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  • I don't think it is, at this point in time, an uncommon opinion that cats in Warriors need to die.

  • The specifics of who we are willing to let go varies from reader to reader,

  • but nearly everyone agrees that the clans have gotten quite large.

  • Cats from the first series are still alive,

  • and many newer cats are practically faceless strangers thanks to the lack of attention given to them.

  • Today I will be exploring the phenomenon of death in the Warriors world,

  • especially as it pertains to the current state of the series,

  • but I should point out that I won't be going over who in particular I would like to kill off to fix this problem.

  • If you're interested in something like that,

  • Moonkitti discussed the subject a while back in a video I will link to in the description,

  • and right now at the top-right of the video.

  • In Thunderclan alone, through the main arcs

  • (and unfortunately discounting Dawn of the Clans since it disrupts the chronology),

  • here is the population growth since the first book.

  • For the first two arcs, Thunderclan had a cat total somewhere in the 20's.

  • It oscillated back and forth with various deaths and new births but it stayed relatively consistent.

  • But as you can see...here, it didn't stay that way.

  • See here? This point? This is The Sight.

  • Even with a couple offscreen deaths, the population shot up by ten whole cats,

  • creating the big Power of Three apprentice generation that we all know and love.

  • But that generation clearly came at a cost, especially since there were no major deaths in the whole arc.

  • A couple of times: with the battles in Outcast and Eclipse as well as the green-cough outbreaks in The Sight and Long Shadows,

  • there were opportunities to kill cats off,

  • but those opportunities weren't taken, and the arc only set a standard that would grow over time.

  • The rest of Power of Three and even Omen of the Stars did manage to keep the population about even;

  • The Last Hope actually finishes with 37 cats.

  • But A Vision of Shadows bumps that number back up and more,

  • with two sets of protagonists and many litters of legacy kits that serve next to no purpose.

  • So clearly there is a problem that has been growing in the past fourteen years.

  • But where did it come from?

  • This is a series about wild cats who have to constantly fight each other over territory or ideologies,

  • and when they aren't fighting each other they're fighting disease or other animals or even their own evil afterlife.

  • Even when they get surges of kits,

  • they should be able to phase out the older generation and be just fine.

  • But there are several complications making that unlikely at best.

  • The first and quite possibly largest is marketing.

  • Warriors is a massive series where a majority of the fans haven't read even close to all of the books.

  • But the first arc is a set most of the fans can be trusted to have read,

  • and the further you get from that the less recognizability a character from a given book will have.

  • The cats from the first series or two, up through Omen of the Stars at best,

  • are thus the most popular and most well-loved.

  • It's in the Erin's interest to use as many early characters as they can,

  • and part of that has to do with keeping the older generations alive and in focus.

  • They can't continue with exactly the same cast either, though.

  • Romance and family have become running themes in the series.

  • If none of the cast got together and had kits, it would imply a lack of close relationships between these characters.

  • Not to mention that the clans would begin to feel very static,

  • and there would be no new kits to make into apprentices for our protagonists to train and bond with.

  • So the old cast stays, and the new cast grows.

  • It sounds like a win-win, but of course we know what that led to.

  • Of this arc's 48 Thunderclan characters, 16 of them have had no characterization at all in their time in the series,

  • and even those that have been mentioned in the arc haven't been given much depth.

  • Making Thunderclan as a whole a blank slate leaves most of the conflicts feeling hollow,

  • as they rely on you caring about what happens to our cast.

  • So it would seem obvious that at this point, cats need to die or otherwise be rolled out,

  • and the new characters that have stayed in the background since their conception

  • need to be brought into focus enough to make the readers empathize with them,

  • and to give story opportunities based on their individual strengths and flaws.

  • However even in The Broken Code, an arc with the potential to be one of the most brutal in the series,

  • very few cats have died, and none of the old cast has been shuffled out.

  • Veil of Shadows has been the only book to officially kill cats off

  • and the only cats to die in Thunderclan were Stemleaf, Rosepetal, and Berrynose,

  • all cats used to some extent in the currently running story.

  • And in a perfect display of our lacking attachment to Thunderclan,

  • Bristlefrost isn't particularly rattled by any of these deaths.

  • In order to show this point more directly,

  • I'd like to read some short passages from Rising Storm and Veil of Shadows,

  • the first involving the death of Yellowfang, and the second involving the death of Stemleaf.

  • Although the entirety of Chapter 27 is dedicated to the slow buildup of Yellowfang's death,

  • I will just read this short segment from the end.

  • (Text Shown on Screen)

  • And now for Stemleaf's death.

  • (Text Shown on Screen)

  • In the case of Stemleaf, they didn't share a last conversation or even a last phrase.

  • The battle simply raged on until Bristlefrost noticed Stemleaf was dead,

  • and then after a short paragraph of remembering what her relationship with him could have been about two books ago,

  • rather than what it was in the present,

  • she faints and from that moment on Spotfur is the only one to bring up his death.

  • With Yellowfang, Fireheart addresses how close they have become,

  • Yellowfang reminisces for a moment on how she wished it could have been different,

  • but then brings herself back to reality with the knowledge that Brokenstar was her punishment,

  • and soon Starclan would judge her.

  • Yellowfang has already given up and just wants to thank Fireheart one last time for all he has done,

  • but Fireheart clings desperately to her life,

  • pleading for her life to be judged favorably even after he knows in his heart she is gone.

  • Stemleaf was Bristlefrost's friend, ally, and first crush.

  • Berrynose was the deputy she replaced and mirrored in her time under the Imposter's rule.

  • Rosepetal was her mentor.

  • But she doesn't have this connection or desperation seen with Fireheart and Yellowfang with any of them.

  • The only cats that truly fill her thoughts are Squirrelflight, Bramblestar, and later, Rootspring,

  • because they are the key players in the plot.

  • The latest material has corrected the problem a little by sending two background characters away to be kittypets

  • but we don't ultimately care about their loss since we never got to know them,

  • and the Erins are still reluctant as ever to kill off any of the old cast.

  • Graystripe had an entire super edition about the clans changing and him being an elder,

  • thinking it was time to move on.

  • This would have been a great time to send off his character with a bang,

  • ending with a momentous death after a reunion with some favorite old characters.

  • But this book ended with him heading back to Thunderclan and contained no death at all.

  • So what options are there to solve this problem?

  • Well the answer seems simple:

  • kill off cats, mostly from the older generation, and start developing the younger characters,

  • and that is what ultimately needs to be done.

  • But as I said, the marketing aspect of the series makes that a hard sell.

  • The newer characters, no matter how well written,

  • will never get the popularity of the older characters who have been around for decades.

  • However, I would argue that if you want to keep the audience you have in regards to the newer books,

  • and maybe even create material good enough to bring on some few fans,

  • your best option is giving something new, in the form of new characters you truly give focus to.

  • I'm sure none of the Erins will ever see this,

  • and they are unfortunately the only ones who can make the choice to fix this problem,

  • but I hope that, going into the end of this arc and beyond,

  • they will consider letting go of their old favorites and try to make someone new for us to love.

  • Thank you for watching, and always remember

  • that Sorrelstripe's should have feelings too.

I don't think it is, at this point in time, an uncommon opinion that cats in Warriors need to die.

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Cat Death – Sunny's Spiel | Warriors Analysis

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    WarriorsCatFan2007 に公開 2024 年 02 月 18 日
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