Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles This video is going to be a little different from my regular Spiels. For one, I won't look like this. I'll look like this. There'll be a lot more drawing than usual as well, a rarity for me as a person as well as a channel. But this is going to be a bit of a special occasion. A couple of years ago, I had the idea of making an illustration with every Warriors protagonist included, along with a couple of others if the protagonists were obviously part of an incomplete set. This idea was quickly put aside as I had much more pressing projects, including the start of Paws of Stars. But now, as I have just finished that massive project, and with how busy I've been for a multitude of reasons, I kind of wanted a break, so I've decided to revisit my old idea and give a brief rundown of my thoughts on each protagonist as I draw them. Euick warning then that there will be spoilers for each cat's story in their section so you can skip over any cats you aren't familiar with using the chapters or timestamps in the description. You can see me now just figuring out the layout and future shading for this piece; I actually spent about 15 minutes before this just reorganizing and trying to remove or add the bubbles with names in them to even get this far. But now, we should be about ready to get into the drawings. And who else could I start with besides the famed first figure and future fiery forerunner of Thunderclan, Firestar! Even though he isn't one of my personal favorite characters or protagonists, Firestar is undoubtedly a great introduction into the world of Warriors. As the lens through which so many people had to learn about this new world, his kittypet background and everlasting curiosity driving him to actively seek out as many cats and plot points as possible made for a good combination, and we got to see much more of the world through his eyes. He had a strong will and moral compass, one that slightly differed from that of the clans in a way that allowed him to take heroic actions that other cats were too scared or too rooted in tradition to consider, leading him to befriend Yellowfang, Onewhisker, and Mistyfoot among others. When a cat from any clan was hurt, Fireheart felt it and wanted to help, leading us to care too. However, he was also not lacking in flaws. He has a tendency to take matters into his own paws rather than ever going to others for help, even when they would both be willing and able to. He can also, at times, be impatient, clueless, and he has a tendency to hold onto the past for too long, be that the weight of his kittypet heritage (especially as it applies to Cloudtail), Spottedleaf's kindness to him, or especially Tigerstar's legacy in the cats connected to him. He's overall a complex and likable character, a good start to and representative for the series. But now it is time to move on to his daughter, well, one of them: Leafpool. When people are thinking about the protagonists of The New Prophecy, a lot of times it comes down to the six cats in the traveling crew, but two of those didn't even get a point of view and one only got two chapters while a fourth only got a piece of one book. In reality, the cat with the largest total chapters across the arc is the resident camera: Leafpool, with Brambleclaw in second place. There's a clear reason Leafpool is there so much and it's because she's a character in a position to show us what's happening in the clans while the traveling cats are away or not interacting with many cats outside of their small social circle, but almost any cat could do that job. When Leafpool finally does get her own storylines: being subtly pushed out of her role by a desperate Brightheart and bonding with the grieving Crowfeather…well it's not my personal taste. Her story at that point, as much of Twilight (the Warriors book) is, is very melodramatic and silly and the sort of thing that hundreds of teens in the late 2000's would happily make love and drama style PMV's to. That's not to say it's a bad story, necessarily, just not as rich as some others in the protagonist mantle. Leafpool's deepest material actually comes after this arc is complete, with her training of two of her children and actions in the fallout of her secret being revealed, but none of this happens in the arc where she is supposedly in focus so I'll leave that to be for now. Firestar's other daughter is quite different, yet bound in the same pair. Squirrelflight certainly inherited his strong will and moral center, but in her case, perhaps because of the cats she was surrounded by, the lack of an appropriate mentor figure like Bluestar was for Firestar, or because of Squirrelflight's cute appearance and status as a she-cat, she was never taken as seriously or given as much ultimate respect as her father was. Here's hoping that will change if she soon becomes leader, but this is a focus on her in The New Prophecy anyway. As far as how she was as a protagonist, I liked everything about her personality and aggressive activeness in jumping into the story. The one thing I didn't care for is what I didn't like about the whole of her arc: the inability to form any close relationships. Almost none of the traveling group actually got close over the course of the arc, let alone on their journey, and Squirrelflight didn't have any friends she was close to back home either. As a result, by the end, her biggest bonds are with her sister, Leafpool, and three different men who loved her: Stormfur, who liked her when she was an apprentice and left to be with Brook instead, Ashfur, who coddled her in a way she didn't like and who later…well, you know, and Brambleclaw, the cat she ultimately ended up with but also who never shared a balanced or peaceful relationship with her. Whatever you think of Squirrelflight, or Brambleclaw's relationship with her, it's fair to say she never got a peaceful resolution or an outlet for her seeming need for connection and intimacy, which is a real shame for an arc that should have been about bonding across differences to come into unity. Up next is the big brown tabby himself, as if that makes it any more specific, Brambleclaw! And um, his complete turn from a noble and resilient tom facing a large amount of worry and ridicule in the original arc to a grumpy, closed-off, desperate warrior despite a complete lack of any mistrust in The New Prophecy is an unmotivated and a frustrating one. Believing the worst in cats around him, mostly Squirrelflight, refusing to see or bend to other cats' points of view, and quickly attaching himself to Hawkfrost and Tigerstar when he explicitly knows and previously rejected the latter's evil history and when he hasn't ever tried to bond with Mothwing or even Tawnypelt that much is just odd and can detach a reader from his perspective when the narrative doesn't give him any reason to think in the way that he does. Additionally, as the second most prominent point of view in the arc after Leafpool, his insistence on never forming friendships with or even giving care to most cats who aren't Hawkfrost distances the reader from the other characters in the story and gives us less reason to care about their journey at all, along with making Brambleclaw seem like a pretty poor leader to his traveling group, a bad quality in a cat the narrative wants us to think is the obvious choice for deputy. Onto the slightly better Tiger-child, it's time for Tawnypelt. She and Crowfeather are the main reasons that I decided to go for more than just the point of view characters, because they're very much part of the group as far as the fandom eye is concerned, even though neither ever got a point of view in The New Prophecy. Tawnypelt is definitely the character I consider to have been most in-need of attention and depth within The New Prophecy, as she didn't really get any growth or even a definitive personality that wasn't contradicted elsewhere in the series. Tawnypelt is most often known for one scene in this arc where Tigerstar asked her to train with him, much later than he asked Hawkfrost and Brambleclaw, and she said no and then told Brambleclaw he was being stupid for not doing the same. This is unquestionably a strong moment, but it is dissonant with information from later in the series that she never told her kits anything bad about Tigerstar and in fact named Tigerheart after him, apparently instilling in him the idea that he was named after a great and strong cat. Even Tawnypaw in the first series, based on her willingness to join and stay in her father's clan as long as she knew she wasn't going to do the same things as him, feels like she wouldn't be the sort of cat to deny his training as long as she wasn't going to take over the clans using it. This is far from the first time it's been suggested, but I honestly believe they could have had a better and less confusing set of character arcs if Tawnypelt and Brambleclaw switched places in The New Prophecy, with Tawnypelt yearning for connection and joining her father while Brambleclaw says no like he has before and tries to use his new, greater connection with his sister since the journey to lead her away from the path she already partially chose seasons ago when she left for Shadowclan. Onto uh my least favorite traveling cat. Stormfur is unfortunately a very bland character, not because he didn't get any time to shine–he had almost a whole book to himself–but because the time he did have was spent establishing him as bland. He doesn't have any specific thoughts about the cats or culture of his home, has some emotions but rarely acts on them, and mostly spends his time orbiting around four sources: his sister, whose relationship he disapproves of, Squirrelpaw, who he hypocritically loves but decides not to pursue because Brambleclaw is there, Brook, who he loves without any particular reason, and the Tribe who he feels duty-bound to protect as part of their prophecy and then as a newcomer in their ranks. Stormfur got tied up in a lot of the apprentice-loving and tribe-bashing trends of his arc and the next which did him absolutely no favors, but even on his own his story has few connecting elements in it to make us care about him, leading to his book being a relatively boring read. His sister is significantly more interesting, though mostly because of her graphic novel rather than because of her two chapters as a point of view character. Within The New Prophecy, Feathertail was almost a polar opposite character from who she was in A Shadow in Riverclan. She's pretty demure, nurturing, angry only at her brother when he tries to comment on her relationship with Crowpaw, and despite all this she also has a strong moral compass and an open heart for those around her, ready to befriend and sacrifice herself to save the Tribe that had just kidnapped her brother and done little more than be rude or closed off to her for a while and also being completely forgiving of Riverclan for what they did to her and Stormfur in the first arc. In her graphic novel, she is instead bitterly angry at Riverclan for that same deed and it is Stormfur who forgives them. She's also much less open-hearted and more sharp-tongued, even sometimes to those who aren't at all involved, like Hawkpaw. In The New Prophecy, she's an effective ancillary character, and having concrete relationships with both Crowfeather and Stormfur gives her an edge over some other characters, but she ultimately doesn't get much time to shine thanks to her early death and later identity as a stock kind she-cat. Wrapping up the New Prophecy crew with the grumpiest boy himself, here we have Crowfeather. He's…really a bunch of wasted potential. From day one he was the protagonist with the farthest character arc to travel, having no connections at all and actively distrusting the other cats on his journey, but we neither got his perspective nor saw him make any lasting friends or changes to his demeanor. Worse still, even when it came time for the civil war in his clan between his mentor and a rightful ruler that he respected, we didn't get his perspective or even much presence from him at all. And from this point onward…well let's just say the controversy that pops up around his portrayal and actions is something I have no interest in touching. So instead it's onto his kits, starting with Jayfeather! This is where my bias starts showing because every Power of Three and Omen of the Stars protagonist is now near and dear to my heart, but Jayfeather specifically is also one of the most consistently interesting protagonists in our set. He has a distinctive personality, compelling strengths and flaws with reasons you can see behind them, and even a resigned but simultaneously passionate investment in his stupid plot of an aimless prophecy, the absurd fracture of Starclan, and a Dark Forest war that makes no sense if you look at it for more than a couple of minutes. Honestly, my only complaint about the guy is that he doesn't really get a character arc, but no one in his arcs does. He's pretty much the same Starclan-love-hating prickly but talented medicine cat at the end as he is in the beginning, and that characterization has been stretched a little too far since he left his time in the spotlight. Speaking of cats who became more exaggerated and aggressive after their arcs, hi Lionblaze! Within his *first* arc of point of view, I would argue he isn't that bad. After the first book, he has some anger issues, impulsiveness, and willingness to trust Tigerstar and Hawkfrost mostly because they agreed with him when his sister didn't. That was all interesting. This was even briefly touched on again in Omen of the Stars with his accidental murder of Russetfur. However, similarly to Jayfeather, none of this is ever resolved, and additionally, a lot of it was set up poorly in the first place with some of the problems that plagued all of the Dark Forest (namely a complete unwillingness to be convincing or even nice to the cats they were trying to seduce to their side). A lot of Lionblaze's time then, particularly in Omen of the Stars, was instead spent on a very bland romance and forced conflict with Cinderheart or just being a stock tom devoid of personality, goals, or flaws to take up space and remind you that he's one of those protagonists. I love the guy at this point but it's due to a lot of headcanon. Onto my absolute favorite gal though, here we have Hollyleaf. There's no way I could succinctly sum up everything I love about her here, so I'll quickly refer you to her dedicated video, but as far as her canon usage as a point of view is concerned, I do have some thoughts, namely that she is a result of poor planning, lack of an initial concept, and accidentally tripping into some deliciously rich complexity. Hollyleaf is a character that was written backwards, with them figuring out how to write her dialogue and what to have her do in the plot before anyone had decided what her values were or what ultimately drove her to do anything she did. This led to inconsistencies across different writers and time periods about how strongly she felt about different things, how intelligent or tied to the code she was, and especially how she felt about the prophecy. Her most famous moments as a point of view: experiencing the fire scene, choosing to kill Ashfur, and then choosing to tell the clans their secret a book later were all written primarily for drama rather than out of an understanding of who she was. Hollyleaf never got a chance to even realize she wasn't part of the prophecy, and her motive to kill Ashfur was just to keep him from telling their secret, something she never got the chance to openly explain why she cared about. We do know that she ultimately revealed her secret at the gathering because finding out she was half-clan was the worst option that she hadn't considered before, but we don't get to see what she *did* consider and we never get any idea of how being the one left out of the prophecy even affects her. That said…*I've* thought about all of that. I've had almost 15 years to think about all that. And at this point I'm thankful to canon for giving me so much to think about. Moving smoothly into the Omen of the Stars crew now, and no, I was not going to draw Jayfeather and Lionblaze twice, here we have Dovewing! She's a gosh darn sweetheart and, when utilized *properly* honestly has the best excuse of any protagonist ever to be a camera. She not only has powers that let her see into any camp and any private conversation, but her personality and values hypothetically make her not understand and not care about the boundaries between clans, only putting value into cats' safety and feelings, leading her to completely disregard the rules in order to help cats she has no choice but to intimately know and care about, as with her intrusion on Sedgewhisker. Like with many protagonists, though, the issue comes in execution. She simply didn't get to live up to that full potential as Omen of the Stars had so much of its focus on Thunderclan and specifically Dovewing's relationships with Ivypool and Tigerheart. Most of the time Dovewing did get to see what was going on in other cats' lives was prompted by direct requests from Jayfeather and Lionblaze to spy on some cat or another, and at the very end her ability to just…see into the Dark Forest immediately undercuts anything Ivypool ever could have even done. Speaking of Ivypool, let's talk about her. I honestly cannot name another character on this list who was as negatively affected by the Dark Forest's portrayal as Ivypool. The crux of her story arc comes from being seduced into the Dark Forest in opposition to her sister, learning that they are using her, and then spying on them to feed information to the three that they can use to defeat her former-allies. However, the Dark Forest is not convincing. Hawkfrost's initial scene aside, as soon as Ivypool is introduced to the wider Dark Forest with more mentors and trainees, everyone just acts categorically evil even to their own cats all the time, and no one notices or cares. The Dark Forest is not secret. The cats Ivypool eventually convinces to switch sides during the Great Battle go so easily because no loyalty was established and it was just plot-blindness keeping them from noticing that Brokenstar murdering one of their friends in front of them might be a sign of bad intentions. The Dark Forest also has no information, and no viable plan. Their 30 cats, including trainees, will attack the 70 clan cats and thousands of Starclan cats without any particular rhyme or reason and with no ultimate goal besides violence. What information can Ivypool even get from her spying endeavors, then? What value is there in having her stay in the Dark Forest, in-universe? There isn't one, which is the biggest reason for Ivypool's story failing to land. In that case, let's go back in time to a place where the Dark Forest did not exist. It's time for Gray Wing. The Dawn of the Clans cast has actually become much more controversial in recent times, but I still mostly like the guy. He's not my absolute favorite character but it's a case where I chalk most of the criticisms people attribute to him to the whole arc's writing rather than Gray Wing's personal execution. Gray Wing is undeniably a less assertive and active protagonist than some others on this list, especially comparing those who had a book to themselves, but he embodies a lot of the values of his time in an important way. In forming the clans, it was important to note that, in the mountains, and even in the forest for a short time, cats were peaceful and respectful to each other regardless of their origin or personal disagreements, and Gray Wing embodies this completely by bonding with so many of his own friends and bringing in many of the loners already in the forest. Gray Wing's value system represents the piece of the clans that work together as opposed to staying as loners or, like Bloodclan, in splintered families. Clear Sky and River Ripple are the only leaders who don't owe their direct inclusion and leadership to Gray Wing by the end and even they wouldn't have been part of *the clans* without him. He was father or adopted father to a dozen or more cats and, if we believe Battles of the Clans, was remembered forever as Gray Wing the Wise. Again, if the arc's execution was better and there was more follow through on the themes, Gray Wing's character could have undoubtedly flourished more. But for what we have, I'm not unhappy. And as a reflection of those themes, we have Gray Wing's brother, Clear Sky, who represents the value system in the clans that pushes for guarded borders, other-ing of outsiders, and aggressive leadership to avoid signs of vulnerability. He is not meant to be likable. He has the bare minimum of showing us a reason why this value system might have formed from what he experienced and who he is as a character, but we weren't meant to agree with him. By the end of the third book he doesn't even agree with his own actions, seeing what tragedy they created. This is very much an execution issue, because in the latter half of the arc, and in the supplemental material that was written before the latter half was properly written, they fail to develop and solidify any sort of growth or change for him, which cements him as a remorseless jerk who only gets worse by knowing what he did wrong and not changing. Genuinely, in concept, I like what Clear Sky and Gray Wing could have represented for each other and even who Clear Sky could have been and become…but what we got wasn't a good concept, it was a failed reality. Onto both toms' much less interesting son: Thunder. I sure do wish that we had Jagged Peak in his position instead, or Tall Shadow, or literally any she-cat, or even River Ripple, but sure he's fine I guess. He just doesn't really add anything to our feelings on the Gray Wing and Clear Sky or general conflict that we wouldn't already feel or learn elsewhere and doesn't have an especially strong journey on his own either. Until he leaves to start Thunderclan, a community not given as much time or depth as some others, he can't even be a useful camera into a place we wouldn't otherwise see. Nothing is *wrong* with Thunder and I have heard people who resonate with his parental conflict and conflicting emotions over Clear Sky in particular, which is great, but from a functional perspective I wish the third point of view character was…almost any other cat. One contender for that spot and another major reason for my choosing to draw more characters than just the points of view is Tall Shadow. She, Wind Runner, and River Ripple will all be on this poster because it felt weird to have half of the clan founders without the others. Gray Wing and Clear Sky are a duo but once you add in Thunder they're part of a larger group. Now, Tall Shadow is a refined and yet emotionally complex she-cat who has to deal with suddenly taking over as leader of her group, discovering that they have fractured and that her own friends would rather have Gray Wing as a leader over her, and gracefully stepping down to let him lead them into a world with dangerous levels of contact with the local loners. Eventually, she also breaks off to form her own group, Shadowclan, which is a mission on its own. Definitely a character with enough potential to dig into but not one given a lot of time to flourish. And it seems that is going to become a theme because up next is Wind Runner, who, uniquely, didn't originate in the mountains but who was already a loner on the moors with her charming mate Gorse Fur before anyone else arrived. Gray Wing invited her in to ask for advice on how to hunt in the area and, eventually, despite her reservations about living in such a large group with cats she didn't really know, Wind Runner grew to open up and love and care about them so deeply that she took the mantle of their exceptionally proud and loyal leader, founding Windclan. Again, it sure would be nice to get this different perspective with a clear arc to follow and also haha get a she-cat with prominence and dignity rather than Thunder but Dawn of the Clans is sort of allergic to women. Rounding out our cats for this arc, though, we have River Ripple. Keep in mind I'm writing this before his super edition comes out but I've been focusing on the characters in their original arcs anyway so I'd probably leave it as a side note if it was in front of me. River Ripple, despite being one of the five, or six, clan founders, has abundantly less focus than any of his peers. He's a permanently-calm, aloof loner already living with a small group across the river when the mountain cats arrive and, other than taking in a couple cats who like the idea of water and just popping in to look at the aftermath of big events, he does almost nothing for the duration of the arc. It's actually shocking how little material he gets, and makes Starclan's choice to thrust him into leadership seem strange. But hey, the complete lack of material is also what gives us the greatest chance of seeing something new from his super edition, so here's hoping we get a character arc for this man soon enough. Wooshing back into the semi-present, though, it's time for A Vision of Shadows, starting with the only point of view for the first book: Alderheart. Again, I actually have a whole video devoted to my major feelings on this guy, but the long and short of it is that Alderheart has the most going for him among the A Vision of Shadows protagonists because he at least had a fairly good foundation in the first book, where he was the only point of view. He was another medicine cat forced into the role but he had the distinction of being bad at warrior duties due to anxiety rather than disinterest or inherent lack of skill and, although he was having more success in the slow-placed training of a medicine cat, he was immediately sent on and failed a mission from Starclan, losing a beloved elder and grandmother in the process and seeing the kits he and Needlepaw found split up despite their wishes. One would think that would only make him feel worse and give him a greater character arc to go on through the rest of the arc, but in reality all of his anxiety and a lot of his personality, presence, and goals disappeared by book 2, a really unfortunate occurrence. He's there to be eyes into Thunderclan for the rest of his time, but nothing important is even happening in Thunderclan so he ends up feeling like a waste of time. Twigbranch, though, got it even worse, because her character arc never even got off the ground. She sort of has a mini arc about wanting to find her mom, but as soon as she goes on a one-day journey and sees a cat die on the Thunderpath, she's convinced that's what happened to her mom and gives up on that. She sort of has feelings like Dovewing about wanting to connect with her distant sister but it's not especially prominent or consistent since Violetshine's feelings aren't consistent and Twigbranch doesn't even know her that well. Her final three arcs consist of finding a place she belongs, in Thunderclan or Skyclan (both of which already had a point of view character performing camera duties in them by the way), getting through a really rough relationship with Finleap, and, if you count it, learning to train Flypaw…by promptly skipping over everything that helps her learn how to teach and instead having her just know how it works. Twigbranch tends to feel consistently disconnected from the plot and she doesn't even have any specific relationships, character arcs, or camera duties that are well-handled or given enough time to connect to, so not my favorite in the protagonist roster. By some measure, Violetshine may be doing the best at being a protagonist in this arc, as she at least has an important part of the plot to look in on: the Kin's takeover of Shadowclan and, later, Skyclan's transition into being one of the clans among the lake. She was at least in the right place to see a large portion of the plot, which is better than the other two options in the arc, but the issue with Violetshine is how disconnected as a character she is from the actions she takes. She may think one thing, like that Shadowclan is mean to her or that the Kin is evil, but none of her actions ever reflect her thoughts or are given other motivations, which makes it difficult for an audience unfamiliar with her experience to understand her at all. Rather than getting to know her as a character, she was constructed to make us feel bad for her by having everyone around her bully her endlessly and giving her no one to be a genuine, caring friend. (No, Needletail does not count. She never actively sought out Violetshine's company and only spent time with her when it could get her to Alderheart or the Kin. She actually had to be reminded by Alderheart to try caring for the baby kitten she brought home.) She's ultimately inconsistent and pretty hollow, which is why I have more technical problems with her than Twigbranch or Alderheart. That said, it's time for us to finally move into The Broken Code! As a way to have the triads from A Vision of Shadows and The Broken Code mirror each other in this poster, I put both anxious medicine cats on top so we're starting off with Shadowsight, who unfortunately shares a problem with Violetshine. Shadowclan, and even well-established characters like Mothwing, are made to be cruel to him without any proper justification for the sake of making us feel bad for a character we can't otherwise connect with. Who is Shadowsight beyond a poor bullied soft boy? Well, as a protagonist, he does give us the first idea of who Ashfur is through his visions and is the connection we have to a piece of the plot because of that, but I find him pretty impenetrable as a character. He's a dutiful medicine cat who does exactly what he's expected to and gets worried a lot because of how other cats feel about and treat him…and that's about it. He's still a dutiful medicine cat who's worried and tries to prove he's okay to cats who mistreat him through to the very last book, leading him to nearly sacrifice himself in trying to show that he's not evil. He didn't really grow or change at all over the course of the arc. The only things that changed were the specific circumstances around him. I have been enjoying his presence much more as a calm voice of reason background character for Sunbeam in the latest arc but that's not really relevant to his time as a protagonist. So sticking with the Broken Code, let's talk about a cat who definitely did change: Rootspring. I'm actually drawing him more like Rootpaw in this poster because that is when he was most compelling in my mind but Rootspring was probably treated the best of the Broken Code protagonists. He started off as an angsty, irritable teen who had a couple bullies, a dad he was ashamed of, and a pipedream hero crush on Bristlefrost of Thunderclan. He clearly had a lot of room to grow, and coming into terms with his powers and the responsibility that Ghost Bramblestar thrust on him was a good vehicle through which to explore that, since it connected to his father's heritage that he was already ashamed of. Most of what I don't like about him is Bristlefrost, because frankly the hero crush on Bristlefrost, a complete stranger, completely read as a part of his immature mindset that he would understand and let go of as he grew up. They could still be friends of course but I didn't really want them to be more than that. With what we did get, though, I at least enjoyed his scene telling Ivypool and Fernsong about their daughter's death. It was appropriately heart wrenching. And speaking of that daughter, it's time to move onto Bristlefrost…oh my poor girl. To start off, she was housed in the clan of Imposterstar and, through a combination of break-up emotions and blind duty, became a perfect unknowing spy and deputy to Ashfur, causing many of her own friends and family to hate and mistrust her in the process. While I think that could have, and maybe should have, gone on longer, her turn to realizing the violent truth of her leader's actions and identity and turning out to be a spy for the rebellion instead was a compelling idea putting her still at the center of the conflict. It's after Ashfur leaves Thunderclan that her arc is thrown off. Rather than healing any relationships or learning to stand on her own without attaching herself to Stemleaf or Bramblestar or any other cat, she becomes a stock demure she-cat and attaches herself to Rootspring instead, following him around and caring about past relationships so much that she actively points out how little she cares when Stemleaf dies and doesn't even notice when her mentor is killed. I was very glad to see a little of her original spark and determination come back for the last book and I am ultimately happy with her death happening when it did to prevent her from sinking further into the stock she-cat role in the future. Finally, we have made it to the most recent arc, and to start off we have Frostpaw! I am glad I didn't add names anywhere in this piece because, whatever her full name ends up being, calling her Frostpaw will become obsolete pretty quick. I put Frostpaw in the center though because at this point it looks like a lot of the plotty parts of the arc will center around her and her clan, and at this point she's kind of um…dead, or at least heavily injured. Riverclan's lack of a leader and deputy and her own spotty connection with Starclan has been a great source of conflict and Frostpaw looking for potential candidates for the roles and perpetrators of Mistystar, Reedwhisker, and Curlfeather's maybe-murders have forced the narrative to explore who a lot of Riverclan cats are in a way that they hadn't ever done before. On a personal level, I've also been loving just how much Frostpaw has loved getting away from responsibility and being a normal, extremely talented, warrior apprentice instead, all while convincing herself that she has a crush on a warrior who definitely wants to kill her. All this for the purpose of solidifying her role as not-a-medicine cat even though she is definitely sapphic ace and might grow to love Whistlepaw from Windclan eventually. Uh, that last part is totally headcanon, for the record, and will never ever come to pass in canon. Next up on the roster is…ugh. Okay at this point in the series, before I know everything they plan to do with Nightheart, I don't know if I can give a solid opinion on my feelings about him. He's a character I will almost certainly make a video on one day, but it's not going to be until a few more books have been released because I don't want to make premature assumptions. What I can say is that Thunderclan seemingly had little going on to justify a perspective in it besides Bramblestar's slow deterioration and Nightheart's primary journey has had to do with being really certain that he's not Firestar and not orange at all, wishing to get away from his super awful pack of she-cat family members, but not his tom friend or super cool tom leader and grandfather, to a place where he won't be judged. He fared much better in Shadowclan with a rushed but acceptable arc that, thankfully, included realizing that he was wrong about how his family saw him. As with Rootspring, though, the danger will come in how the next books treat his relationship with a certain she-cat. And look at that! We've come to Sunbeam, my current favorite character in the arc and the last one in the poster. She began as a young but grown up cat with a committed relationship in Blazefire, a friend in Lightleap, plenty of other connections in her eccentric and fun Shadowclan, and a yearning to become a mentor and be a model warrior. However, Lightleap and Blazefire each breaking up with her and then getting together as their own pair threw off that plan and left her with a somewhat petty bitterness. Sunbeam is also able to be a camera for the second largest plot going on right now: Berryheart's Moms-Against-Code-Changes, or “MACC” uprising. (This is only my term no one else has ever heard of or used it before.) As a side note, Lightleap might also still be plot-involved considering her suspicious behavior around the time of Reedwhisker's death. The big thing, though, is that Berryheart is against the new code changes and is allying with Splashtail of Riverclan to go against them. This movement briefly appealed to Sunbeam when Nightheart purposefully failed his last test and left her, but immediately after she joined Thunderclan because she loves him so much. I do not know where this plot is going yet. No one does. Maybe conspiracy theories are right and she is actually just spying for her mom now…but given their track record with strong she-cats abandoning their personalities, arcs, and sometimes positions to pursue true love while toms don't have to give up much or anything for love, I'm not holding my breath for that. And wooo! We're coming to the end, with just some formatting, lighting, and framing to finish off the piece. Being an artist isn't my primary profession or skillset by any means, but I do like how it turned out for the most part. To give you an idea, I wasn't able to work on this full time because, shockingly, I do have many other responsibilities to attend to, but this took 10 days to complete, longer than any drawing I've ever done before. This was definitely intended to be a break, so the drawing taking so much longer than expected is…odd, and goodness knows how long the video will turn out once I finish editing this, but I am happy to have done it, because now I have a poster with all of these little kitties together, until arc 9 comes out, anyway, and I can check that little item off the bucket list. Thank you very much to anyone who got through this monster of a video. I hope you enjoyed it, and as always, remember to give yourself a break every so often (even if that break is more work). If it's something you want to do, it's worth it.
B1 US arc character protagonist gray prophecy wing Drawing & Talking About EVERY Warriors Protagonist – Sunny's Spiel | Warriors Analysis 4 0 WarriorsCatFan2007 posted on 2024/02/18 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary