▋I hate the way fandom power-scales Claire through this weird credentialist lens, as if she needs a military résumé before she’s allowed to be competent, especially whenever people talk about the original Code: Veronica opening.
You know the one. Claire infiltrates an Umbrella facility, gets chased down by armed guards and helicopters, causes absolute chaos, and still goes out like a menace. It is easily the most badass FMV from the original era of the series, and every time someone says, “That should have been Chris,” I’m like: okay, thank you, you should’ve just started there. We could’ve saved time.
Because that’s usually where the argument is going anyway. It’s not really about whether Claire is “capable” of doing it. It’s about people being weirdly annoyed that Claire got that sequence.
And I find that so boring, because Claire has never needed to be a soldier for that scene to make sense. Her whole character is cut from the same cloth as Ellen Ripley and Sarah Connor: everyday women who are thrown into horror, survive it, adapt, harden, and become terrifyingly competent because the situation demands it.
Sarah Connor is not introduced in The Terminator as some elite commando. She’s a nineteen-year-old waitress. Ripley is not introduced in Alien as an action hero. She’s a warrant officer trying to keep everyone from doing something stupid, which, unfortunately for her, is apparently a full-time job. Their power does not come from credentials. It comes from escalation. They survive the nightmare, and the nightmare changes them.
Claire survives Raccoon City. She’s been trained by Chris, yes, but more importantly, she has already been through the kind of trauma that either breaks you or turns you into someone who can move through fear without stopping. So when Code: Veronica opens with her breaking into Umbrella’s Paris facility, I don’t see that as “unrealistic.” I see it as genre language. It is the game telling you: this is not the same girl who walked into Raccoon City looking for her brother. This is what surviving Raccoon City did to her.
And the Code: Veronica opening has always felt like it was recalling Sarah Connor’s unseen Cyberdyne incident before T2, where John explains that his mother was arrested after trying to infiltrate and blow up Cyberdyne. That is the same archetype. Not “trained military professional does military professional things,” but “ordinary woman discovers the machine behind the horror and decides she is going to drag hell directly to its front door.”
So it annoys me when people try to flatten Claire back down into “just a college student” every time she does something impressive.
Yes. She was a university student.
So was Sarah Connor “just” a waitress.
Ripley was “just” a civilian worker.
That is the point. That is the entire flavor. That is why it works.
I’ll admit, the recent producer comments about Code: Veronica’s remake portrayal make me a little nervous. The whole “RE2 was only three months ago” thing is technically true, but I hope that does not become an excuse to sand Claire down too much. Three months is not a lot of time in normal life. Three months after surviving Raccoon City is not normal life.
Claire does not need to be written like Chris. She should not be written like Chris. But she also should not be written like she wandered into the plot with a backpack and a prayer. She has already survived one of the worst bioterror outbreaks in history. She has already learned what Umbrella is. She has already decided to chase them instead of run from them.
That opening is not some random “girlboss” power fantasy. It is the thesis statement of Claire’s original-era character:
You can underestimate her because she does not have the official title, the uniform, or the resume.
That has historically gone very badly for people.