Warning! Spoilers for The Vampire Slayer #11 ahead!Willow Rosenberg is the biggest threat to Buffy the Vampire Slayer's multiverse and BOOM! Studios' latest spinoff is finally proving this to be true. Willow has always been the most good-natured and pure of the Scooby Gang, but it's that same love that often corrupts her and brings the worst out of her. Take, for example, the sixth season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, where Warren shoots Willow's girlfriend, Tara, dead. Her grief mixed with rage is enough to convince her to absorb immense dark magic, putting Dark Willow on a quest for bloody vengeance. Audiences understand and sympathize where Willow's coming from, and perhaps even root for her as she hunts the season's Big Bads, but her violent ambitions go too far, nearly spelling the end of the world.

Similarly, the series The Vampire Slayer is focused on a world where, in the hopes of easing her friend's pain, Willow adopts Buffy's role as the new Slayer. However, the burden becomes too great for Willow herself and eventually, the series sees her become Dark Willow, the new Big Bad of the series. As of the latest issue, The Vampire Slayer #11 by Sarah Gailey and Hannah Templer, Willow's current plans are to undo the entirety of reality itself in hopes that no one in the universe will hurt anymore. After all, no one can be in pain if no one exists anymore. Willow's intentions are good, but it's still bad news for every universe and everyone in them.

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Willow's Good Intentions Could Doom The Entire Slayerverse

Willo and Buffy the Vampire Slayer after Xander dies

These are not the only instances of Willow going too far to protect her loved ones. In BOOM! Studios' Buffy the Vampire Slayer #24 by Jeremy Lambert and Ramon Bachs, after watching Faith stake her best friend turned vampire Xander, Willow is heartbroken and distraught to the point that she's convinced that Xander is still out there. "I can find him," she says. "There's something left. There has to be." She instinctually opens a dark portal to an alternate universe (the main canon of the show, to be exact) in search of at least another version of Xander. This only stirs up more trouble when it puts the new Big Bad, Silas the Multiverse Man, on their trail.

In all three of these examples, Willow has good intentions at heart, but her actions either directly or indirectly spell doom for everyone involved. The latest instance in The Vampire Slayer has the most dire consequences yet as it affects every universe in the multiverse (or, as the Slayerverse, as the Buffy equivalent of the multiverse is known). It's reasonable for that to be the case upon realizing that Willow's kindness is a multiversal constant, meaning that it's likely to be consistent with every universe iteration of her.

It's clear that Willow's kindness and empathy is a multiversal constant in just about every universe, but it's also becoming a constant that this same kindness is not good for the multiverse as a whole, with her extreme lengths putting everyone at risk. Willow Rosenberg is, by far, the most kindhearted character in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer cast, but her kindness continues to be a detriment with increasingly concerning results to BOOM! Studios' Slayerverse.

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The Vampire Slayer #11 is available now from BOOM! Studios.