
NEWX7
5.8K posts

NEWX7
@NEWX71
Brazilian-American who happens to be a huge fan of pop-culture! YT Channel: https://t.co/yVs3fXAfJA








define ‘love’




Why exactly is Monkey D. Dragon so feared?? For someone that has not feats??


5/9 “He lets Ada go,” part 2: the actual situations RE4R Everyone points at Leon letting Ada escape with the Amber and somehow treats it as “morally grey subtext.” But people forget one very simple thing: his mission was to save Ashley Graham. Not recover the parasite. Not destroy the cult. Not arrest Ada. His objective was straightforward: get the president’s daughter out alive. Now imagine Leon trying to stop Ada there: two highly trained agents fighting each other while the island is literally about to explode. Neither of them would gain an easy advantage, meaning the fight could drag on for far too long. Would risking Ashley’s survival for that confrontation actually be morally superior? Personally, I don’t think so. And remake Leon makes his emotional stance even clearer when he refuses Ada’s helicopter offer and says: “I think we both know this is where we go our separate ways.” That line alone says a lot about where his morals stand by that point. RE6 This discourse has existed for centuries at this point, but here we go again. “Why did Leon stop Chris?” Maybe because Leon has basic common sense while trying to protect the only witness connected to the case. And again, this ties directly into Leon’s core trait: prioritizing others over himself. Helena’s safety and reputation are at stake here. On top of that, Leon understands Chris probably better than almost anyone else. He immediately recognizes Chris is acting emotionally, which is WHY Leon tries to calm him down in the first place. And what does Leon do afterward? He lets Chris continue pursuing Carla because he trusts him — something Leon outright states seconds later. Killing “Ada who isn’t actually Ada but whatever” right there would’ve caused two disasters: 1) Destroying Helena’s credibility and possibly ruining the investigation. 2) Chris potentially making the worst emotionally driven mistake of his life. Leon’s intentions here are incredibly easy to understand, and none of them point toward moral ambiguity.






























