Similarities and Differences of The Walking Dead

edited November 2016 in The Walking Dead

As a habitual reader of TVTropes, I have developed a tendency to use their terms to describe and analyze characters from many different sources of media. And with a series as full of complex characters as the Walking Dead, of course it would get this treatment.

One of my favorite tropes is that of the literary Foil: A character who highlights another character's trait(s), usually by contrast. This character can be the opposite of the character in many ways — or perhaps very, very, very similar, except for a crucial difference. This trope is so flexible that it can really apply to any two characters and it has several common subtropes (such as Foils, Counterparts, Shadows, and Opposites) to specify the nature of the foil. So, the purpose of this topic is to compare and contrast the characters of the Walking Dead and help find what makes each so unique on their own.

Table of Contents

  1. Stranger and Kenny
  2. Kenny and Ben by @Kenny726
  3. Kenny and Jane by @TWDazehnuu
  4. Jane and Stranger
  5. Lee and Larry by Deltino
  6. Ben and Arvo
  7. Kenny and Larry
  8. Kenny and Lilly by @LoseMyHome
  9. Kenny and Sarah
  10. Jane and Kenny
  11. Lee and Kenny
  12. Clementine and Duck
  13. Lee and Vince
  14. Lee and Carlos
  15. Katjaa and Brenda
  16. Shel and Carlos
  17. Carver and Arvo
  18. Luke and Nick
  19. Sarah and Jane
  20. Russell and Nate
  21. Duck and Shawn
  22. Pete and Carlos
  23. Sarah and Arvo
  24. Gil's Pitstop and Crawford by @megamike15
  25. Carley and Luke at the request of @BroKenny
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Comments

  • edited October 2016

    Just gonna post a rough guide to be edited into a Table of Contents later on.

    Common Foils:
    Adventure Duo The Hero tends to be fairly serious, at least for what world they're in.The Lancer, on the other hand, is weird.
    All Work vs. All Play
    Always Second Best
    Always Someone Better
    Arch-Enemy The Hero's most prominent enemy.
    Armored Villains, Unarmored Heroes
    Beast and Beauty
    Beta Couple
    Betty and Veronica Two girls in a Love Triangle: one a sweet Girl Next Door and the other sensually exotic, or hot-tempered on the outside, but sweet on the inside.
    Black Sheep
    Brains and Brawn
    Cain and Abel
    Classic Villain
    Commander Contrarian
    Deliberately Bad Example
    Evil Counterpart A character who has similarities to a good or not as evil character, but is evil(er).
    Evil Counterpart Race
    Evil Knockoff
    Evil Twin
    Fan of Underdog
    Force And Finesse
    Geodesic Cast A large cast is divided into teams with counterparts.
    Ham and Deadpan Duo
    Junior Counterpart
    The Lancer The second most-capable member of Five-Man Band under The Leader, and the Foil to The Hero in The Team.
    Mentors
    Morality Pet An amoral character's voice of reason.
    Not So Different
    Not So Similar
    Odd Couple A friendly (sometimes romantic) relationship between completely different people, usually the main characters.
    Opposites Attract
    Polar Opposite Twins
    The Psycho Rangers An enemy team whose members are each specifically designed to destroy a particular hero.
    Red Oni, Blue Oni Two characters, one passionate, headstrong and wild, and the other level-headed, collected and rational, are associated with each other for contrast.
    Right Way/Wrong Way Pair
    The Rival
    Rude Hero, Nice Sidekick
    Salt and Pepper
    Shadow Archetype A character that embodies something another character does not like about themselves--positive as well as negative things, anything suppressed or denied in the personality.
    Sibling Yin-Yang
    Sidekick
    Similar Squad
    Soldier vs. Warrior
    Straight Man and Wise Guy
    Student and Master Team
    Talker and Doer
    Technician vs. Performer
    Token Evil Teammate
    Token Good Teammate
    Vile Villain, Laughable Lackey
    White Sheep
    Worthy Opponent A character shows their respect for an adversary.

  • edited September 2016

    The Stranger could be a darker foreshadowing of Kenny in Season 2. The two are very similar as husbands and fathers, and plausibly could've swapped roles in the story. As Kenny tries to kill Jane, it parallels neatly with The Stranger's attempted murder of Lee in Season 1, to the point of using lines very analogous to the Stranger.

  • Kenny and Ben could be considered foils. (Maybe?) Kenny knew that a lot of his actions were wrong, yet he purposely chose to be in denial so his guilt didn't consume him. He tried to mentally play the hero, even though he truly saw himself as anything but. Ben, on the other hand, never mentally denied his actions. Because of this, his guilt ate him up. Um...would this be considered a foil? Sorry if this is completely wrong.

  • No, its fine, mate&love. Actually, as I mentioned in the description, a foil can technically be any two characters with a significant contrast and difference. Funny I never thought of that exact duo.

    Kenny726 posted: »

    Kenny and Ben could be considered foils. (Maybe?) Kenny knew that a lot of his actions were wrong, yet he purposely chose to be in denial so

  • Okay. I wasn't sure if that example would be some sort of parallel, or if it would be a foil.

    Kenny and Ben would make a great sit-com duo. Have you ever watched any videos or had a playthrough where only Ben and Kenny go with Lee to find Clementine? It's pure gold.


    There's a lot of commentary in this video, but it's the only one I could find if you haven't seen this choice play out.

    DabigRG posted: »

    No, its fine, mate&love. Actually, as I mentioned in the description, a foil can technically be any two characters with a significant contrast and difference. Funny I never thought of that exact duo.

  • Well, you seem to know your Walking dead quite well. Good for you.

  • Yeah actually! :lol:

    Kenny726 posted: »

    Okay. I wasn't sure if that example would be some sort of parallel, or if it would be a foil. Kenny and Ben would make a great sit-com du

  • I didn't even think of that!

  • Jane's gambit of lying about a family member to manipulate the situation and gain her trust is disturbingly similar to The Stranger lying about Clem's parents.

  • DeltinoDeltino Moderator
    edited September 2016

    I've always seen Larry as an anti-Lee. Both of them are older guys that have had to deal with their own hardships in life. Both of them have one person left in the world that they still care about, and are willing to protect at any cost. The only difference is how they go about doing so; Larry's been hardened from everything he's gone through to the point where he just tries to push everything and everyone else away. Him and his daughter, fuck everyone else. Lee has a similar set of beliefs, and even says so himself. He's a family-oriented person, and he has the firm belief that family is what's important in the end. But unlike Larry, Lee doesn't let that get in the way of helping the people around him.

    Lee and Larry diverge at the point when the people around them enter the equation, and that's because of where the loss they've dealt with comes from: Larry is more than willing to push people out of his bubble, because the loss he's faced left him bitter to the world that surrounds him. The world is what took his wife, his friends, and his family from him, and he doesn't want it to take anything else. Lee has lost a lot as well, but unlike Larry, that loss isn't because of circumstance; it's because of him. He's killed. He's already been shunned by everyone else around him, seen as something he isn't because of his mistakes. The world didn't take anything away from Lee; Lee took everything away from himself, or at least, that's how Lee sees it. He's a man seeking redemption, a man that is quite obviously filled with regret, who doesn't blame anyone but himself for his current situation. And taking care of Clementine offers him the redemption he seeks. All the same however, helping the people around him contributes just as much towards the redemption he is so desperate to find. Lee doesn't want to die a killer, ostracized by the people he loves and cares about, like he did with his family. He wants to die a good man, or the closest he can come to it, whose death will give someone else's life meaning.

  • That's like poetry, man.:cry:

    Deltino posted: »

    I've always seen Larry as an anti-Lee. Both of them are older guys that have had to deal with their own hardships in life. Both of them have

  • Shamelessly copied from TV Tropes.

    Like Ben Paul, Arvo is timid, awkward, and unlucky young man who is apologetic to those he considers good people, a bit of a screw up when it comes to successfully executing his plans, and constantly in a position where he is the subject of victimization, abuse, and ridicule from friends and enemies alike. Both are timid young screw ups who are constantly bullied by Kenny, that the player naturally feels inclined to give the benefit of the doubt in hopes they'll prove themselves. The only difference is that while Ben was a part of the group and wanted to help, Arvo is being held against his will and actively despises the group. Additionally, Ben is a victim of bandits who teams up with the protagonists against them (mostly). Arvo sees the protagonists themselves as bandits, and tries to rob them in turn. And whereas Ben was close with Clementine (implicitly due to her reminding him of his sister), Arvo hates Clementine and blames her for the death of his sister. Both Ben and Arvo get fed up with Kenny's treatment in Episode 5 of their respective seasons, and tell him to fuck off. For Ben, it works. For Arvo? Not so much.

  • Shamelessly copied from TV Tropes because my laptop froze before I actually hit the save button on the file I was storing this thread's material on. :unamused:

    Kenny and Larry. Both are unreasonable, violent and Papa Wolves. Larry, however, is a Jerk Ass.

  • edited September 2016

    I think Kenny and Lilly are the series archetypal "foil" characters. They are, really, two sides of the same coin.

    Kenny and Lilly are both leaders. Both are headstrong, out-spoken, and stubborn; and both would do anything for family. In personality, they are very much alike, which coincidentally is why they clash so often. Their opinions diverge when they decide what is best for their family. For Kenny, that meant leaving the motor inn to keep a target off their backs, killing Larry to ensure his survival to help Katjaa and Duck, and stealing supplies to feed and cloth them. For Lilly, that meant rationing out food fairly, staying at the motor inn to give Larry a quick and easy supply of meds from the drugstore, and performing CPR on her father. As much as they hated each other for their decisions, there was still a level of respect between them. They understood each other because they knew that what they were doing was best for their family. It's why Lilly didn't shoot Kenny. Even during her breakdown, she didn't seek revenge on him because while she hated his decision to kill her father, deep down she understood it was for family.

    I think it's interesting that Lilly leaves the story just as Kenny faces the loss of his family. They both deal with their loss similarly, and they are unstable and ready to snap at anyone who questions them. I think if Lilly were to stay, she might have been able to share some sort of mutual pain and morning with Kenny that might have resolved some of their conflict. Lilly knew she meant a lot to Larry as the last thing in his life after her mother died. Maybe Lilly might see some of Larry in Kenny after losing a wife and child.

    It was also why I was a little upset with Season 2 with Kenny mentioning Jane as another "Lilly situation." While I agree Kenny and Jane are also foils in a way, I don't think Jane serves the same purpose as Lilly did, and I would like to think Kenny knew that.

    A forced character foil in my opinion was Carver and Kenny. The game tried very hard to make them have a rivalry and then foreshadow Kenny to maybe becoming like him, but I didn't really see it. Carver and Kenny had different motivations and personalities that in my opinion did not have any parallel significance, other than they both wanted AJ (but again for different reasons).

    One that had a lot of potential I think would have been Clementine and Sarah, with Sarah as an echo of Season 1 Clem, serving as older Clem's moral compass as she used to be with Lee. Didn't quite work out that way though.

  • Wow, you didn't hold back, did you? Ah well, Good work!

    Kenny and Lilly were two of the most obvious ones and you went into detail. As I just posted and you elaborate on, it would have been interesting if Lilly had stuck around to witness Duck and Katjaa's death so as to share some common ground with Kenny.

    As you probably know by now, Clementine and Sarah was one of the highlights of the story for me and, unfortunately, one of the sticking points. There was so much they could've done with that....

    It was also why I was a little upset with Season 2 with Kenny mentioning Jane as another "Lilly situation."

    Funny you mention that considering I originally thought Jane was Lilly until you got to know her for an extended period of time. While there are differences, she does eventually have a similar role as a sensible female who contrasts with the passionate Kenny. Though I am curious as to how they would've gotten along had things not escalated so fast.

    A forced character foil in my opinion was Carver and Kenny.

    Oh no, a forced character foil would be Carver and Clementine. While I just rolled with it a bit on my first playthrough by promising to be nothing like him in terms of compassion, it did come across as cliche-- a poorly utilized one at that!
    Meanwhile, I did buy the Counterpart-ing of Carver to Kenny since it actually had some relevance to the story, plus there's also the reminder of what could have been(or what should have been, in my sour opinion).

    LoseMyHome posted: »

    I think Kenny and Lilly are the series archetypal "foil" characters. They are, really, two sides of the same coin. Kenny and Lilly are bo

  • edited September 2016

    Kenny and Sarah

    Both are Shadow Archetypes that represents Lee and Clementine(the player character)'s repressed flaws and whom they form an encouragingly friendly relationship that later has a determinant affect on their later interaction. Both are emotion driven with a tendency towards negative emotions, both have little to no regard for rules or authority at times, both are older than their friend, and both are incredibly attached to their family members.

  • edited September 2016

    Jane to Kenny

    Both are selfish, but well-meaning hypocrites who are stuck on the losses of the past and are willing do nearly anything to protect the people they consider family. They’re also capable of being incredibly petty, inconsiderate, and childish. They have a variety of contrasts between them: calm vs. hot-tempered, functional vs. unstable, working alone vs. teamwork, self-righteous vs. acknowledging of own flaws, and manipulative vs. opinionated.

    To Kenny. Just like Kenny was looking for a Replacement Goldfish for his son and wife, Jane was looking for one of her sister. Just like Kenny attached himself to Alvin Jr., Jane attached herself to Clementine. Just like Kenny was willing to do anything to start over again with another baby boy, Jane was willing to do anything to start over with Clementine. The player must choose in the end which one deserves their sympathy more, if either of them do.

    The final episode paints her as one to Kenny. Kenny is an unstable person who is aware of his faults and values teamwork while Jane is a more functional person who ignores her own faults while preferring to work alone. Despite these differences, they still hold dangerously lingering affection towards their deceased loved ones, which they transfer onto Clementine.

  • I always saw the stranger as Jane in that scene. As he felt like the cause of his family's death like Jane and kidnapped a child like her. Kenny would know not to take anyone's child and be so damn creepy like Jane or the stranger could. Also it was Jane that went after Kenny, she had the weapon and let it be used against her when she could've prevented it just like the stranger could have let Clementine go.

    DabigRG posted: »

    The Stranger could be a darker foreshadowing of Kenny in Season 2. The two are very similar as husbands and fathers, and plausibly could've

  • Kenny has never been selfish, just not understanding to why people can't just do what he says is right lol. Which to be fair he has been right about most things he suggests. Also I doubt Jane would do much for anybody she loves anymore. When they crashed the truck in episode 5 she bolted and didn't even try to help Clementine.

    DabigRG posted: »

    Jane to Kenny Both are selfish, but well-meaning hypocrites who are stuck on the losses of the past and are willing do nearly anything to

  • Disagree about Kenny never being selfish, Agree that Jane isn't the most trustworthy.

    Kenny has never been selfish, just not understanding to why people can't just do what he says is right lol. Which to be fair he has been rig

  • Another profound comment, LoseMyHome!

    I must admit though that, upon thinking about the parallel between Kenny and Lilly, I've come to the conclusion that you might be romanticizing their relationship in a way that it looks more appealing than it ever was.

    We observe plenty of times in Season One that even though Lilly says that she has considered Kenny's perspective neither of them share a bit of respect toward the other. They do not agree on anything, and their disagreements serve them as a way to destructively criticize the other person. Lilly refers to Kenny several times using demeaning insults, then Kenny doesn't have any problem with leaving her at the Motor Inn when the push came to shove, and the fact that Kenny refers to Jane as a "Lilly situation," as in somebody who doesn't agree with him, makes their relationship all the more shallow.

    LoseMyHome posted: »

    I think Kenny and Lilly are the series archetypal "foil" characters. They are, really, two sides of the same coin. Kenny and Lilly are bo

  • This is less about respect in the sense that they're civil to each other, and more respect in the sense that on some level they understand each other's viewpoints despite deeply disagreeing with each other. When Lilly steals the RV, she tells Lee "I know you did what you did for a reason. Part of me understands," and I would imagine this would be extended to Kenny too. She hated Kenny for what he did, but she did not take revenge on him. She only went after those she thought were purposely putting the group in danger, and because she knows Kenny has a family to take care of, she never really suspects him of wronging her or can honestly hold the murder of her father against him as being completely unnecessary for his family's safety. There was no way to know.

    Likewise, Kenny shows some understanding of Lilly's side too during his talk with Lee while on the walk to the drugstore. He understands she's unraveling because of what he did. Being ready to leave Lilly at the motor inn in my opinion doesn't indicate any lack of regard for her, they were in the middle of a bandit shootout and zombie horde, and for the safety of his family he couldn't wait on her forever.

    The "Lilly Situation" mention in season 2 making their relationship seem shallow is exactly why I have problems with Season 2. Season 1 did a great job crafting intricacies between characters and their relationships even if they were mostly negative. To refer to Jane as a "Lilly situation" totally negates their separate character complexities by using a blanket statement painting her as merely the female that doesn't agree with Kenny. He knows Jane's motivations are completely different than Lilly's (no family and being a loner vs. holding on to what remains of family and trying hard to keep a group together), so to reduce the relationship to only the disagreement aspect of it made me a little peeved. Similar to how I felt about him referring to Ben as a "fucking shitbird" but that's a different discussion.

    Another profound comment, LoseMyHome! I must admit though that, upon thinking about the parallel between Kenny and Lilly, I've come to th

  • edited September 2016

    Shamelessly copied from TV Tropes.

    Lee and Kenny.

    Both generally want the same thing- to help people. While Lee can generally be infallible with a lack of faults, Kenny has plenty- hotbloodedness, selfishness to name some. However, Kenny comes with a legitimate desire to help people. He always puts others before him if he gets the chance, and sacrifices himself several times. Despite this, his flaws (such as his selfish and later violent tendencies) turns him away from the path Lee walks. For all his attempts to be a hero, Kenny fails not because he doesn't try or he doesn't want to- but because he's inherently flawed.

    Additionally, Lee's life was pretty much ruined right before the plague, and the apocalypse gave him a chance to redeem himself. Kenny was a relatively successful family man pre-apocalypse, and the events following the plague slowly tore him apart.

  • Clementine and Duck.

    While both happen to be friendly kids under the protection of the Motor Inn group, they are very much opposites. Clementine is a girl being protected by Lee, who took her under his wing, is quiet and thoughtful, and is alive due to Lee teaching her how to survive before he ends up deader/undead due to her not being there where he can protect her; Duck is a boy being protected by Kenny, who is his dad, is loud and boisterous, and is undead/deader due to Kenny not being there for once to protect him from being bitten.

  • Shamelessly copied from TV Tropes because unoriginal.

    Lee and Vince

    Both are males of an ethnic minority, both were sentenced to jail for murdering someone related to a close person (Lee's wife, Vince's brother), both can be played as either a Nice Guy or a Jerkass and both are forced to make a Sadistic Choice the end of his campaign. They also become The Leader of their group over time.

  • Lee and Carlos

    Both are fairly reasonable and intelligent minority men, both are prone to sudden fits of anger, both are very protective, and both have a deep desire to protect their little girl from the outside world. The difference is that while Lee is usually very helpful and sympathetic to other people's problems, Carlos is prone to making logical mistakes concerning the well-being of others. Also, Lee taught Clementine how to survive and stop relying on him to protect her, whereas Carlos never taught Sarah how to survive nor stop relying on him.

  • I really liked how you mentioned that Sarah and Kenny were a sort of manifestation of the playable characters' flaws. That's an interesting way to look at those two. I mean there are a lot of apt comparisons you could make between Kenny and Lee and Sarah and Season 1 Clementine, but the way you worded it just makes me look at the same thing a little bit differently.

    DabigRG posted: »

    Kenny and Sarah Both are Shadow Archetypes that represents Lee and Clementine(the player character)'s repressed flaws and whom they form

  • Thanks!

    I forget exactly where the idea first popped into my head, but there was a thread where Kenny was briefly invoked as concerning his screentime and I mentioned how I liked that Amid the Ruins had him sit off to the side so other characters could get some focus, something I credit Sarah for doing. Then, with that thought still in my head, TVTropes listed them both as being Shadow Archetypes and the other similarities they happen to share suddenly popped into my head, which in turn was one of the inspirations for this thread.

    Not to go into rant mode here, but it also raised the question of why wasn't Sarah suddenly not allowed to fulfill her potential with this purpose? She was the one of the only things by that episode that still gave Clementine a personal stake in the plot and talking to her after you save her from the trailer park seemed to be setting up some sort of falling out with Clementine and/or Jane--then it's just like "Nope! Can't have her and Jane at the same time!" :angry:

    Kenny726 posted: »

    I really liked how you mentioned that Sarah and Kenny were a sort of manifestation of the playable characters' flaws. That's an interesting

  • Katjaa and Brenda

    Both are supportive mothers to their more aggressive family members, both have similar looks and personalities, both dislike guns and/or violence, both have limited medical skills, both get attacked by an unexpectedly turned patient, and both die during a moment of distress. The difference is that while Katjaa is usually a very peaceful and nonviolent person, Brenda, though more reluctant to commit murder than her sons, is still complicit in kidnapping, mutilation, and cannibalism. Additionally, while Katjaa only uses a gun once to kill herself when she is unable to fix Duck, Brenda takes Katjaa hostage at gunpoint while backing upstairs and fails to see a recently turned Mark crawling towards her, which results in her death.

  • Shel and Carlos

    Both are responsible survivors whose primary concern is the well-being of their younger family member, for whom they only want what's best and hope to shield away from the horrors of the world. The difference is that while Shel allows her sister to participate in group meetings, engage in activities that help keep their community in order, and attempts to be a role model for her, Carlos has his daughter be left out of group meetings, be sheltered from much of the issues that troubles their group, and constantly talks down to her.

  • Carver and Arvo

    Both act as Big Bad's for Season 2 and both are Evil Counterparts to Season 1 characters. Both ended up being at odds with Clementine and Kenny do to extending circumstance, but this is where the similarities end. Carver is the Disc One/Overarching Villain during the first majority of the story, while Arvo is the Disc Two/Interim Villain during the breather period after dealing with Carver. Carver is major, insufferable, forceful, magnificent; and an absolute hate sink; Arvo is incidental, kindly, submissive, ineffectual, and a borderline designated villain. They further differ in terms of vileness, effectiveness, and threat level: Carver is a villain that has the ambition, malice, and misdeeds necessary to antagonize people and enjoy doing so for his grand design, while Arvo lacks these things and is more of a neutral bystander who got unlucky, real unlucky, and had to make what ended up being a bad decision for justifiable reasons. Additionally, both have an abusive dichotomy with Kenny, but their primary antagonistic interaction is with Clementine.

  • I mention his parallel in her further down. Also, I've seen plenty of other people note that Kenny's attachment to AJ is kinda creepy.

    Also, I'm getting some of this information of other sources, mainly TVTropes. So sometimes I'm posting things from my perspective(Kenny and Sarah, for example), other times I'm posting things that someone else pointed out.

    I always saw the stranger as Jane in that scene. As he felt like the cause of his family's death like Jane and kidnapped a child like her. K

  • Luke and Nick

    Both are guys who were childhood friends for twenty years, both have a bit of a temper, both have something of a guilt complex, and both can die trying to protect someone else at the cost of themselves. The differences are that Luke is more rational, passive, outgoing, easygoing, and prone to hesitation, while Nick is more emotional, aggressive, angsty, stubborn, and prone to hastiness. Additionally, Luke uses a machete, while Nick uses a rifle.

  • Sarah and Jane.

    Both are young women who are the older best friends of Clementine, both have trouble in social situations, both can come off as creepy at first, both have a tendency to ignore the feelings of others, both show symptoms of a personality disorder, and both suffer from PTSD due to the death of a family member.

    Sarah seems to represent Clementine's innocent/blissful past, in that she is friendly, emotional, has middle length hair, is relatively feminine, and has a meek and gentle demeanor. However, she is also portrayed as being a "liability," seems to have dependent personality disorder due to the influence of her dad, is prone to becoming anxious when stressed out, and sometimes reacts in an impractical and even hysterical manner in the face of danger. However, she seeks to satisfy her desire for the knowledge she needs to become a true survivor in spite of her meek nature.

    Jane seems to represent her neutral/bitter future, in that she is cold, rational, has short length hair, is relatively masculine, and has an assertive and abrasive demeanor. However, she is also portrayed as a survivalist, seems to have schizoid personality disorder due to the incapacity of her sister, is prone to being pragmatic when stressed out, and tends to react in a versatile and collected manner in the face of danger. However, she seeks to satisfy her desire for a friend in spite of her abrasive instincts.

  • Thanks?

    AChicken posted: »

    Well, you seem to know your Walking dead quite well. Good for you.

  • edited October 2016

    Okay, gonna move this alphabetical list down here for later referential usage.

    Abigail
    Adam: Duck
    Alex Fairbanks
    Alfred
    Alvin: Omid Rebecca Carver
    Alvin Jr.
    Andre Mitchell
    Andrew St. John: Danny
    Anna Correa: Christa
    Arvo: Clementine Kenny Ben Vernon Michelle Sarah Carver Jane Natasha
    Atlanta Police Officer
    B. Everett
    Bart
    Beatrice
    Becca: Clementine Carver Troy Sarah Shel
    Ben Paul: Kenny Doug Travis Nick Arvo
    Bennett: Clyde
    Berto
    Beth
    Bonnie: Dee Tavia Walter Troy Reggie Mike Natasha
    Boyd
    Breckon
    Brenda St. John: Katjaa Jolene
    Brie: Clementine
    Buricko
    Cam
    Carley: Doug Lilly
    Carlos (400 Days)
    Carlos: Pete Kenny Natasha
    Charles
    Chet
    Christa: Lilly Rebecca
    Clementine: Lee Duck Brie Becca Michelle Sarah Carver Jane
    Clive
    Clyde: Bennett
    Colette
    Crawford Oberson: Vernon Carver
    Danielle
    Danny: Vince Justin
    Danny St. John: Andrew
    David Parker
    Dee: Bonnie
    Diana
    Dierce Belman
    Dominic
    Donna
    Donna Clarke
    Doug: Carley
    Drew
    Ed
    Eddie: Wyatt Nate
    Edith: Clementine Edith Taavia Troy Jane
    Elizabeth
    Ellen Breslin
    Elodie
    Fivel
    Fivel's Father
    Fivel's Mother
    Gabby: Jonas
    Gary
    George
    Gill: Clementine Dick
    Girl(Javier's friend)
    Glenn
    Greg Fairbanks: Sam Randall
    Hank
    Hershel Greene: Kenny
    Irene
    Jaime: Molly's Sister Sarah
    Jake
    James Fairbanks
    Jane: Clementine Kenny Lilly Molly Stranger Michelle Sarah Carver Buricko
    Janey
    Javier Garcia: Clementine
    Jean
    Jeff
    Jenny Pitcher
    Jerry
    Jimmy
    Joe
    John Fairbanks
    Johnny: Bonnie Walter
    Jolene: Brenda
    Jon Sandusky
    Jonas: Zachary Gabby
    Joyce
    Justin: Vince Danny
    Katjaa: Brenda Sarita
    Kenny: Lee Hershel Larry Lilly Ben Stranger Luke Nick Carlos Carver Jane Arvo Vitali
    Kenny Jr./Duck: Clementine Shawn Gil
    Larry: Kenny
    Lee Everett: Clementine Kenny Mark Vernon Stranger Vince Shel Luke Carlos Mike
    Leland
    Lilly: Kenny Carley Mark Christa Nick Edith
    Linda
    Logan
    Lowell
    Luke: Kenny Carley Nick Carver
    Mac
    Macon Resident
    Man(Javier's friend)
    Marcus Crabtree
    Mark:
    Matthew
    Maybelle (Animal)
    Michelle: Clementine Russell Becca Ralph Reggie Mike Jane
    Michonne
    Mike: Lee Clementine Kenny Omid Bonnie Michelle Luke Jane
    Molly: Jane
    Molly's Sister: Jaime
    Mr. Everett
    Mrs. Everett
    Mrs. Moore
    Natasha: Katjaa Brie Bonnie Carlos Arvo
    Nate: Russell
    Nick: Kenny Lilly BenLuke Sarah
    Norma: Sam
    Oak
    Omid: Christa Alvin
    Paige: Sam
    Patricia: Katjaa
    Pete: Michonne
    Peter Joseph Randall: Carlos
    Radio Survivor
    Ralph: Michelle
    Randall: Greg Zachary
    Randy: Kenny
    Rashid
    Rebecca: Christa
    Reggie: Bonnie Michelle
    Rich
    Roberto
    Roman: Oberson
    Russell: Nate Michelle
    Sam (Animal)
    Samantha Fairbanks: Norma
    Sandra
    Sarah: Clementine Kenny Becca Nick Sarita Jane Arvo
    Sarita: Kenny Katjaa Sarah Walter Matthew
    Save-Lots Bandit 1
    Save-Lots Bandit 2
    Save-Lots Bandit 3
    Shawn Greene: Clementine Duck
    Shel: Lee Becca Carlos
    Siddiq
    Sophia Fairbanks
    Stan
    Stephanie: Bonnie
    Steve (400 Days): Nate
    Steve
    Stranger: Lee Kenny Jane
    Tamara Sandusky
    Tavia Troy Bonnie Rebecca Edith
    Terry St. John
    Tess: Katjaa Sarita
    Tisha
    TJ
    Train Engineer
    Travis: Ben
    Troy
    Tyler
    Vanessa (Atlanta)
    Vanessa
    Vera
    Vernon: Lee Arvo Mike
    Victor
    Vince: Justin Danny
    Vitali: Kenny
    Walt
    Walter (Animal)
    Walter: Kenny
    William Carver: Clementine Kenny Chuck Oberson Luke Alvin Jane
    Winston
    Wyatt: Eddie
    Zachary: Randall Jonas
    Zombies

  • Shamelessly copied from TV Tropes.

    Russell and Nate

    Whereas Russell is hesitant to trust and is uncomfortable with killing, Nate has no qualms with either.

  • she had the weapon and let it be used against her when she could've prevented it just like the stranger could have let Clementine go.

    The stranger caused Lee to get bit, Clem to be left alone, and the breaking of the whole group. And Lee is just going to let him go because the Stranger saw the error of his ways?

    If the Stranger were to just give Clem back, I believe that Lee would die eventually, and season 2 would begin will the stranger, Christa, Omid, and Clem walking to some place. Because who else would watch over her?

    Nah. Lee would still kill the Stranger for just wasting his time and hold him responsible for the breaking of his group. I just don't realistically see anyway that the Stranger is going to leave the house alive.

    I always saw the stranger as Jane in that scene. As he felt like the cause of his family's death like Jane and kidnapped a child like her. K

  • Ok. We get it. Stop.

  • What?-

    Killah posted: »

    Ok. We get it. Stop.

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