I mean it's not uncommon, this is how writers generally use "genius" characters, but it's still noticeable how blatant it is in many cases I never noticed any point where Hermione was actually ahead of me (i.e. a genuine reveal that was fairly set up ahead of time)
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Maybe when she figures out the cumbersome method Draco Malfoy used to (try to) assassinate Dumbledore with the Vanishing Cabinet? I dunno my eyes kind of glazed over all that
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A lot's been written about how, even though he wasn't perfect, Arthur Conan Doyle was *really good* at the subtle art of the whodunit, writing mysteries that it's fairly unlikely the audience will solve ahead of time but still *feel* like the clues were all there
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Specifically I've seen someone write about how hard it is to write a good "Dr. Watson" character -- i.e. someone whose job it is to be stupid, but not THAT stupid "Very slightly stupider than the average reader"
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You've got to be juuuuuust one step ahead of the Watson so you figure it out *right* before they do and you get to feel satisfied and clever
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If you're, like, ten miles ahead of them all the time (or if conversely everyone's constantly ahead of you jumping to conclusions they didn't adequately explain to a reader of your level of education) then you're just gonna be fucking bored the whole time and throw the book away
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Or her "genius" is shown by her being odious in correcting others smugly.
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The mensa approach do genius
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Weird how the same people who give HP shit for some periods of obliviousness never criticize Parasite for the implausibility or hiding under a coffee table going somehow unobserved by multiple people, including a character who had a direct line of sight to the people hiding
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I'm down with most of what you say, but this is dumb. Characters aged 11-18 really shouldn't be all that sharp. The flaw in the books is that they're almost always smarter than basically every adult.
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