|
Post by Black Widow on Mar 31, 2018 11:13:26 GMT
Sure she died and ultimately she never had Fitz's love. However, she messed with him mind to the point where his true persona and The Doctor are kinda one in the same. Before being forced into the Framework, he wouldn't have never done what he did to Daisy.
|
|
|
Post by backroadjunkie on Mar 31, 2018 11:51:09 GMT
Sure she died and ultimately she never had Fitz's love. However, she messed with him mind to the point where his true persona and The Doctor are kinda one in the same. Before being forced into the Framework, he wouldn't have never done what he did to Daisy. I'm not sure she won. Aida removed the moral inhibitions that Fitz had, but the evil in Fitz was always in Fitz. If not for Aida, the rift to the "fear" dimension would have consumed the world. (Man, I really hate they used the "fear" dimension. Why didn't they just call it the Dark Side. It's not like they don't borrow from that franchise...) Of course, now Daisy can destroy the world, so there is that down side... And May is right. The team needs someone who can think like a super-villain. So you might say she won, but her actions are now proving to be beneficial to the team and to the world, which is certainly contrary to what Aida wanted.
|
|
|
Post by caseyrook AKA Mechelle on Mar 31, 2018 12:05:06 GMT
Sure she died and ultimately she never had Fitz's love. However, she messed with him mind to the point where his true persona and The Doctor are kinda one in the same. Before being forced into the Framework, he wouldn't have never done what he did to Daisy. I agree with backroadjunkie in that I think that that darkness has always been in Fitz: but then again, every single member of the team has some form of 'darkness'. I do agree with you the rest of the way, however.
|
|
|
Post by FreeKresge on Apr 4, 2018 5:37:40 GMT
I do not think that it was her goal to turn Fitz evil. That was just a means to get him to figure out how to make her into a real person with a wide array of superpowers. I do not believe that the darkness was always in Fitz. Before going into the Framework, he was probably the most moral of the main characters. Fitz believes that the darkness was always there, but I see that as a sign of how hard it is for him to distinguish between what was always inside him and what was added in the Framework.
|
|