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[003] Wyldchyld Current Version
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This is whole point of the ShapeshifterGuiltTrip trope. The trope description\'s first example uses is the exact situation that Neo and Ren were in: two people are fighting and the shapeshifter suddenly busts out the loved one\'s appearance to throw their opponent and give them the upper hand. The trope doesn\'t depend on the shapeshifter having to hide the change, it depends on the concept that a person cannot harm someone who looks like their loved one even if they know it\'s not their loved one (another example the trope uses is the shapeshifter deliberately choosing to morph into a dead friend to go for that extra emotional knife).
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This is whole point of the ShapeshifterGuiltTrip trope. The trope description\\\'s first example uses is the exact situation that Neo and Ren were in: two people are fighting and the shapeshifter suddenly busts out the loved one\\\'s appearance to throw their opponent and give them the upper hand. The trope doesn\\\'t depend on the shapeshifter having to hide the change, it depends on the concept that a person cannot harm someone who looks like their loved one even if they know it\\\'s not their loved one (another example the trope uses is the shapeshifter deliberately choosing to morph into a dead friend to go for that extra emotional knife, especially if the target blames themselves for the death).
Changed line(s) 5 from:
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Besides, the very first example the ShapeshifterGuiltTrip trope uses is the exact situation that Neo and Ren were in: two people are fighting and the shapeshifter suddenly busts out the loved one\'s appearance to throw their opponent and give them the upper hand. The trope doesn\'t depend on the shapeshifter having to hide the change, it depends on the concept that a person cannot harm someone who looks like their loved one even if they know it\'s not their loved one (another example the trope uses is the shapeshifter deliberately choosing to morph into a dead friend to go for that extra emotional knife).
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This is whole point of the ShapeshifterGuiltTrip trope. The trope description\\\'s first example uses is the exact situation that Neo and Ren were in: two people are fighting and the shapeshifter suddenly busts out the loved one\\\'s appearance to throw their opponent and give them the upper hand. The trope doesn\\\'t depend on the shapeshifter having to hide the change, it depends on the concept that a person cannot harm someone who looks like their loved one even if they know it\\\'s not their loved one (another example the trope uses is the shapeshifter deliberately choosing to morph into a dead friend to go for that extra emotional knife).
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Besides, the very first example the ShapeshifterGuiltTrip trope uses is the exact situation that Neo and Ren were in: two people are fighting and the shapeshifter suddenly busts out the loved one\\\'s appearance to throw their opponent and give them the upper hand. The trope doesn\\\'t depend on the shapeshifter having to hide the change, it depends on the concept that a person cannot harm someone who looks like their loved one even if they know it\\\'s not their loved one (another example the trope uses is the shapeshifter deliberately choosing to morph into a dead friend to go for that extra emotional knife).
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