- You can see that Viktor's spine shattered on impact (Hexcore x-ray). He died in the council room (hence Jayce later telling Viktor, "my partner died in this room")
- Despite the fact other people died, including Mrs Kiramman whom Jayce was very close to (she was his patron and he owed her a lot), he only starts crying when he sees Viktor. It's also the moment he starts dissociating (as proven by the back and forth of the action, where we the viewers see events in the present in the council room and in the future in the lab)
- Viktor doesn't have clothes on the top half of his body in the lab because Jayce attempted to revive him on scene, and failed
- The lab is five blocks away. Jayce RAN five entire blocks while carrying dead weight (which is an insane physical feat)
- Jayce didn't save Viktor's life. Jayce literally brought him back from the dead by using the Hexcore.
- Jayce broke Viktor's promise because he would rather have Viktor be alive with him (paraphrasing, "I'm going to leave the council, my place is in the lab, with you") than to respect Viktor's last wish, destroying the Hexcore.
- Jayce studied all of Viktor's research. He doesn't care about the outcome and the toll on Viktor's body (which was literally so changed that Viktor himself replied, "What am I?") as long as it means Viktor is "alive"
That scene illustrates perfectly Singed's character motivations.
"Why would anyone commit acts others deem unspeakable? For love."
At that point in time both Heimerdinger and Viktor had warned Jayce about the Hexcore. One was Jayce's mentor and the other his partner.
And yet Jayce rejects their opinions each time if it means saving Viktor. (He continues research on Hextech in the hopes of saving Viktor's life. He refuses to destroy the Hexcore because he wants to bring Viktor back to life.)
I find it super interesting that both of the brilliant Piltover scientists in the show are the ones to reject scientific ethos. And this leads to unspeakable horrors, with the creation of Warwick and the Herald.
Yet funnily enough, both Jayce and Singed get their happy endings. The only thing they wanted was to be reunited with the person they lost. And they did. We see that Orianna is alive at the end of the episode just like Viktor. Viktor's theme only plays when Jayce tells him that "(they are going to) finish this together" indicating that at the very end, the original Viktor came back. It is also indicated visually by his appearance which is that of Viktor from Act 1, Season 1.
(We know that regardless of the existence of Hextech, of whether Jinx bombed the council room or not, Viktor would have died by succumbing to his disease. Much like Orianna. I can't help but think of the very, very dark timeline where a grief-stricken, brilliant Jayce meets Singed.)
What a beautiful, beautiful show.
Me, you, and our giant robot son
ngk
Kofi | Patreon
these boys need to stop bringing work home, all their notes are about to be sticky (hextech gemstone from the hexstrap trust me ðŸ¤)
"I never asked for this"
Viktor is not immune to the pull of post forge Jayce
over winter break i started making these silly (stupid) arcane comics and ive decided im going to finish them
Beautiful Crime (alternate ending)
Original ending⬇⬇⬇
Does anyone else think about how Vi said "All us fissure folk can do it" when she was talking about parkour and telling Caitlyn to blend in or she'd look like an outsider and then we see Viktor's flashback and he can't.
His disability makes him an outsider within Zaun.
I've seen people make analyses that he assumed people weren't interested in him because of his disability. But that specific line literally poses that he was an outsider even within his own group. It wasn't an assumption, it would have actively put him at RISK even.
Like his loneliness and isolation isn't just about internalized ableism. It's about EXILE. I would almost imagine it was easier to go to Piltover where at least he knows he "doesn't belong" and it's not his people. Imagine trying to be okay with the fact his own group thinks of him as someone who doesn't belong and shouldn't be trusted. But I don't actually believe that the writer's knew that they were implying all of this this when they wrote it.
my contribution to this trend🙇
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