Overview (Spoilers Below): Migi and Dali, along with others, are trapped in a confinement room. Gradually, smoke from the fire started by Eiji begins to drift into the room.
Our Take: With Reiko out of the picture, thanks to Eiji, the twins have one more situation to endure before they complete their revenge-filled journey: escaping the flaming house that Eiji set. After all, nothing screams “The End” without a thrilling climax, even with a burning home. Thankfully, Akiyama arrived to rescue the twins, Karen, Maruta, and Akira from their flaming demise. But, of course, their revenge is far from over, especially from Dali’s perspective. With Eiji lying next to a dead Reiko, this would’ve allowed Dali to kill his triplet brother. However, despite Eiji’s plea to be murdered by him, Dali surprisingly reconsidered and allowed Eiji to live so that his sins would punish him instead of death. Considering that Dali’s obsession almost killed his brother, this is a satisfying turn of events for Dali’s development, meaning that he’s now on the same path to peace as Migi. Unfortunately for Eiji, it also means the triplet brother is going down a different path instead of staying with Migi and Dali, as he chose to confess his crimes to the police, resulting in his arrest. As expected, the twins’ revenge quest is finally completed after a series of twisty and unsettling turns that began with the ninth episode. However, it comes with the cost of exposing their secret, with Dali now having a scar on his right cheek. Along with their different personalities, this physical change makes it easier to tell the two apart, but again, it puts a significant risk on the twins’s true identities, especially when it involves the Sonoyamas. With this being the penultimate episode, it’s unsurprising that it attempts to provide some heart and humor into its messages of revenge and brotherhood, mainly the heart. The heart came from Migi and Dali working as a team to lift the chandelier off of Eiji, which was the best part of the episode. If the English dub version weren’t so corny, this sequence would’ve been more impactful. However, it’s also not without an outlandish moment in which Micchan’s physical spirit shows up to clear out the fires for the triplets. It’s an odd inclusion regarding its tone, along with the scene involving Migi’s butt being on fire during a dramatic moment between Dali and Eiji. Besides that, the episode is an acceptable closure to the twins’s troubles before the show’s finale next week.