Darth Wedgius wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2019 3:59 am
It took a while, but Starlight Glimmer grew on me. She was forgiven easily, but this is MLP:FiM, where even treason is forgiven pretty easily. And, like with Discord, they had a motive, with Starlight being powerful enough to want on their side. And Starlight's past was forgiven, but not forgotten, being brought up multiple times. And she had a character arc, learning (by fits and starts) not to use magic to solve everything, then being thrust into a situation where she couldn't use magic.
That's a better justification of her arc in the Season 6 finale than I've usually got--but it's still undermined by her being quick on the draw to use magic in "A Royal Problem" within the first (what, five, ten minutes?) on others without their permission (AGAIN, after No Second Prances AND Every Little Thing She Does) and then being told at the end that she did the right thing. It's stuff like that really soured me on her redemption. I loved the Season 5 finale. It was Season 6 that did it in for me.
Starlight did grow on me a bit ... but mostly thanks to episodes where she wasn't interacting with the Mane Six. "Rock Solid Friendship," "Uncommon Bond," "Parent Map," "To Change A Changeling," "On the Road to Friendship," "Triple Threat." In those episodes she was capable of being funny, likeable, entertaining, etc.
Too often when she is interacting directly with Twilight or the others, the episode to tends to devolve into Starlight being the only one allowed to have a functioning brain-cell and solving the problem--often by making Twilight out to look completely hapless, clueless and overbearing: "No Second Prances," "Marks for Effort," "A Royal Problem," "School Daze," etc.
To take an example of an two-parter I actually really like, "Shadow Play," think about Starlight's role in that:
Part 1 - Starlight says they Twilight should listen to Starswirl, trust that he knew what he was doing.
Part 2 - Starlight says that Twilight shouldn't listen to Starswirl, that he doesn't know what he's doing.
She's the only one arguing that point of view and, of course, is right BOTH times. Having that happen in one part or the other is fine; having it in both is ridiculous and annoying.