Dong-eun is a tragic figure. She has sacrificed her youth, her career, and her potential happiness for a single purpose. The finale handles this duality well, offering a conclusion that is triumphant yet tinged with melancholy. It acknowledges that while justice is served, the scars—both physical and emotional—remain.
Watch these reviews and breakdowns to see why the conclusion of this revenge saga resonated so deeply with audiences: THE GLORY Season 2 Ending Explained BrainPilot the glory season 2 review
The second installment of Netflix’s delivers a hauntingly precise and profoundly satisfying conclusion to Moon Dong-eun’s decades-long revenge plot. While Part 1 painstakingly built the foundation of trauma and meticulous planning, Part 2 is the "grim sword dance" promised by writer Kim Eun-sook—a fast-paced, high-stakes execution where the perpetrators' own greed and paranoia become their undoing. Dong-eun is a tragic figure
What makes Moon Dong-eun’s (Song Hye-kyo) revenge so riveting is its psychological nature. Unlike typical action-heavy revenge tales, Dong-eun rarely uses physical violence herself. Instead, she uses her enemies' own greed, secrets, and lack of trust to let them destroy one another from within. It acknowledges that while justice is served, the