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| Character | Game | Why They Work | Why Dahl Fails | |-----------|------|---------------|----------------| | Tess | The Last of Us | Dying wish drives Joel’s entire arc. | Dahl has no impact on Jacob’s primary goal. | | Sergeant Johnson | Halo | Consistent support, memorable lines, agency in final battle. | Dahl disappears during the climax. | | Claire Redfield | Resident Evil 2 | Shared protagonist. Playable. Full backstory. | Dahl is a guest star with no playable sections. |

1. Strong Visual Design & Presence Dahl has an immediately striking, pragmatic design. Her armored scavenger suit, modified helmet, and weathered equipment visually communicate that she is a survivor who has adapted to the harsh, resource-poor environment of Callisto. Unlike many generic "tough female soldier" tropes, her look feels functional to her role as a salvager, not just a fighter.

2. Excellent Voice Acting (Karen Fukuhara) Karen Fukuhara (The Boys, Suicide Squad) delivers a performance that is arguably one of the most natural in the game. She brings a dry, weary, and sardonic edge to Dahl. Her line delivery avoids the overwrought melodrama of other characters and instead lands on a believable cynicism. When Dahl expresses distrust or exhaustion, it feels earned.

3. Competence Without Superpowers Dahl is capable—she fights, sneaks, and hotwires machinery—but she isn’t a superhero. She gets injured, needs help, and makes tactical retreats. In a horror-action game, this grounding keeps her relatable. Her introduction (saving Jacob from a Biophage, then immediately threatening to kill him if he gets too close) establishes her as smart and ruthless, not stupidly heroic.