OVERVIEW (SPOILERS)Fionna, Cake, and Simon warp to Farmworld, the universe resulting from Finn’s wish that the Lich never existed where an alternate version of himself gained the Ice Crown, in hopes of finding another crown that will turn Simon back into Ice King and restore magic to Fionna’s world. Many years have passed there, with society moving on and Finn and his Jake having completely moved on from magic, along with Finn having a few kids, among them his son Jay, who helps the three travelers locate what’s left of the crown. Scarab is in pursuit, taking on a human form, as well as the Destiny gang, a gang in control of the area whose leader’s daughter is in a secret relationship with Jay. The three take a shard to fix Prismo’s remote and teleport to the next world, again with Scarab.Said next world brings Fionna face to face with the Winter King of her dreams, who himself is a dapper and well dressed individual who promises to help them out, but faces the persistent advances of the Candy Queen who captures him and Simon. Fiona works to save them, but somehow deactivates Winter King’s magic and kills him, revealing that he had been transferring his crown’s magic to Candy Queen, who is in reality a very similar version of Princess Bubblegum, trapping her in a horrible loop. Meanwhile in Fionna’s world, Gary meets Marshall Lee and the two bond over Gary’s baking aspirations.OUR TAKEI’m getting a vibe about where this season might be headed in terms of where the arcs for the main trio might end up. A lot of it is wrapped up in Fionna, Cake, and Simon, trying to revert things about the former two’s world and the latter’s mental state. Fionna and Cake feel like they need to reclaim the magic their world lost when Simon lost his magic, while Simon feels so out of place in Ooo that he feels the need to become Ice King again both for Fionna and Cake and for the possibility to see his wife Betty again. And based on how I tend to see stories like this go, they may be finding out sooner rather than later that these goals might be misguided, or destructive at worst. What makes me think this is mainly how much emphasis they’re putting on these being the only solutions to fixing things, but that’s supplemented by us checking in with Gary and Marshall Lee, two characters who have nothing to do with the multiverse shenanigans and, if the patterns of their counterparts are anything to go by, are finding their own magic just by meeting each other. But then again, Winter King Simon seems to have moved past his own Betty, so not all pairings seem to be set in stone.On another note, the analysis I’m seeing about this series has really reminded me how much I’ve forgotten about the original Adventure Time. I obviously do not have the time to go rewatch it all right now just for this review, but maybe someday. In the meantime, this episode really does some deep cuts into subplots that were only barely touched upon from that show, mainly in the stuff regarding Farmworld Finn, whom I’m told we last saw when he was having his own magic manic episode under the Ice Crown’s thrall that led to the Lich’s hand being dropped into something that spread it out across the multiverse. Given the Lich’s prominent usage in Together Again, both don’t expect nor really want him to turn up again in this series so soon, much like how The Borg kinda felt like they were thrown into Star Trek: Picard Season 3 (I just did a Star Trek review so that’s on the brain), but that also feels like some sort of plot they’ll pick up on down the road if they have enough time. For now, it’s just good to see Farmworld Finn’s life ended up working out for the most part. Also, maybe I’ve just been conditioned weird by modern media, but did anyone else think Jay was Finn’s daughter for a second?