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The 100 season 6 finale explained
The 100 season 6 finale explained











the 100 season 6 finale explained

Raven, meanwhile, passed the test because of her perseverance. There may have been a time where she could have made a better case, when she was willing to sacrifice and make hard decisions for selfless reasons, but Clarke was the wrong person at the time, exacerbated by the fact that Madi had effectively "died". When Clarke took the test, she was filled with grief and anger, killing random Disciples on the way to the Stone Room just because they were there. Clarke fails the test because she was driven by the wrong motivations. While the test is about humanity as a whole, a lot of it is influenced by who takes it. Why Clarke Failed The Test But Raven Didn’t

the 100 season 6 finale explained

Instead of the war happening and a victor being declared, however, the objective of the Last War ends up being preventing the war from happening - the opposite of what the Disciples believed. The test ends up being the Judge and Raven watching the people of Bardo and Sanctum facing off against each other as things are about to erupt into outright warfare. While Cadogan was wrong in general about there being a war, he was partially correct in this case. It’s unclear just how many species have been eliminated by taking the test, as the only one we know about for sure are the Bardoans, but it’s implied that it’s difficult for a species as a whole to pass the test.

the 100 season 6 finale explained

(It made sense given that humanity had just doomed Earth in a nuclear apocalypse.) This is what spooked Becca so much back in “Anaconda” – she knew that humanity wasn’t ready to be judged, so she refused to take the test and tried to stop Cadogan from taking the test himself. Whoever steps through the Anomaly to reach the Judge represents their species for the chance to transcend if they’re worthy - or be destroyed if they’re not. Jordan actually had the correct reading, that instead of a war, it was a test for humanity. While Cadogan had insisted that humanity was headed towards a last war, he was only partially correct. This was taken to its extreme in season 7, where the show leaned heavily into spirituality, including most of what was left of humanity transcending their physical forms. While the early seasons of The 100 were mostly earthbound, seasons 6 and 7 explored groups of humans that survived by leaving Earth. Related: The 100 Easter Egg Makes Madi’s "Death" Even Sadder It became a show largely about what people are willing to do to save themselves or the people close to them, going to unexpectedly dark places for what started with a relatively light pilot episode considering it was set nearly a century after a nuclear apocalypse.

#THE 100 SEASON 6 FINALE EXPLAINED SERIES#

The 100 started off as a rather straightforward adaptation of a young adult book series but quickly matured.

the 100 season 6 finale explained

While there is still the as-yet-unnamed The 100 spinoff in the works, this is the end for the characters audiences have been following since the show began in 2014. The 100 season 7 ends the episode “The Last War”, tying a bow on what has been a rather polarizing season - and overarching story for Clarke Griffin.













The 100 season 6 finale explained