the old caretaker of Sunflower Orphanage has recovered from his sickness and will be resuming his role. She, however, will have to resign as the headmistress and she wants to give the kids something to remember her by. She decides that it would be nice for them to have a playground. Kiryu agrees and decides to call the person from Everyday Renovations. Later, worker agrees to make the playground for Sunflower without cost, Kiryu returns to Suenaga and receives Handmade Scarf from her.
After finishing all 3 above substories, Suenaga stands at Four Shine and Kiryu hires her as a hostess.
Gallery[]
Notes[]
- ↑ The given height of 165 cm (5′ 5″) is based on the character model's scaling factor within Yakuza Kiwami 2's data.[1] For Dragon Engine games, this method is believed to be very accurate (±2 cm). However, this is intended as an estimate, not a substitute for an official statistic.
