Agatha all the time brought a fun, spooky, and witchy atmosphere to the Marvel roster, leaving many fans wanting more. Watching Agatha Harkness form a clan that comes together almost against her will was a beautifully compelling narrative, the likes of which can also be found in other similar series, and the Agatha all the time characters having so much growth in just eight episodes is impressive. For any viewer of Agatha all the time whose main complaint is that they wanted more time below Westview, there is a little-known supernatural drama, Homeland: Fort Salemwhich provides the perfect substitute.
Homeland: Fort Salem is an alternate history of America where witchcraft is real. The entire US Army is made up of witches, with headquarters in Fort Salem, Massachusetts. Homeland: Fort SalemThe main characters are a unit of three newly recruited witches, each with their own opinion on the honor of serving in the military. As Agatha all the time, Homeland: Fort Salem It’s about harnessing feminine power. For those who want more of Agatha and Rio Vidal’s romance at the end of Agatha all the time, Homeland: Fort Salem offers a complicated and steamy queer relationship that is explored in depth over three seasons.
Homeland: Fort Salem uses the power of friendship and female music, just like Agatha throughout
Fort Salem Teaches Witches “Seed Sounds”
All the witches in Agatha all the time They have specialties within their craft. For example, Alice Wu-Gulliver is a “protection witch”, while Lilia Calderu’s gift is divination. Once the coven members begin to claim their power, there will be some impressive displays of power in Agatha all the time. Likewise, in Homeland: Fort SalemThe women in the unit train to improve their natural gifts. Raelle Collar is a healer, Abigail Bellwether inherits her family’s gift for weather manipulation, and Tally Craven is skilled in scrying, a form of intuitive clairvoyance. In both Agatha all the time and Homeland: Fort Salem, No matter how powerful a witch is alone, she is stronger with her coven.
A unique highlight of Agatha all the time It’s the power of music. “The Ballad of the Witches’ Road” is a song with the power to open the gate to the Witches’ Road or to cast a protective spell on Alice. Homeland: Fort Salem also embraces the power of music. Fort Salem cadets are taught to use their vocal chords to make “seeds” or “seed sounds”, layering vocals to harness the raw potential and harness it in specific acts of magic. The more harmonious the clan, the stronger its magic will be. These similarities create a surprising overlap between the two series.
Homeland: Fort Salem has the complicated queer love story that Agatha and Rio always teased
Raelle and Scylla’s relationship grows over three seasons
Agatha all the time It was a milestone for queer representation in the MCU. Agatha and Rio are canonically ex-lovers who still feel strongly attracted to each other even centuries later. Its intriguing but vague story was developed in the first half of the show, although the details were never fully explored. Agatha telling Billy Maximoff: “If you want a straight answer, ask a straight lady” Sums up the wonderfully arrogant way the show handled gay characters, but Agatha all the timeThe ending of Agatha had a big failure: it didn’t show the story of Agatha and Rio. With only eight episodes, there wasn’t enough time.
Different Agatha all the timewhich had to condense its narrative into a shorter streaming season, Homeland: Fort Salem has room to allow their strange relationship to fully blossom on screen…
Homeland: Fort Salem has 30 episodes to explore every detail of Raelle’s relationship with the witch Scylla. From their first meeting, their chemistry is intense and magnetic. However, Scylla keeps a secret about Raelle’s past and future. Despite many obstacles, Raelle and Scylla always find their way back to each other. Their love story is the central romance of the series. Different Agatha all the timewhich had to condense its narrative into a shorter streaming season, Homeland: Fort Salem Have space to allow your queer relationship to flourish entirely on screen – a clear plus for fans who want more from the Marvel series.