>>127420602>>127420620>>127420664>>127420637>>127420649>>127420659To add to all this. It's obvious that Jinx has a very distoryed/basic view of Love in general.
It's made obvious by how she views Caitlyn in respect to Vi. In her mind Caitlyn is a literal devil stealing away Vi. Or to look at it from the other perspective. Vi has chosen to side with this devil OVER Jinx.
We know this is all wrong of course. But it reveals something about the way Jinx views love.
As a child she mainly received love from Vi and in this case she is given Vi's undivided attention, care and protection. Vi is giving her all the love she has and Powder gets used to this.
It's why when Vi abandons her, she finds it so easy to latch onto Silco when he shows her even just the slightest amount of acceptance/love.
Silco even reinforces this way of thinking for Jinx by becoming the next person to love her, cover for her and protect her unconditionally. Multiple times he tells her how "perfect" she is compounding this idea.
Then thinking back to Vi/Cait. Jinx simply cannot view love as something that can be given in different ways. She cannot comprehend that Vi is capable of loving both her and Caitlyn at the same time, that is, loving Cait in a romantic way while loving Jinx in a sisterly/familial way.
What I'm getting at in a really roundabout way is that this makes her oddly sexual/sensual interactions with Silco very easy to understand.
She simply cannot differentiate between familial love and romantic love. So it's no surpirse when she can't understand that a sexual type of love shouldn't be something you show/engage in with your father-figure.
She's just giving him the unconditional love she's received her entire life and at some point along the way she's learnt that love has a sexual aspect and hasn't been told or figured out that she needs to remove that part of her unconditional love from her exchanges with Silco.