Quote Originally Posted by Cleretic View Post
Also because he's unconventionally hot (but not too unconventionally hot), and a type of evil where he simultaneously feels like he has a point but he could also maybe possibly be convinced to not do the horrible thing.

Emet appeals to people who want a quirky sexy man, the people who want a guy they can fix, and the people who want to agree with the evil guy, while somehow managing to remain generally consistent, charismatic, sympathetic and detailed as a character at the end of it all. He's checking more 'character appeal' boxes than I genuinely thought were even possible to check with the one character in the one piece of media; MCU Loki took like, five movies and a miniseries to get this far. Snape's a good comparison, too.

I don't like him, and I remember being very surprised when I learned I was basically alone about that after finishing Shadowbringers; it was very alienating to bring my fresh opinion of 'well most of that was great, shame the ending dropped the ball' to people after finishing and getting 'confusion bordering on anger' as a response. But stepping back and taking a wider look at it... yeah, I can see exactly why I didn't find much agreement there.
People liked him as he was a interesting well written character, we could feel what that weight of the duty he held himself to do and the damage the monstrous acts he has and continues to do have done to him and he was an actual well written example of depression as we can feel just how broken and depressed he really is. He was also an genuinely interesting and fun character to be around which made the knowledge that would have to come to ahead extra sad. He also came with a very relatable story, how much would we damn ourselves to bring back the people we love as it made him a very relatable villain.