Board Thread:False Info and Speculative Discussion/@comment-1487677-20160305181327/@comment-13965604-20160307021422

Trent 116 wrote: AlphaOfAlphas wrote: LadyX wrote:

AlphaOfAlphas wrote:

Biz2424 wrote: My personal thoughts on the subject are that even those Jeff often kills fan favorites like Erica and Boyd and josh, its actually better for the show. The more characters that stick around every season, the less attention they would all receive. I'd much rather them spend future episodes going over the lore of the TW verse then waste time with scenes from more characters who we don't fully understand. But they barely talk about the TW lore anyways. We still barely know anything about the Hellhound, La Bete (e.g. what makes him so special? Is it by the nature of his transformation or just by the nature of his personality? Why is he the only werewolf with white eyes?), The DD, Valack, etc.

In fact, they still haven't even explained what the other chimeras were mixed with, nor even Josh or Corey for that matter, and it's already been 19 epidoes.

I was saddened by Josh's death because I knew it was going to happen from since he didn't put on the mask, and it sucked that he didn't even see it coming. I liked him, although he didn't say much. I hope we at least get to find out what he was mixed with. That's exactly the point. They don't go into lore because there are too many characters No, that's not why. Characters can talk about lore all the time. There are many opportunities to. Even when they have moments when they can give a lot of information, they're always very vague. A prime example was when Gerard and Chris revealed to Parrish that he's a Hellhound. They didn't say anything that we already knew, when it was a perfect opportunity to give us more information. Another example is when Valack keeps talking about the DD ruining his life, but never says how...I really hope they plan to address this. They have many scenes of the DD doing things that levae us clueless, instead of having them talk and give some information about themselves. Screen time isn't the problem, especially since characters are all involved in the same issue, so interconnected that information about secondary characters is still revelant enough for main characters to talk about it.

I agree with Nervous. They probably don't have a "series bible". It seems like they are vague on things because they are not yet sure what they want to do, so they don't want to etch ideas in stone that they may one day go against. Yep. Like the true alpha power rule. Peter's arc through season 4 was to kill Scott and become an alpha again because in his pov Scott usurped the Hale's alpha status in Beacon Hills. In season 5 they introduced the rule that only a beta of his own making can take a true alpha's power. Like Liam. But then everything Peter planned and did would've been for nothing even if he had got to kill Scott..

Peter made Scott not the other way around so in the current canon it was impossible for Peter to become an alpha by killing Scott himself. Unless Peter being Scott's maker would serve as a loophole for this rule. But that's never stated and most likely never will be. So to our knowledge Peter, who grew up as a werewolf and around the supernatural community, was a total idiot in season 4. Working for something that would've failed even if he succeded. Hard to believe Peter not knowing about this, but the canon contradicts itself so much that we have a whole new set of canon every season.

He tried to get Liam to do it first. However, pretty much his whole speech when he went after Scott was about trying to make him be the Alpha a pack needs. "You have to kill me, or I'll keep coming back" on closer watch doesn't seem to just be a you have to kill me or I will keep trying to take your power. He was trying to get Scott to be the Alpha a pack needs.