Darker than Black/Fridge

Fridge Brilliance

 * I had a epiphany about Amber in Darker than Black which made me realize how much of a Magnificent Bastard she was. Amber pretty much knows the future, and thus the reason she had no problem having Maki and Wei in her group, is that she knew both of them would act against her wishes and die in the process. It's also interesting now that the Gaiden has shown Amagiri to have survived. In the first season, it looked like while Amber had tried to do something to save both Amagiri and Brita, it didn't work, and both were burned to death. Now that it's clear Amagiri survived (but ended up badly scarred), I tend to think that maybe Amber was only trying to save him- because he was loyal to her and the nicest of her main supporters- and she succeeded.- User:Jordan
 * This show does not like to explain things, so a few things listed as fact on its page are the product of Fridge Brilliance. Namely, that Mundane Utility moment in the first episode: we just see that Li smacks a broken TV, some sparks fly out of it and he jumps, and all of a sudden the picture clears up. Since it takes a while before they explain much about who and what he is, you may have to watch it again before you realize that he had his eyes closed when he laid his hand on it; Hei used his Shock and Awe abilities to fix the TV, and the Eyes Always Shut smile hid the telltale red glow.
 * The Stargazer's ramblings become a good deal more relevant once you think to connect them to the running "stars" metaphor everywhere else. There's still no explanation for what she has to do with everything else that's going on, but at least you realize who she's addressing, and some of what she's trying to tell them.
 * Hell's Gate is Mind Screw incarnate, to the point where the characters know and comment on it. But a bit of sideways What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic logic and remembering that its main rule is, "It'll give you back what you lost, but for a price" can make sense of some of the oddities that happen around it. Misaki's reappearing tape recorder, for example. She lost it, needed it, and wanted it back badly, so when everything went really weird, it showed up back in her pocket. If you want to get overanalytical, she finally got the opportunity to reveal the crimes of people who thought they were above the law, and in exchange
 * In episode 9, Hei (undercover in a hotel) is talking to Saitou (much more clumsily undercover in the same hotel) about Kirihara. There's an exchange along the lines of: "She's beautiful." "Yeah, but once you get to know her, she's actually pretty scary." Now think about who one of the participants in this conversation is.
 * November 11 is James Bond's birthday, damn it. How could I miss that one?!
 * Until Evening Primrose shows up, November 11 is the only Contractor badass enough to survive more than a two-parter fighting Hei, making him essentially the main villain for a while. Based on that, his white suit and light-colored hair and eyes could be a deliberate contrast with our hero, the Black Reaper.
 * Quite a few bits of the (first) Gainax Ending actually make a surprising amount of sense if you think about it way too much. For instance, special attention is drawn to the fact that Kirihara gets her tape recorder taken when she goes through Pandora security, but it appears in her pocket a little later, when she . The reason?
 * At one point during Heaven's war, Hei when Amber walked up and started taking about how cute/romantic they looked. Later, when Amber and Hei were alone in Hell's Gate, she said that she must have fought Heaven's War a hundred times trying to get it right. That means in several timelines Pai wasn't alive to seal the area and win the war.
 * Remember Hei's coat and how it's supposed to be bulletproof only when he wears it? Maybe it's made of a fabric or something that becomes rigid when electricity is passed through.
 * In the second season,
 * In the second season,

Fridge Horror

 * See all those pretty shooting stars in the openings? Remember what that means?
 * Hei's contractor power was originally thought to be generating lethal electrical discharges. In the first episode, the Tokyo Police couldn't determine the Contractor Louis's cause of death. It turns out that his power was really Molecular Manipulation, allowing him to manipulate the electrons of matter.
 * The human body itself generates electricity. Everything we do is controlled and enabled by electrical signals running through our bodies. All matter is made up of atoms, and atoms are made up of protons, neutrons and electrons. Protons have a positive charge, neutrons have a neutral charge, and electrons have a negative charge. When these charges are out of balance, an atom becomes either positively or negatively charged. The switch between one type of charge and the other allows electrons to flow from one atom to another. This flow of electrons, or a negative charge, is what we call electricity. Since our bodies are huge masses of atoms, we can generate electricity. The electricity produced by our bodies is what allows synapses, signals and even heartbeats to occur.
 * Electricity is a key to our survival. Electrical signals are fast. They allow for a nearly instantaneous response to control messages. If our bodies relied entirely on, say, the movement of chemicals to tell our hearts to speed up when something is chasing us, we probably would've died out a long time ago.
 * In other words, Hei's power doesn't stem from zapping people to death by arrhythmias of the heart, meaning that the heart would not contract in synchrony between the different chambers, essentially causing elimination of blood flow. But rather screwing up the electron flow in a person's body.