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The Boys Final Season: the Power of Endgame 2026.

OTT Deep Dive | May 2025

The Boys
Final Season:
The power of

Endgame 2026

Season 5
Finale May 20
Prime VideoHomelander • Billy Butcher • The Boys • Amazon Prime
Seasons
5 (Final)
Finale Date
May 20, 2025
Platform
Amazon Prime Video
Creator
Eric Kripke

There’s a very specific kind of dread that kicks in when your favourite show announces its final season. You want it to end well. You’re terrified it won’t. And somewhere in the back of your mind, you know that the way a show ends is how you’ll always remember it.

The Boys Season 5 is that exact moment — and it’s landing on May 20, 2025, with a finale that showrunner Eric Kripke has been promising is unlike anything the series has done before. After four seasons of brutal satire, jaw-dropping violence, and some of the most uncomfortable commentary about power and celebrity that television has ever attempted — it’s all coming down to this.

If you’ve been watching since Season 1, you’ve earned this ending. And if you’re just catching up — well, strap in. Because this isn’t just a superhero show wrapping up. This is a cultural moment. And the May 20 finale is the punctuation mark.

5
Total Seasons
May 20
Finale Air Date
#1
Most Watched Prime Show
2019
Series Debut Year

Why The Boys Became So Important

Let’s be honest — when The Boys first dropped in 2019, a lot of people didn’t know what to make of it. A dark, R-rated superhero show where the heroes are the villains? Where corporate greed and media manipulation are literally the superpower structure? It felt edgy for the sake of it. Provocative. Maybe even gratuitous.

Then the world caught up to what creator Eric Kripke was actually doing.

The Boys turned out to be one of the most precise satirical mirrors of the last decade. Every season got more uncomfortable — not because of the gore (though yes, there’s plenty), but because the show kept being right about things. Homelander isn’t just a fictional villain. He’s a portrait of how fame, trauma, and unchecked power warp a person into something genuinely monstrous — and how millions of people will still cheer for that monster if he’s confident enough on camera.

📋 What The Show Is Really About
Strip away the flying and the laser eyes, and The Boys is a show about accountability — or the terrifying lack of it. What happens when the people who are supposed to protect you are also the ones with the power to destroy you? What happens when there’s no system left to check them? And more unsettlingly: what do regular people become when they spend too long staring at power and wanting it for themselves? These are the questions Season 5 is racing toward answering.

The show also made stars out of Karl Urban, Antony Starr, Erin Moriarty, and Jack Quaid in ways that their earlier work simply hadn’t. Homelander specifically — Antony Starr’s performance — is genuinely one of the most chilling character portrayals in modern television. And Season 5 is his final act.

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Where Season 4 Left Things

Before we get into what to expect from the finale, let’s get real about where Season 4 landed — because it set up a very specific kind of chaos that Season 5 has to resolve.

By the end of Season 4, Homelander had consolidated his control in terrifying ways. Vought was more powerful than ever. The political landscape of the show had shifted into something almost too real to watch comfortably. And Butcher — the beating, broken heart of the entire series — was facing something far more personal than any Supe he’d ever hunted.

“This season is our endgame. Everything we’ve been building for five years — it’s all in here.”

Eric Kripke, Showrunner — The Boys Season 5

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The Season 5 Timeline — What We Know So Far

Here’s how the final season has been rolling out — and what’s already happened before the May 20 finale drop.

Early 2025 — Pre-Season Buzz
Eric Kripke confirms Season 5 will be the last. The cast begins their farewell press tour. Karl Urban calls it “the ending these characters — and these fans — deserve.” Trailers drop to massive viewership numbers. The internet loses its mind.
Season 5 — Episodes 1–3
The opening episodes pick up immediately from Season 4’s cliffhangers. Homelander’s public support is at an all-time high. The Boys are fractured. Butcher is running out of time. The tone is darker than ever — and Kripke said in interviews he intentionally made the first episodes “feel like you’re losing.”
Mid-Season — Episodes 4–6
The middle run of episodes brings pivotal character confrontations that fans had been waiting seasons for. Without spoiling specifics: certain alliances that seemed permanent crack, and at least one character death lands with the weight of a gut punch that the show hasn’t done since Season 1.
Episodes 7–8 — The Build
The penultimate episodes are setting the board for the finale in ways that feel almost unbearably tense. Every subplot has been converging. Every character is positioned for their final confrontation. The show is structurally doing what great final seasons do — drawing every thread toward a single explosive point.
May 20, 2025 — THE FINALE
The episode that ends it all. Kripke has confirmed it’s the longest episode the show has ever produced. Early word from people who’ve seen it calls it “devastating,” “earned,” and “not what you’ll predict.” Which is either the most reassuring thing a showrunner can say, or the most terrifying.
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What to Actually Expect From May 20

Here’s where we stop recapping and start thinking. Because if you’ve watched The Boys closely — really closely — the finale has been telegraphing itself for two seasons. And there are some things that feel almost certain, and some things that are genuinely impossible to call.

🔑 The Questions the Finale Has to Answer

  • Does Homelander die — and if so, who kills him? This is the central question of the entire series. The show has been very careful not to make this feel simple. Killing Homelander isn’t just a physical challenge. It’s a symbolic one. And whoever does it — or whatever the alternative is — tells us everything about what the show believes about justice, revenge, and whether systems can actually be dismantled.
  • Does Butcher survive? The narrative has been building toward Butcher’s death for two seasons. His arc is a tragedy of a man who can’t stop fighting even when the fight has consumed everything. The question isn’t just whether he lives — it’s whether he dies on his own terms, or someone else’s. That distinction is everything for his character.
  • What happens to Vought? The corporation can’t just walk away. The show has always been as much about institutional power as it is about individual Supes. If Vought survives largely intact, that’s a statement. If it burns — that’s a different statement. Both feel possible. Neither feels predictable.
  • Ryan’s choice — father or humanity? The show has quietly positioned Ryan’s decision as the emotional fulcrum of the entire series. He’s Homelander’s son with the same powers. But he’s also been shaped by people who chose love over dominance. What he chooses in the finale might be the single most important moment in the episode.
  • Is there a happy ending at all? This is a show that has always resisted easy comfort. The finale could end in triumph, in tragedy, or in that grey uncomfortable space the show has always occupied most naturally. Based on Kripke’s interviews, “happy” might not be the right word — but “honest” might be.
⚠️ Kripke’s Warning: In multiple interviews, the showrunner has specifically told fans not to expect a conventional superhero ending. His exact phrasing was that the finale “doesn’t reward the audience in the way they might want — but rewards them in the way the story has always been earning.” That’s either deeply satisfying or deeply devastating. Possibly both.
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The Themes Season 5 Is Really About

If you watch The Boys as just a show about superheroes and corporate evil — you’re watching the surface. The reason Season 5 feels so weighty is because of what it’s actually been wrestling with underneath.

Power and Its Inevitable Corruption

The Boys has never believed in redeemed power structures. Every institution in the show — Vought, the government, the media — is infected by the same pathology: power that goes unchecked eventually eats itself and everything around it. Season 5 is the inevitable endpoint of that thesis. And the finale is where the show has to decide: is there a version of the world where this changes? Or is the cycle permanent?

What Revenge Actually Costs

Billy Butcher has been on a revenge mission since the first episode. And Season 5 is the show finally reckoning honestly with what that costs. Not just physically — though yes, it’s killing him — but what it does to a person’s soul to organize your entire existence around destroying something. Butcher’s final scenes in this season are some of the most emotionally complex things the show has ever produced.

The Seduction of Easy Answers

One of the things the show does brilliantly is show how ordinary people get pulled toward Homelander — not because they’re stupid, but because he offers certainty in an uncertain world. Season 5’s political subplots are uncomfortable specifically because that dynamic doesn’t feel fictional at all. The show refuses to let the audience feel superior to the people cheering for the monster. That discomfort is intentional. And the finale leans into it.

📖 Worth Knowing: Eric Kripke has said in interviews that one of the core questions he wanted the finale to answer was: “Can people actually change — or do they just change who they’re hurting?” That framing tells you almost everything about where the character arcs are heading on May 20.

Legacy vs. Letting Go

Almost every character in Season 5 is facing a version of the same question: what do you do when the thing you’ve been fighting for is finally within reach — or finally gone? Hughie, Annie, M.M., Frenchie, Kimiko — each of them has a version of this reckoning in the final season. And the finale has to give each of them something true. Not necessarily happy. But true.

✅ What Makes This Finale Different: Most superhero stories end with a battle. The Boys finale, from everything we know, ends with a conversation. Multiple ones. The show has always believed that what people say to each other — honestly, brutally, without the protection of performance — matters more than any fight scene. If the finale delivers on that, it will be remembered as one of the great series endings.
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How The Boys Could End — The Real Scenarios

Let’s actually put the scenarios on the table. Because part of what makes the May 20 finale so anticipated is that unlike most shows, The Boys has legitimately multiple viable endings — and each one says something different.

  • The Tragic Victory (Most Likely): The Boys win. Homelander falls. Vought is broken. But the cost is catastrophic — likely Butcher, possibly others. The world is safer but emptier. This fits the show’s tonal DNA perfectly — it doesn’t believe victories come free, and this ending would honour that belief while giving the audience something to hold onto.
  • The Ambiguous Survival (~25% probability): Homelander survives but is changed — contained, diminished, or by some means neutralised without death. This is the riskiest ending because the audience wants him gone. But it might also be the most honest — systems of power rarely get cleanly destroyed; they get managed. The show has always been more honest than comfortable.
  • The Ryan Pivot (~20% probability): Ryan kills Homelander. His own son. The show has been building this thread deliberately. It would be the most mythologically resonant ending — the son who chooses humanity over legacy. It would also destroy the audience in the best possible way.
  • The Burn It All Down (~5% probability): Nobody wins. The cycle continues. Vought rebuilds. New Supes replace old ones. The final shot is something bleak and uncomfortable that says: this is what happens when nothing structurally changes. It would be the bravest ending. Also possibly the most infuriating.
🎯 The Wildcard: Kripke has specifically said the finale contains “a scene that will make you completely rethink the entire series.” That kind of statement usually means a recontextualisation — something in the past being revealed in a new light. Keep your eyes on anything involving Becca Butcher and the show’s earliest events. The seeds might be older than you think.

Final Read:
This Is the Ending We’ve Been Earning.

The Boys built its entire world on a simple, uncomfortable premise: power doesn’t just corrupt — it reveals. It shows you who people already were, underneath all the performance. Five seasons of that thesis, and now we find out what the show actually believes about whether it can be defeated.

May 20 isn’t just a finale date. It’s the end of one of the smartest, angriest, most honest shows about the present moment that television has produced in years. Whatever happens — to Homelander, to Butcher, to the world the show built — it will have been earned.

The Boys never promised you a comfortable ending. It promised you a true one. And if Kripke delivers on what he’s been setting up — the final episode will be remembered long after the streaming numbers fade.

Clear your May 20 evening. Watch it with someone. And maybe have a quiet moment afterward — because the good ones always need one.

The Boys Season 5 — Finale May 20, 2025

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