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  • While cats with superpowers isn't an element exclusive to the Power of Three and Omen of

  • the Stars arcs, those arcs certainly focused most heavily on them.

  • Unfortunately, that was less out of a desire to tell a specific story involving superpowered

  • cats, and more out of a need to fill space while waiting for the Ashfur and family drama

  • plotline to play out.

  • By the time of Omen of the Stars, they had already made several missteps in the formation

  • of the powers, and didn't manage to correct those by the time of the final battle, leading

  • to even the clans' victory over the Dark Forest having nothing to do with the powers

  • that were supposedly made to use in that very fight.

  • One of the most tangled aspects of the powers plot is actually in what the powers themselves

  • are.

  • From fairly early into the process of writing The Sight, the Erins already knew that Jaypaw,

  • Lionpaw, and Hollypaw, would have superpowers, and Jaypaw is using his throughout the first

  • book, including a moment where he uses it to see, in Firestar's memories, the exact

  • prophecy that his powers are based around: “There will be three, kin of your kin, who

  • hold the power of the stars in their paws.”

  • This prophecy, like many in the series, is quite vague.

  • It says that three members of Firestar's family will have powers, but it doesn't

  • say who those cats are, what any of their powers are, when they will use their powers,

  • or what they will be used for.

  • Strictly speaking, this prophecy doesn't even say that they'll be born with powers.

  • They could all be given power for a single special battle or other climatic moment and

  • still follow the prophecy to a tee.

  • The reason for all of this vagueness is simple: at the time the Erins were writing this and

  • most other prophecies, they didn't yet know how it would play out.

  • Warriors books are written three books in advance, so Outcast was being drafted as they

  • finished up with The Sight.

  • They don't know while writing The Sight what will happen in Sunrise, let alone The

  • Last Hope.

  • And in case you were wondering, the first time that Lionpaw and Hollypaw are even told

  • about the prophecy's existence is in the space between Outcast and Eclipse.

  • Hollyleaf herself was originally intended to be one of the three like her brothers,

  • and her eventual confirmation of lacking power was a last minute decision made in the latter

  • half of the arc, in large part because Victoria Holmes had found no luck in thinking of a

  • power for her until then.

  • Now, knowing how tremendously popular Hollyleaf has become as a result of that choice, and

  • as a massive Hollyleaf fan myself, I do believe that particular choice did more good than

  • harm.

  • However, it also resulted in Hollyleaf having a fairly inconsistent characterization and

  • storyline, one that continued to bounce and sway even through to herless-than-perfect

  • death, which I'm sure I'll have more to say on in a different video.

  • Here, though, I'd like to stick to the topic.

  • Even once her lack of power had been chosen, it didn't affect her story much.

  • Through Long Shadows and Sunrise, Hollyleaf's main priority is still about her parentage

  • and the possibility of not being clan-born, or later, being half-clan.

  • In other words, she was concerned with what the plot of the arc was originally conceived

  • to be.

  • There doesn't even exist a single scene where Hollyleaf realizes that she doesn't

  • have a power, instead thinking that none of the siblings are part of the three since,

  • without Squirrelflight as a biological mother, they might not be related to Firestar at all.

  • The first time she has to confront her separation from the prophecy is when she comes back and

  • meets Dovewing in The Forgotten Warrior, but even then we don't get any of her thoughts

  • without her point-of-view, and most of what we do see is her trying to make up for the

  • murder she committed rather than anything to do with her power or place in the prophecy.

  • Lionblaze's power, meanwhile, definitely existed, and if you've read or know the

  • story of Power of Three, you probably have at least a general conception of what that

  • power is.

  • However, the exact description of what his power is would change depending on who you

  • asked, from not being hurt to instantly winning any battle to general strength or just anger.

  • This is because his power was only really invented in late Outcast, in a…ahem, distasteful

  • event in the Tribe, which led to many mistakes in it both before and after its implementation.

  • He definitely doesn't instantly win any battles he is involved in, either on his own

  • or with his clan.

  • There are only seven battles involving him before the end of Omen of the Stars: a border

  • skirmish with Shadowclan in The Sight, fighting the Tribe invaders in Outcast, fighting Windclan

  • and Riverclan in Eclipse, the battle with the beavers in The Fourth Apprentice before

  • they realized they needed to destroy the dam, a second battle with Shadowclan in Fading

  • Echoes, a second battle with Windclan and Sol in the tunnels in The Forgotten Warrior,

  • and the big Dark Forest battle in The Last Hope.

  • Now, seven is a very small number to make any judgement off of, but importantly here,

  • even one of those battles was flat out lost.

  • When the traveling group fought the beavers, Rippletail died, all of them were overwhelmed,

  • and they had to retreat, with Lionblaze himself making the call.

  • And when they went back the second time, Lionblaze and Dovewing worked to tear the dam apart

  • while the others distracted the beavers directly, so he wasn't even a part of that battle.

  • Along with that, the battle in Fading Echoes was only declared to be won by Thornclaw,

  • but both Thunderclan and Shadowclan lost a high ranking life that day, so whether Lionblaze

  • won them the battle or not is questionable.

  • Even beyond that though, winning the majority of battles you are involved in is a trait

  • shared by a great majority of Warriors protagonists, especially those in the main series.

  • It doesn't seem all that special for Lionblaze specifically, and he has been beaten even

  • in single combat, with Berrynose nonetheless, so being undefeatable doesn't seem like

  • a possible power for him.

  • The second most prominent idea is that he can't be hurt, but this is proven false

  • many, many times.

  • Lionpaw is regularly scratched by the environment or by other cats, and even if his power was

  • meant to be used exclusively against the Dark Forest, it wouldn't work, because Tigerstar

  • himself, effectively if not literally the leader of the Dark Forest, was easily able

  • to draw blood.

  • Suffice to say, he is in no way indestructible, no matter how many times he comes out of a

  • battle without any scratches of his own.

  • The only remaining possibility seems to be that, as lines like this imply, his power

  • is a form of adrenaline that allows him to have more energy, anger, passion, or focus

  • during battles.

  • If this is his power, it overlaps greatly with his anger issues that exist outside of

  • battle and it is hard to determine the line between the two, but it also doesn't seem

  • that powerful.

  • If the adrenaline can't guarantee him a win, he'll still be just as hurt by any

  • attacks, and the anger he has can make him kill cats he didn't mean to, what benefit

  • does that power provide?

  • How is it different from any strong, angry, rampaging warrior doing the same thing?

  • In my view, at least, it isn't really.

  • The issue with Lionblaze is that his power was only developed by looking back on what

  • he had already done and who he already was, so thesuperpowerhe was described to

  • have is exactly what any average cat could have as well, making it seem significantly

  • less like the power of the stars is in his paws.

  • The opposite problem exists in Jayfeather.

  • His power was being used from the first book, primarily because it had the most utility.

  • Letting Jayfeather know what his clanmates thought about him helped to push his isolation

  • and explain why he didn't care for social niceties, and seeing into other cats' dreams

  • and memories not only got him his spot as a medicine cat but revealed the prophecy to

  • himself, the readers, and eventually, Hollypaw and Lionpaw too.

  • With Jaypaw as a point of view, having Firestar or even Starclan reach out to the three became

  • unnecessary, and they could become an independent group learning to live with their powers without

  • guidance.

  • That said, the utility of mental powers may have also been a detriment, as it caused the

  • rules and limits of Jayfeather's powers to constantly be stretched over the series,

  • with various additional elements being added over time.

  • I left it intentionally vague before, but even what basic power Jayfeather was meant

  • to have is unclear.

  • It was either mind reading, where you can hear the thoughts of others around you, or

  • empathetic abilities, where you can tell what someone else is feeling and sometime's feel

  • it yourself.

  • Jayfeather was definitely almost never compelled to feel what another cat was feeling like

  • Yellowfang was in her super edition, but there are some examples where he did, and he is

  • consistently able to tell with detailed accuracy what cats around him are feeling.

  • Yet he is also able to tell exactly what cats are thinking down to the word, hearing them

  • in his mind as if they were speaking aloud, and is also capable of walking into dreams,

  • seeing memories, and somehow spiritually entering a cat's mind to speak with aspects of them

  • separate from who they naturally are.

  • This all isn't to mention the time travel he was somehow able to accomplish into a past

  • self's body without any trace of that past self being there, even for the period between

  • Long Shadows and Sign of the Moon where Jayfeather wasn't back in time at all.

  • These different abilities do all share the similarity of being mental powers, but that

  • is a category, not a single power on its own, and Jayfeather might well have access to nearly

  • all of them, with the exception of those that allow you to control another mind.

  • Where compiling Lionblaze's different accounts together ends up stripping him of any real

  • power, compiling Jayfeather's abilities makes him seem overpowered, not in comparison

  • to a normal cat, but in comparison to the other cats who share his destiny.

  • The three are supposed to be powerful, and I think Jayfeather is the best example of

  • that being true, but having so many different abilities seems more unbalanced than they

  • are supposed to be.

  • Dovewing is, in my mind, the one who got the best balance of power and consistency, which

  • makes sense.

  • Unlike with Jayfeather, Lionblaze, or even Hollyleaf, by the time the Erins got to Dovewing

  • they had a whole arc of practice behind them, the chance to focus on nothing *but* powers

  • for Omen of the Stars, and an entire book, The Fourth Apprentice, whose primary purpose

  • was developing Dovewing as a character in conjunction with the powers they were introducing

  • to the readers, and her powers are heavily tied into who she is, how the plot progresses,

  • and how her life and relationships progress.

  • Dovewing is able to hear, scent, and vaguely see things at extreme distances.

  • This is a powerful ability and could be useful in a variety of circumstances, which I think

  • is a good idea for one of the three powers, especially in how normalized it is for Dovewing.

  • Almost every cat is able to hear, see, and scent things, so she went from birth thinking

  • that this was perfectly normal.

  • It is only in seeing how other cats react to her that she comes to understand how different

  • she is, and that she becomes somewhat isolated as a result.

  • This is not only a great power because of its utility, but because of the potential

  • it offers for character, development, and relationships, and while I think some of that

  • could have been built more upon during the story, Dovewing's novella did a great job

  • of capitalizing on those feelings once her power was stripped away.

  • The only issue I have with how it works, is that The Last Hope portrays her as being able

  • to stretch her senses into the Dark Forest.

  • The Dark Forest is an afterlife, like Starclan, and both of them have to use magic in order

  • to reach the living world.

  • Presumably then, those afterlives are on a different plane of some sort.

  • No matter how well her senses worked, Dovewing shouldn't have been able to see into the

  • Dark Forest any more than she could see into the past, or see into any fan's AU of her

  • world.

  • But even imagining that the Dark Forest is just a short walk awaysomehow, there's

  • another issue with this, in that it makes Ivypool's already sparse amount of usefulness

  • in her own story even more obsolete.

  • Whatever tiny bits of information Ivypool was able to gather while in immense danger

  • every night and actively hurting certain cats to maintain her cover would be instantly dwarfed

  • by the information Dovewing could gather by hearing and seeing everything that went on

  • there every night without a sweat.

  • Even if none of these powers ended up being of use in the final battle, and none of the

  • three ended up being pivotal parts of the Dark Forest's defeat, just spending twelve

  • books with cats who have to deal with superpowers and a looming prophecy could have been and,

  • in some ways was, very interesting.

  • But some level of planning, integration, or balancing among the powers would have done

  • a lot of good in helping the prophesied three to feel like equal pedestals of power, and

  • could have potentially inspired them to use those powers for what they were destined to

  • do.

  • Thank you for watching, and always remember to watch where you step.

  • You're not indestructible after all.

While cats with superpowers isn't an element exclusive to the Power of Three and Omen of

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