字幕列表 影片播放
The New Prophecy arc ended all the way back in December of 2006,
and as the second arc rather than the first, it has far less widespread viewership than The
Prophecies Begin. Because of that, the idea that it still holds a major influence in the
series is already a bit strange. But I would go further. I believe that, in the present, The New
Prophecy's influence is stronger than that of any other arc in the series, including the original.
Just about every fan who has gotten into the series at all either started with it or went
back to read the original arc. It is this story alone that sparked so many fan communities,
ideas, stories, and art, and speaking from the fans' perspective, I would
conclude that the first arc is easily the most influential and widespread material. However,
the original arc wasn't a template for the series in the way that The New Prophecy was.
When the team was drafting and writing the first arc, those books were the only ones they ever
expected to make. Certain details like the ages and relationships between cats, the cultures and
histories of each individual clan, and the precise rules of the warrior code went overlooked because
they weren't necessary to the exact story being told. The New Prophecy did *begin* in this camp,
as it was originally meant to be a simple 3-book epilogue series to the original arc,
but soon enough, it was decided that the series would go on for much longer.
I suspect that this is one of the main reasons that the material it invented has been clung to
so tightly over the years. Though I should defend that point. Let me go over the elements
from the New Prophecy, and show how far they have stretched into the present.
I think the most appropriate thing to cover first is the characters, the easiest elements to
track across the years. The New Prophecy's main cast of Brambleclaw, Squirrelflight, Leafpool,
and Crowfeather, along with the support cast of Stormfur and Feathertail, Hawkfrost and Mothwing,
Tawnypelt, and the tribe at large, have stuck around and even been major players in every
series since. All four of the main cast members act as the biological and adoptive parents for
the three protagonists in the next arc, and due to that relationship end up as central figures
for the whole of Power of Three and Omen of the Stars. By the end of Omen of the Stars,
Bramblestar and Squirrelflight were Thunderclan's leader and deputy,
and due to that status quo not changing at all in nearly 10 years, they haven't left their spots of
prominence. Both characters have gotten a super edition to themselves since Omen of
the Stars concluded, and for that matter so has Crowfeather. Leafpool too got extra material,
though as a novella retelling her kitting rather than a post-Last Hope super edition,
and she only recently died in a super edition before The Broken Code began.
They aren't the only New Prophecy characters with heavy emphasis either.
Hawkfrost and Mothwing's tale has been told in two mangas and a novella, and Hawkfrost
himself was one of the most prominent members of the Dark Forest in the third and fourth arcs,
being Ivypool's main mentor and our primary avenue to learn about the evil afterlife.
Mothwing meanwhile has been Riverclan's medicine cat since New Prophecy,
even past Willowshine's death, and as the medicine cat who doesn't believe in Starclan, her story and
oddities have been a strong curiosity for just about every medicine cat point of view we've had,
from Jayfeather to Shadowsight. Of course Mothwing also came back to prominence recently with The
Broken Code and her being driven out of Riverclan to instead bully Shadowsight in his own clan,
and now as the mentor for an upcoming point of view protagonist, Frostpaw.
Tawnypelt, Stormfur, and Feathertail have certainly had a lesser effect on the series
as a whole, though to be fair they also had less focus in their own arc. Even still, they have very
important roles and legacies into the present. Feathertail and Tawnypelt have both been given
very recent supplemental material, Feathertail with her manga and Tawnypelt with her novella,
and Stormfur has stood as the poster boy for the tribe for a decade. It's hard for many to remember
a time when the Tribe wasn't a part of the series, but it was the New Prophecy that introduced it,
and despite the many, many times the books have returned to that group since,
Stormfur and to an extent Brook have been the only Tribe cats with much if any characterization
or focus. Even in Graystripe's Vow, when Graystripe and Flipcaw visited the Tribe,
it was only Stormfur and his kits that they really talked to or spent any time with,
and while they tried to include more cats in books like Sign of the Moon or Tawnypelt's Clan,
they failed to give them any characterization as opposed to just screentime.
Even beyond the characters themselves, there is of course the plot to consider, and The New
Prophecy's plot elements all had massive effects on the rest of the series. There is the obvious
element of The New Prophecy bringing the clans to the lake, which remains the home of the clans to
this day, but there is far more to bring in, such as the Tribe's dependence on the clans,
which I have already discussed at length as stretching into the entire rest of the series,
the introduction of the Dark Forest and the possibility of being trained there, which
continued into Power of Three, caused Omen of the Stars' big conflict, and was the setting and main
focus for the last two books of The Broken Code. Graystripe's disappearance and Brambleclaw taking
up his position instead was brought up not only in Power of Three with their deputy struggle, but
in an entire three-part manga series, which was in fact the first mangas the team ever put out, so it
indirectly started the concept of Warriors mangas existing at all. Tallstar's decision to make
Onewhisker the leader and Mudclaw's subsequent coup spawned an entire character arc for Onestar,
starting from Power of Three and ending when it spawned the main plotline for A Vision of Shadows,
and also was the focus for last year's extended manga: Winds of Change, which
featured Mudclaw himself as the point of view character. Cinderpelt's impactful death created
the Cinderheart reincarnation plotline which stretched until the very end of Omen of the Stars.
And, perhaps most importantly, the relationships that took up so much of the arc, especially in its
latter half, fuel three of the subsequent four arcs that follow the main timeline.
Leafpool and Crowfeather's forbidden relationship resulted in three kits,
two of whom were part of the prophesied three, and all of whom were raised by
Squirrelflight and Brambleclaw instead with no clue as to who their biological parents were,
and their breakup caused Crowfeather and Nightcloud to get together, and have Breezepelt,
one of the main antagonists in Power of Three and Omen of the Stars. The relationships of
those couples with each of their kits was the one of the only things that could reasonably be called
a plot in Power of Three, and was still a central point in Omen of the Stars as well. Meanwhile the
relationship between Squirrelflight, Brambleclaw, and Ashfur was not only the birth of the most
famous moment in Power of Three and perhaps all of Warriors, and the cause for much of the tension in
Omen of the Stars, but also the reason for the entirety of The Broken Code to have happened.
None of this would be an issue if the prominence of The New Prophecy's cast and ideas didn't push
out the supposed real cast and make them obsolete. This happened in the Power of Three, where the
protagonists were written sloppily thanks to the plot's real focus on Squirrelflight, Brambleclaw,
and Ashfur, and in The Broken Code, where the protagonists were written...sloppily...thanks
to the plot's real focus on Squirrelflight...Bramblestar...and Ashfur. Huh.
All told, it often seemed that Ashfur, Squirrelflight,
and Bramblestar were the real protagonists of The Broken Code, rather than Bristlefrost
Rootspring and Shadowsight whose jobs were more about witnessing and assisting in their story,
with the probable exception of A Light in the Mist.
While the characters from the first arc have definitely stuck around and kept popping
up since their arc ended, it never got to the level of intrusion that the TNP cast has. The
strongest examples to the contrary are probably, first, the number of first arc cats who appear in
Starclan or Dark Forest scenes, such as Bluestar, Yellowfang, and Tigerstar, second, the climactic
and somewhat overshadowing roles that Tigerstar and Firestar played in the Last Hope, and last,
the strangely large roles Graystripe and Firestar played in the most recent arc. On the topic of
Starclan and Dark Forest cameos including a lot of first arc cats, I would say that it honestly
comes down to how few cats have died since. The first arc was far more brutal than any arc since,
and the inclusion of so many Firestar cameos since his death proves to me that there just weren't
enough notable dead cats to fill up Starclan and Dark Forest scenes before. And let's not forget
that Feathertail has been in many of those scenes too, despite dying in the second book of the New
Prophecy. But the Last Hope being focused on the Firestar vs. Tigerstar conflict more than anything
else is a fair criticism. After all, Tigerstar was the Dark Forest's leader, and Firestar was made to
be the fourth cat in the prophecy who really saved the clans, even if he didn't actually do much more
than any of the three did. Still, their prominent role only took center stage in one book: The Last
Hope, whereas Squirrelflight, Brambleclaw, and Ashfur overshadowed the protagonists for
about an entire arc and a half, including The Broken Code and parts of both Power of Three
and Omen of the Stars. And while Graystripe and Firestar's recent prominence in the latter half
of The Broken Code was oddly placed for sure, it was only for one, or in Graystripe's case,
two main scenes. Though admittedly, Firestar literally taking over Rootspring's body to kill
Darkstripe was about the most blatant expression possible of old cats pushing out the current ones.
And along with this is a disturbing trend particularly in the more recent arcs where
characters are almost entirely left behind as soon as their story is over. Despite all
being the parents of main characters, Ivypool, Dovewing, and Violetshine were all given
startlingly little attention or screentime to show their continuing journeys or build relationships
with their children. Ivypool especially didn't even get 50 lines across the whole
of the Broken Code despite Bristlefrost, a main character, being her daughter,
and Violetshine, Rootspring's mother, barely did any better. Twigbranch too, has been forgotten,
getting even less time than Ivypool. Alderheart has managed to be slightly more prominent thanks
to still being a medicine cat, but he hasn't had a meaningful character beat since his arc ended.
And it's not just their lines or presence, but their very stories that have quickly
been forgotten. No one in The Broken Code even mentions Onestar or the Kin's plot,
and the closest thing we get to acknowledging the previous tensions with Shadowclan and Skyclan is
the mention of Juniperclaw poisoning freshkill when he is up for redemption. And even though
the setting for the Broken Code's end is the Dark Forest, the area has changed so much since Omen of
the Stars and no cat who trained there goes back, so we end up not touching on that history either.
With all these refusals to include the more recent growing history of the clans in the new material,
the endless, significant reliance on the characters, lore, and plot ideas of The New
Prophecy starts to look excessive. When stories go on for generations upon generations, you would
expect some things to be less talked about as time goes on, for old members to pass or fade
into the background and be replaced in prominence by new characters and newer history to share.
But instead, the original arc and especially the New Prophecy are still being treated as
the blueprint from which all new stories should arise, which I consider to be a disservice to
the narrative. Evolution and change are what keep the new books interesting, and part of
that involves not just adding new characters, not even just letting the new characters be the focus,
but treating recent history as just as or more important than history further away,
and involving the characters who have come shortly before. If there was one thing I could do to
change the levels of intimacy and realism of the communities in modern Warriors, it would be that.
Though, it wouldn't hurt to abandon most of the New Prophecy. It's amazing they even got
this much material out of such a nothing arc. I am quite satisfied with leaving it behind now.
Thank you for watching, and always remember to share your tales, new and old.