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  • Sol is a very unique character in the Warriors world.

  • He's undeniably an antagonist, but he doesn't have nearly as large of an affect on the world

  • as some other antagonists, never rises to power through either literal strength, the

  • formation of an army, or taking up some position of power in the clans, and also never serves

  • as the primary antagonist of any arc or even book, as he only appeared sparsely through

  • the latter half of Power of Three and a single book in Omen of the Stars, followed by an

  • origin story in the Skyclan manga series.

  • Despite all of that, he is a massively popular character among the fandom, which mostly stems

  • from the *type* of antagonist he is.

  • Among the Tigerstar's, Hawkfrost's, and Darktail's, Sol is unique because of his

  • methods of getting what he wants.

  • Fighting is rarely if ever something he gets involved in.

  • He prefers to use his words to manipulate other cats into keeping him safe, trusting

  • him, or taking actions against their own interests.

  • This on its own isn't unique to him at all.

  • Tigerstar manipulated Bluestar along with all of Thunderclan and Shadowclan.

  • Hawkfrost manipulated Brambleclaw, Mudclaw, and, later on, Ivypool and the other Dark

  • Forest trainees.

  • Darktail manipulated Needletail, Violetshine, Hawkwing, and most members of the Kin.

  • But in all of those cases, manipulation was only part of their plan, and striking out

  • with violence was always the end goal.

  • Sol, meanwhile, tries to avoid fighting when at all possible.

  • The concept of the master manipulator who makes events play out exactly the way he wants

  • and tears the protagonists apart without ever lifting a claw to stop them himself is quite

  • appealing.

  • The strongest of warriors wouldn't be able to stop someone who they don't ever think

  • to fight.

  • With that said, Sol's execution doesn't make him a master manipulator, so much as

  • it makes him out to be a petty and sometimes stupid selfish cat who does whatever he wants

  • to with little thought given to the consequences.

  • Ultimately, especially in the context of Power of Three and depending on your perspective,

  • he is either a waste of potential or a waste of time.

  • Let's delve into the few appearances he has had so I can explain why.

  • We first meet Sol in Eclipse, where he gets a very powerful and mysterious entrance, being

  • mistaken for a lion by Hollypaw and then strolling into camp as a bewildered patrol which even

  • includes Thornclaw is unable to think of a reason why they brought a strange loner into

  • the heart of Thunderclan.

  • He quickly makes an impression not only on most of Thunderclan, but on the reader as

  • well.

  • What could he have said to the patrol to make them take him to camp when they didn't really

  • want to?

  • What sort of power does he have?

  • This was an arc where superpowers were introduced, so he could have had some sort of oration

  • power for all we knew, or he could have simply been a very good and malevolent speaker.

  • Sol quickly weasels his way into taking Leafpool and Jaypaw away alone to tell them that a

  • darkness is coming, nothing will ever be the same again, and that the sun will go out.

  • This immediately speaks to Jaypaw, who had a dream concerning a choking darkness recently,

  • but Leafpool is put off by his abrasiveness and disrespect for Starclan.

  • It turns out, though, that Jaypaw's favor was all he needed, as that caused Jaypaw to

  • bring Hollypaw and Lionpaw along to see him, find out more of what he knows, and perhaps

  • get his help with the prophecy that still, four books into the arc, was a mystery to

  • them.

  • Sol's lies have already, at this point, given him access to one of the most powerful

  • and well-kept secrets around the lake at that time.

  • Sol being a confidant or mentor to the three could have made for the foundations of a really

  • good story, but unfortunately this is about as far as it went.

  • As soon as he met them for the first time and agreed to mentor them, he caught a Shadowclan

  • patrol and asked to go to Shadowclan instead, where he could manipulate Blackstar in front

  • of the three and not only immediately abandon them but also immediately lose their trust.

  • Any power he could have had over them is lost in an instant, only a chapter after he got

  • it.

  • Not a great start.

  • And all he gets to do for the rest of the book is convince Blackstar to give up on Starclan

  • and the clans.

  • This very minor, unthreatening plot that is already disconnected from all of our main

  • characters continues into the beginning of the next book: Long Shadows.

  • Somehow, offscreen, he convinces Shadowclan to essentially become a band of rogues that

  • hisses to any cats they find at the border and no longer feed the kits and elders.

  • Tawnypelt and her kits, Flamepaw, Tigerpaw, and Dawnpaw, flee to Thunderclan and, with

  • zero convincing since our protagonists already know about and don't like Sol, the six cats

  • band together to fake a Starclan sign and convince Blackstar that Starclan is still

  • real actually, which instantly makes Blackstar return his clan to normal.

  • Shadowclan then drives Sol out, Tawnypelt and her kits return to their own clan, and

  • our protagonists go on as normal, having learned nothing from a cat and event that had practically

  • nothing to do with them.

  • The one exception is a quick conversation Sol has with Hollyleaf where he says that

  • she needs him, she says no, and then drives him out of Thunderclan too.

  • Despite the amount of focus Sol's presence gets in Sunrise, the last book of the arc,

  • he didn't do much there either.

  • The clan concluded that he was the most likely cat to have murdered Ashfur so they spend

  • a great deal of the book going on a Sol Patrol to look for him and bring him back for interrogations,

  • which they do, yay.

  • He doesn't have any answers for them and is just kept as a prisoner that no one likes

  • or trusts until Lionblaze offers to help him escape in exchange for Sol telling him who

  • their birth parents were, which he eventually sort of agrees to as he and his siblings do

  • let him escape and tell him to leave them alone, even though Sol doesn't ever give

  • them information on their birth parents.

  • The siblings have a climatic scene where they tell Sol that their powers aren't his to

  • control, which would probably be really powerful if he ever had any control over them or their

  • powers and didn't immediately give it up and make enemies of them when Shadowclan came

  • around.

  • He then leaves, never to be seen again and having made no impact on the story.

  • In the Forgotten Warrior, he returns, taking credit for saving Molepaw and Cherrypaw and

  • suddenly becoming Thunderclan's hero, despite them never once trusting him before and still

  • considering him as the most likely suspect in Ashfur's murder which was never solved.

  • However, it turns out that Hollyleaf was one who actually saved the apprentices and Sol

  • was secretly working with Windclan to start an attack on Thunderclan, which Hollyleaf

  • helps them to fend off.

  • Despite the hatred she has for him, Hollyleaf decides to spare his life when she has the

  • chance to kill him as a symbol of how she will now stick to the warrior code and has

  • changed since she murdered Ashfur.

  • And thatis the last time we've ever seen him.

  • The only other story material he's in is the Skyclan mangas which, as it turns out,

  • tell his origin story before he ever came to the lake.

  • In brief, Sol was originally a kittypet named Harry who lived in the house Leafstar was

  • kidnapped into.

  • While he doesn't understand Leafstar's desire to get out, he does respect it, and

  • helps her escape with her kits.

  • He joins the clan, but doesn't want to do much work, is both untalented and unmotivated

  • in training, and keeps looking for workarounds, some of which have disastrous results for

  • Skyclan's safety.

  • We learn that his mother, Cinders, had told him and his siblings stories about the brave,

  • strong, legendary clan cats and, even once he heard that those stories were fake, he

  • always wanted to be a warrior too.

  • But when he doesn't become a full warrior as quickly as he wanted to with no effort,

  • he decides to prove to Leafstar that he's ready by stealing her kits with the intention

  • of pretending to find them later.

  • However, his plan is discovered and Leafstar banishes him, an act so horrendous that he

  • went on to go manipulate the clans out of spite for the clan who wouldn't accept him.

  • This is a…pretty horrendous backstory for Sol to have.

  • It makes him out to be stupid, lazy, untalented, impulsive, and someone who hates the clans

  • only out of petty vengeance after he was banished for an obviously wrong, intrusive, and dangerous

  • decision.

  • None of his manipulation tactics or ability to lie his way out of troubles is explored

  • except in that he lied to Leafstar to gain her favor, after he already had it for saving

  • her and her kits.

  • No one else in the clan was fooled, and it is only Sol who comes out looking like the

  • fool for believing that stealing someone's kits, taking fox prey, and skimping out on

  • training was a good way to become a warrior.

  • Sol would have honestly been better served by not giving him a backstory at all, so that

  • he could be more mysterious.

  • And with any hints to a backstory he did drop, we would never know if those were the truth

  • or just more of his lies.

  • Although, it isn't as if his main series appearances painted him as a single-minded

  • smooth-talker either.

  • This type of master manipulator really needed to, first, be at least partially centered

  • on the protagonists so we can see the result of that manipulation, and second, succeed

  • in some of his ambition so that we could learn the power he holds with his words.

  • Through immediately leaving the protagonists behind and going to Blackstar in another clan,

  • where he didn't successfully do much of any damage, he has a very shallow effect on

  • the story and our heroes.

  • And with no consistent goals or any permanent effects on the story or characters, his entire

  • plot seems like more filler for already filler-heavy arcs.

  • In that way, he is a waste of time, especially considering his very very small Shadowclan

  • plot goes on over two different books when it didn't even need one.

  • But there was also a little spark of potential in him, even in the story as we were given

  • it.

  • There is one particular relationship that he and the story keeps coming back to, and

  • one character that he keeps being pitted against: Hollyleaf of course.

  • Like Hollyleaf, he doesn't actually have any power, and yet seeks to gain it mostly

  • through his words and the trust of other cats.

  • Like Hollyleaf, he is a bit of a hypocrite and sometimes compromises on his morals in

  • service of achieving his goals.

  • And like Hollyleaf, he believes he is ultimately more powerful and important than Starclan

  • and must make his own decisions about how to proceed rather than relying on ancestors.

  • Sol doesn't care about or follow the warrior code, which would make Hollyleaf feel superior

  • to him, but what about when she became a murderer, and went against the code herself?

  • Even if he wasn't the real culprit, Sol was nearby when Ashfur's murder happened,

  • and being a loner, he certainly could have wandered over and seen what happened.

  • What would Hollyleaf do then, finding herself morally inferior to and even similar to a

  • tom who tore Shadowclan apart and stands for everything she thought she didn't?

  • How would she confront that?

  • And if this tom was actually important to her, how much more satisfying could it be

  • when he returned after she had finally redeemed herself and come to terms with all that she

  • had done?

  • I don't know.

  • I just think it could have been interesting.

  • And it is in that particular scenario where I do, like many others, really enjoy Sol.

  • Thank you for watching, and always remember that I'm your friend.

  • You can trust me, I *promise*.

Sol is a very unique character in the Warriors world.

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