what if Jenny wakeman is reacting puss in boots the last wish when death was following puss what could Jenny and brad and tuck say from deviantart
Quick Scoop
A fun crossover-style reaction where Jenny Wakeman (XJ-9) , Brad , and Tuck watch the intense “Death stalking Puss” scene from Puss in Boots: The Last Wish would lean into their personalities: Jenny’s analytical but empathetic side, Brad’s humor masking fear, and Tuck’s chaotic innocence.
Scene Setup
They’re watching the moment where Death (the wolf) silently follows Puss, whistling, building tension. The room gets quiet… then the reactions start.
Character Reactions (DeviantArt-style dialogue)
Jenny (focused, scanning):
“That entity… it’s not just a villain. My sensors would classify it as a metaphysical embodiment. It’s targeting him psychologically before physically.”
Brad (uneasy, trying to joke):
“Yeah, cool analysis, Jenny—BUT WHY IS IT WHISTLING LIKE THAT?! That’s horror-movie level creepy!”
Tuck (half-hiding, half-excited):
“Nope. Nope. I don’t like the wolf. The wolf can go away now. Send him to the moon or something.”
When Death gets closer
Jenny (more serious):
“Puss is experiencing fear conditioning. Notice the change in his posture—he’s no longer confident. That’s… rare.”
Brad:
“I’ve never seen him like this. This guy fights giants and now he’s panicking? Okay, yeah… that wolf is BAD news.”
Tuck (whispering):
“Why is he walking so slow… just RUN, kitty, RUN!”
The whistle moment
Brad (covering ears):
“That whistle should be illegal. I’m filing a complaint.”
Jenny (quietly):
“It’s intentional. A sound cue to induce dread. Efficient… but terrifying.”
Tuck:
“If someone whistled like that at me, I’d uninstall myself from existence.”
When Puss realizes who Death is
Jenny (softly):
“He understands now… This isn’t just danger. It’s inevitability.”
Brad:
“…Okay, that line goes HARD. I’m officially scared of animated wolves now.”
Tuck:
“So he’s like… THE Death? Not just ‘a guy’? Oh, we’re doomed.”
Mini Breakdown: Why Their Reactions Fit
- Jenny Wakeman
- Analytical, notices behavioral shifts and deeper meaning
- Would recognize Death as more than physical threat
- Shows quiet empathy when Puss becomes vulnerable
- Brad
- Uses humor to cope with fear
- Reacts like an average viewer—shocked but entertained
- Calls out how intense the scene is
- Tuck
- Pure emotional reaction
- Over-the-top fear but also comedic relief
- Represents the “nope, I’m out” audience
Multi-Viewpoint Insight
- Emotional lens (Tuck): pure fear and instinct
- Audience lens (Brad): relatable, commentary-driven
- Analytical lens (Jenny): deeper psychological and thematic understanding
This mix is why the scene would feel even richer with them reacting—each one highlights a different layer of the moment.
If This Were a DeviantArt Post
Title: “XJ-9 Crew Reacts to Death vs Puss – The Last Wish”
Top Comment:
“Jenny analyzing Death like a final boss while Brad panics and Tuck wants to leave is exactly how this scene feels.”
TL;DR
Jenny would analyze Death as a psychological and existential threat, Brad would joke through fear, and Tuck would panic outright—creating a balanced mix of insight, humor, and raw reaction that matches the intensity of the scene. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.