Fridging is when a love interest gets killed just to push the main character forward. It used to mean a woman getting hurt to make a man act. Now it covers any partner dying to pump up the plot.

Here’s the cold truth. A romantic loss is the only loss that actually justifies losing your head over it. If your boyfriend or girlfriend dies, that grief can spiral into obsession or a need for revenge. That is story fuel. Everything else is background noise.

An uncle, a child, a best friend, a parent, a teammate getting killed is not tragic nor is it enough to be sad and enough to motivate you to be a hero. Those losses might be a little sad but they do not automatically justify turning your life into this crusade against injustice. They are not dramatic enough to demand you drop everything and hunt a killer down.

So yeah, fridging as a device works because romantic love is one of the few things audiences treat as absolute.

Whenever there is a story about a main character who is depressed because their best friend, parent, or child dies, I just can’t get into it, and I’m always like, “Please get over it,” because this isn’t enough to be depressed over, and it’s not enough to want to become a good person.

  • latenightnoir@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    How about just be decent for the fuck of it? Why should we need reasons to be good people?

    Edit: take classic Superman, for instance. That dude is good simply because he’s good. He’s the type of person who’d apologise if you walked into them and mean it, not because they’re a pushover, but because why the hell not.

    • Grimreaper@sopuli.xyzOP
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      1 day ago

      How about just be decent for the fuck of it? Why should we need reasons to be good people?

      There is a difference between being a good person and going out of your way to get revenge for someone.