Before starting the final episode of Arcane, I was excited but also nervous.
I am sure we have all had instances where there is a show we are really enjoying but then the ending drops the ball.
While I mostly doubted this would happen, I was still concerned the conclusion would be a little rushed because it felt like some things were glossed over in previous episodes, most notably the Piltover and Zaun conflict.
Thankfully, Episode Nine, “The Dirt Under Your Nails” is a great ending for Arcane, which opens the door for more stories set in this world.
Sure, I do think the finale would have benefitted from having more scenes but, overall, it is still a more than satisfactory conclusion.
“The Dirt Under Your Nails” begins by showing the disturbing direction of Jinx’s “break the cycle” comment from the previous episode.
She cuts her hair, burns down the Last Drop and then attempts suicide by triggering one of her bombs.
We can only watch in horror as the explosion begins to eat away at Jinx in slow motion, until that motion thankfully rewinds with the arrival of Ekko and his Z-Drive.
I remember screaming, “Ekko, you bloody legend!” when this happened.
What follows is a thoroughly depressing sequence of Ekko continuously trying to talk Jinx out of killing herself, only to rewind every time he fails.
With every attempt, he is more injured from the explosions and Jinx heartbreakingly notices this so attempts jumping at one point, so she won’t hurt him.
Ekko is finally able to get through to Jinx, talking to her vaguely about his time with the alternate universe Powder.
“No matter what happened in the past, it’s never too late to build something new. Someone worth building it for.”
The depressing scene ends on a thankfully hopeful note with Jinx considering Ekko’s words.
This scene was honestly one of the hardest to watch in all of Arcane.
Watching Jinx attempt suicide over and while Ekko kept desperately trying to save her delivered gut punch after gut punch.
And to think Ekko would have probably never been there to save Jinx had it not been for the alternate version of Powder teaching him to not give up on her.
Following the final opening of the show, we see Vi, Caitlyn, Jayce and Mel planning for the final battle in Piltover.
The plan is to hold the Noxians off, thus buying enough time for Jayce to disable the Hexgates before Viktor reaches them.
This proves difficult when fighting an experienced warrior such as Ambessa, especially when she is aided by Rictus’ magical runes.
However, she does provide a target for Piltover’s forces, as a Noxian corrupted with Shimmer brings out Viktor’s cocoon to bring him to the Hexgates.
Loris tries to shoot the egg, but he is quickly killed when the Noxians break through their defenses.
Speaking of Loris, I have to ask what exactly the point of him and the rest of Caitlyn’s squad were?
With the exception of Maddie, they’re all pointless, especially Loris who just acts as Vi’s friend for a few episodes before dying.
Getting back to the fight, Caitlyn uses the Grey to provide cover, giving her team the chance to blow up Viktor’s cocoon.
However, the bomb has been sabotaged by Maddie who is a Noxian spy, as predicted by many.
“I did appreciate your warmth,” she says, as she is about to put a bullet in Caitlyn’s head.
Damn, that’s cold.
It also makes it incredibly satisfying when Mel deflects the bullet using her magic, killing Maddie.
What’s even more impressive is that Mel did this behind a closed door before making her dramatic entrance.
Her dramatic entrance has nothing on Jinx’s though, who arrives with brand-new drip.
She also flies a hot air balloon constructed from her old hideout and even has a soundtrack to hype up her and Ekko’s arrival, with “Come Play” acting as their hype train.
Jinx’s smoke bombs act as cover for Sevika and the other Zaunites (who Jinx and Ekko convinced to help off screen), and they ambush the Noxians.
This gives the Piltover/Zaunite team enough time to blow up Viktor’s cocoon… only to learn he has long since left it, proving this attack to be a diversion.
At the Hexgates, Jayce is confronted by a full transformed Viktor.
His design is especially intimidating, with his messiah-like cloak, runes floating around his head and, of course, his mask now being his actual face, with the remains of the old one still being visible.
At the same time, Viktor’s avatars arrive on the battlefield, turning the tide again, as they infect most of the Piltovan and Zaunite forces, including Sevika.
This leaves Caitlyn and Mel to face off against Ambessa.
She proves to be unstoppable with the runes she has, so Caitlyn removes them at the cost of her eye.
This allows Mel to send Ambessa to the world of the Black Rose, where she is immediately captured by the mysterious sorceress who inflicts a fatal injury.
However, Mel intervenes, rebelling against the Black Rose’s control.
The sorceress seems surprised by this but, honestly, I don’t know what she expected.
She admitted to killing Mel’s brother and even murdered her friend right in front of her.
In what world would she ever trust them?
If they wanted to recruit her, they should have gone about it in a way that made them seem much less insidious.
After rescuing Ambessa from the Black Rose, she passes in Mel’s arms, her dying words being, “You are the wolf.”
And so Ambessa dies, defeated yet content in her daughter’s strength.
It also seems that Ambessa’s forces become loyal to Mel after her death, which is interesting in its implications about Noxian culture.
Did Ambessa leave orders for them to follow her daughter in the event of her death, or do they follow her simply because she had the strength to defeat Ambessa which Noxus values?
The Noxians may be out of the fight, but Viktor and his avatars remain.
This, sadly, includes Warwick, who has had all humanity stolen from him.
It is truly tragic to see Vander, nothing more than an animalistic shell of his former self, fighting his own daughters.
Their fight, leads to Jinx crashing her balloon, knocking Ekko unconscious.
As Jinx and Vi prepare to fight Warwick, Jinx tells her sister, “I’m always with you, even when we’re worlds apart.”
Meanwhile, Viktor harnesses the power of the Wild Rune, and levitates himself to the top of the Hexgates, passing Jinx and Vi.
He then uses it to begin his “glorious evolution” of connecting everyone, whether they want it or not.
This includes Ambessa’s forces, proving she really was out of her depth when dealing with Viktor.
Vi, Jinx, Jayce, Caitlyn, Mel, Sevika, they are all being absorbed into the glorious evolution and no one can stop it… except for the Boy Saviour.
Ekko rushes in on his hover board, wielding a broken piece of clockwork.
Quite fitting, given his time travel ability.
It is an ability he uses to its full potential here, using the Z-Drive to avoid the attacks of Viktor’s avatars.
That is until Ekko is stuck in a situation where four seconds is not enough.
Left with no other choice, he pushes the Z-Drive to its limit, going even further back in time to throw the device in Viktor’s face, where the Wild Rune explodes outwards.
In doing so, Ekko allows Jayce enough time to convince Viktor to stop, saving everyone.
Ekko definitely lived up to the title Jinx gave him of “Boy Saviour,” not only saving Jinx from suicide, but also saving pretty much everyone else in the world as well.
He is absolutely my favorite character of Act Three, which is a massive step up since he barely featured in the season’s first two Acts.
Inside the dimension Viktor resides, Jayce shows Viktor the horrible outcome of his glorious evolution by embracing him.
Through this, we also see the identity of the mysterious figure who rescued Jayce as a child: Viktor himself.
“There is no prize to perfection” the future Viktor tells Jayce. “Only an end to pursuit.”
Yet another fantastic line in this fantastic story.
I had heard the theory of Viktor being the one who rescued Jayce and to see it confirmed was great.
Usually, whenever time-travel and alternate universes get thrown into the mix of a story, it gets messy, but Arcane uses it perfectly.
The rules of Ekko’s time travel and the buildup to Viktor’s reveal allowed the story to flow without breaking any suspension of disbelief.
It is through Jayce wanting his partner back, Viktor learning what the consequences of his own actions will be, and seeing the ingenuity Ekko developed without the glorious evolution that convinces Viktor to stop.
However, this is not an act he has to do alone, for now that Jayce has his partner back, he is not letting go.
In a brilliant, dazzling sequence of animation, Jayce and Viktor finish their work together, putting an end to the glorious evolution.
The two vanish, their physical forms being sucked into a vortex, leaving their fates unknown.
Personally, I feel like this is a fitting end for both characters.
It is not the only ending for a character we get in this finale though because next, much to my dread, was Jinx’s conclusion.
Back when the season got leaked, I was spoiled about Jinx and Viktor dying, so I spent much of the episode praying it would not happen.
But, when I saw Vi standing over a fallen Warwick, and remembered a shot from the trailer which showed her screaming in grief as someone fell, I knew where this was heading.
Sure enough, Warwick wakes up and attacks Vi, only for Jinx to save her and then be left dangling over a ledge.
Warwick is pulling her down, and only Vi’s gauntlets are keeping them from falling.
Jinx realizes their weight will cause the construction to fall, killing Vi as well, so chooses to sacrifice herself.
“Always with you, sis,” she reminds Vi, before pulling the Hex Crystal out of the gauntlet, and falling with Warwick.
Before they hit the ground, Jinx activates one of her bombs, supposedly killing them both.
I say supposedly because I don’t think Jinx is dead.
This is not just blind hope though because there is some evidence to back it up.
For starters, when Jinx triggers the bomb, we don’t see her consumed by the explosion, like we did during her suicide attempt.
What we do see, although briefly, is a purple shimmer blip before the explosion, suggesting that Jinx used her shimmer abilities to get out of the way.
Later, we see Caitlyn inspecting the remains of Jinx’s bomb, while looking over air duct schematics.
This implies they never found Jinx’s body, and Caitlyn is researching if it is possible for her to have escaped through their air ducts.
Then there is the final shot of Arcane, which is of an airship flying away.
At the beginning of the story, Jinx said she would fly in an airship one day.
Along with this, the following “The End” title is in the glitches Jinx sees whenever she hallucinates.
To me, this is all hinting to Jinx surviving the explosion, and then leaving Zaun and Piltover, taking her hallucination of Silco’s advice.
The hallucination told her, “Jinx, I think the cycle only ends when you find the will to walk away.”
Well, now Jinx is walking away, or flying away, I guess.
It also works with her earlier statement to Vi, “I’m always with you, even when we’re worlds apart.”
This is all circumstantial evidence, but it’s what I choose to believe.
To be honest, I would be pretty disappointed if Jinx died right after Ekko convinced her to live.
So, yeah, my headcanon is that Jinx survived, and it will stay that way unless her death is confirmed in a subsequent show.
But what about the other characters’ endings?
Well, as I said, Jayce and Viktor’s sendoff is fitting.
Vi and Caitlyn’s final scene shows them together, which is nice.
Ekko’s ending is sad, since he is mourning Jinx.
Mel looks to be heading back to Noxus, with a mysterious multiple-eyed crow following her.
This seems to be suggesting a Noxus storyline will be the next show set in the Arcane universe, which is something to look forward to.
We see that Singed has successfully resurrected his daughter.
I find it hilarious that Singed, the character responsible for at least 90% of the tragedy and conflict in this show, got the happiest ending out of every character.
Finally, there is Sevika, who we now see has a seat on the council as a representative of Zaun.
This, I have issues with.
I do believe it is a good ending for Sevika, but the issue is we got almost no buildup to it.
Sevika had absolutely zero lines in Act Three, and this makes me wonder if she had a storyline that was cut for time.
As a result, there are multiple questions surrounding her ascension to the council.
How was she chosen?
What do Vi and Caitlyn think about it since they fought her numerous times?
Does this mean Zaun has independence now and, if so, how did that happen?
That last question points to the extreme lack of screen time the Zaun and Piltover conflict got in Act Three.
This is my biggest issue with Season Two.
Season One was all about the conflict between the two cities but that fell to the wayside with the threat of the Noxians and Viktor in Season Two.
I understand why but, as someone who was invested in that part of the story, I wanted a better resolution for it.
This is not the only thing I believe was cut for time with the ending.
We do not see Mel’s reaction to Jayce’s death, and Vi and Ekko do not share a single word the entire season.
It just feels like a lot was cut out from the season and it is this that makes me prefer Season One.
That being said, Season Two is still great.
The character work is excellent, the animation is groundbreaking, and I once again teared up at multiple points.
As for “The Dirt Under Your Nails,” it is an excellent finale, even if it feels like it could have used more scenes.
Overall, Arcane has been a terrific experience, and I cannot wait to see the next show in its universe, even if I have to wait years for it again.
To celebrate Arcane, I will be rewatching the show in its entirety.
Once I have done that, I will put out a Top Ten Characters and Episodes List, so be on the lookout for that.
Arcane is an excellent show, and I am so thankful to have experienced it.
Once it got under my nails, I just couldn’t clean it out.
Tag: Riot Games
Arcane Season Two, Episode Seven, Pretend Like It’s the First Time Review: The Boy Saviour Who Leapt Through Time.
Although I have been enjoying Season Two of Arcane, I will admit that it is not without its issues.
One of the bigger issues I have had is the way some characters have been used, primarily Ekko.
Going into the season, he was one of the characters I was most excited to see.
Unfortunately, he was only in a couple of scenes in Act One, before disappearing for the entirety of Act Two.
I knew he would be back for Act Three, given that there was trailer footage of him we had not seen yet, but I was afraid he would not have enough time to shine.
Well, Episode Seven, “Pretend It’s Like the First Time” proves me wrong by gifting us with an entire episode focusing on him, Jayce and Heimerdinger, explaining what happened to them after they were abducted by the Wild Rune.
“Pretend Like It’s the First Time” begins as all Arcane episodes do, with a record that has “A Netflix Series” written on it being played.
However, this time, it is different.
Rather than showing Vi and Jinx on the record, it instead shows Ekko and Powder, foreshadowing the events of the episode.
It is revealed that, following his experience with the Wild Rune, Ekko was transported to an alternate universe where things have mostly turned out well for everyone.
This becomes apparent very quickly with the arrival of Powder who appears less pale and skinny than the one we know.
The contrast is immediately made apparent because, when Powder first speaks, we see Jinx’s reflection in the glass she is standing beside.
This is not only a wonderful piece of animation, but it also does a great job showing off Ekko’s mentality.
There was a lot of bad blood between him and his universe’s Powder, so it makes sense he would instantly see her as a threat, despite appearing different.
It is only the arrival of Benzo that snaps Ekko completely out of fight or flight mode, making for quite the emotional moment when he is reunited with his father figure.
He is even reunited with Vander, Mylo and Claggor.
Those last two I was especially surprised to see alive, and this episode makes their deaths even more tragic because it reveals that if they had survived, they could have helped purify Zaun’s air.
Ekko is clearly suffering from the effects of travelling dimensions but thankfully Heimerdinger appears to help him out, having arrived in the dimension much earlier.
Sadly for Ekko, Hextech was not created in this world, meaning there is no way home for them.
The reason for this become tragically apparent when Powder asks Ekko if he wants to visit Vi.
Instead of taking him to meet an alternate version of her sister, Powder takes Ekko to her memorial.
In this dimension, when Jayce’s workshop blew up, the explosion killed Vi, most likely convincing Piltover’s elites not to get involved with Hextech.
This also somehow appears to have led to peace between Piltover and Zaun, although I’m not quite sure how that happened.
Ekko’s knowledge about the workshop explosion does allow him to retrieve fragments of the Hex Crystals though, meaning that he can use them to potentially find a way home.
Heimerdinger agrees to help him, acknowledging he feels guilt for forsaking Jayce at the beginning of the story.
In the meantime, Ekko seeks to make amends with this universe’s Powder, creating a mural for Vi just like he did all of his fallen friends from his universe.
He paints Vi as he knew her, unknowingly gifting Powder with what her sister would have looked like today had she lived.
Through this, we can see how Vi’s death shaped Powder.
Rather than use her genius like Jinx does in Ekko’s universe, she instead focuses on living a normal life, no doubt feeling guilt for the explosion which killed Vi.
So, despite things being mostly better for everyone in this universe, there is still inescapable tragedy through Vi’s death and its effect on Powder.
Ekko strives to help Powder move forward, and the two of them work with Heimerdinger to eventually making their own miniature Wild Rune.
This results in Ekko creating a time loop, from which he can go four seconds back in time.
To go any further back could prove disastrous, as proved by Heimerdinger exploding, which Ekko quickly resets.
For a moment, I was afraid Powder would want to go back to save Vi, driving her down the path of Jinx in a different way, but the story thankfully did not go that direction.
Knowing that this will most likely be his last night in this reality, Ekko tells Benzo how much he means to him at the party.
He also sees that Silco made up with Vander in this universe, meaning he found the letter Vander left for him.
Ekko mentions Vander trying to kill Silco, but he responds, “Greatest thing we can do in life is find the power to forgive.”
While it is great to see Silco again, and his words do hold weight, this moment did make me wonder how exactly Ekko knew about Vander’s attempt to kill Silco?
As far as we know, he was never told this.
That is only a minor issue though.
It is not long before Powder arrives at the party, and the shot of her boots is exactly the same as Jinx’s entrance in Episode Four of Season One.
She and Ekko dance in a moving, four frames per second sequence that really hits you in the feels when you think about how easily things could have been different.
After their dance, they meet in the same place Vi and Powder used to as kids.
Ekko tells her he “used to dream the Undercity could be like this. But somewhere, I got consumed by all the ways it wasn’t. I gave up on it. Gave up on you.”
This shows the impact Ekko’s brief time with Powder in this universe has had on him.
Going back, he will no longer give up on Jinx, which results in something big in the final episode.
Getting back to this episode, the tender scene between Ekko and Powder leads to a kiss, confirming the Timebomb ship.
To be honest, going into the episode, I was not sure how to feel about the ship.
I had heard rumors about it becoming canon, but I thought it would be difficult to pull off since Ekko and Jinx had a lot of bad blood between them.
That being said, the writers found the perfect way to pull it off by having Ekko connect with an alternate version of Jinx, which convinces him not to give up on the one from his reality.
Whether Ekko and Jinx become a couple in his universe, or this remains a tragic what could have been, their scenes together are beautiful.
Returning to Heimerdinger, the two prepare to travel back using Ekko’s Z-Drive, only for Heimerdinger to sacrifice himself to accomplish this.
Or, at least, it seems like he sacrifices himself.
He was either blasted out of existence or transported elsewhere.
It’s kind of hard to tell.
If Heimerdinger really is dead, though, I would say his death is kind of abrupt.
Still, it is not enough to take away from the emotion of Powder appearing and realizing Ekko was from another universe before he disappears.
For a moment, I was scared the writers were going to have her get hurt or killed but, thankfully, they seemed to realize there was enough tragedy with Episode Six.
Following Ekko’s departure, we see Powder for the last time, placing a trinket Ekko gifted her inside a cabinet, which also holds the Hextech Crystals, items which hold meaning to her but will never be used in her universe.
With that, the episode comes to an end, but it is not the only storyline this episode.
I have yet to mention Jayce’s arc, which sees him transported to a universe the complete opposite of the one Ekko and Heimerdinger were taken to.
Whereas they landed in a universe where there was peace between Piltover and Zaun, Jayce landed in a universe where both were destroyed because of Hextech.
Traveling through the ruins, we see him sustain injuries, and be brought to the edge of madness, before encountering the hooded mage who saved him and his mother at the beginning of the series.
Realizing the danger his creation holds, Jayce tells the mage to send him back to save his universe, swearing that he will not fail.
This makes Jayce’s brutal actions upon his return a lot more understandable, since he is literally trying to prevent the apocalypse.
His story this episode was a grim one, but it is balanced nicely with the mostly happy Ekko storyline, which sees him reconnect with Powder.
Overall, I would say that “Pretend Like It’s the First Time” is another fantastic Arcane episode.
Yes, I did think some things about the peaceful timeline could have been better explained and Heimerdinger’s death(?) felt a little abrupt, but it was still an emotionally moving episode which gave Ekko the screen time he sorely needed and deserved.
It is for these reasons that “Pretend Like It’s the First Time” is my favorite episode of Act Three, and probably my third favorite episode of the season.

