Recently, "Douluo Dalu 2** has a somewhat dramatic setting, that is, the male protagonist Tang San divided his daughter Tang Wutong into two halves, one is Wang Dong and the other is Wang Qiuer. These two existences, which were supposed to be one person, turned into two completely different individuals, which inevitably makes people feel a little unreasonable.
First, let's take a look at the backgrounds of these two characters. Wang Dong's true identity is actually Tang San, the daughter of Tang San and Xiao Wu. She has four martial soul fusion skills, and her compatibility with the male protagonist Huo Yuhao's martial soul is as high as 100%. She is also one of the Shrek Seven Monsters, and has a quarter of the soul beast bloodline. Wang Qiu'er has the blood of the Emperor Rui Beast.
According to the setting, these two are the existence of the same person. But they each have their own completely independent life experiences and personality traits. Especially Wang Qiuer, she and Huo Yuhao have also established a deep emotional relationship.
But later, Tang San merged the two back to Tang Wutong alone, and erased Wang Dong and Wang Qiu'er's original personalities. This is very embarrassing, because it stands to reason that they are already two completely different individuals, and they cannot simply merge together from memory.
There are some problems with this setting. **Wang Dong and Wang Qiuer, who came out, have formed their own unique personalities and experiences. The forced merger of them is in fact disrespectful to two separate personalities.
In some Japanese comic works, we can see that the personality of the ** individual often rebels against his own existence. For example, in "Death", the copied personality contradicts the original personality and tries to replace the original personality;In "Wings", the two protagonists who have been copied do not want their existence to be erased.
It can be said that Tang San's simple forced merger is a bit cruel to Wang Dong and Wang Qiu'er, two personalities who should exist independently. This setting is too eager to create a deep love for the male and female protagonists, and ignores the independent value of the individual.
In short, there are certain hidden dangers in the practice of separating different parts of a person and then forcibly reuniting. It inevitably glorifies the idea that "it is the same person" too much, and does not respect the independent personality that the individual should have. I hope that the follow-up plot can give Wang Dong and Wang Qiuer the respect they deserve, and don't sacrifice the rationality of the characters' personalities simply to serve the plot.