Dur'id the Druid
Know what you're doing yet?
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2019
- Messages
- 210
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That's interesting since the She-Ra characters are, accounting for plot-induced changes, the same as here.
Not really. Not in a way that makes sense anyway. Very little thought was put into the Seacat story, other than putting the charcter into scenes the author wants to write. It's just the scenes of the week that seem to matter, not consequences of previous history. Biggest example; How long was the story obsessed with getting Seacats memories back through the power of friendship? Even after it only made Seacat justified angry? No body even tried other things, consider if they were doing the right thing, or seemed to take Seacat's own desires into account, only Adora's feeling matters! That is the reasoning and plot of a brainwashing kids show, do the right thing -> this is the right thing-> don't need to think about why.
That is where your story differs, your characters are smart paladins. Good people doing right in a complicated situation tempered by wisdom and history. Even your version of Hordak is showing wisdom, even as he bluntly points out what his history tells him is a good choice. The fact he listens to others and even backs with supporting their implementation shows he has grown as an individual; he is learning to be more than an angry clone of a 'perfect' individual.
Why do you want to talk so much about Seacat anyway? This is a forum for Stargate Etheria!
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