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  • 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 aschannel. 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 nowas 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 worldhis 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, Onewhiskerand 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 hastendency 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, cluelessand 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 Crowfeatherwell it's not my  personal taste. Her story at that point,  

  • as much of Twilight (the Warriors book) isis 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, necessarilyjust 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 relationshipsAlmost 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 insteadAshfur, who coddled her in a way she didn't like  

  • and who laterwell, you know, and Brambleclawthe 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 herit'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 andfrustrating 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 evendefinitive 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 catStormfur is unfortunately a very bland character,  

  • not because he didn't get any time to shinehe  had almost a whole book to himselfbut 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 sisterwhose 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 interestingthough 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 potentialFrom 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 onwardwell 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 personalitycompelling 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 thingshow intelligent or tied to the code she was,  

  • and especially how she felt about the prophecyHer 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 TigerheartMost 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 anotherand at the very end her ability to justsee  

  • 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 mountainsand 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 themeswe 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 becomebut what we got  wasn't a good concept, it was a failed reality.

  • Onto both toms' much less interesting sonThunder. I sure do wish that we had Jagged  

  • Peak in his position instead, or Tall Shadowor 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 eitherUntil he leaves to start Thunderclan, a community  

  • not given as much time or depth as some othershe 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 wasalmost 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. SheWind 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 herand 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, Shadowclanwhich 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 becometheme 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 leaderfounding 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, thoughwe 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-calmaloof 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-presentthough, 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, presenceand 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 worsebecause her character arc never even  

  • got off the ground. She sort of hasmini 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  

  • Flypawby 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 relationshipscharacter arcs, or camera duties that are  

  • well-handled or given enough time to connect toso 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 characterHe'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 himand  

  • 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 ascalm 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 Bristlefrostoh 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, becameperfect 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  

  • umdead, 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 isugh. 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 allwishing 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,  

  • orMACCuprising. (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  nowbut given their track record with strong  

  • she-cats abandoning their personalities, arcsand 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 partTo 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 isodd, 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 listThank you very much to anyone who got through  

  • this monster of a video. I hope you enjoyed itand 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.

This video is going to be a little different  from my regular Spiels. For one, I won't look  

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