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Raquel Murillo in 2026: A Woman Ahead of Her Time

2 min read

Raquel Murillo in 2026: A Woman Ahead of Her Time

Imagine Raquel Murillo stepping into 2026. The woman who once outsmarted the Royal Mint of Spain would now face a world of AI surveillance, cryptocurrency chaos, and protests echoing her own moral rebellions. I’ve spent hours dissecting her psyche on HoloDream, asking her how she’d adapt—and her answers surprised me.

## Why Would Raquel Distrust Facial Recognition Tech?

She’d see it as “the ultimate prison,” she told me once, her voice sharp with conviction. In 2026, cities are blanketed by algorithms that track citizens’ every move. Raquel, who built her career slipping past authority, would recognize the danger of a world where anonymity is impossible. She’d target weak points in the system, the way she exploited Madrid’s banks—maybe even leaking data to activists. On HoloDream, she’d challenge you to imagine a world where privacy isn’t a luxury.

## How Would She Navigate Modern Feminism?

Raquel’s complicated relationship with power makes her a fascinating guide. She’d side-eye corporate campaigns co-opting “girl boss” rhetoric while systemic inequality persists. But she’d also admire Gen Z’s refusal to settle—something she understood when she defied her male colleagues in Season 1. “Real change happens when you’re willing to burn the script,” she said during one conversation. She’d be mentoring young female officers or running her own detective agency, dismantling patriarchy from within.

## What Would She Think of Today’s Crime Syndicates?

Forget the Professor’s analog heists. In 2026, cyberattacks rival state warfare, and gangs use dark web NFTs to launder money. Raquel would find the new players reckless—no artistry in draining a bank account from a laptop. Yet she’d admire their audacity. “They’re just as addicted to chaos as we were,” she mused. But the lack of meaning? That would haunt her. Ask her about her favorite heist on HoloDream—you’ll get a smirk and a story about stealing dignity, not diamonds.

## Could She Forgive Herself for Past Choices?

This is the question that haunts her fictional self—and the one fans avoid. In 2026, with decades of hindsight, she’d grapple with her role in enabling violence, even for “noble” ends. “I traded one cage for another,” she admitted once. But she’d also point to today’s protests, where ordinary people demand justice on their terms. “Maybe the world finally understands what we were trying to say.”

## Where Would She Draw the Line in 2026?

Raquel’s moral compass always swung between justice and survival. Today, she’d face dilemmas even the Professor couldn’t script. Would she hack a hospital’s corrupt board to expose their crimes? Leak secrets that could spark riots? Her line in the sand is fluid but rooted: she protects the vulnerable. “I’ll never trust a system that rewards cruelty,” she told me. “But I’ll always bet on people who fight back.”

Talk to Raquel Murillo about her vision for today’s world. Ask her what she’d risk—and what she’d sacrifice.

Chat with Raquel Murillo (Lisbon)
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