Picture the most terrifying person on the planet. A man who genuinely believes he is a god — and has the powers to back it up. No bullet can pierce his skin. No missile can leave a dent. He can incinerate a stadium full of people with his eyes if the mood strikes him.
Now picture that exact man sitting in a beige prison cell, waiting in line for mashed potatoes, coming down with a cold, and nursing a pulled muscle in his lower back.
Sounds impossible, right?
After watching — and rewatching — the new trailer for The Boys Season 5, Episode 6, I genuinely don't think it's impossible anymore. In fact, I think the show has been methodically, quietly building toward an ending that is far crueler than simply killing Homelander. And honestly? That's what makes this season so compelling to dissect.
One line from the trailer sets the tone for everything: "There's no way this doesn't end bloody." And if you've been watching this show since the beginning, you know they don't say things like that for decoration. The weird supernatural tangents are behind us. The slow-burn political commentary is giving way to pure, kinetic, beautiful chaos. We are officially heading for the finale, and the lines between heroes and villains have never been more smeared beyond recognition.
Grab something to drink. Let's break this down.
The Mission: Racing for the Original V1 Serum
The episode's central objective is clear from the opening frames of the trailer. Hughie and Annie are running — and for the first time in what feels like forever, they actually look hopeful. Their plan is audacious and almost charmingly naive: track down a legendary 1950s superhero named Bombsight, get their hands on the original V1 serum, and lock it away before Homelander ever sniffs it out.
Quick aside, because the costuming team deserves a shoutout: Hughie is wearing a Billy Joel t-shirt, and it is doing a lot of emotional heavy lifting. Since Season 1, Billy Joel — specifically "We Didn't Start the Fire" — has functioned as a quiet symbol of Hughie's humanity. It's the music that bonded him with Annie and Mother's Milk. It represents the version of him that still believes the world can be okay. Butcher, predictably, wants nothing to do with it. His heart is essentially a carbon briquette at this point, and watching Hughie cling to something innocent seems to actively annoy him.
Which brings us to the golden rule of The Boys universe: hope is a countdown timer. The moment a character dares to believe something might work, the show pulls the tablecloth out from under the whole setup.
Right on cue, we see the crew sprinting across a dark, open field — terrified — followed by a shot of Homelander firing a laser blast into the sky with an intensity we've never quite seen. And there, in the dirt at his feet? A broken vial.
The worst-case scenario has already happened. He got the V1.
The Bulletproof Needle Problem (Yes, This Is a Real Plot Issue)
Here's something the show genuinely needs to address, and I kind of love that it exists as a puzzle. If Homelander's skin is impenetrable — and we've watched missiles bounce off this man's chest — how does a medical injection work?
Do they have a titanium syringe? Does he have to swallow it? Mix it into a protein shake? Slip it into his eye like contact solution?
There's actually something darkly funny about the most powerful being on Earth having to problem-solve how to give himself a shot. Whatever the mechanism, the trailer makes the consequences clear. In a sterile Vought lab, we see Homelander and Sister Sage watching a test subject receive V1 — and the results are spectacular in the worst way possible. The man's body fails catastrophically. This isn't a power-up montage. It's a biological lottery, and most people lose.
Sage herself told us a few episodes back that V1 isn't stable. Out of thousands of unwilling test subjects from the original Vought trials, only a tiny fraction survived to become genuinely enhanced. Everyone else essentially dissolved.
Sister Sage's Long Game
Pay close attention to what Sage is doing in that lab scene, because she is not just observing. She is operating.
Remember: her superpower isn't physical. It's cognitive. She is the smartest person in any room she walks into, and she thinks at least four moves ahead of everyone else. She already stated, privately, that she does not want Homelander to take V1. So why is she standing next to him watching this test?
She is hacking his psychology. She wants him to look at those exploding test subjects and feel something he almost never feels: fear of his own mortality. The implicit message she's delivering is: Look what this does to a lesser person. You might be special — but are you sure enough to bet everything on it?
And here's a thought worth sitting with: what if Sage is the one who quietly tipped off Bombsight in the first place? What if the "theft" of the V1 was orchestrated from the beginning to keep it off the board? It would be entirely consistent with how she operates — giving everyone else the illusion of agency while steering the board from behind the scenes.
Bombsight: The 70-Year-Old Wildcard
Bombsight is finally here, and he is exactly as unhinged as the name suggests. Because the original V1 froze his cellular aging, he looks exactly as he did during the Cold War. The guy has been hiding for seven decades, which raises an obvious question: why does he surface now?
In one of the trailer's most tense exchanges, Frenchie asks Butcher why he's so confident Bombsight will walk into their trap. Butcher doesn't answer out loud. He doesn't have to. The implication is unmistakable — he's taken someone Bombsight loves as leverage.
This is the moment in Season 5 where the Butcher arc becomes genuinely uncomfortable to watch, because he isn't fighting monsters anymore. He's becoming one. Using an innocent person as bait is precisely the kind of psychological cruelty Homelander uses. The difference between them is narrowing to nothing, and Hughie is the only one screaming about it.
When Bombsight does arrive, his power is spectacularly simple: he's indestructible, and he dives from high altitude using his own body as a missile. No fancy equipment, no energy blasts — just kinetic physics and the confidence of a man who can't be killed by the landing.
Vought Villages: The Best Location in the Show's History
I need a moment to appreciate the absolute genius of this setting.
The chase with Bombsight leads our crew to what appears to be a heavily guarded retirement community in Florida, where Vought houses elderly superheroes who are no longer marketable. Think of it as a senior living facility for supes who've been quietly sunset from the brand.
But instead of shuffleboard and early dinners, these retirees are throwing forcefields at Butcher. There's an 80-year-old woman using invisible barriers. There may be a geriatric speedster who can't quite remember where he was going. And if you think about what a nursing home populated by vintage, low-tier supes would look like — people with cataract issues and laser eyes, someone with super strength and joint pain, a flier with balance problems — you start to understand why this is the funniest, strangest, most The Boys location the show has ever created.
Three Curveballs the Trailer Throws at the Final Battle
1. Soldier Boy Punches His Own Son
There's a brief, jarring shot of Soldier Boy delivering what looks like a full-force right hook to Homelander's jaw. This is confusing specifically because last episode featured what passed for a touching father-son bonding moment between them.
The most likely explanation: Soldier Boy wants the V1 for himself. Whether out of fear of irrelevance, wounded ego, or genuine self-preservation instinct — he's making a move. He also gets into it with Bombsight, his old Cold War teammate. Father, son, and war buddy all brawling over one vial of serum is peak The Boys storytelling.
2. The Deep Is Covered in Crude Oil
There are no words adequate for this visual. He is drenched. He looks genuinely defeated in a way that transcends the physical. Whatever happened to him almost certainly involved his ongoing, low-key disaster of a feud with the new Black Noir. Whatever the sequence of events, it ended with The Deep being someone's environmental incident, and he has only himself to blame.
3. Starlight vs. "Oh Father" in a Megachurch
A new supe named "Oh Father" launches a devastating sonic scream attack against Starlight inside what appears to be a Vought-backed televangelist megachurch. Visually it looks stunning — light powers versus sound attacks, in a setting that perfectly satirizes religion as brand extension.
How this connects to the V1 plot is still unclear, but Vought has always used faith as a revenue stream. The name "Oh Father" doing violence in a church designed to look like a product launch event is the kind of detail that earns this show its reputation.
The Legend's Warning and the Ending Theory That Changes Everything
Paul Reiser is back as The Legend — the man who managed superheroes through the wild, morally unhinged era of the 1970s and 80s and emerged knowing exactly where every body is buried. Butcher goes to him for information on how to find Bombsight's weakness.
What The Legend says to him is the most important line in the entire trailer:
"Knowing you, Butcher — there's no way this doesn't end bloody."
Here is why that line is significant beyond its obvious meaning. The final episode of the entire series is titled "Blood and Bone." This is a direct callback to a speech Homelander delivered several seasons ago — his prediction that their conflict could only end in scorched earth, shock and awe, blood and bone. The show is signaling its own conclusion.
So how does it actually end?
The De-Powering Theory
Here's the theory that I keep coming back to, and I think it's the most emotionally satisfying ending the writers could pull off.
If Homelander takes the V1 and survives, his biology mutates. The supe-killing bioweapon Butcher has been holding as his trump card? Useless. Homelander becomes immune. The usual paths to stopping him disappear.
That leaves exactly one option: Soldier Boy.
Soldier Boy's radioactive chest blast doesn't just explode things. It has a very specific, documented ability — it strips Compound V from a person's nervous system entirely. It fries the powers out of whoever it hits.
Think about the finale of Avatar: The Last Airbender for a second. Aang doesn't kill the Fire Lord. He takes his bending away instead. It's a choice that's simultaneously merciful and devastating — a man defined entirely by his power, stripped of it completely.
Now apply that to Homelander.
If you kill him, his cult makes him a martyr. He wins even in death — the conspiracy theories, the shrines, the political movement. But if Soldier Boy blasts him and he survives as a powerless ordinary human?
He has to stand in line at the DMV. He gets toothaches. He can be punched by literally anyone. The man who spent his entire life performing godhood — who looks in the mirror and sees a deity — is suddenly a fragile, aging, unremarkable human being who will be forgotten.
For a malignant narcissist, that is not a punishment. That is an annihilation.
Why It Probably Won't Be Clean
Before you get too comfortable with the satisfying theory above, consider the source material.
Showrunner Eric Kripke has already inserted a meta character this season whose explicit function is to set expectations for a messy, painful, deeply unsatisfying finale. The joke the show keeps making — that TV finales are almost always disappointing — is a direct warning to the audience. Do not expect a fairy tale.
This could end with Homelander de-powered and humiliated. It could also end with Butcher and Homelander taking each other out in the mutual destruction they've been building toward since Season 1. It could end with something the trailer isn't even hinting at yet.
What's certain is that the show is not going to reward everyone. Some of the people you're rooting for are going to lose. That's not a prediction — that's the show's entire thesis.
FAQ
Will Homelander actually take the V1? Based on the trailer evidence — the shattered vial, the laser blast skyward — it strongly appears he does. Whether that means he successfully enhances or the process has unexpected consequences is still unclear.
Is Bombsight related to the Vought Rising prequel? Yes. His appearance in Season 5 is clearly setting up his role in the confirmed Vought Rising prequel series, which will explore the 1950s era of the superhero program.
What is Soldier Boy's motive for attacking Homelander? Most likely a combination of jealousy, self-preservation, and competition over the V1 serum. Their "bonding moment" last episode doesn't mean mutual loyalty — it means Soldier Boy saw an opening and took it.
Who is "Oh Father" and what are his powers? A newly introduced supe with a sonic scream ability powerful enough to compete with Starlight's light-based powers. Beyond that, details are limited — he appears tied to Vought's religious media operation.
What is the significance of the episode title "Blood and Bone"? It directly echoes Homelander's speech from earlier in the series predicting how his conflict with Butcher would ultimately end — giving the finale title a loaded, ominous weight.
Conclusion: Everyone Is in the Mud Now
The most remarkable thing about this stage of The Boys is that the moral scoreboard has become nearly meaningless. Butcher is kidnapping innocent people. Homelander, relative to some of the choices being made around him, occasionally looks like the reasonable one. The "good guys" are making decisions that would have been unthinkable in Season 1.
That's the point. That's always been the point.
The show has spent five seasons arguing that power — institutional, physical, political, cultural — corrupts in ways that are gradual, justified, and almost invisible until you're standing in a field at night and someone is using a person you love as bait.
Whether Homelander ends up in a jail cell, humiliated and mortal, or whether this all goes up in the scorched-earth blaze of glory he's always promised — the show has earned the right to deliver either ending, or something nobody saw coming.
Drop your wildest predictions in the comments. Who survives? Who de-powers? And more importantly — who wins the grandpa fight at Vought Villages?

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