Abstract
Recently, the author of this paper and his research team have extended the orthodox quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) to a novel paradigm called the two-component QTAIM (TC-QTAIM). This extended framework enables one to incorporate nuclear dynamics into the AIM analysis as well as performing AIM analysis of the exotic species; positronic and muonic species are a few examples. In present paper, this framework has been reviewed, providing some computational examples with particular emphasis on origins and applications, in a non-technical language. The main questions, enigmas and basic ideas that finally yielded the TC-QTAIM are considered in chronological order to help the reader comprehend the intuition behind the math. Finally, it is demonstrated that the TC-QTAIM and its more refined versions are able to tackle problems inaccessible to the orthodox QTAIM