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|Hiro's powers resulted from mutations in his grandfather's DNA. These mutations were caused by the atomic bomb dropped on [[Hiroshima]]. || Hiro's grandfather was a survivor of Hiroshima and died of cancer. (''[[The Crane]]'') || |
|Hiro's powers resulted from mutations in his grandfather's DNA. These mutations were caused by the atomic bomb dropped on [[Hiroshima]]. || Hiro's grandfather was a survivor of Hiroshima and died of cancer. (''[[The Crane]]'') || |
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|Hiro's grandfather is [[Patient Zero]]. The first of the specials... || Hiro's grandfather was a survivor of Hiroshima. His exposure to radiation could have caused him to develop special powers. (''[[The Crane]]'') Hiro's grandfather knew that Hiro would one day develop powers and introduced his grandson to comics fostering dreams of special abilities. Could Hiro's father and sister also have special abilities?||All details about Hiro's grandfather and comics were presented in the graphic novel ''[[The Crane]]''. Also, radiation gives you cancer, not powers. Otherwise Mrs. Sprague would have powers. Cancer is a type of genetic mutation, and Chandra Suresh believed that most powers first presented themselves as genetic mutations. |
|Hiro's grandfather is [[Patient Zero]]. The first of the specials... || Hiro's grandfather was a survivor of Hiroshima. His exposure to radiation could have caused him to develop special powers. (''[[The Crane]]'') Hiro's grandfather knew that Hiro would one day develop powers and introduced his grandson to comics fostering dreams of special abilities. Could Hiro's father and sister also have special abilities?||All details about Hiro's grandfather and comics were presented in the graphic novel ''[[The Crane]]''. Also, radiation gives you cancer, not powers. Otherwise Mrs. Sprague would have powers. Cancer is a type of genetic mutation, and Chandra Suresh believed that most powers first presented themselves as genetic mutations.Besides that in "Parasite" Mohiner reveals that his father called Sylar [[Patient Zero]]. |
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|Hiro is the cause of Charlie's brain tumor. |
|Hiro is the cause of Charlie's brain tumor. |
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Revision as of 18:50, 7 March 2007
| This article is not up to Heroes Wiki's quality standards. |
The following are all of the published and fan theories that exist for characters on Heroes.
For help on adding theories, see the Help section.
To view disproven theories, see here.
Andrews, Charlie
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Charlie is merely a victim of time. No matter how much Hiro bends time and space, Charlie dies at the same time. | Hiro tells Ando he couldn't save her, no matter how hard he tried | Because of his failure to save Charlie, Hiro believes he cannot change the past. |
| The Haitian visited Charlie and erased some of her memories. | In Seven Minutes to Midnight, she says that she had started only a week before reading the Japanese phrase book she received for her birthday six months earlier. In Six Months Ago, she started using the book right away. Altering her memory may have interfered with Hiro's efforts to save her — even though he bought her a ticket to Japan, her memory of being told to leave was erased. | This begs the question of just how The Haitian knew how to find Charlie in the first place. It doesn't seem like Charlie was being watched by AWI — otherwise they probably would have warned her if they knew Sylar was on the way to Odessa/Midland. Short of Hiro meeting The Haitian in the future, winning his trust and being given a way to prove himself to The Haitian in the past so that he could convince him to go and erase Charlie's memory, there's no way this scenario could work. |
| Charlie knew of her impending death, and of Hiro in the changed time line. She simply did not acknowledge that she already knew Hiro. She accepted her death at the hands of Sylar because she was going to die of the blood clot anyway. | Ando doesn't remember anything differently. | This doesn't account for the changing photo, however. |
| Hiro's actions did create some changes in the past, but he is apparently unable to make a change that would create a causality paradox: he cannot change the past in such a way that it would prevent him from going into the past. | The different versions of Charlie's birthday photo (and Ando's reaction to the change) indicate the past has changed |
Bennet, Claire
For disproven theories, see here
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Claire cannot regenerate if she has a foreign object stuck in her body. | Episode 3: "One Giant Leap" Claire did not wake up after her injury by the bleachers, or on the autopsy table. She only woke up and started regenerating after the medical examiner pulled the branch out of her head. | This may have been because her body was trying to regenerate, but she would continue dying if she woke up with the branch through her skull. Therefore the body couldn't properly heal itself until the lethal object was removed. Also, Claire said that she had a steel rod through her neck and was able to regenerate it after removing — but it did not kill her. It could also be that Chandra Suresh's Theory about the abilities being centred and /or controlled by the brain, possibly if that connection is severed, and kept severed, the abilities may not be able to manifest in the rest of the body. The branch was located in the area of the brain stem, an area that connects the brain to the rest of the body. It is also a "Kill Point" soldiers are trained to stab to quickly kill a person because it stops both voluntary and involuntary body functions. |
| With all connections to the Bennet family gone, and with it not being safe to contact her biological mother, Meredith Gordon, Claire will go to New York to contact Peter Petrelli. | The Haitian advised her against contacting Peter, saying that he was being watched by Mr. Bennet, but he did not mention him being watched by the AWI. However, it would be logical to assume that the AWI knows about Meredith Gordon and would be watching her. | Claire saw Nathan Petrelli just outside Meredith's trailer and realized that he was her biological father, but she still does not know that Nathan and Peter are brothers. Meeting Peter again in New York will also allow her to confront Nathan face to face.
This theory has been proven correct as of Parasite. |
Bennet, Mr.
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mr. Bennet has only one name, and that is "Bennet". He has no first initial or middle initial. | In the episode "Distractions" Sylar takes Mr. Bennet's wallet and then locks Mr. Bennet in the cell that he was being held in. Sylar then finds his drivers license and shows it back to him just to let Mr. Bennet know he knew his address. On the license his name is only listed as Bennet, which is not normal on legal ID. |
If he has no name, it's strange that Sandra made that comment about everyone calling him "Mr. Bennet" while she referred to him by something else. (the dog interrupted, so Sandra doesn't actually finish her statement.) On the other hand, if his name really is just "Bennet", then Sandra could just find it amusing that everyone else puts "Mr." in front of it, just as it would be odd if everyone called her "Mrs. Sandra". |
Bennet's Boss
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mr. Bennet's boss is Mr. Linderman. | Linderman is connected to most of the heroes in some way. It would also explain how Mr. Bennet and The Haitian were able to get into Nathan's hotel room so easily and why the casino staff were so blasé about a guest disappearing from their room. | Neither character has ever been seen. |
| Mr. Bennet's boss is named Thompson. | Bennet received a text message from a "Thompson" in Wireless, Part 2 | Bennet's boss has previously contacted him electronically.
Writers have stated in a CBR interview that Thompson is an associate of Mr. Bennet, not his boss. |
| Mr. Bennet's boss is Mr. Nakamura. | He runs a large corporation with a biotech department. | As revealed in Company Man, Kaito Nakamura is affiliated with the AWI, and is at least higher up in the organization. He was the one who gave Claire to Mr. Bennet to raise. |
| Mr. Bennet's boss is someone in the Deveaux Society. | Claude appears to have a connection to Deveaux (lives in his building) and Mr Bennet refers to Claude as an "old friend" | Mr. Bennet refers to Deveaux's rooftop in Unexpected.
Also, Claude, Mr. Bennet, Mr. Nakamura and Thompson meet to hand over Claire on the Deveaux Rooftop in Company Man. |
| Mr. Bennet reports directly to the President or someone high up in the administration. | It seem unlikely any of the major powers would be unaware of such individuals particularly if the phenomenon has been going on since the 1970s. the resources available to Mr Bennet seem to beyond the capabilities of anything but government. He refers to working for an agency. He seemed to have prior warning of the police raid. He is interested in tracking not killing or capturing them. | In World War 2 Nazi Germany engaged in scientific programs to produce superior humans. Many of these scientist were taken to USA or USSR to continue their research. and just as German rocket science lead to the man landing on the moon, these evolved humans could represent the fruition of this research. |
Bennet, Sandra
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sandra's condition is caused by repeatedly being subjected to The Haitian's power. If her health continues to degenerate, Mr. Bennet will eventually be discovered and forced to reveal the truth about his organization. | Sandra looks visibly ill when she returns from the doctor in Run!. She further shows evidence of unexplained brain hemorrhaging in Unexpected. | Sandra's memory of Claire and Mr. Muggles is erased by the end of the episode, which caused questions into the nature of her memory loss during Unexpected. |
| Sandra's condition was caused by the blow to the head that she suffered from Sylar's attack or another blow that the Haitian had erased from her memory so she did not seek appropriate medical treatment. | The doctor reviewing Sandra's case to Claire in "Run!" asks if she has been battered or suffered a serious blow. | As Sylar approached Sandra to finish her off in "Distractions", he apparently slipped into his intuitive aptitude ability and got a strange look on his face that made him unexpectedly pause. Possibly he saw what was 'broken' and was distracted.
It was noted, however, in Unexpected that the brain hemorrhaging was located in the part of the brain that controls memory. This is a clear note by the writing staff that this is due to the Haitian's abilities. In addition, Mr. Bennet is aware that his actions are the cause of her illness. |
Deveaux, Charles
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Charles has a power similar to Sanjog's, like a sort of "spirit guide". | Peter had a dream about the same time Charles died. | Peter's dream was most likely his power of empathy in action; he connected with Charles' feelings and emotions. |
| Charles had the power of astral projection. | Charles was in a coma for an extended period and in some depictions, "astral travelers" become unconscious as their mind travels elsewhere. Charles also said that while asleep he had been flying around the world and seeing things happening. The accounts of those who claim to have experienced astral projection are very similar to this description. | |
| Charles Deveaux was an agent of the AWI. | Several agents of the AWI meet on his rooftop in a flashback in Company Man. Bennet later recognizes as the rooftop of the Deveaux building in Unexpected from Isaac's painting, indicating that he knew of the building and had been there before. Claude also would be able to hide in plain sight (so to speak) while he was up there, since the last place the AWI would look for him is right under their noses. |
Deveaux, Simone
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Simone is the evolved human that Claude was hiding. | Claude was shot for hiding an evolved human. (Company Man) | This would explain why he always hung out on top of the Deaveaux building. |
Gitelman, Hana
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hana’s power may be the ability to hear and receive electronic communication signals without any sort of aid such as a radio. | In Wireless, Part 1 , which introduces her character, Hana, while working as an intelligence officer for the Israeli military, says that “At my best, it seemed as if I knew the enemies’ moves before they did.”, which may be an indication of her ability to pick up on their communications. The series of graphic novels' name, “Wireless” may also be a reference to this ability. | Hana is able to receive and send electronic communications (Wireless, Part 2), though it is only after a period of study and treatment by Mr. Bennet's organization that she manifests this power unambiguously. |
| Hana has a list of evolved humans. | She knew where Ted was. She had saved a document containing the needle that made "the mark", so she could've saved a list of evolved humans.
She could've intercepted some of Mohinder's phone calls or emails, or even accessed the list on Mohinder's computer.||Hana could also have tracked Ted using her powers quite easily, assuming Ted left some kind of electronic trail in reaching Nevada. Even if the DHS kept Ted's escape and existence out of the media, their own e-mail and phone-calls would still be accessible to Hana. And according to How Do You Stop an Exploding Man?, Part 1, Hana did get to Ted just before Homeland Security did, making it more than likely she was piggy-backing off their reconnaissance. | |
| Hana is the hacker who is a part of the Heroes 360 experience, and she is using her power to do so. | Hana can intercept emails and texts as well as responded to them... | ...So why can't she use it to hack into the files? |
The Haitian
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| The Haitian's orders come from an organization of powered individuals in resistance to AWI. He functions as a deep-cover agent with AWI. | None | The Haitian has been hiding his vocal abilities from AWI for a number of years. He wears a symbol associated to other heroes. Mr. Bennet's memories of shooting Claude appear to be discontinuous and could represent an attempt to fake Claude's death. |
| The Haitian works for future Hiro. | None | With Future Hiro's attempts to prevent rifts or temporal paradoxes, an agent who could use his memory abilities to minimize predestination paradoxes would be beneficial. The Haitian has some set of employers interested in Claire, and Future Hiro was the source of the "Save the Cheerleader, Save the World" meme. The Haitian wears the same RNA symbol as a necklace as Hiro has on his sword. |
Hawkins, D.L.
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| D.L.'s power may involve more ways of manipulating the molecules of his body than just phasing. | At the end of the video about Niki and D.L. on the official NBC site, D.L. is called a "shape-shifter." | They also refer to Niki's power being "Good and Evil" which seems unlikely. Niki Sanders has thus far not revealed any indication that her powers have something to do with the divide between ultimate good and ultimate evil. Therefore, it is possible that the editors simply made an error, since he hasn't displayed any other power than phasing to date. In addition to this, Mr. Bennet does say to Sylar that so far he is the only individual to display more than one power- and in comic books there have only been one or two instances where shape-shifting has also granted the person the power of phasing.
This show is also popular amongst people who do not have previous experiences with super-heroes, so the editors made the choice to put him down as a shape shifter instead of a phaser- seeing as that would be easier for people to understand. It is also possible that the editors did not make an error. Just because he hasn't displayed any other power than phasing, doesn't mean he can't. |
Iyer, Sanjog
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Iyer may have the power to see the past, not just entering other's minds while they dream. | He was able to see the murder of Mohinder's father, for example. This event, as far as we know, was not witnessed by either Mohinder or Sanjog. Sylar's stopped watch seems enough to suggest that the vision is accurate, as neither Mohinder nor Sanjog had seen that watch either. | |
| Sanjog was murdered by Sylar, and Sylar obtained his ability. This is how Sylar appeared in Peter's dream when he was in his cell in Fallout. | Nathan changed from Nathan to Sylar in Peter's dream in Fallout | Sanjog was most definitely still alive during the events leading up to Homecoming, because Mohinder met him. It's possible that Sylar killed Charlie in Midland, flew to India, killed Sanjog, and flew back to Odessa, but it seems unlikely. Another reason is because Sylar was in the metal room at the time at Mr. Bennet's company. The Haitian would have prevented him from using his powers. |
Jumpsuit
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| The Exterminator works for Mr. Bennet, and his appearance was a ruse for Mohinder to meet, and trust, Eden. | Eden was planted by Mr. Bennet, and the gun the exterminator uses is the same style as the weapon Eden attempted to use on Sylar. | Eden picks up the gun when she goes to 'rescue' Mohinder, so it's possible that she kept the gun afterwards. |
Linderman, Mr.
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Linderman will eventually play a bigger part in the series. | He is already connected to most of the heroes | |
| Linderman may be funding the AWI. | He has money, and is connected to most of the heroes. His interest in Isaac Mendez's paintings may indicate his knowledge of their significance and of the existence of superhuman powers. | This would also explain how Mr. Bennet and The Haitian were able to get into Nathan's hotel room so easily and why the casino staff were so blasé about a guest disappearing from their room. |
| Linderman is Mr. Bennet's mysterious employer. | See "Linderman is funding the AWI" | |
| Linderman is an evolved human. | Linderman appears to be a key "villain" in the series, who already has somewhat sinister connections to most of the heroes. Linderman collects items that have the symbol such as hiro's sword. He also collects paintings by Isaac Mendez which may hint that he has a heightened level of awareness such as omniscience but no precognitive powers himself. Since Mr. Linderman predicts the almost exact path that will enter Nathan into the Whitehouse, it appears that he is omniscient.
Linderman seems without fear after Nathan points a pistol at him. || A villainous superhuman would be an appropriate enemy for the heroes. | |
| Linderman is Nathan and Peter Petrelli's actual father. | None | Nathan's campaign is funded by Linderman. Linderman was an associate of Mr. Petrelli, Nathan and Peter's - supposed - father. Linderman appears to know a lot about enhanced humans. Nathan and Peter, being siblings, may have inherited their powers from a parent. Mrs. Petrelli does not appear to have any powers. However, there is no hard evidence that Linderman has powers (see above). |
| Mr. Linderman is a shapeshifter. | None. | Linderman may have been Sylar's cockroach and Mohinder the lizard. He may also have shape shifted into Hiro's dad to trick him. And if a live dinosaur is to battle Hiro, it could be Linderman. |
| Linderman has powers and he is recruiting to have world domination. | Maybe Mr. Bennet works for him and captures evolved humans to monitor them until needed. | |
| Linderman will be played by Malcolm McDowell | Preview of 'Parasite' shown at the conclusion of Company Man. Leaked spoilers have also suggested this. |
In many shows, a character is kept off screen mainly because they will be played by an expensive actor who is not contracted to appear in the earlier episodes. This theory has been proven correct as of Parasite. |
| Linderman is aware that Isaac paints the future. He collects the paintings to further his own agenda. He buys all the paintings so as not to draw attention to the ones that really interest him | He buys all of Isaac’s paintings that he can. | He may also be aware that the sword has special properties. |
| Linderman buys Isaac Mendez's paintings so people don't realize that he can paint the future. | Judging from the graphic novel The Path of the Righteous, Linderman can be connected to the AWI. By posing as a fan of Isaac's work, Linderman could be fulfilling the directives of the AWI. | |
| Linderman has no powers. | None | Linderman is a powerful character; having no powers would be an interesting dichotomy. |
| Linderman is Claude's Father. | They both have British accents | It has been a recurring theme of fathers having and protecting children with abilities. |
| Linderman wants Nathan to become president so that when people having evolutionary enhancements becomes mainstream knowledge, the major power will not be inclined to capture, kill, or otherwise control them. | Linderman has a lot of interest in people with abilities. | This theory could be disproved because apparently Linderman ordered Jessica to kill Nathan. If this is true it would be very interesting because on several occasions Nathan has spoken on how his natural reaction to people with abilities would be to lock them up and study them. He also is against going public about the evolution. |
| Linderman is either the embodiment of the heroes, or the embodiment of the universe. This is also known as omnipresence. | He tells Nathan that if Nathan kills Mr. Linderman, then he will also die. He also knew about many of the heroes before most of the heroes knew about their own power. | This theory could be disproved by the fact that Nathan would have been killed by Linderman's henchman. |
Masahashi, Ando
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ando has the power to focus or amplify other people's powers. | Every time Hiro uses his powers near Ando he is able to do what he wants. When Hiro is not near Ando his powers are unpredictable. Also, when Isaac was around Ando, he was able to paint the future successfully without drugs. | The possibility of this is unlikely. When Hiro attempts to go back in time and save Charlie in Episode 8 ("Seven minutes to midnight"), he moves back 6 Months to April, far further than the day he intended to, despite his proximity to Ando. If Ando's ability is just developing it might explain this though. Also, Ando is next to Hiro at the Museum of Natural History, and Hiro is only able to slow time, not completely stop it (Godsend). |
| Ando has some kind of power involving the control of objects in motion. | In Unexpected, the bullet from Hope's gun seems to stop and then goes back into the barrel, causing it to "backfire". This does not seem to be the result of anything Hiro did. | So far, Hiro has not shown the ability to "rewind" time. Even if he were able to do this, it is unlikely that doing so would cause the effect we see on Hope's gun.
While this can not be proven or disproven at this time, Hiro was concentrating at this time and in the first episode, did display the power to reverse times in moments of duress. Considering that the bullet followed the exact same path back into the gun that it had coming out of it, it is possible that this may have been a result of Hiro's powers developing. |
| Ando has the ability to speak the future. |
There are many instances where Ando's off hand utterances later turn out to be true. In a recent episode, he says that he and Hiro need to find hope, only to meet a woman named Hope moments later. He also says "maybe you need the sword to find the sword." to Hiro, which seems like it will also turn out to be true later on. His ability may be that he is some kind of oracle. |
This observation may simply be a device the writers have used to play up the need for Ando's character since Hiro learned English, or, more likely, to play up Hiro's quest for destiny. |
Mendez, Isaac
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Isaac is the character who is killed off this season. | Hiro found Isaac dead with his brain removed when he traveled into the future in Don't Look Back. Since Sylar is once again free, is is possible that Isaac could still die. | Based on the events of Parasite, it seems certain now that Isaac will die: Sylar knows about him and even has his phone number. Furthermore, Isaac has now painted himself dead in a manner consistent with Sylar's MO and what Hiro saw in the future. Thus far, all of Isaac's paintings have come true. |
| Isaac Mendez will end up working with the AWI. | Hiro found the same gun near Isaac's body that Mr. Bennet, Eden, and the man in the jumpsuit all use. (Don't Look Back) Furthermore, the AWI cleaned up Isaac's murder, putting him deeply in their debt. | Isaac calls Mr. Bennet and seems to be working with him to track down Peter. (Distractions)
This theory seems to have been confirmed, as of Unexpected. |
Nakamura, Hiro
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hiro is Takezo Kensei | The picture of Takezo in the museum looks a lot like Hiro in the future. | He can manipulate time, and he does end up in the past. It cannot be a far off idea that he is the "Godsend" after he teleports into ancient Japan.
As further evidence of this, a comment from Kristen@E-Online (02/12/07) suggests that Hiro will not be with the rest of the cast for Season Two, because he will be trapped in another century. George Takei stated that Takezo Kensai is Hiro's ancestor. |
| Hiro is patterned after the Flemish comic book character, Nero. | Hiro rhymes with Nero. Hiro fantasizes of being the ancient warrior Takezo Kensai, while Nero thought he was the emperor Nero. Hiro and Nero both love waffles. Hiro and Nero both have their lives told in a comic book. Hiro and Nero both have sidekicks. Their sidekicks are closely attached to their cars, a Nissan Versa in one case and a Porsche 911 in the other. Hiro and Nero both span ages of time, Hiro by time travel and Nero by starring in the longest running comic book by the same artist ever. | Tim Kring claims not to read comic books. Therefore it is more likely that the comic book character, Nero, is patterned after Hiro. Hiro could very easily have time-traveled to Belgium some time around WWII and made an impression on Mark Sleen just before he came up with his character. However, this is unlikely since Mark Sleen exists in the real world and Hiro does not. |
| Hiro's powers resulted from mutations in his grandfather's DNA. These mutations were caused by the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. | Hiro's grandfather was a survivor of Hiroshima and died of cancer. (The Crane) | |
| Hiro's grandfather is Patient Zero. The first of the specials... | Hiro's grandfather was a survivor of Hiroshima. His exposure to radiation could have caused him to develop special powers. (The Crane) Hiro's grandfather knew that Hiro would one day develop powers and introduced his grandson to comics fostering dreams of special abilities. Could Hiro's father and sister also have special abilities? | All details about Hiro's grandfather and comics were presented in the graphic novel The Crane. Also, radiation gives you cancer, not powers. Otherwise Mrs. Sprague would have powers. Cancer is a type of genetic mutation, and Chandra Suresh believed that most powers first presented themselves as genetic mutations.Besides that in "Parasite" Mohiner reveals that his father called Sylar Patient Zero. |
| Hiro is the cause of Charlie's brain tumor. | Future Hiro mentions that he is "risking a rift just by coming." It could be that a rift is the re-aligning of history. Suppose that F. Hiro stayed too long. Claire would still end up getting killed by Sylar, dooming the world. F. Hiro probably made sure that he knew his message and that it was short to prevent a re-aligning like the one that doomed Charlie. Hiro spent longer than he should have in the past, with the goal that he was going to save her life. Hiro probably also crashed timelines, staying in the past at the time his "power" activated, sending history on an eternal loop. Probably, Time fixed itself, and punished Hiro for staying until his powers manifest by warping him without most of his powers back to the future. | |
| Hiro has been adopted by Kaito Nakamura. | Claire is adopted by a member of The Company (Mr. Bennet) while waiting for her powers to manifest. Likewise, Hiro could have been adopted by Kaito while waiting for his powers to manifest. |
|
Nakamura, Kaito
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mr. Nakamura has powers. | None | The Petrellis and Claire Bennet's ability to have super powers may have been inherited. If this is consistent, Mr. Nakamura also has powers. |
| Mr. Nakamura is the head of the AWI. | In the episode Company Man he seems to have incredible sway over other members of the AWI, shown by his ability to give them orders and their learning his native language. He also is known to have significant resources at his disposal, given how easily he monitors and abducts Hiro and Ando. | |
| Mr. Nakamura has been hiding Hiro from AWI. | In Company Man, Mr. Nakamura tells HRG he will have to turn over Claire when and if she manifests a power. But Mr. Nakamura has not turned over Hiro to AWI. | It is possible Mr. Nakamura does not know that Hiro has powers. Hiro himself doesn't know he has powers. |
| Mr. Nakamura's organization is a competitor to Linderman's organization. | Mr. Nakamura's organization is powerful and well funded. Linderman's people act independently of AWI, and no one associated with Linderman has the tracking marks. In Hiros, Nathan flies away from Mr. Bennett and the Haitian, after having met with Linderman. | This is part of a theory of Independent Action, where not everything lines up with two factions.
-| |
Nakamura, Kimiko
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Kimiko has powers and will be back. | None. | If Micah and Claire Bennet inherited their super powers, then it makes logical sense that all the Nakamuras may also have super powers. |
Parkman, Janice
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| The father of Janice's baby is not Matt. | It was revealed in "Seven Minutes to Midnight" that Janice had been having an affair with Tom McHenry. | It would make sense that since Janice and Matt have been having so many marital problems that the baby could not be his. Also, the time when she discovered she was pregnant could fit together with the time when she was sleeping with Tom. Also, Janice always seems to be very tense when Matt is around and when he is reading her thoughts, although that could be she is just busy censoring her thoughts for privacy. |
| Nathan is the father of Janice's baby | Nathan has been having sex with almost every female on the show. |
Parkman, Matt
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Matt will be the rumored cast-member who is killed off. | None | Matt is a bodyguard and they have high mortality rates. Matt joins up with Ted Sprague. This may lead to his death directly (being shot by the FBI) or indirectly (radiation poisoning) |
| Matt will work for AWI now, partnered with someone without powers. | He doesn't have a job, and might want to join to make money. He started working with HRG slightly when he realized that Ted was crazy. He also has experience dealing with dangerous people from being a cop. He was also turned away from the FBI by tests and by Audrey Hansen and may feel that the AWI is his last chance at that sort of job. Thompson suggests he'd make a good partner. He does some work for Thompson (by reading HRG's mind). |
Petrelli, Angela
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Angela knows Peter's friend Claude. | Angela is caught shoplifting socks (Genesis). Her son Peter meets a man who uses invisibility to sort of frame him for purse snatching (Distractions). | Claude has behaved as if he encountered people like Peter before — even helped them understand their powers. Perhaps those people include Angela and/or Peter's father. |
| Angela Petrelli has powers. | If both the Petrelli boys have super powers and Claire has powers because her father Nathan Petrelli and mother have super powers, then logic would conclude that the Petrelli's inherited their ability to have super powers from at least one or both of their parents. | |
| Angela Petrelli is an agent of the AWI, who was partnered with Mister Petrelli. | We have seen Claire handed off to be with surogate parents until she manifests, it is possible that Peter and Nathan were given to the care of Angela and Mr. Petrelli in the same manner. Since the pairing of one person with powers and one person without powers seems to be the norm for the AWI, we can hypothosize that Angela Petrelli is the one without powers, and possibly killed her partner before he could go public against Linderman and the AWI. This allowed her to tell Peter (her favorite son) that his father had simply had dillusions of grandure when he committed suicide (she was the one to find him too). | This allowed her to protect her favorite son, since Linderman and the AWI already seem to have tabs on Nathan. |
| Angela Petrelli is part of an organization working against the AWI | In Parasite, we see that she has been working with The Haitian and was aware of Claire to a greater degree than Nathan was. |
Petrelli, Monty and Simon
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| It is possible that Monty and Simon might have powers inherited from Nathan. | Micah is a second-generation evolved human, as is Claire Bennet and possibly Molly Walker. Nathan and Peter are evolved siblings. | Molly Walker has not yet demonstrated any superhuman ability. Children of evolved parents tend to exhibit their powers earlier |
Petrelli, Mr.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| It is possible that Mr. Petrelli had powers. | Mrs. Petrelli said that his depression involved delusions of grandeur, which is the same way Nathan describes Peter. His sons are evolved siblings. He worked for Mr. Linderman, who is probably aware of the recent evolutionary developments | |
| The Fake Petrelli Suicide Theory:Mr. Petrelli is not dead, but in hiding from Mr. Linderman, possibly as a part of the Witness Protection Program/Witness Security Program. He faked a suicide with the help of Nathan Petrelli to protect his wife and family and so not to be put into a position either against his son or against Mr. Linderman. | Nathan was the one who told Peter that his father was dead, yet when Nathan was almost killed, he felt it. Peter also sensed when Charles Deveaux passed on, while he didn't sense his own fathers passing. Their mother stated that Nathan was the one who found his father dead. |
Peter's not sensing his father's death could be explained by his powers just developing; however, since Peter's father supposedly committed suicide after Nathan's accident, he had already experienced his first vision. This theory requires that nobody other than those in on the fake suicide, like Nathan, had seen Mr. Petrelli's body, an unlikely scenario that has not been indicated in the show. While Nathan tells Peter that their dad is dead from a heart attack, Angela Petrelli told Peter in the hospital that his father suffered delusions of grandeur and had committed suicide. |
| Linderman orchestrated Mr. Petrelli's death to look like a suicide. | Linderman clearly has enough power to do such a thing, and he benefitted from Mr. Petrelli's demise in that Nathan switched from being about to sue him to being a "candidate in his pocket." | |
| Mister Petrelli was an agent of the AWI and was killed because he was about to reveal company secrets to the public. | Children with powers often seem to be placed in surrogate families until their powers manifest (this seems to be the custom indicated in "Company Man"). It is possible that Mr. & Mrs. Petrelli were given Peter and Nathan and were told to raise them as their own until their powers manifested. Over this time, they had normal lives and grew to regard the AWI agents as their parents, and in order to continue his protection of Peter and Nathan, Mr. Petrelli was prepared to go public. He was killed by the AWI to prevent this, and his partner (though we can't be certain which of them had the powers) Mrs. Petrelli covered it up as a suicide. | Mrs. Petrelli's behavior toward Peter after his semi-failed attempt to fly also can therefore be interpreted as her desire to keep her 'favorite' son from being exposed. |
Petrelli, Nathan
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Nathan is Claire's biological father and he knows it. | Tim Kring said "Claire's biological father just might be someone fans are already familiar with." | Claire's birth mother Meredith Gordon supposedly calls Claire's father, who wears a ring very similar to one Nathan has been seen wearing. (The Fix)
Claire is only 15 at this point in the show, Nathan is in his early 30's — meaning he would have been in his teens when he had a child with Meredith. Also, Meredith calls the person to let them know that their daughter found her- so this person must know about Claire. Nathan is about the same age as Meredith, so he could be Claire's father. This theory was proven correct in Distractions There is also the "Crazy Uncle" parallel between what Zach said in the previous episode and what has now been revealed. The uncle being Peter, who Nathan has long thought to be crazy. |
| Nathan impregnated Niki when they met in Collision | None | Nathan is Claire's father, so he has impregnated an evolved human before. The child of Nathan and Niki might have super-strength and flight.
|
| Nathan will be the next hero to be killed off | Tim Kring recently revealed in an interview that he will be killing a prominent hero before the end of the season. Peter's "exploding man" premonition in Godsend ends with Nathan disintegrating in front of Peter when he explodes. This could be interpreted as a foreboding sign. It should also be observed that the same thing happens to Simone. The death of Nathan could serve as a key turning point in the plot and especially in Peter's life as it would possibly motivate him to further hone his powers.
If Peter was to get Jessica's power, potentially he could talk to Nathan via mirrors after his death. This might be the meaning behind "a hero might die, but not in the way you think". | |
| Nathan will be a major villain | He consistently makes unethical choices, and values power more than morality. | *Nathan repeatedly picks his political career over "doing the right thing."
|
| Nathan will become president of the U.S. | Linderman confirms that Nathan will become president (likely because he owns this painting, and he knows that it is Nathan in the painting). |
The empty chair at his side seems awkward with this painting, it is possible that Claude (or Peter) is sitting in it, hence the President would still be "standing" seemingly alone. However, most grand offices will have a chair next to the main desk for informal meetings. Also of note is his facial expression, clearly irritated and looking towards his right side. |
Petrelli, Peter
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Peter's power is empathy. This would give him the ability to channel powers and would explain his prophetic dreams about Nathan, and explain how he knows what he felt. | According to Tim Kring: "Peter’s [power] is based on his empathy and his ability to connect with people and when he’s around them." | This would also match the theory that their abilities are based on their personalities...or personality on abilities. Peter became a nurse to help people, so gaining empathy would just further his wanting to help. |
| Peter has some unknown additional power that is or causes these dreams and blackouts. | None | According to the writers, each character has only one innate power. |
| Peter's dreams come from an ability he is mimicking, possibly his father's. | None | Since it looks like the first ability he has mimicked, it would have to be from someone that is always around him. Since Peter's father died six months before Genesis, and Peter didn't learn to recall powers until Distractions, he would have to be recalling the power subconsciously. |
| Peter's dreams come from an ability he is mimicking, probably from Charles Deveaux. | None |
|
| Peter can share his duplicated powers with non-powered people. | Peter's power is based on empathy, and as such he can help others, presumably with replicated powers. | |
| Peter's impending explosion, foreseen in Fallout, may be caused by the proximity of many other evolved humans, whose power he absorbs all at once; it's too much power for him to handle. | After being in close proximity to several others in a short time, Peter appears weak and sickly. (Fallout) | Peter seemed to come close to overloading as he learned how to access powers he had absorbed once before at the end of Distractions after absorbing Ted's power such an overload could result in an explosion |
| Peter's vision of himself exploding may not be a prophecy; it may be form of empathic communication, like some of his other dream experiences seem to be. | His dream about Charles Deveaux was not prophetic. Neither was his dream about Nathan and Heidi's accident, which was occurring at the same time Peter was asleep. | If so, Peter is wrong to think he will be the cause of the explosion. Also, Claire is alive in the vision, implying that this cannot be the actual end of the world. In Godsend, more of Peter's vision is seen, including scenes with Claude laughing while stealing money. These portions of Peter's vision, at least, have definitely proven to be prophetic. |
| Peter may use the vision as a warning that he needs to learn how to better control his powers in order to prevent a disaster like the explosion. He may now start making an effort to learn to control his powers in order to prevent the explosion from happening or to limit its destruction. | Spoilers indicate he will gain a mentor who helps him control his powers. | Claude is teaching Peter how to control his powers. |
| As seen in a painting in the background of Isaac's room at Primatech Paper Co, Peter could evolve into something akin to the Human Torch. | Isaac's painting | |
| If Peter's power is mimicking/copying the special abilities of others, why did he stick just to Claire's healing power when he was very close to Sylar (and a bit farther away from Eden and the Haitian)? | He used telekinesis to throw Isaac against the wall, in Unexpected | It's unknown how close Peter has to be to another evolved human to duplicate their powers, or how long he has to be near them. It is possible he didn't get Claire's healing power until after she came close to him after he fell off the bleachers. Also, he may be unable to duplicate the acquired powers of Sylar (as opposed to his innate power of intuitive analysis). Also note that Sylar used his acquired ability of telekinesis to launch lockers that did not hit Peter. It is possible that Peter unknowingly used telekinesis to prevent damage to himself. This was suggested in the Q & A session with the writers. It also looks like the lockers are just flying around him. It is probable that Peter had access to all of Sylar's powers, but did not know how to wield them and he was using the telekinesis reflexively. |
| In the vision, Peter explodes from mimicking too many powers at once. | Most of the known evolved humans are near him before exploding.
In Distractions, Peter said, as he figured out how to access powers he had copied before, that he felt like he was going to explode as he lost control of all the powers he had. |
From the way the other characters are responding to him, this seems most likely. Claire says she is sorry, Simone is running to him, Nathan is walking towards him determinedly, etc... The dream may also not be prophetic in nature at all, but merely a means for his body to explain its dilemma; that it cannot mimic so many powers simultaneously, probably causing damage similar to what is occurring to Sylar. It would explain why Peter suddenly "blows" when his brother gets too close. The New York setting as well as serving the content of Isaac's painting may be his subconscious linking real life events to a dream. This would also explain the shorter Nathan/Sylar dream, though it doesn't explain how Peter could render images of Micah, Niki, D. L. and Hiro whom he has never met, as well as Sylar, who he had seen very briefly. It also doesn't explain the other characters' reactions to him in his dream. |
| In the vision, Peter sees himself as Sylar, who loses control of Theodore Sprague's power after stealing it. | His trench coat and watch are similar to Sylar's | Peter has been shown to wear a trench coat since the beginning of the series, and many characters wear watches. Peter's watch in the vision is not broken and is a different shape than Sylar's. In Godsend, more of Peter's vision is seen, including conversation between himself and Nathan. Nathan addresses him as Peter. |
| Peter is manifesting the abilities of a female human torch. | "A new female hero is joining the cast for a mini arc, and this person's power is unlike anything we've seen on the show so far. All I'll say is, she'd come in very handy on Survivor." Source: Ask Ausiello @ TV Guide) |
The fortold character is likely Meredith, Claire's birth-mother, who is a pyrokinetic. |
| Peter exploding may be a self-fulfilling prophecy | Some of Isaac's paintings have happened because the paintings were seen | Peter will contact the others and tell them he is the one who is going to explode. They'll believe this because of the exploding man painting and barricade the city, etc. Then since he will be by all of them at once he will explode because of it. And he would not have if he hadn't contacted them all. |
| Peter's regeneration after his encounter with Sylar was incomplete. | When we see Peter in Fallout, he is coughing and sickly. It would appear that he did not heal completely. | Peter's illness could also be attributed to overuse of his powers or coming into contact with too many other evolved humans in too short a timespan. |
| Peter can still duplicate powers that he has copied, even when the original source is gone. | In an interview, Tim Kring has implied that Peter may be able to reproduce powers that he copied previously. | This seems to have been confirmed by the events of Distractions |
| Peter has visions of himself as Nathan since, as brothers, they share the same blood. When Peter falls with Sylar, their blood becomes mixed thereby giving Peter visions of himself as Sylar. | None whatsoever. | |
| Future Hiro contacted Peter because Peter is the only person who can hold a conversation with him while he has stopped time. | Peter's experience with Claude supports the theory. By duplicating Claude's invisibility power, Peter made himself immune to it. Duplicating Hiro's space-time manipulation power may have a similar effect. | It is still unclear whether Future Hiro has enough control of his power to exclude other people from the time-stopping effect. |
| Evolved humans must be living for Peter to duplicate their power. | When Peter activates another evolved human's ability he thinks of the person, linking empathically to them enabling him to have access to their power. If an evolved human dies, that connection has been broken and Peter cannot access the power. This would also support the idea that Peter is a kind of "anti-Sylar". (Peter copies powers of the living and it appears Sylar must kill in order to gain an ability.) | This could be why it is so vital to save the cheerleader, since Peter will frequently have to rely on her power to save the world. |
| Peter mimicked the power of suggestion from Eden McCain. | While Peter visited Mohinder Suresh's apartment while Eden McCain was present, there is no indication that he duplicated her suggestion power. However, since Eden could use her power at her discretion, it's possible Peter duplicated it and simply didn't know how to activate it. Additionally, the fact that Peter was able to convince Mohinder to visit Isaac, but later fail to do it again may suggest that Peter tapped into Eden's power, but later did not. | In the fight with Isaac, Peter yells in an unnaturally deep voice, which may have been Eden's suggestion power. However, he did not give Isaac enough time to answer before flinging him across the room, so we can't know for sure. |
| Peter is the character who is killed off this season. | None | Tim Kring mentioned that one of the main characters would be killed off, and that Peter was a possibility. If this is so, and the explosion is caused by an overload of powers that Peter can not control, then the sword that Hiro needs may be a way to stop it—by killing Peter. Claude punches Peter during his vision, indicating that Peter's powers can be rendered useless if he is unable to focus on them. (Distractions) If he is overloaded and can not control them, he would not be able to regenerate after being killed. |
| Sylar will unsuccessfully attack Peter. | In Parasite, Peter is attacked by Sylar and loses a lock of hair. | When Future Hiro visits Peter in the subway, he comments on how different he looks without a scar... perhaps a large scar horizontally across his forehead? |
| Peter only absorbs a power that is used in his presence | Of Sylar's many acquired powers, Peter has only used telekinesis. | Peter has now come close to Sylar, the Haitian, Eden and others who may have powers. Claire is presumably always healing herself. Sylar's perfect memory may also be always operating. It would make sense for Peter to have a limit like this. On the other hand, Peter absorbed Isaac's ability and Isaac never used it in Peter's presence. |
| Peter absorbs personalities as well as powers as a result of having to "feel" another person's presence in order for absorption | In his fight with Isaac, Peter displays an "evil", aggressive nature to him when he uses his telekinetic abilities, which likens to that of Sylar | Peter, being empathetic, needs to experience another person's "essence" in order to use their abilities. Being around Sylar invoked fear and chaos, so using Sylar's powers would inevitably cause Peter to have violent tendencies |
| Peter can also mimic non-superhuman abilities of others. | Peter initially seemed only able to draw stick figures, but is able to paint similarly to Isaac without painting anything precognitive. | |
| Peter's abilities reside in the long-term memory portion of his brain and are not a part of his genetic code. His empathic powers are therefore susceptible to The Haitian's ability. | In contrast, Sylar changes his genetics with each power theft. | By the end of Unexpected, Peter demonstrates he has the power to dominate any foe. Unbridled, his powers will only increase. Peter's powers must be abated for there to be any suspense in a Peter vs. anyone duel. However, just like all powers, it seems an individual cannot use their own power against themselves. If Peter were around the Haitian, he would mimic his ability, meaning he would be immune to his powers, similar to how he can see Claude when Claude is invisible. |
Rains, Claude
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| The "Invisible Man" is not Claude Rains Theory: In the episode "The Fix" the man that Peter Petrelli had dreams of he meets. This man has the power of invisibility. When Peter demands to know his name the man snaps back "You don't know me! I'm the Invisible Man... I'm Claude Rains!". Peter takes this as the man telling him his name, but he is actually referring to the name of the actor who first portrayed the role in the original movie "The Invisible Man" in 1933. This man then does nothing to dissuade Peter from this misconception. It will be revealed later that he is on the run and does not want anyone knowing his true identity so he can stay hidden. | The man who Peter Petrelli calls Claude was trying to get away from Peter and was very concerned about how it was that he could see through his invisibility. It is very unlikely that he would tell a person he just met, especially in this state of mind, his real name. Also he did not say "I'm Claude Rains and I am the Invisible Man" he said it in such a way as to suggest that he was referring to the movie. |
The name "Claude Rains" could be an Easter egg. Mr. Bennet referred to him as Claude, so the first name is probably correct. However, AWI with Eden, Wireless, and the Haitian has given its operatives new names/codenames, so Claude could also be a knowing in-universe reference. |
| Claude taught Sylar how to control his powers. | When Peter Petrelli asked Claude if he had trained anyone else, Claude gave him a look and then blew off the question without providing an answer one way or another. | It is unlikely that Claude taught Sylar, since Sylar would have simply killed Claude to gain the power of invisibility. |
| Claude may have been a former mutant hunter, but something terrible happened to him on the job and he quit out of sheer disgust. | When Peter asked Claude if he had trained anyone else, Claude did not answer. Mutant hunters generally capture, then sometimes train, their mutants. | This theory has been confirmed true as of Company Man. |
| Claude was part of a former generation of heroes from the seventies and eighties. Because of this, he has trained or been trained by members of the last generation. | Claude is in his 40's which is far beyond the ages of the other heroes (all of whom are between 11 and 35). His comment "Oh, one of those" may indicate that he has experience hunting down and training someone who has empathic power absorption- and as a possible former hunter, knows what's at stake if Peter doesn't control his power. | It is possible that other characters are also part of this group: Linderman, Charles Deveaux, Mr. Bennet, Meredith, Mr. Nakamura and so on. |
| Claude trained the Haitian and possibly even Eden McCain how to use their abilities. | The Haitian and Eden had obviously developed their abilities, and it appears Claude may have trained other evolved humans how to use their powers. It's been made obvious that Claude and Mr. Bennet also share a connection, possibly through the organization. | Claude's history with The Company is confirmed in Company Man. |
| Claude is Patient Zero. | Chandra Suresh was looking for Patient Zero, two days before he was murdered by Sylar. Claude appears to have had a power far longer than any other character. This could indicate he was the first person to have developed powers. Chandra was looking for Patient Zero in New York, and Claude's invisibility would make him hard to find. | |
| Claude removed the tissue containing the radioactive isotope used for tracking that was planted in his back by AWI. Claude may have had an "old school" device rather than a radioactive isotope. Technology has bound to have changed. The radioactive isotope used to track could be a relatively new method adopted after Claude dropped off the grid. | Scar looked like a crater...As if something had been burned out of his body | |
| Claude is Mr. Bennet's old partner. | Claude seems to have some connection with Mr. Bennet and his organization, beyond having simply been abducted. | This theory has been confirmed true as of Company Man |
| The evolved human Claude was protecting was a character with whom we're already familiar. | Claude was shot for allegedly protecting an evolved human. | It seems likely given the show's penchant for character connections, that whomever Claude was protecting is one of the current roster of characters. |
| Claude was protecting a young Sylar. | Claude was shot for allegedly protecting an evolved human. | It seems unlikely that Gabriel Gray's initial ability would have been detected so early. |
| The evolved human Claude was protecting was either Charles Deveaux or his daughter, Simone. | Claude showed no interest in training Peter until he mentioned in passing that he had taken care of Charles Deveaux. Claude's hangout is on the roof of Deveaux's building. |
Sanders, Micah
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Micah will build a suit similar to Iron Man's. | None | There's no evidence that Micah's abilities extend to building new technology. He's only been shown repairing existing technology. |
| The most likely power that Micah was exhibiting is known as technopathy, or the ability to control technology with one's mind. | His repair of the payphone in Nothing to Hide and manipulation of the ATM in The Fix fit with a power of this description. | |
| Micah will build a cybernetic limb, like Forge and Cable; a time machine like Forge and Cable; an evolved human tracking or detecting device. | None | There's no evidence that Micah's abilities extend to building new technology. He's only been shown repairing existing technology. |
| Micah will become a first-class computer hacker. | None | His abilities shown to date could all be hardware, not software, related. However, his abilities, as shown hacking the ATMs in The Fix could have involved influencing the software of the ATM computer. |
| Micah is unusual because he exhibits powers as a child. This is because both of his parents are also evolved humans. | Micah used an out-of-order pay-phone to call his mother. He places his hand on ATMs and they dispense money | The next youngest character to have powers is Sanjog Iyer -- who seems to be Micah's age -- followed by Claire Bennet, who is 15. Both of Micah's parents are evolved humans; both of Claire's biological parents are evolved; nothing is known about Sanjog's parents. All other powered characters did not become aware of their abilities until well into adulthood. It also seems likely considering that the abilities have to do with genetics. As such there would theoretically be greater odds that two evolved parents produce an evolved child. |
| The early manifestation of Micah's abilities may be related to his intelligence. | None | It has be quasi-demonstrated that Micah is smarter than most children his age, and he is often referred to by Niki as "my little genius". It has also been stated that the abilities are dependent on the brain. It's not a far jump to assume that Micah is a genius, and as such, if the abilities are in fact dependent on the user's brains, then Micah's increased cognitive abilities might contribute to his early development. |
| Micah is the one who distorted the recording of Niki and Linderman's thugs in the video camera. | None | Micah was at Tina's house when Niki first watched the video and saw that it was scrambled. Since his power seems to require physical contact with the device he would have no way to scramble it. |
Sanders, Niki
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Niki & Jessica are not merely split personalities in the psychological disorder sense, but a temporal anomaly, trapped between near identical temporal paths. When Niki has control in one reality, Jessica is in control in the other reality. This alternate reality is different only in what the other alter has accomplished in that reality | They can see one another through mirrors. Neither alter has described what it's like when not in control, suggesting there is no jarring difference in environment for the recessive personality. | If this theory is true, this means both realities exist simultaneously, and Niki & Jess are experiencing things very differently from how we've been perceiving them. Jessica's tattoo simulates the symbol on the sword Hiro is seeking, which may mean a temporal connection between the characters. |
| Niki has Dissociative Identity Disorder and Jessica is her alternate personality. For some reason, only Jessica is able to tap into her powers for now. | Apparently all superhuman powers are based in the brain, including Jessica's superhuman strength. Since the power is in her brain, not her muscles, it is plausible for only one personality to be able to access it. | Niki's psychiatrist has diagnosed her as a classic case of Multiple Personality Disorder, the older term for DID. However, in Godsend Niki snaps a guard's baton in half with her bare hands.
In Run!, Matt Parkman is able to hear Niki and Jessica conversing with his telepathy. This seems to suggest that there really are two seperate people living inside Niki's head. |
| Niki had control of her powers at one point, but HRG captured her, and had The Haitian wipe her memory. Her old personality, that The Haitian erased might not have been fully erased, which explains her alter-ego. | Other characters that the AWI has studied (Ted Sprague and Matt Parkman) have a distinctive mark, and Jessica has a tattoo of the Symbol. | This hypothesis does not explain why all of her friends/family know her as Niki and not as Jessica.
The mark and the symbol are not necessarily connected. |
| Niki will go to the "dark side". | None | |
| Niki's other personality is actually her sister Jessica, who may have had an ability before dying and somehow came to take over Niki's body so she could continue protecting her. | The Jessica persona definitely believes it's the dead sister. In "Six Months Ago", the way Jessica (Personality) speaks is as if she is Jessica. | A dead twin still being able to talk to or influence their "other half" is a common idea in many stories involving twins.
In Run!, Matt Parkman is able to hear Niki and Jessica conversing with his telepathy. This seems to suggest that there really are two seperate people living inside Niki's head. |
| Niki is a medium. She can talk to the dead and channel spirits, but has so far only had contact with her sister Jessica, who takes over Niki's body when she has things to take care of. | Spirit communication/channeling is a common power claimed by many real-world mystics, along with levitation (or flight), telekinesis and Space-time manipulation. If levitation, telekinesis and space-time manipulation are genetically possible in the world of Heroes, why not the power to talk to the dead?
In Run!, Matt Parkman is able to hear Niki and Jessica conversing with his telepathy. This seems to suggest that there really are two seperate people living inside Niki's head. | |
| Niki may have a power of her own, probably something related to motherhood or nurturing (or the Madonna side of the Madonna/whore dichotomy). She may have used a healing touch on Micah after Jessica threw him into the rocks in Fallout. This would explain why Micah suddenly stopped favoring his arm when she touched him and suffered no further distress from it. | ||
| Given that Niki is a close analogue to Marvel Comics' Incredible Hulk, if this homage continues, we may see an even stronger rage based personality or a full integration of the two (via hypnosis?) in the future. | Both characters were abused as children, have physical and personality changes brought on by stress, and powers only accessible to one personality state | |
| Niki can theoretically tap into the same power, but doesn't know how. | The source of Jessica's superhuman strength is somehow a part of her brain, as are the abilities of other evolved humans, and the personae share a brain | In Godsend Niki snaps a guard's baton in half with her bare hands. |
| Jessica is a sleeper agent for the Yamagato Corporation's Genetic Research Division, which is headed by Hiro's Father (played by George Takei in a January 29th episode). | Niki Sanders is the quiet little web-stripper from Las Vegas whose marriage has gone sour and has left her stranded, alone and desperate...or is she? Niki Sanders may be a sleeper agent for the Yamagato Corporation. Since it is possible that Hiro receives his katana from his father, it is also likely that the symbol on the handle of the sword (the RNA symbol) is the Corporation's Genetic Division logo, who has a hand in the creation of the evolved humans, or at least funded Suresh's research and used the logo after it appeared in repeating patterns in the results. The logo also appears on Suresh's book, which supports this theory, since the financial backers would probably want themselves included on the cover.
When Jessica appears, the same symbol appears on Niki's back, tying her to the source of the symbol in some way. The ink used to make this tattoo could be temperature controlled, and when the personality switch occurs as an identifying mark, Niki's body temperature increases or decreases causing the mark to appear. Like all sleeper agents, Niki likely has a trigger that switches her from suburban stripper mom to super hero assassin. Someone like Niki should have no knowledge of where to find or how to operate military hardware. Jessica, however, was precise in her shooting of D.L. Hawkins- she knew where to find/buy weapons off-the-market and how to conduct herself on a hunt. If Niki were exhibiting schizophrenic behavior, there still would be no way for her to know about all these things. With the stress of her sister's death, Niki's trigger seems to have been damaged, and the layers of mental conditioning and brainwashing that she has undergone has eroded, allowing her to switch from Niki to Jessica in moments of duress or pressure. Jessica knows about her powers, has had obvious combat training and knows about the Niki persona, while Niki had no knowledge of her alter-ego until recently- all of these things are characteristic of a sleeper agent. But why would Niki choose the name of her sister for her sleeper persona? It is possible that Jessica is the real personality, and used her twin sister's name as a cover- since Niki could get close to someone as an unassuming woman, where Jessica's name could be recognized. |
There is no indication that Yamagato Industries has a genetic research division.
There is no evidence that the Symbol is in any way associated with Yamagato Industries. |
| Jessica (possibly Niki's twin sister) is a soul/spirit existing inside Niki's brain. | Suresh once stated that if a soul does exist scientifically, it will most likely exist in the brain. (Six Months Ago). If Jessica is Niki's twin sister, and it is true that twins tend to have the strongest psychological links, Jessica's soul most likely exists within Niki's brain. | In Run!, Matt Parkman is able to hear Niki and Jessica conversing with his telepathy. This seems to suggest that there really are two seperate people living inside Niki's head. |
| Jessica is a spirit. Her presence caused the interference on Niki's tape. | Spirits hypothetically cause static interference. | Linderman's tape, showing Jessica committing adultery with Nathan showed no static interference. |
| The sword that Hiro is trying to obtain isn't for him, it's for Niki. The sword will allow her two sides to be integrated and bring balance to her personality, giving her full access to her power. | The samurai that originally possessed the sword was feared by everyone because he was brutal and powerful, just like Jessica. | |
| In order to get out of prison, Jessica Sanders will make a deal with Mr. Linderman and as a result, will become his newest assassin. | Spoilers seem to suggest that in episode 14 (Distractions), Mr. Linderman will be recruiting a new assassin. Jessica wants out of prison, thus she will be his person. | This theory has been proven correct as of Run! |
| Niki's powers are her enhanced strength. Jessica's power is the ability to possess other bodies, like a symbiote. | In Godsend, Niki breaks a cop's nose and snaps his nightstick in half. | Although the cast commentaries on NBC.com indicate that Ali Larter believes this was Niki's first display of enhanced strength, it's also possible that Jessica took over to protect Niki. |
| The Twins Super-Switching Theory: As children Jessica had the power to jump into Niki's body and possibly visa versa. Through this the stronger willed Jessica could be the hero and always protect her vulnerable weaker sister by switching bodies. Being twins, their drunken abusive father never noticed the difference. Unfortunately when Jessica died, she out of desperation did one last instinctual attempt to body swap to save herself, but since there was no place for Niki to go she stayed in the body she was and Niki was trapped in the same body. It is also possible that the body that they are in is actually Niki's. | In the episode "Six Months Ago" Hal Sanders, Niki and Jessica's alcoholic father tries to reconnect with Niki. Jessica then takes over and goes to Hal's Hotel Room and tells him that he should be apologizing to her, not Niki since she took all the beatings for her and then wouldn't let Niki remember the ones after she had originally died. This may mean the contempt that Jessica now has for Niki may be due to her alcoholism, weakness, and her getting to have a regular life. Also many children of abusive or controlling relationships look at the aggressor and the victim, in this case Hal and either his wife, Niki, or both, and think the following. I care for all involved, but what the aggressor is doing is wrong and I will never be like that, but I will never let myself become the victim. They so overcompensate to not being the victim, they become more like the aggressor and don't see it. Jessica is like this, and doesn't realize she is hurting people this way. When Niki was an actively drinking as an alcoholic, this was possible self medicating pushing Jessica who needs control, into a position of no control for an extended period of time, turning her into what she could not stand being. When Niki became sober it would allow for Jessica to come out, and although she loves her sister, she probably would be really angry and resentful too. Especially if Micah is Jessica's biological son. |
The likelihood of only one twin being the "Target of Opportunity" all the time of a drunken/ abusive parent is very unlikely, especially twins at the age of 10 to 11 years, the age on Jessica's Grave. In her reflective visions of Jessica, Niki has seen Jessica in bed with DL and protective of Micah, in Jessica's own way. It is possible that Jessica considers them hers, and if Jessica can influence Niki's memories, they very well may be. This may not be what DL thinks though. Hal may have been the straw that broke Jessica's back because Niki would let her (Jessica's) abuser near Micah in any way after all she had done for Niki. D.I.D. (Dissociative Identity Disorder) is a more likely explanation, but in a world where men can walk through walls, fly, time travel, and explode, it is not impossible. In Run!, Matt Parkman is able to hear Niki and Jessica conversing with his telepathy. This seems to suggest that there really are two seperate people living inside Niki's head. |
| Jessica can only take possession of Niki's body when there is a mirror in the room. | To date, Jessica has only taken control when a reflective surface is present. | The reflective surface does not have to be a mirror (e.g., the reflection in the water by the cabin in Utah, the shiny Montecito elevator doors).
Jessica took control on Godsend's end. There was no reflection in the room. |
| Either Niki or Jessica will "break out" of a mirror while the other is in control. | At the end of Distractions, Jessica is in control and Niki pounds on the mirror from the "other side" and causes it to shake, which she shouldn't be able to do if she was merely a reflection. | |
| Multiple personality disorder is often triggered by child abuse. In Niki/Jessica's case they just took it to the next level. This fits with theories that powers are amplifications of the natural gifts of the hero in question. Jessica as a video chat tease detached herself from what she was doing...When abused by her father, she became Jessica whose strength made her more capable of dealing with their father. | Jessica has the super strength. Niki may have have some form of telepathy? More like the ability to see intention, anticipate danger. The treatment for multiple personality disorder is to integrate the separate personalities. Niki's use of super strength may be the first step toward this integration. This continuing process will become a big part of Niki/Jessica's story line | |
| Niki's talent is enhanced strength. The personality of Jessica is another enhanced human, with the power to possess other people, pushing the primary personality to the side. | None | The key is the visible mark that appears on Niki's shoulder when Jessica is in control. This mark seems to be linked with establishments that know about enhanced humans, i.e. Linderman's group and the Organization. Jessica appears to have been an assassin for Linderman for some time, as evidenced by her phone conversations after receiving her assignments. The Niki/Jessica relationship is very similar to the Polaris/Malice relationship from Marvel Comics X-Men comic book. |
| Niki has a third personality and it could be a man. | None | This was mentioned in spoilers from Paul Davidson. |
| Niki is on steroids. | She has superhuman strength. | |
| Niki and Nathan will have a child together and/or they're married in 2011. | Episode 20 will be featured 5 years in the future and Adrian Pasdar said that Nathan and Niki/Jessica relationship would take an interesting twist (which could be a child or a marriage, or even both). |
Sprague, Ted
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Theodore is the source of the explosion in New York. (He isn't the explosion but his powers are the source) | Ted says he doesn't know what would happen if he were shot, that "Maybe I'll wipe out this whole city like an atomic bomb!" | Ted being the cause would be consistent with Isaac's "Exploding Man" painting. |
| Theodore is the bomb. Peter absorbs his power to contain radiation. Peter then becomes the bomb. | As above, also, when he is shot by Thompson, his eyes turn like that of Peter in his vision. | Peter's second vision (as seen in Godsend) of himself exploding touches on this theory. Before exploding, Peter tells Nathan that he took "his" power. Peter did not specify whom, however he is most likely referring to Ted (as Ted is the only known character with a radioactive power). |
| Theodore is the individual who sent Hana the email regarding Mr. Bennet. | The sender's handle appears to be "TEDDYBEAR," the nickname Ted's wife had for him. | |
| Ted, along with Matt Parkman and Hana Gitelman, will take revenge on Mr. Bennet and his group, and extract from him that his boss is in New York. | None. | Ted, Matt, and Hana are going to work together and Ted and Matt will go to Texas. They retrieved information that led them to New York, which could explain the nuclear explosion and Matt's presence in Peter's dream. However, neither Ted nor Hana appeared in the dream. |
| Ted is impotent. | None | The radioactivity in his body can only have an adverse effect on his reproductive system. His incessant rage could very well be caused by the agony of being impotent. |
| Hiro teleported Ted from prehistoric times to present day. | Ted looks like a caveman. | Ted was born August 28th, 1973. However, this could be a false birthdate. |
| Ted gave everyone near the Bennet house cancer and they will all die. | Ted was emitting large amounts of radiation. | It is possible that a hero will be introduced and will cure them all of their cancer before they die. |
| Ted actually has the ability to absorb the properties of various materials as his power, not the ability to emit radiation. | The Company's needle injects people with a radioisotope. Ted could be absorbing the radioactivity from the isotope. | It is worth noting that it was originally thought that Peter's power was to fly, but he was absorbing that power from his brother. A similar thing could be happening to Ted, but with the radioisotope, instead of Nathan. |
Suresh, Mohinder
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mohinder has lived in the US prior to Genesis. | Mohinder has a license to drive a taxi cab. To acquire such a license in the 36 hours the show leaves him is impossible. Therefore he must have acquired the license, or at least its prerequisites, at a previous date. | Mohinder may have been awarded the license illegally. Mohinder's license expires on a day that doesn't exist. It's probably a fake, but this could merely be a production gaffe. |
| Mohinder is on the list | Mr. Bennet asks him if he's on the list and he hesitates. His sister Shanti was described as special; if this means she had powers, then the fact that the Petrelli brothers both have powers would suggest that Mohinder should have powers as well. |
He doesn't know but it's a possibility. |
| Mohinder will be the next character killed off. | His dad worked with Sylar and Sylar killed him, he could decide to do the same with Mohinder. | Tim Kring said in an interview that Mohinder is one of the few truly safe characters. |
| Mohinder's sister, Shanti Suresh, had the ability to morph her body into stone. | When Mohinder remembered his father's reference to having a heart of stone in Homecoming, he tried to think of a connection between the phrase and the password to view the list on Chandra's computer, and put in Shanti. |
Sylar
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sylar is dying because he attained his powers unnaturally or because his mutation ("power") was fatal, and the only way he's staying alive is by consuming the brains of other evolved humans. | None | While it's possible that either Sylar's power or his acquired powers are damaging him in some way, there's no evidence to support such a conclusion. Additionally, it's confirmed that he is taking (but not necessarily eating) brains to absorb powers. |
| Sylar's powers have something to do with emotion, due to what Chandra says to him and his intonation in Six Months Ago. | None | Sylar may have some sort of emotional power in addition to his others, but there's little evidence to support such a theory. |
| Sylar can alter his brain by studying the physical characteristics of other brains, which is why he is able to alter his own abilities. | Sylar's gift of fixing objects and the profound instance when Sylar noticed his first victim's 'defect' supports this theory. Sylar can fix intricate devices, and brains, specifically his own. Micah seems to have a similar gift. | Sylar's Intuitive aptitude was confirmed in Fallout, but there's no clear evidence how he absorbs powers. Knowing how things work and being able to alter his own brain seem like two distinct powers. He has not yet fixed anything, mechanical or biological, other than manually. Mr. Bennet said it was his DNA he was altering (Fallout). Sylar was able to absorb Charlie Andrews's power despite only having a matter of seconds to look at her brain once it was exposed (Seven Minutes to Midnight, Road Kill). |
| Sylar takes the brains and somehow figures out how to take the parts with the ability and place it in his brain. He has convinced himself that either all the Heroes are broken or incapable of their abilities, or that he needs the powers just to satisfy his hunger for power. | Sylar's Intuitive aptitude | His comments to Mr. Bennet in Fallout support the idea that he is acquiring powers to be more "special". |
| Sylar believes all the Heroes need to be "fixed". | Sylar's Intuitive aptitude Episode 13 is titled The Fix |
To get "a fix" is also a term used by drug users, meaning to satiate their need for their drug of choice. This could be a reference to Isaac or perhaps Sylar's own need for power. |
| Sylar may be heeding to the Evolutionary Imperative to kill dying Heroes and augment their powers to his for the sake of efficiency. | This would explain Charlie, who is dying from a blood clot, and possibly Brian Davis. Sylar uses the phrase Evolutionary Imperative in describing his mission in the graphic novel Road Kill |
However, Evolutionary Imperative doesn't state anything about greed, so he might kill people out of his lust for being "special" |
| Sylar may also be a thematic foil to evolution itself. | His profession of watchmaker is often used as an analogue to an intelligent designer. Rather than following an Evolutionary Imperative, he appears to be redesigning himself using existing powers as a template which he then improves upon. | In contrast, evolution requires reproduction of the fittest, not merely survival of the fittest. So, unless he starts trying to have babies, he can't affect evolution at all. (If he did try to reproduce, it would likely be through rape or with the equally immoral and extremely powerful Jessica.) |
| Sylar is meant to be Peter's literary/thematic antithesis. | He has a similar motivation (to be special), similar looks, (perhaps) similar powers, and both men have even talked to a Suresh who ultimately gave up on him before he could prove that he was special. One major difference between them is that Sylar's main power depends upon logic and Peter's power depends upon emotion - a common theme in many literary conflicts | |
| Sylar is suspected to have learned one or more of the following powers from his victims: cryokinesis, eidetic memory, concussive resistance or bullet-proof skin, super-jump, enhanced reflexes or flight: |
|
Sylar could have used his telekinesis to stop the bullets, lift himself up (giving the appearence of flight), and could have possibly protected himself from the fall with the same power. He could even, assuming his telekinesis is powerful enough to work on an atomic level, possibly flash-freeze people by slowing the molecular motion of the air around the person. In an interview, Aron Coleite and Joe Pokaski state that much of Sylar's apparent invulnerability is in fact merely his telekinesis. Also, Mr. Bennet confirmed that Sylar had more than one power. (Fallout) |
| Sylar may have unwittingly gained Charlie's blood clot when he killed her to acquire her power. | None | Given Sylar's ability to understand complex systems and repair them, he would probably have detected the clot and not duplicated it in himself. |
| Sylar is the anti-Chandra, much like he would be the antithesis to Peter. | He finds the special people, much like Suresh did. He has a map like him. He even worked with him. | While Chandra found the special people and helped them harness their own abilities, Gabriel would steal their abilities to become even more one of them. |
| Even if The Haitian were to remove the memories of Claire from Sylar, Sylar would not be effected because of the memory power he gained from Charlie. | There is no reason to think that Charlie's exceptional memory capacity would grant special resistance to the Haitian's power to erase specific memories. | |
| When Sylar fell from the bleachers in Homecoming, he lost a power which Peter then absorbed. This is why Peter appeared sick in "Fallout." He doesn't yet know how to handle the new power. | None | |
| Sylar could have the ability of shadow travel as a power. | In the episode "One Giant Leap" when Matt corners Sylar, Sylar disappears without the camera watching and it didn't sound like he jumped. Also it was dark on the floor and on the side of the building. In the episode "Homecoming" when Peter tells Claire to go find people, when he turns back Sylar is in his face and when Peter was talking to Claire they didn't look like Sylar was approaching or else they would have looked at him. Sylar could have slithered through the shadows that were on the bleachers. Also, in "Unexpected", Dale asks Sylar why she didn't hear his foot steps and Sylar replies, "Because there weren't any." Whether Sylar used telekinesis or shadow travel is unclear. |
In all the dark areas he seems to move faster than normal. |
| The Doctor Sylar Theory : Sylar has developed the power of Psychic Surgery. He has done this either through the combination of his intuitive abilities and telekinesis or by acquiring it from a victim. | In the episode Godsend the AWI doctor that was running tests on Sylar claims the only power they can trace in him is telekinesis, in spite of his victims show the signs of other abilities being used against them. In an earlier episode Mohinder Suresh broke into Sylar's apartment and found medical books seeming to focus on medical procedures, primarily on the brain. This is perhaps a sign that his telekinesis is powerful enough and precise enough that he can use it to do intricate procedures on others and himself. Additionally, Sylar had to smash his victim's head open with an ornamental crystal to acquire his first stolen ability; now he seems to carry no tool or weapon. | He could be using this ability to heal his injuries on the fly and to transplant the grey matter of his victims with special abilities to his own body, thus gaining their "specialness". |
| Sylar has a limited form of tissue regeneration as a side-effect of his ability. | At one point, Sylar is able to alter his physiology enough to fool Hank into thinking that he is dead. He then appears to recover from the condition. (The Fix) | |
| The Gabriel's Brother Theory: Sylar has at least 1 brother who may have special abilities. There special abilities may have made him/them shine and made Gabriel seem that much more plain, contributing to his pathological need to be special. | The shop that Gabriel Gray worked at when Chandra Suresh found him was his family's business Gray and Sons. | Now while it may have had the same name for generations, it could also mean that Gabriel has at least one brother, maybe more. The store Gray and Sons may also lead us to believe that Sylar owned the store, and he himself had unmentioned sons, who he feels the need to be special for. |
| Sylar has no intuitive sense of whether a person has an ability or not, and must actually observe someone using their ability before he is able to understand how it works, and how to steal it. | Sylar watched Charlie all morning before her ability became clear to him, and killed her soon after. Hiro was also present in the diner at this time, and Sylar was unaware that he had any ability. (Road Kill) | Every time so far Sylar has stolen (or attempted to steal) an ability, he has waited for the evolved human to use their power before he kills them. (Seven Minutes to Midnight, Six Months Ago, Fallout, Run!) In Road Kill, he speaks of not knowing Charlie's ability until she spoke about it, but knew she was special since she was on the list. In addition he attacks Jackie rather than Claire out of mistaken identity, which would be difficult to explain if he could actually sense powers from Claire. This also helps to explain why Sylar needs the list from Mohinder so badly. |
| Sylar is the half brother of Peter and Nathan Petrelli through an affair of Mr. Petrelli. | Sylar states he used to wish that "some stranger would come and tell [him] that [his] family wasn't really [his] family" because they were so insigificant, and he wanted to be special. (Six Months Ago) | So far, neither of Sylar's parents are known to have had powers. In fact, Sylar expresses loathing for his father's ordinary life, so how did he get his original mutation? Also, there are an incredible number of parallels and coincidences between Peter and Sylar. Both wanted desperately to be special, their powers are similar (though Peter's is born of emotion rather than logic), both men have talked to a Suresh who prematurely gave up on them being special, when Peter imagines himself as a bomb he is wearing a similar (but not identical) coat and watch to Sylar's, and when in the hospital Peter has a vision of his brother Nathan suddenly becoming Sylar (which may have been a mix of his recent trauma and a foreshadowing of their relationship). Finally, these two characters are the only two to have alliterative initials, Peter Petrelli and Gabriel Gray. |
| Sylar can be identified with some supernatural harbinger of the end of the world. | Sylar, as Gabriel Gray, refers to himself as "the son of a watchmaker." The notion of supernatural "watchmaker," setting the laws of science in place then letting them tick away, is one frequent symbol for God (a rather apt one for a show centering around apparently God-directed evolution). Sylar, like the mythical Lucifer/Satan, became disastisfied with his status in life, wanting desperately to be more important, more special. By aquiring more and more superhuman powers, he appears to be making himself God-like, an act of supreme hubris. Also, "Gabriel" is the name of the archangel supposed to arrive immediately prior to the apocalypse. | Additionally of note is that the first episode of the first two seasons both had titles of religious significance, the first being "Genesis" and the next being "Godsend." Also, the Haitian associats these powers with being from God, Jessica's character flippantly rejects the need for God's help at the end of Godsend. Basically, there are many religious references (predominantly Christian) throughout the show, lending some believability to the idea that Sylar plays a significant role in a supernatural scheme. However, most indications are merely hints towards that interpretation, not solid evidence. |
| Sylar's powers become weaker when he absorbs more powers. | None |
Sylar doesn't seem to notice his watch is stuck at 11:53. Later he may have fixed it but this could show that his powers are becoming weaker. However, 11:53 is also the time that he killed Chandra Suresh, and the watch may be set to that point in some sort of twisted homage to the man who told him he was special. In Unexpected he is having trouble with headaches from his enhanced hearing. This could also be a sign that his powers are weakening or that he is simply going through the same process that Dale did as she learned to control her powers. |
| Sylar and Peter actually have identical powers, but come at them from different directions. Peter emotionally connects with the donor; Sylar's connection is more mechanical. Sylar has always known that he can retain the powers he has acquired; Peter has just learned this from Claude. While Sylar believes that he needs to kill the donor to acquire their powers, he could mistaken about this just as Peter was mistaken about the need to be close to the donor. Evidence that Sylar has the powers of people he has not killed would support this. | There is evidence that Sylar has Claire's powers already 1) He survived the fall in Homecoming 2) He appeared to die in The Fix, probably from an overdose of the tranquilizers they were giving him in his cell. They removed the drip and he comes back to life. 3) Mr. Bennet shot him at least once. He was bleeding in the graphing novel Road Kill. He seemed to recover in record time. There is also some evidence that Sylar owns Eden's powers as well... | Sylar survived his fall Homecoming
Sylar revives after being declared dead by Hank The Fix Sylar was wounded Run! His wounds were confirmed in Graphic Novel:Road Kill. Also, in "Episode:Godsend", Claude Rains mentions to Peter Petrelli that there are others out there like him. This could be referring to Sylar. |
| Sylar absorbs personalities as well as powers when he steals someone's powers. |
|
In the commentary for Unexpected, Zachary Quinto and Greg Beeman both comment upon the subtle clues in the lighting and acting that show Sylar "changing". |
| Sylar will be the next character to be killed off. | ||
| Sylar has the power of indestructibility. | Sylar pulls the bullets out of his chest (Road Kill) and survives a fall from the roof of Union Wells (Homecoming). | Writers Aron Coleite and Joe Pokaski have said that much of Sylar's apparent invulnerability is merely application of telekinesis. |
Thompson
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Thompson is Mr. Bennet's boss. | Mr. Bennet received a text message from "Thompson" asking if Hana Gitelman had "manifested" while she was being trained at the Alaskan facility. | Mr. Bennet received a cell phone call from an unidentified superior in Fallout who gave him instructions regarding Sylar. |
| Thompson is the leader of the party that tries to apprehend Ted Sprague in the graphic novel ...exploding man, part 2. | The man's face, especially on page 4, bears a resemblance to that of Eric Roberts, who portrays Thompson. The GN also made a point to indicate that the leader escaped from the explosion that killed his team. |
Walker, James
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| James Walker was killed using cryokinesis before his brain was taken. | James was frozen in mid-bite while eating breakfast; he would not be in this position if he wasn't frozen before his brain was taken. | In Road Kill, Sylar uses a power that is most likely cryokinesis to cover a section of road with a slippery layer. |
Walker, Molly
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sylar believes Molly is an evolved human | It's not yet clear what Sylar's interest in Molly or her parents is, or whether any of them are evolved humans, but he did attempt to kidnap her. However, since the only other of Sylar's victims shown with their brains removed have been evolved humans (Isaac Mendez in the future, Charlie) or believed by Sylar to be an evolved human (i.e., Sylar thought Jackie Wilcox was Claire Bennet), it's quite likely that at least her father, who was on the list, possessed superpowers. | Mohinder Suresh mentioned James Walker when listing those his father believed to have powers.
Sylar could have been taking Molly somewhere to take out her brain in seclusion and away from security. |
| Molly might have the ability to amplify powers, thus making her a highly desirable target for Sylar. | This would explain Matt's ability to hear thoughts from well outside the house, at a time when his powers were new and unfocused. |
Willmer, Candace
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| "Candice Wilmer (guest star Missy Peregrym) makes an illusive debut". The word "illusive" could reference "illusion", which then implies that Candice has the power to mask her form and/or change her appearance. This fits well with the other description of "temptress" if she can take the form of whatever the person desires most, plus it would fit under the subset of Dynamic Camouflage. | It appears in the preview for Like Any Parasite that there is a dead Simone lying on a table behind the Simone asking "Wanna shoot me again?", potentially meaning Candice took the form of a shot Simone. | In Parasite, Candace does indeed display perception-altering powers that allow her to look and sound exactly like other people. |
| Sylar actually kills Candace Willmer while she is creating the illusion of Isaac. | None | Under the assumption that this is Candace's ability, previews show Sylar wanting to make contact with Isaac, as well as Candace interacting with Isaac. This would open the possibility of Sylar choosing the wrong "Isaac". |
| Sylar kills Candace Wilmer and Ted Sprague. Peter's dream about seeing himself blow up is really Sylar blowing up. | None |
Zach
For disproven theories, see here.
| Theory | Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Zach has an unknown ability. | None | Zach shares an uncanny similarity in facial features with Mr. Muggles. It is possible that he is a shapeshifter. |
| He is killed because of Claire. | None | He no longer remembers Claire's power or friendship, having been mind-wiped by the Haitian in Fallout. |
| He is gay. | Confirmed by NBC as not gay, but not yet confirmed in show, so there is a chance that that may change in future. Also his blog was supposed to be designed to be alternate lifestyle friendly | Confirmed off screen by Tim Kring in an interview with Out magazine. This most likely means that Zach is not and never will be gay in the show or graphic novels, but this may change at any time. |
| He has deeper feelings for Claire. | None, except that he seemed to care for her a great deal before his mind wipe | |
| Zach will be the one who eventually saves Claire, possibly with his theoretical ability. | None | Claire has already been saved once, by Peter Petrelli in Homecoming. When Claire asks if this fulfills the prophecy, The Haitian simply responds that she is saved "for now." |
| Zach is actually Claire's twin brother. He knows it, but she doesn't. | He won't date her and yet tries to be very close to her. | |
| Zach is actually Claire's twin brother. But neither knows it yet. | They were childhood friends. He can't remember where he heard of Kermit Texas. He has had his memory erased once, and possibly more than once. When he and Claire start hanging out again, Mr. Bennet appears both suspicious and interested in Claire being nice to Zach. | The newspaper article about the fire that supposedly killed Claire's real mom mentioned only a daughter. However, the whole accident, the alleged deaths, and the separation of the parties was clearly part of a conspiracy. Perhaps a lost brother could have been in the mix too a la Luke and Leia. |
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| See Also: 9 • Red • Time travel | |||||||||
