Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-26516813-20151115032732/@comment-27523265-20160113045255

This is a story. Look at how the writers would be able to create conflict and the necessity of conflict in the plot. Diana is to powerful to be a good guy for very long. It is the uderdog character that is usually the good guy so that there is serious pressure. If Nick had Juliette's power, he could handle situations much more easily but the show would not have the conflict that propels it. The same is true for Diana. She is much easier to write as an antagonist than protagonist if she is to have a major role in the show. Otherwise Nick becomes a useless character. Kelly meanwhile is bound with a number of constraints including the fact that his powers will not develop for a while. Going off the idea that power corrupts, if Kelly's  zauberbiest/grimm parentage make him immune to magic, that would paint a big target on him and Diana could try to remove him. They can't be happy together because then there is no conflict. At best, Diana is going to be doing her thing outside of Portland and trying to make a difference, occasionally showing up for some plot line or other, or she will heroiclly sacrifice herself. Diana herself has no reason for familial attachment and I think it is likely that Julliette survives in order to prevent Diana from standing unopposed by someone with similar power. Julliette is weaker though so she will likely be defeated, possibly killed, Nick goes on the offensive, Adalind is torn between children. There you have it. I will be perfectly clear though Julliette and Adalind are like Harry Potter and Voldemort "neither can live while the other survives", one of them will have to die for Nick to find his ultimate match. Diana and Kelly are only half siblings and have never met, having nothing in common other than their mother. There will never be a show where Nick, Adalind, Julliette, Kelly and Diana are together and happy. Forget it. Its bad writing. Dysfunction and division are what drives plot and character growth. get over it.