Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-86.156.222.122-20161114230226/@comment-86.156.222.122-20161115200730

ChishioKunrin wrote: When he started explaining and she thought he understood what she was doing, she started calming down, but then he showed that he didn't understand, and she got angry again. Then, she realized that Sun actually had a point, and she calmed down and accepted it. Plus, she knows that she can't really get rid of him right now, since they're on a boat in the middle of the ocean. Chish, my point was during the seasonal transition at the end of volume 3 whether or not Qrow disclosed to Ruby the truth behind the Maidens' tale, & subsequently its role in Pyrrha's death, in the lengthy time between her return from Beacon & her departure for Mistral weeks/months later. Considering how Ruby's evidently been having bad dreams of Pyrrha's final moments since the CCT fell, surely he'd witnessed them during the winter when they both were in the house, and wouldn't he feel the slightest guilty about what she had gone through? (with her silver eye episode i mean)

Also, it was just to support a barely relevant second point that I brought up my opinion of Sun and Blake's meeting being (IMO) somewhat unrealistic - due to them not paying any heed to the 20+ weeks of him tracking her across a continent and an ocean.

Even if I can't see the reasonableness in Blake expecting Sun to understand her true intentions when even we the audience didn't have a clue about her newly-revealed family (unless at some point offscreen she had told him about them - which I find unlikely as their dialogue in this episode didn't suggest so), I'm not bashing on how they resolved her animosity in their reunion. I'm noting how the writers have yet again failed to properly show how life has carried in extended time period between the volumes - and if that's the case then maybe Qrow never felt the need to talk to Ruby about the Maidens