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whoops, wrong diagnosis


* DiagnosedByTheAudience: A prevailing fan theory about Howl is that he's either autistic or bipolar, stemming from Episode 2 and 4's stories of his childhood and how he was a "different child" and, as an adult, fled from the one person he loved because he couldn't handle the peace and love.

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* DiagnosedByTheAudience: A prevailing fan theory about Howl is that he's either autistic or bipolar, has borderline personality disorder, stemming from Episode 2 and 4's stories of his childhood and how he was a "different child" and, as an adult, fled from the one person he loved because he couldn't handle the peace and love.
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* DiagnosedByTheAudience: A prevailing fan theory about Howl is that he's either autistic or bipolar, stemming from Episode 2 and 4's stories of his childhood and how he was a "different child" and, as an adult, fled from the one person he loved because he couldn't handle the peace and love.

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Removed: 140

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** Howl's character is multifaceted and can be seen in many ways, from how Brett sees him as a misunderstood loner with an inherent goodness in him buried under years of grief, to Sandra seeing him as an evil man willing to let people die to prove his principles, to Peregrine seeing him as a surrogate father figure who was willing to listen when no one else would. In-universe, Brett and Peregrine wrestle with the conflicting information about Howl and how to perceive him.
*** Depending on how you view Howl, the initial suspicion he's framed with could either be rightful foreshadowing or a case of GoodAllAlong.

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** Howl's character is multifaceted and can be seen in many ways, from how Brett sees him as a misunderstood loner with an inherent goodness in him buried under years of grief, to Sandra seeing him as an evil man willing to let people die to prove his principles, to Peregrine seeing him as a surrogate father figure who was willing to listen when no one else would. In-universe, Brett and Peregrine wrestle with the conflicting information about Howl and how to perceive him.
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him. Depending on how you view Howl, the initial suspicion he's framed with could either be rightful foreshadowing or a case of GoodAllAlong.
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* SugarWiki/FunnyMoments: In episode 5, Donald van Calcar mentions that ''his'' Rule of Threes includes coffee. "Three hours without caffeine? Somebody's gonna die."
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* EpilepticTrees: One fan theory that gained ground on ''very'' flimsy premises was that Howl was actually a werewolf, based solely on the recurring NobleWolf, the ambiguity of [[spoiler:Howl's disappearance]], and his nickname.

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* EpilepticTrees: One fan theory that gained ground on ''very'' flimsy premises was that Howl was actually a werewolf, based solely on the recurring NobleWolf, NobleWolf in Episode 5, the ambiguity of [[spoiler:Howl's disappearance]], and his nickname.
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* {{Wangst}}: While Peregrine's grief at losing Jacob is understandable, her feelings of betrayal and anger when Lexy blows the lid off the Final after John Francis was injured, and subsequent berating of her mom, can fall into this for listeners.
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***Depending on how you view Howl, the initial suspicion he's framed with could either be rightful foreshadowing or a case of GoodAllAlong.
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** Howl's character is multifaceted and can be seen in many ways, from how Brett sees him as a misunderstood loner with an inherent goodness in him buried under years of grief, to Sandra seeing him as an evil man willing to let people die to prove his principals, to Peregrine seeing him as a surrogate father figure who was willing to listen when no one else would. In-universe, Brett and Peregrine wrestle with the conflicting information about Howl and how to perceive him.

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** Howl's character is multifaceted and can be seen in many ways, from how Brett sees him as a misunderstood loner with an inherent goodness in him buried under years of grief, to Sandra seeing him as an evil man willing to let people die to prove his principals, principles, to Peregrine seeing him as a surrogate father figure who was willing to listen when no one else would. In-universe, Brett and Peregrine wrestle with the conflicting information about Howl and how to perceive him.
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None

Added DiffLines:

* EpilepticTrees: One fan theory that gained ground on ''very'' flimsy premises was that Howl was actually a werewolf, based solely on the recurring NobleWolf, the ambiguity of [[spoiler:Howl's disappearance]], and his nickname.
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* AlternativeCharacterInterpretation:
** Howl's character is multifaceted and can be seen in many ways, from how Brett sees him as a misunderstood loner with an inherent goodness in him buried under years of grief, to Sandra seeing him as an evil man willing to let people die to prove his principals, to Peregrine seeing him as a surrogate father figure who was willing to listen when no one else would. In-universe, Brett and Peregrine wrestle with the conflicting information about Howl and how to perceive him.
** Peregrine can be seen as a grieving teen who came up with the Final as a way to honor her brother and help the town, or someone who recklessly put her friends and herself in danger to satisfy her own wants.
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