


And in the end, Wanda sacrifices her happy family life in the suburbs - which includes Vision wearing a turtleneck! - in order to put everything right. They have every right to be upset with her after Agatha cuts the metaphorical strings that Wanda used to control them. Throughout the episode, “WandaVision” stands firm in the idea that Wanda is the villain of this particular story: her grief has plagued the people of Westview and caused them pain for weeks. I’m sure that’s the end of him and that he definitely won’t play a role in any future Marvel projects. In the end, the copy of Vision that Wanda created from her sadness, hope and love unlocks the memories of White Vision, who then flies off and is never seen from again. Meanwhile, as this is going on, Vision and White Vision tear up the skies above Westview in a classic comic book scenario of the hero fighting his evil self, that is until the two decide to have a lovely chat about the metaphysics of identity, the outcome of which being that both and neither are the true Vision. SEE Here is what ‘WandaVision’s’ penultimate post-credits reveal means See, she’s learning already! By the end of the episode, she’s fully unlocked the powers of the Scarlet Witch, becoming the person she first glimpsed in the Mind Stone and who’d been prophesied in the Darkhold (which we’ll get to in a minute) in the process. witch battle was fairly obvious from the start - Wanda was always going to triumph - it’s what happens at the end of their battle that matters, as it sets up next year’s “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.”Īlthough Wanda claims she isn’t a witch, doesn’t cast spells, and no one taught her any magic, she defeats Agatha, who’d removed Wanda’s influence over the people of Westview, creating an angry mob (some things never change for witches), by adding runes to the fabric of the Hex to neutralize Agatha’s powers within it - something she picked up from Agatha last week. But even though the outcome of the witch vs. The finale was pretty much exactly what we all expected it to be, with Wanda ( Elizabeth Olsen ) facing off against Agatha ( Kathryn Hahn ), who wanted to absorb Wanda’s power like she’d absorbed all the powers from the witches in her coven all those years ago, while Vision ( Paul Bettany ) fought the emotionless White Vision ( also Bettany), who’d been programmed by S.W.O.R.D.’s nefarious director, Tyler Hayward ( Josh Stamberg ), to destroy the Westview copy of Vision and neutralize Wanda.
