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Especially after The Rise of Red , the strongest artistic choice is to read Coco as aromantic and/or asexual. Her love is reserved for her chosen family (Uma, the pirate crew) and her craft. In a franchise obsessed with royal weddings and villain redemption through romance, Coco stands as a quiet revolutionary: a female character whose happy ending is solitude with purpose .

Their storyline often peaks during a tournament or a magical heist. Coco, believing Hadie betrayed her to their father, confronts him in the Underworld’s forge. The resolution is not a kiss, but a truce —a promise that they are stronger as allies than as enemies. This quasi-romantic tension is beloved because it subverts the "love at first spell" trope; it is about earning respect, then love. -SexArt- Ariadna- Coco De Mal -Party Boat Part ...

-SexArt- Ariadna- Coco De Mal -Party Boat Part ...
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