The biggest misunderstanding about Caitlyn from fans actually comes from season 1, not 2. Fans see Caitlyn break Vi out of prison and talk to Ekko about empathy and think that sheâs learning and growing as a character and then when season 2 hits they think all that growth was somehow âabandonedâ or âreversed.â
Caitlyn has ALWAYS been a spoiled little rich girl who came from a family of rich people who are so used to how much power they have in the city that they donât regard ANYONEâS feelings or respect ANY rules. Both Marcus and Salow spell this out to us.
Marcus: âSheâs a Kiramman! Just like them she does what she wants! I canât control her!â
Salow: âItâs the name! It bewitches people.â
Time skip Caitlyn is introduced investigating the botched Jinx job at the shipping docks. She is not an official detective and Marcus makes it clear she isnât supposed to be there. Sheâs supposed to be guarding her familyâs pavilion, but she ignored both her motherâs AND the sheriffâs wishes to investigate a crime because sheâs bored.
She breaks Vi out of prison AFTER sheâs been effectively laid-off by Marcus, using her connections to Jayce to forge her release papers. Reminder: at this point in the story she is technically not a cop anymore. Sheâs doing all this stuff with noble intentions of trying to uncover Silco and bring Jinx to justice⌠but what sheâs doing is technically illegal. And the only reason sheâs able to get away with it is because sheâs a spoiled rich BRAT.
Her privilege shields her from repercussions in season 1, just as they do in season 2.
The difference is that sheâs now been traumatized by Jinx. Her bodily autonomy was violated by Jinx kidnapping her when she was literally naked in the shower, she was most likely tortured by Jinx, was tied up and painted on, threatened to be executed at gun point by Jinx, and then to top it all off Jinx murders her mother in a terrorist attack.
And Caitlyn tries to hold it all in. She tries to confide with Vi, she tries to let her hatred go⌠but both times she is denied her the ability to grieve properly. First by her privilege and not understanding that asking Vi to become an Enforcer would be rejected. And then by Ambessa by funding the attack on the memorial service.
She has no parental figure to guide her, her rage and hatred for Jinx is boiling over⌠so she resorts to what she always does and what she did back in season 1. She just does what she wants to get her way. She convinces Jayce to develop hextech weapons, she assumes the role of leader for house Kiramman, and she uses her unique position in power to bend systems her family put in place to protect Zaun against them.
Caitlyn in season 2 is very much the same Caitlyn weâve always known from season 1. The difference is that in season 1 we were rooting for her because we like Vi. She exhausted the same disrespect for authority and people back then but they were in service of things we, the audience, liked. So we gave her a pass. We excused her rule breaking. We ignored her unique brand of privilege because we liked what her privilege could unlock for us.
Season 2 slams that door shut and tells us âno, actually, you werenât supposed to like this because nobody in power is innocent.â
But rather than learn more about Caitlyn and understand her character better⌠people are dismiss this all as âbad writingâ or âcharacter assassination.â
And whatâs more frustrating is the whole âdictator arc.â Because frankly I would argue that by that point Caitlyn HAS learned her lesson about privilege and power, but itâs too late to stop things now. Just as Jayce going vigilante in season 1 was the start of a cataclysmic event, Caitlyn gassing Zaun to look for Jinx results in Caitlyn losing everyone she trusts and respects. Broken up with Vi and alone, she is suddenly granted even MORE power than sheâs ever had by Ambessa. And you can see it affect her. In that moment she realizes that Ambessa is the one who spearheaded the attack on the memorial. After seeing what happened between her and Vi, she realizes that by taking this role she will be responsible for even greater atrocities.
She has 2 choices. Let it all go, or use the position of power to her advantage. And just like before in season 1⌠she chooses the later. Her goal may still be to get Jinx, but she does NOT want to be a part of Ambessaâs dictatorship. This is why sheâs so reluctant to join even with all the peer pressure. This is why sheâs so slow and hesitant to walk forward. And she only accepts the cape she is crowned with once Ambessa says âyour mother will have justice.â
Whatâs most important about this scene is that SHE KNOWS Ambessa is using her. Thatâs why when we see her in Act 2 sheâs already trying to counter Ambessaâs plans. Thatâs why sheâs constantly challenging Ambessa with âwhy is peace always the excuse for violence?â Thatâs why when Ambessa says âyou donât trust me?â Caitlyn responds with a resounding âno.â And thatâs why when Vi drops back into her life she realizes she has an opportunity to correct her mistakes. She doesnât switch on a dime because Vi fluttered her eyes and called her âcupcake.â She switches because she was already looking for an out. And this is why when Vi confronts her in Act 3 she screams âI KNOW.â
Caitlynâs arc is that of someone who always had privilege and power coming to realize too late how dangerous and harmful that power is. By the time she learns her lesson sheâs already entrenched with Ambessa and stuck in this hateful miasma for Jinx. Season 1 was setup for what was going to follow with how her character was going to learn and atone for her mistakes.
And whatâs so god damn frustrating about all the discourse around Caitlyn is how reductive and dismissive it all is. So much of the discourse completely ignores the actions she takes to fix things in favor of trumping up the actions she took to get there. All of her transgressions in season 1 are ignored and her own internalized growth is reduced to a joke about Vi calling her cupcake. Itâs MADDENING.