“Heaven’s Will”OverviewNumerous obstacles stand between Arel and his journey to return home.Our Take Picking up from the previous episode, the season finale doubles down on what defines Arel most: absolute competence and total independence. His return home is briefly interrupted by lingering obligations and authority figures, but none of it meaningfully slows him down. Rather than a true climax, the episode feels like a final confirmation that no force, emotional or political, can really challenge his momentum.As a whole, the finale mirrors the series’ long-running strengths and flaws. The “classless” premise remains mildly engaging, but the storytelling sticks rigidly to familiar fantasy beats. Pacing rushes past moments that could have mattered, character relationships stay surface level, and the production never rises beyond functional. Conflicts resolve too cleanly, reinforcing the idea that progression matters more here than consequence.Overall, it’s an ending that fits the show content, being serviceable rather than memorable. It wraps things up cleanly while leaving the door open, offering closure without emotional weight. If you enjoyed the low-stakes, generic fantasy ride, it delivers exactly that, but it also confirms this series was never aiming to be more than a comfortably mid, one-and-done experience. If Season 2 ever happens, I’d still watch it to see where it goes at least.