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Chi is still shown as being ‘superior’ not only to other persocoms but to human women as well, which is a dangerous thing to suggest. Fortunately, Chi spends most of the end of the series suffering with an identity crisis, and comes to the conclusion that there's only one person for her and that that person must love her completely and, subsequently, must treat her right in order to deserve her love in return. The show still presents the insulting ‘perfect woman’ archetype (why anyone would love someone who's as blank and personality-free as Chi is, I'll never know), they sidestep the really offensive things the character type suggests by making the story more about romance and mutual love than gender politics. It isn't perfect, but it's a big step forward for this genre, and that should be appreciated.
Yuki is more desperate than ever to remember her past. Any sensible girl would take the escalating, bloody hallucinations as a sign that perhaps she shouldn't pursue the issue, but Yuki has never been a sensible girl. So she confronts Kaname about his role in her missing past, which naturally leads to him declaring her as his lover. It's patently obvious, even to Yuki, that there's something besides mere affection behind his declaration. But what? Between Yuki's memory, Shiki returning from break a (very) changed man, and Ichiru transferring into the Day Class there can be no doubt that something big and probably very, very bad is in the offing. Can the relationships that Yuki treasures survive it? Not unchanged they can't.
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