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  • The title might be a slight exaggeration.

  • Spotfur as a character hasn't been demolished in the ways that Shadowsight or Bristlefrost were,

  • and she wasn't suddenly torn from her trajectory like Mothwing or Stemleaf.

  • But she was, for reasons I will go over in this video, an extremely important character to get right,

  • and her novella...hasn't done that.

  • Another warning, as my last sentence might have implied, this episode will conclude with spoilers from Spotfur's Rebellion,

  • one of the novellas in the pack “A Warrior's Choicereleased at the beginning of April.

  • If you want to avoid spoilers for that, feel free to skip off when I give the spoiler warning and come back when you have read the book.

  • As I have made abundantly clear already Thunderclan has fallen from grace overtime,

  • and is now filled with nobodies who have never spoken and whose names we barely remember.

  • Additionally, deciding to stay in your clan because of your connections to it

  • is being used as the justification for Bristlefrost and Rootspring deciding to stay apart and continue their pining from a distance.

  • In this vein, it is imperative that there *be cats with actual connections to the protagonists*

  • and for that to happen there need to *be actual characters in the protagonists' clans at all.*

  • It sounds simple, but it's become especially rare in recent books, making the protagonists' declarations of loyalty sound fake.

  • Going into the Broken Code, and unfortunately putting aside Bristlefrost's entire family that she barely ever talks to,

  • we only had two characters in Thunderclan who were remotely in the right place to become Bristlefrost's friends,

  • and reasons for her to believe in and stay in Thunderclan: Stemleaf, and Spotfur.

  • Stemleaf did have a massive advantage in this regard.

  • He was already friends with Bristlefrost and they had a pretty big event between them

  • that could help to define their future relationship:

  • Bristlefrost confessing her feelings and being let down, since Stemleaf didn't see her that way and liked Spotfur instead.

  • However, both Stemleaf and Spotfur could have easily been affected by this event and what followed:

  • where Bramblestar's imposter took over the clan

  • and both cats joined an inter-clan team who wanted to take him down as prominent members.

  • This would give both Stemleaf and Spotfur plenty of chances to show off their personalities and develop in opposition to Bristlefrost,

  • who was working with the imposter for much of the group's formation time.

  • Later on, they would have the chance to clash directly and reconcile,

  • quite possibly becoming Bristlefrost's closest friends in the clan (not that they would have much competition).

  • But...well let's see what actually happened.

  • Stemleaf was a respected but fairly basic warrior and clearly cared about Bristlefrost, but only as a friend.

  • Still, since they do care about each other going into The Silent Thaw,

  • it truly hurt when Bristlefrost took actions that damaged Spotfur,

  • and with it her relationship with her friend until she joined the rebels herself.

  • He still didn't show much of a personality beyondgood warrior, likes Spotfurbut it was something.

  • Then, as we all by now know...in Veil of Shadows he died, rather unceremoniously,

  • and any potential he might have had as a character or an anchor for Bristlefrost died with him.

  • Now Spotfur is all that's left, and she had far less to start off with.

  • In the first book she didn't even spend much time with Stemleaf.

  • She seemed to only appear once Stemleaf pointed out her existence, which started Bristlefrost's secret jealousy over the other she-cat.

  • Then in the second book, any small amount of goodwill between them was destroyed

  • when Bristlefrost targeted her first to receive Imposterstar's ire,

  • and Spotfur got understandably angry at her and called her a spy.

  • She also, during this book, somehow began the rebel group.

  • She tagged along with Stemleaf on missions in Veil of Shadows and saw Stemleaf die,

  • though we didn't stick around long enough to see her reaction.

  • Afterwards, though, she was very angry: firmly on the side of killing Bramblestar

  • and thinking of Bristlefrost as an irredeemable traitor also at fault for her mate's death.

  • She goes through a lot, but halfway through the arc we still hadn't seen any defining character traits: only reactions,

  • and even her relationship with Stemleaf had next to no on screen time.

  • She's a character that's exceptionally important to define and develop, and she has the space in the plot for it,

  • but the work hasn't been done.

  • And then of course came Darkness Within, my dreaded nemesis.

  • Spotfur did get more focus in this book than any before,

  • as someone grieving the loss of her mate and dealing with the reality that she'll have to raise these kits alone,

  • and travel and work alongside the cat she still hasn't forgiven for her part in his murder.

  • Spotfur is closed off and distant, choosing to deal with her emotions herself and suffer even physically alone,

  • which makes perfect sense considering the alternative is speaking with Bristlefrost.

  • Bristlefrost acts like nothing is wrong between them, and her lack of personal grief over Stemleaf's death isn't helping them to connect.

  • A lot of the book ends up being Bristlefrost lecturing Spotfur about how she should learn to move on and take care of the kits,

  • which is exactly the wrong conversation that should be happening.

  • Bristlefrost keeps calling Spotfur her friend in her head,

  • but nothing in Spotfur's behavior makes us believe this is reciprocated,

  • and whether it was intentional or not, it makes sense.

  • If any deep conversations happened between them in this book,

  • it should have been *Bristlefrost* apologizing to *Spotfur* for the significant pain she caused the other she-cat personally,

  • and Spotfur teaching Bristlefrost to stick with what she knows to be right, even against cats she considers authority.

  • That could have given them a chance to become real friends,

  • and for Spotfur to open herself up enough for us to see what...you know, her personality is,

  • because as compelling as Spotfur's grief over Stemleaf is,

  • it would be far more so if we knew anything about Spotfur before this reaction

  • to help us care about her and want to bring her back to her old self,

  • or if we knew what Stemleaf and Spotfur's relationship was: who either of them were as cats and how they fit in as a couple.

  • I think I've proven why it's really important, for Bristlefrost in this case but for protagonists in general,

  • to have genuine, tangible attachments to their clan, and of all of Bristlefrost's theoretical connections,

  • Spotfur is the one with the most potential and existence in the narrative to actually become that attachment.

  • So it is vital that, if given the chance of...say, a novella, the writers explore who she is outside of her known events and reactions,

  • and that we get her side of the relationship with Bristlefrost that could lay the foundations for true friendship between them...

  • or a hatred that she won't let go of that would prevent any relationship between them but I doubt they would do that.

  • And that brings us to Spotfur's Rebellion.

  • As this is the section that will start containing spoilers, I'll give you a few seconds to evacuate if you'd like to read the book yourself first.

  • I'll start by saying that I honestly don't think this was a bad book.

  • In fact, of the three novellas, it was probably the best.

  • It gave more focus to some of the grosely underused background cast in Thunderclan, admittedly not a high bar to clear,

  • and explored bits of Spotfur's past in her early relationship with Stemleaf.

  • But it didn't go far enough for what the main arc it branches off from needs.

  • We did get some completely new content in Spotfur's childhood

  • as an apprentice who enjoyed the thrill of rebellion and used it to impress her already-crush, Stemleaf.

  • This is...more characterization than we've ever seen from her,

  • but I take issue with the picture this presents of present-day Spotfur.

  • It implies that, at some level, standing up to Bramblestar was a matter of enjoyment

  • rather than taking a stance against unjust treatment to herself and her clanmates, along with cats from other clans.

  • She loses some of her implied moral righteousness from the main series.

  • The alternative is that her rebelliousness is there to show she's someone willing to disregard the rules in favor of...anything else,

  • which will eventually help her ignore Imposterstar's unjust rules.

  • But even this case still equates goofing off around the border to impress a crush

  • to allying with members of rival clans to take down your leader because his current behavior is immoral.

  • It doesn't leave a good impression.

  • And other than that small section, the book is just a retelling of events we've already seen

  • with very little added even in the differing point of view.

  • This was a problem with all three of the novellas in A Warrior's Choice.

  • In different ways, they all felt very derivative, more so than Warriors usually is.

  • In Spotfur's Rebellion's case, there are important things that should have been touched on that just...weren't.

  • The story didn't tell us how Spotfur formed the rebel group, how cats from other clans were contacted,

  • if there were any cats she tried but failed to pull in, how the other clans were feeling about it,

  • or even how most of the clan felt about Bristlefrost when she followed Bramblestar.

  • In its effort to make the clan seem like an adversary, we didn't get to see anyone but Stemleaf take Spotfur's side,

  • with even her parents saying Bramblestar is great and we should follow him regardless of what he does.

  • However, when we saw Bristlefrost's side, she often felt like the whole clan was disappointed in or even scared of her.

  • You can't have it both ways.

  • Because so little was added in the plot, we also got very little expansion of Spotfur's character.

  • Pretty much the only example is her rebellious streak from her childhood,

  • along with the default nice personality applied to most semi-important characters.

  • She didn't feel like she led a rebellion at all, despite the title.

  • The rebels just...happened, in a way we weren't shown, and then faded out as they weren't needed.

  • And the same was unfortunately true in her relationship.

  • Spotfur's Rebellion was the chance to give the Broken Code an opportunity to make

  • good on at least some of its promises and potential...but it didn't use that chance at all.

  • It didn't degrade the arc either, but with how many holes The Broken Code has in its plot and its characters,

  • it and Spotfur really needed a boost...one they did not receive.

  • Thank you for watching, and always remember to

  • stand up for what you believe in...not just for fun.

The title might be a slight exaggeration.

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