Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-27720018-20160906015503/@comment-26383427-20180916132048

Rpmaluki wrote: Looking back at the show I noticed something I can't tell whether it was intentioanl or not. For the first four seasons of following Nick's story as a newly minted grimm with his wesen friends and perpetually endangered live-in girlfriend, we were also following Adalind's story. We watched her blindly follow orders from people she thought cared for her who ended abandoning her, we watched her lose her powers and desperately seek them back, fall in love with her unborn child, lose that child, do everything she could to get that child back, fall pregnant again and fall in love with the father/hero of the show. It's almost like Grimm was about her journey as much as it was Nick's, at least more so than all the other supporting casts include those who were closest to Nick like Monroe and Juliette who barely got developed beyond being used as a prop for Nick to save the day. It's not surprising then that Nick and Adalind do end up together and are actually happy together after all that they went through. That actually make sense. You know, when I first watch Grimm, it was during the 3rd Season and it were the episodes after Nick met Monroe's parents. I don't know much about Nick back then except that his the Hero of the show. I also don't know a thing about Adalind (Hell, I don't even know her name back then) and her past interactions with Nick. However, when I watch those episodes without any ideas of what happened during Season 1 and 2 and the earlier episodes of Season 3, it feels like the story was split between what's happening on Nick's side and what's going on from Adalind's side that it gave me an impression that this story is about those two than just about Nick.