āBumbleby is bad writing!ā
In the months since volume 6 weāve heard it all. Bumbleby is rushed, they arenāt even friends, they were over shadowed by b/lacksun, it has no development, it has development but itās less than b/lacksunās, theyāre throwing away b/lacksunās development, bumbleby is forced, itās pandering...you name it weāve seen it, and chances are weāve seen it multiple times. It gets repeated over and over again but honestly? None of it holds up.
Iāve said before that b/lacksun never really had as much development as people act like it did, but letās take a look at how b/lacksun and bumbleby develop volume by volume. No soundtracks, no outside comments made by the crew. Just the show itself (heads up, this is really fucking long)
Volume 1:
There isnāt much to say about volume 1; neither really have a whole lot of teasing between Sunās late introduction and the lack of focus on Yang. There is something very interesting though about both relationships in this volume: both end up subverting Blakeās expectations of them.
With Yang, Blakeās first reaction is a little chilly. She sees this loud young woman walking up to her while sheās trying to read and their first interactions reflect that. However, Blake quickly realizes that Yang isnāt what she seems and goes out of her way to choose her as a partner. They get along perfectly and in the Emerald Forest we see Blake enjoying herself more than she had up to that point. They couldāve been a bickering pair because of their differences (and weāre lead to think they will be at their introduction), but those differences end up being complementary and it shows in their easy teamwork.
For Sun, itās almost the exact opposite. His entrance couldnāt scream ālove interestā any more if it tried and Blake clearly thinks that as a Faunus he would understand her. Only, he doesnāt. Thatās something thatās emphasized multiple times in their volume one interactions (and reinforced in later volumes) and they lack the teamwork that came so easily to Blake and Yang. Heās introduced as a very blatant love interest type but his inability to understand Blake has her spend a lot of their volume 1 time annoyed with him.Ā
Volume one is arguably the only volume where b/lacksun has a potential edge, but even that isnāt as big of a one as people act like it is. Not with how quick the turnaround is fromĀ āobvious love interest entranceā toĀ āBlake glares at him enough that Sun comments on it in the very next episodeā (and regardless of what the media might tell you, thatās not a good basis for a relationship).
Volume 2:
One of the biggest events for both ships in this volume is the dance arc. However, the most important part of the dance arc is not that Blake goes with Sun or that she saves her first dance for Yang or even that she dances with him andĀ Yang; itās that she finally decided to slow down. Dancing with Sun (and again, even Yang) is unimportant to the overall plot and is never brought up again, while Blake pursuing Torchwick in a healthier way is something we see throughout the rest of volume 2. Sheās less exhausted and doesnāt run herself ragged, and thatās because of her talk with Yang.
Another key result of that arc is Blake learning about Yangās abandonment issues. This is major because itās setting up their main conflict a volume and a half before Yang loses her arm and Blake leaves. We get another building block for it in Mountain Glenn when Blake expresses that she always runs away, and you donāt have a character thatās always left behind paired with someone who always leaves if you arenāt going to take advantage of it. As of volume 2, Blake and Yang have the setup for their relationship to go through a conflict that will change everything for them but that can ultimately make their relationship stronger in the long run (setup that we see delivered on later on).
Meanwhile, Sun and Blakeās relationship gets no further development after the dance arc this volume (Sunās only appearances afterwards heās excited with Neptune about being Junior Detectives), and what they have in the dance arc is both self contained (Sunās main goal in his interactions with Blake is to get her to go to the dance with him, which he succeeds in thanks to Yang) and not relevant beyond it. We donāt get anything from them that sets up any future development.Ā
None of this is to say that the dance itself is completely meaningless when it comes to their relationships. Sun asking Blake to the dance shows that he is still interested in her in his casual way (and honestly, thereās really no question that Sun likes/liked Blake in earlier volumes). This is the first time though that we really start getting hints that Yang likes Blake. Between her flirting with Blake in episode 2 (āI love it when youāre feistyā) and the soft, genuine manner in which she both winks at Blake and promises to save her a dance the show has begun to establish that Yang has feelings for her (and in a way that no one would question if she were a guy).
Like in volume 1, we continue to be shown that Sun doesnāt understand Blake. In addition to him not being the one to get through to Blake (that honor going to Yang instead), we also have Blakeās reaction to him asking her to the dance. She straight up says she doesnāt have the time and that she āthought that [he] of all people would get thatā since he saw first hand how passionate she is about finding answers and stopping Torchwick in the previous episode. Once again she expects him to understand her and again he shows that he doesnāt. Another instance is a little more subtle and spread throughout a couple of episodes. In the first episode, Sun comments that the best part of Blake is that sheās a faunus while in the very next episode Blake says she wants be seen for whoĀ she is, not whatĀ she is. Meanwhile, in that same episode Yang compliments her for being feisty and later on in Mountain Glenn tells her sheās not one to back down from a challenge, both compliments on who Blake is (even if she canāt see that Yangās latter comment is true just yet).
This is the volume where the differences between the two ships really start to show. Blake and Sun have a few moments in the first half, but their relationship is pretty shallow when compared to the depth that Blake and Yangās has already developed and lacks the the setup for anything to change that.
Volume 3:
This volume along with volume 6 are by far the most lopsided in Bumblebyās favor. Blake and Sun have only two interactions, one of which is Sun watching Blake tearfully clutch Yangās hand while ignoring the outside world and him (and obviously, Blake only having eyes for Yang isnāt something that supports romantic b/lacksun). The onlyĀ sort of teasing or development they get is Sun winking at Blake and Blake blushing. Itās actually a good moment for b/lacksun as it suggests a mutual crush is there, but thatās undermined by the fact that they get no other romantic development for the rest of the volume.
Blake and Yang on the other hand start out a little slow this volume but once the halfway point hits we get a lot of important moments very quickly. Yang is framed for attacking a downed Mercury but she holds it together well until Blake is hesitant to believe. She needsĀ Blake to believe her; she trusts her and cares about her opinion. But the biggest part of this is not on Yangās side but Blakeās.
Blake explicitly parallels Yang, her new partner, to Adam, her old partner. We know sheās watched Adam make excuses for hurting people (hell we literally see that parallel in the Adam short) and now sheās watching something similar unfold with Yang. But where Adam turned it on her and hid his insincerity behind a mask Yang is open and honest, and never blames her for being suspicious. Sheās upset yes, but she cares about Blake and knows she has her reasons. This conversation helps establish Yang as Adamās foil (something that had been built on earlier with things like both being Blakeās partner, the visual similarity of their semblances, etc. thatās now made explicit), something thatās even more meaningful with the revelation that Adam is Blakeās ex lover. It adds a whole new level to Blake not wanting Yang to be another Adam, and ultimately Blake decides to trust her (a huge sign of how far sheās come since leaving Adam).
The biggest moment of course, is the entire encounter with Adam. Every bit of it is filled with romantic coding, from Adamās āI will destroy everything you love, starting with herā to Blakeās reaction to seeing Yang to Yang throwing herself at Adam and losing an arm trying to save Blake to Blake defiantly getting between Adam and Yangās unconscious body, and all of itās compounded thanks to the context of Adam being Blakeās possessive and abusive ex. Thereās a reason b/lacksun shippers were so insistent that Sun would take place in the final showdown with Adam, because even if they wonāt admit it with Blake and Yang who fights at Blakeās side has serious romantic implications. Itās important to note that Sunās absence isnāt even because heās unavailable (in fact heās right by Weiss when she tells Yang where Blake went...he couldāve gone instead and Yang couldāve been sidelined in another way if the writers wanted to go that route) so the fact that itās Yang is very substantial.
I honestly believe that the fight with Adam is the point of no return. In addition to setting up an entire intertwined arc for Blake and Yang, Iāve said before that the intensity of the moment makes it very difficult to establish a romance for Blake and Yang that doesnāt involve each other. In the case of b/lacksun, how do you show the audience that Blake cares about him more that Yang, who Adam singles out as a person to hurt if he wants to hurt Blake and who she throws herself in front of when Adam, her abuser, tries to kill her and whose dismemberment by Adam is a huge part of what undos Blakeās character growth and convinces her she needs to run to protect her? The answer is you donāt (and the writing gets two different chances to try in volumes 4 and 5 and neither come anywhere close).
In the rest of the volume we get the previously mentioned moment of Blake holding and unconscious Yangās hand, apologizing profusely and ignoring everything else as well as Yangās devastated reaction to her leaving. Both continue to emphasize how important they are to each other (note Yangās obvious lie that she doesnāt care, because if she didnāt care it wouldnāt hurt so much that Blake was gone), and the former includes a very interesting shot of Sun seeing the way Blake is focused on Yang.
Overall, thereās a very clear difference this volume. Sun and Blake have one cute moment but it absolutely doesnāt hold a candle to the incredibly major Blake and Yang moments, all of which have lasting ramifications on their relationship. This is also the second volume in a row to suggest that Blake and Yangās feelings are more than platonic with Adamās choice of words and the general romantic coding of the scene, suggesting that the romantic phrasing in volume 2 was intentional (and thus that information should be kept in mind when interpreting their later scenes).
Volume 4:
This volume, Blake and Sun spend the entire volume together while Blake and Yang wonāt meet again until the end of the next volume. However, that doesnāt mean that suddenly Blake and Sun suddenly get more romantic development at all.
One of the first things this volume establishes is that Blake and Sunās relationship hasnāt developed much in previous volumes. When Sun says he gets why Blake left, Blake believes that he understands her and he immediately proves her wrong. She spends most of the volume irritated at him and in the fights they have together thereās a clear lack of teamwork and communication. All of these things have been present in their relationship since volume 1. For all the supposed development theyāve had in three volumes theyāre no closer to understanding each other than when they first met.
Thereās three main moments/aspects to look at for any potential romantic development: the āmeet the parentsā shtick, Sun getting injured against Ilia, and their talk after he wakes up. The former is incredibly shallow and relies on a comedic trope to even be interpreted as romantic. After the intensity and drama of the Adam fight, itās very lacking in comparison when youāre talking about furthering a romantic relationship and honestly feels like itās there to try to add some lightheartedness to Blakeās arc.
The other two run into a different issue: both end up circling back to Yang. The lead up to Sunās injury isnāt doing their relationship any favors (at this point theyāre really at their lowest with Blake being done with his invasiveness) and Blakeās reaction to him getting hurt doesnāt further a romantic relationship between them. Not when her immediate reaction is āno, not againā, a clear callback to Yang losing her arm. As I mentioned earlier, it would be very difficult to convince the audience that Blake cares more about Sun than Yang, and having her reference Yang right away does the opposite of that (not to say that she doesnāt care about Sun, just that if the writers were building a romance between them having Blake clearly thinking about Yang isnāt constructive to that). In addition, the scope of Sunās injury (just a stab wound to the shoulder) makes it a much less dramatic scene in general and mainly happens to get Blake to open up to Sun about why she left.
When she does open up again it ends up circling back to Yang. We get the crack on her name but more importantly Sun himself brings her up, saying heād get get hurt again protecting Blake and promising (very surely) that Yang would say the same. Heās putting Yangās dedication to Blake on at least the same level as his, and if you interpret Sun having romantic feelings for Blake it adds to the idea that Yang does as well (on its own it could be taken as romantic or platonic, but weāve had moments already in volumes 2 and 3 that also lend themselves to the idea that Yang has feelings for Blake). He then continues by talking about how Blake leaving hurts āusā and āweā, not just him, turning their heartfelt conversation into one focused on Blake and her friends. They do end on a much better note here and even have a cute callback after Sun talks about wanting to get even with Ilia (setting himself up as a foil for Blakeās friend and not her ex). At this point theyāre settling into a more comfortable friendship and it shows.
Blake and Yang may not interact this volume, but there is still some development. Besides the above mentioned scenes in Blakeās arc, we have Yangās ptsd and nightmare. While they arenāt romantic teasing at all and are instead part of her own character arc, they are setting up Yangās eventual rematch with Adam, something Blake will be deeply involved with. What happened in Beacon intertwined Blake and Yangās character arcs, and even things that arenāt romantic or about each other further their shared plot. Heās both of their monsters at this point, and the final showdown with Adam was always going to be him versus Blake and Yang together from the moment he took Yangās arm. Additionally, before Yang or Blake even appear in the volume we know that Blakeās mind is on her thanks to the intro, which is reflected by her scenes with Sun.
We see a lot of the ramifications of volume 3 here in volume 4, and even though they are apart we still get development for Blake and Yang while Blake and Sun spend most of the volume fighting. While they do get some development at the end of the volume, the fact that both of their biggest moments have a callback to what happened with Blake and Yang doesnāt scream romantic development, especially given the intensity of whatās being referenced. Blake and Sunās last conversation also serves to develop Blakeās character in the same way Jaune and Rubyās and Tai and Yangās are meant to as opposed to being focused on building a romance with Sun.
Volume 5:
This is the volume that wouldāve been the time to canonize b/lacksun if that was the goal. Blakeās in a better place mentally than in volume 4, she and Sun are getting along better, and itās really the last chance to do it before Sun steps out of the plot for who knows how long (which was always inevitable once Blake reunited with her team and Sunās role as her support outside of them was no longer needed). Instead, everything stays pretty damn platonic and even the slight romantic coding of his interactions with Blakeās parents are toned down.
Volume 3 makes it very clear that Adam is Yang and Blakeās fight, and volume 5 has several opportunities to try and make it Sunās too and doesnāt take them. When Blake tells him a little about Adam Sun shows no further interest in him. Instead, the focus shifts to Ilia and Blake wanting to help her the way Sun helped her. Sun is clearly tied to Ilia, Blakeās friend, and not Adam, Blakeās ex which says a lot about how his relationship with Blake is meant to be seen.
Thereās still one more opportunity this volume to connect Sun to Adam, one that also wouldāve been a great way to establish Blakeās feelings for Sun as stronger than her feelings Yang: the skirmish with Adam. Yet when confronted with Sun, Adamās incredibly dismissive of him going so far as to call him aĀ āclassmateā. This is a huge contrast to how he treats Yang in both encounters with her, and it makes it clear which one he sees as the bigger threat when it comes to Blake. The Haven encounter is also very focused on the White Fang side of the Adam conflict, and lacks the personal and emotional stakes the Blake and Yang vs Adam ones do.
Despite still being separated for the majority of the volume, thereās some very significant development in Blake and Yangās relationship. However where last volume most of what is there is on Blakeās side, this time itās Yang where we really see it. Alone Together is the first time we see Yang talk about Blake since volume 3, and itās very clear that what happened still affects Yang. Her feelings about Blake are complicated; sheās still hurt by Blake leaving but makes it clear that she does still care about her. Her and Weiss have an entire conversation about her messy feelings about Blake and how she wanted both to be there for Blake and for Blake to be there for her (and her desire for a mutual relationship gets plenty of payoff in volume 6). What happened in volume 3 and how it affected Blake and Yangās relationship is still something thatās being dealt with. It also parallels the conversation Sun and Blake have at the end of volume 4, with Sun and Weiss both able to give Blake and Yang a look at how the other is feeling.
Those conversations help Blake and Yang be in a better place when they finally see each other again, and boy is their reunion something. Blake walks into a room filled with her friends that she hasnāt seen in almost two volumes, some enemies she hasnāt seen in just as long, a whole bunch of strangers, and a spectral Grimm that blew a hole in the wall and immediately focuses on one thing: Yang. Which is followed by a slow closeup of Yangās reaction, and the framing makes it look like theyāre the only two people in the world. Once again their relationship is emphasized in a way thatās unmatched by anything Blake and Sun have.
This volume takes what little alone time Blake and Sun will have for years and does nothing to further a romantic relationship and instead emphasizes how important Blake and Yangās relationship is. Sun was there to help Blake get back to her team and now that sheās reunited with them in his own words she doesnāt need him anymore.
Volume 6:
I said earlier that volumes 3 and 6 are where we get the biggest differences both in quality and quantity for bumbleby vs b/lacksun, but even volume 3ā²s massive imbalance aināt got nothing on this.
Sun shows up in exactly one scene this volume and the fact that Blake kisses him on the cheek has been highly talked about. However, what this scene does is end any potential romance between them. The kiss itself is incredibly zoomed out, too out of focus to be meant to be seen as a grand romantic gesture and Neptune and Sunās conversation is the final nail in the coffin. Neptune says it feels like Sun is letting her go, something he wouldnāt say if he saw that kiss as the start of something and not the end of it. SunāsĀ āIt was never about thatā just adds to it. Blake and Sun will see each other again some day (and their friendship has had some good development in the past two volumes!), but they wonāt be starting a romance when they do.
From the very first episode we know that a major part of this volume is going to be Blake and Yang rebuilding their relationship. Yangās feelings are still complicated; sheās glad that Blakeās back but sheās still hurt by what happened while Blakeās trying to make things up to her but goes about it in not quite the right way at first. The fact that their relationship is the center of one of the major arcs of the volume is huge. Itās not about Yang helping develop Blakeās character or Blake developing Yangās or even about taking Adam down, no, itās an entire arc dedicated to their relationship. Even Pyrrhaās arc and relationship with Jaune in the first three volumes is mainly there to lead up to her sacrifice, while Blake and Yangās end goal this volume is to better their relationship.
Another aspect of their arc thatās unprecedented is just how tactile they are. We see them hold hands on four different occasions, and three of those four are either the focus of the shot or the only thing in the shot (with special mention going to Blake grabbing Yangās hand in front of Adam being the only thing in the shot two episodes in a row). While handholding isnāt necessarily romantic in and of itself (though it is frequently used that way as seen in the canon romantic pairings of Ren and Nora, Ozma and Salem, Terra and Saphron, and the could-have-been Jaune and Pyrrha), the sheer amount of times they do it is very notable especially in contrast to how Blake and Sun acted. Blake and Sun get a few shoulder touches, most of which arenāt emphasized, and one out of focus cheek kiss and thatās pretty much it. Meanwhile handholding isnāt the only sort of close contact Blake and Yang have. In the finale, the two stay very close and almost constantly maintain physical contact and at the end of Seeing Red their positioning (legs intertwined, Yangās hand on Blakeās face, Blakeās hand on that one, foreheads touching) is incredibly intimate.
Throughout the volume we see them taking steps to improve their relationship. On the train we get the setup and are shown what their current awkward dynamic is, then in the barn they start making progress. They open up to each other about Adam and they make huge steps when Blake asserts that sheāll be there for Yang if they see Adam again. They take a few steps back when she fumbles withĀ āIāll protect youā (because we know Yang wants their relationship to mutual) but we do see a large change after they escape the Apathy (likely in part because Blake almost died and also because their previous tension was probably partially a result of the Apathy starting to get to Yang). By the time Blake leaves for the tower, the two are playfully bantering with each other. Blake reaffirms her promise to Yang by promising to hurry back, while Yangās reaction shows that sheās ready to fully believe her.
When they finally confront Adam, thereās manages to be even more romantic coding than there was in volume 3 in addition to it showing how much Yang and Blake have grown since then. Blake hearing Yang coming and defiantly declaringĀ āIām not aloneā is a far cry from her begging Yang to leave, and Yang telling her to catch her breath reinforces that Yang wants their relationship to be mutual instead of weighted in one of their favors. Blakeās absolute horror at Adam targeting Yang and Yangās panic when Adam deflects Gambol Shroud remind us how much they care about each. Their teamwork is flawless (improvising a reverse Bumblebee on the fly is insane!) and both their verbal and nonverbal communication allows them to work together to take Adam down when neither could do it alone. The biggest moment though, is Blake reaffirming her promise and declaringĀ āWeāre protecting each otherā, standing hand in hand with Yang as they stare down Adam.
Blake and Yangās actions arenāt the only thing to look at here. Adamās words and actions speak volumes and reinforce that he views Yang as a romantic rival in his twisted way. From the moment he sees her he recognizes her, and why wouldnāt he? This is the woman that Blake threw herself in front, that he promised to destroy because Blake loves her. And here she is, not destroyed and Adam is ready to rectify that. Just watching Blake and Yang look at each other is enough to send him into a murderous rage and his jealousy is even more emphasized withĀ āWhat does she even see in you?!ā, which is so blatantly romantic (and no, itās notĀ āwhat does she even see in you [because youāre human]ā because he never once comments on the fact that Yangās human) itās not even funny. He even tries to manipulate Yang by positing that he was in the same position as her once (āshe made a promise to me too, to always be at myĀ sideā) which makes it even clearer how he interprets their relationship.
Iāve already said before that the way they embrace after Adam falls is incredibly intimate, and it also reinforces that their relationship is now stronger than ever. We get Yang making sure Blake knows that Yang believes sheās not gonna break her promise, including looking her in the eyes to be sure (something thatās very important after Blakeās relationship with Adam). They end the volume with Yang echoing that they were there for each other to Weiss, who of all people knows how important that is to Yang. Yang and Blake arenāt in a relationship yet (so calling it rushed is very odd), but the groundwork is there and the narrative has made it clear thatās where it will progress.
The show has consistently given Blake and Yangās relationship more substantial development than Blake and Sunās. None of this is to say that b/lacksun is a bad ship or that people shouldnāt ship it, just that the argument that bumbleby is somehow less developed than it isnāt supported by the show at all. Blake and Yangās relationship is incredibly dynamic; weāve seen them go from strangers to friends to facing a seemingly insurmountable obstacle to struggling to repair their friendship to having an even stronger relationship now, and it isnāt done evolving. Thereās so much emphasis placed on their relationship, and itās going to be beautiful to watch it continue to blossom.Ā










