I-19

"Such a great admiral makes me happy. I'm I-19. Yep, calling me Iku is fine!"

- I-19 I-19 was a Japanese Type B1 submarine which saw service during World War II in the Imperial Japanese Navy. It was responsible for sinking the USS Wasp (CV-7) and USS O'Brien (DD-415), and damaging the USS North Carolina (BB-55) during the Guadalcanal campaign.

Appearance
I-19 wears all but a school swimsuit with a name tag on it. Other equipment includes a cannon on her right thigh and several torpedoes around her. She has long blue hair in triple-tails, secured with white ribbons and tiny ship parts. She also has red eyes with star-shaped pupils.

She is very often seen holding her torpedos in a way that it goes between her breasts.

Trivia

 * 2013 November event special map E1 completion reward
 * Calls herself as "Iku". The "i" is a way to read the 1 in Japanese along with the "ku" as a way to read the 9.
 * In September 15, 1942, while patrolling the Solomon Islands, she fired 6 torpedoes at the carrier USS Wasp, 3 hit causing heavy damage, later she was abandoned and scuttled, while the other 3 sunk the destroyer USS O'Brien and damaged significantly the battleship USS North Carolina.
 * Sunk via depth charges on November 25, 1943 by USS Radford.
 * She has a resemblance to Dizzy.