"HUE won't let me have a guitar. Do you really think I'm going to HANG MYSELF BY GUITAR STRINGS?!" "Yes, dude." "Yeah, well, you're probably right." They should've just gone and fixed the breach.
No, I told myself, I'm not letting this show catch me off-guard. And, to some degree, I succeeded. But then that ending comes in and punches, nay, stabs you square in the gut. But before we get to that, let's go over everything else this episode does right. Even without its ending, it would be as tight a narrative as ever.
Chapter Six is the first episode (and last, but we'll get to that) to put everything in order by unifying our leading cast, allowing us to push onwards on the long-delayed quest to save Lil Cato. In other words, there's a lot on this episode's plate: it's legitimately monumental, signifying a shift in the overall narrative even beyond the obvious (Just wait on it), and we're finally moving from the preliminary rounds of setting the narrative up to the meat of the narrative itself.





