Marvel-s Agents Of S.h.i.e.l.d. - Season 5 →
But the most tragic figure in the future is (Jeff Ward), a scavenger living in the Lighthouse’s lower levels. Deke starts as a cowardly opportunist who sells out Daisy for a few Kree coins. Over the season, he evolves into a fan-favorite, providing comic relief, tech wizardry, and ultimately, one of the most heart-wrenching revelations in the show’s history: he is the grandson of Fitz and Simmons. Fitz and Simmons: The Cruelest Cut If Season 4 belonged to Robbie Reyes (Ghost Rider), Season 5 belongs to Leopold Fitz and Jemma Simmons. The writers have always weaponized this couple’s happiness, but Season 5 is outright sadistic in the best way.
Split across time, Fitz is not abducted with the others. He spends the first several episodes trapped in a cryo-freeze pod, traveling the slow path to the future to rescue the team. But the cost of that journey shatters him. In a controversial but brilliant twist, Fitz is revealed to have an alternate personality——a remnant of his brain damage from Season 1. This persona is cold, ruthless, and willing to sacrifice anyone for the mission. Marvel-s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. - Season 5
Her arc concludes with a quiet act of defiance: she refuses to destroy the Earth not by fighting harder, but by trusting her family. It’s a mature, introspective take on the powerful hero trope that comic book shows rarely attempt. Season 5 is, in many ways, the final chapter of Phil Coulson’s story. Clark Gregg delivers a melancholic, weary performance as a man running out of time. Early in the season, we learn that the deal he made with the Ghost Rider to defeat Aida in Season 4 came with a price: the Rider’s hellfire burned out the alien (Kree) blood keeping him alive. Coulson is dying. But the most tragic figure in the future
This theme crescendos when the team returns to the present. Daisy learns that she is the prophesied destroyer of Earth—a graviton-powered tremor that will rip the planet apart. The season masterfully subverts the trope of the “chosen one.” Instead of embracing her destiny, Daisy spends the back half of the season in handcuffs, begging Coulson to kill her before she loses control. Fitz and Simmons: The Cruelest Cut If Season
Pasdar’s transformation from sad clown to megalomaniacal god is harrowing. His final battle with Quake atop the Chicago ruins is a low-budget CGI fest, but the emotional stakes are sky-high. When Daisy refuses to kill him, it is Coulson—using the alien weapon that killed him in the future—who delivers the final blow. Talbot dies believing he was the hero. It is Shakespearean tragedy in a superhero costume. Season 5 introduces a complex time travel mechanic that the writers treat with surprising rigor. The team travels from 2017 to 2091. They change events, then return to 2017. The question: Is the future fixed?
The antagonists are also a significant step up. (played with delicious theatricality by Dominic Rains) is a Kree outcast desperate to prove his worth to his father. He is effete, cruel, and unpredictable—a far cry from the stoic Kree of Captain Marvel . His right-hand enforcer, Sinas , and the genetically modified warrior Sarge (no relation to the later Season 6 character) add layers of physical threat.
They find themselves in a dilapidated, labyrinthine space station called the Lighthouse, orbiting what remains of their home planet. The year? 2091. Earth has been shattered into floating debris—an event survivors call “the Destruction of Earth.” Humanity is enslaved by an alien race known as the Kree, led by a tyrannical overlord named Kasius. The survivors live in fear, forced into auctions, gladiatorial combat, and servitude.