Norma or Vallory?

I notice some basic similarities in the two being strong, older women. They're also reasonable to an extent (both giving the protagonist an opportunity to redeem themselves in their eyes opposed to just killing them at the first chance) They also punish their followers (or claim they will) family or not. They're also the brains of their respective groups although Vallory strikes me as more evil. Who do you prefer?

Comments

  • Vallory

    Who?

  • She was an antagonist in Tales From The Borderlands.

    Vallory Who?

  • Norma all the way. She was less 'physical' than Vallory and she was really smart.

  • Oh okay, cant really answer this then

    She was an antagonist in Tales From The Borderlands.

  • Norma, way more complex, way more intimidating and way more satisfying to kill.

  • Norma all the way, 'cause, w'the hell is Vallory!

  • Would definitely say Norma, she was an overall much better character and a bigger threat. Vallory was only a huge threat in Episode 3, after that, she was kind of just there, she had like 5 minutes of screen time in the last two episodes combined.

  • Why not both?

  • Norma was really well written in that when she died I wasn't getting some sadistic satisfaction from it. It was really morally ambiguous. I mean, Randall was a dick, but she was democratic and didn't want the people at the ferry to be killed. She was in pain. She wasn't some villain, she was a PERSON. And watching her suffer felt terrible; we burned down her community and stole from her. That is the kind of moral ambiguity the walking dead is about. My vote's in for Norma; extremely well written

  • Why not both!

    prink34320 posted: »

    Why not both?

  • Probably Norma, Valloy kinda just showed up for 5 mins

  • Nice point. She wasn't a one note Carver character. She wasn't brutal, evil or psychotic. She was human that's what brought her to life as someone more believable

    Tenmile posted: »

    Norma was really well written in that when she died I wasn't getting some sadistic satisfaction from it. It was really morally ambiguous. I

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