Episode 8 of See Season 3 begins this finale with the final fight upon us. While Maghra and the others suggest going back, Tamacti Jun points out that they’ve got the whole of Pennsa in the tunnels and fighting like this would be suicide.
Meanwhile, Ranger and Baba Voss sneak into Kane’s camp and try to find the queen. If only they had a sighted comrade by their side eh? Shame they didn’t convince Haniwa to go with them, her bow and arrow would have been mightily handy right about now.
Anyway, the pair follow their noses while Kane and Tormada use a talented woman with super hearing to learn that those inside Pennsa are using tunnels to escape. I mean, how did she know that but couldn’t figure out Baba Voss was approaching?
Anyway, bombs are flung from the trebuchets into the village, and while Kofun is separated from the group, more bombs knock him down and under a mass of rubble. Thankfully he’s okay though and not hurt.
Maghra soon comes out of hiding to try and bargain with Kane and stop the bombs. The latter taunts her sister, telling Maghra that she’ll never be Queen. Maghra attempts to dissuade her with memories of the past, calling Sibeth her sister and bringing up very specific memories from the past. She lets her guard down, and in doing so Maghra lands the killing blow, stabbing Kane in the neck.
As a result, Tormada’s troops are caught off-guard as Tamacti Jun and Maghra are joined by Baba Voss, Ranger and the others as they attack the camp. They’re hopelessly outnumbered but somehow they manage to get the upper-hand. Tormada attempts to throw a bomb on Baba Voss, after knocking him down originally, but he’s stopped and it explodes. Ranger hits the killing blow and destroys the bomb-maker with a nasty sword strike through the eye.
Baba Voss regains consciousness but he’s badly injured, with bits of metal stuck inside him. After pulling them out, he charges at the sea of soldiers before him, shirtless (which is never a good way to fight!) and tries to hold them all off. Baba Voss makes for the bombs and heads up the stockpile. Haniwa is there, piercing enemies with sharp precision from afar.
Know what he needs to do, Baba Voss sacrifices himself to save them all, exploding all the bombs and killing the soldiers in the process.
Time passes and the Pennsa folk try to get their lives back in order again. Kofun doubles down on being a father, Baba Voss’ memory still fresh and raw. As for Maghra, she’s still grief-stricken by the loss of her husband and sister.
In the wake of what’s happened, Nevla leads the Trivantian people in a council meeting and explains that the sighted are too much of a risk to them. Tamacti Jun pints out that there are 3 sighted among them who have helped swing the tide of battle here. Still, peace is blanketed over the realm but at a great cost. Sight is outlawed but Maghra refuses to allow the same in Pennsa. After an ill-advised threat from Haniwa, a treaty is signed to keep the peace.
With peace established, at least for now, Haniwa heads off with Wren while Kofun decides to blind himself in order to become the next leader of Paya after Maghra. He’s never been comfortable with his sighted gift.
Meanwhile, Wren and Haniwa are wed and in the process, the latter receives a map showing the location to one of the secret libraries, which was hinted about earlier in the season. They head out together and the pair show up at an old museum in the middle of New York, where numerous sighted are joined together. Michaela is their leader and the pair are invited in with open arms.
So the final episode of See rounds everything out with a mixed bag conclusion, one that manages to give a good send-off for Baba Voss and Sibeth Kane, but also asks big questions about the wider world. There’s definitely implications here for another season to follow, or even a spin-off to explore some of these characters inside the library further, and given the popularity of this show, Apple would certainly be foolish not to pursue that. Where did all the sighted come from? What journeys have they had? And do any of them have guns?
The idea of a blind world forced back into primitive tribal warfare is a good one, but as I’ve said before, introducing guns and the sighted into this world and then conveniently forgetting about it for three seasons is all kinds of world-breaking. Even a simple explanation like “we’ve destroyed all of Jerlamarel’s guns, it’s too dangerous to keep them about” may have sufficed.
Instead, this final episode throws its own set of contrivances out. If Tormada and Kane have a super-listening agent on their side, how is it she could hear Maghra and the others underground but not Baba Voss and Ranger destroying soldiers in their own camp? These sort of plot holes hold this back from being a better watch, but regardless of that, the finale has still been a decent watch. We get a good amount of fighting to round this season out, and the conclusion with the bombs was certainly well written.