Invincible - Season 3 [PLUS]
“Curious,” Thragg rumbles. “He fights like a Viltrumite. But he has the heart of a human.”
Cecil, desperate, activates his contingency: a sleeper agent within the Viltrumite ranks. It fails catastrophically. In retaliation, Anissa doesn’t attack a city—she attacks trust . She publicly reveals Cecil’s secret: the microchip in Mark’s head, the deadlier failsafes implanted in every Guardian of the Globe, the Reanimen built from the corpses of fallen heroes.
The climax isn’t a battle against a monster—it’s a battle for a monster. Anissa, tired of waiting, lands in the middle of Paris. She issues a final warning: hand over Mark or she kills one million people every hour.
He brings her back alive. Broken, but alive. Invincible - Season 3
“He put a bomb in your skull,” she whispers.
He whispers: “He’s coming back. The other one. The first one.”
The finale opens with a trial. Not for Anissa—for Mark. The world’s governments, terrified of a rogue Viltrumite with a conscience, demand he submit to global oversight. Cecil offers him a deal: become Earth’s official, controlled weapon. “Curious,” Thragg rumbles
He cracks his neck.
This is the new normal. Mark is no longer the eager, bleeding rookie. He’s a weapon. After the trauma of his father’s betrayal and the near-apocalypse of the Season 2 finale (the Scourge Virus, the alternate Invincibles), Mark has hardened. He’s been training with a guilt-ridden Allen the Alien and a bitter, one-armed Battle Beast. The result? He’s terrifyingly powerful.
“People were inside, Cecil,” Mark replies, his voice flat. “I’ll pay for the pipes.” It fails catastrophically
But power is a cage.
Mark’s response is terrifyingly calm. “I know. I’ve known since Season 2. I let him think it worked.”
But he doesn't smile.