Here’s an interesting, spoiler-light review that answers the question: Does “Revenge of Others” have a happy ending?

The series follows Ok Chan-mi, a teenage archer who transfers to a brutal new school after her twin brother dies in a suspicious “accident.” She’s not there for prom queen. She’s there to find his killer. Alongside the mysterious, tough-as-nails Ji Soo-heon, she descends into a cesspool of bullying, corruption, and secret societies. By the final episode, you’ve watched characters get stabbed, framed, and psychologically shattered.

So, does it have a happy ending? The short answer is:

Let me explain without spoiling the corpse count.

So here’s my honest review: Revenge of Others ends , leaning toward hopeful melancholy . If you need your thrillers tied with a happy bow, look elsewhere. But if you want a show that respects its own gritty world and gives you a finale that hurts and heals — one that answers “does revenge pay?” with a bloody, honest “sometimes” — then strap in. The last episode won’t make you cry tears of joy. But it might make you cry tears of something real .

If you’re racing through Disney+’s gritty high school thriller Revenge of Others wondering whether all the blood, betrayal, and hallway beatdowns lead to a warm, fuzzy finale — stop right there. This isn’t Riverdale with a bow on top. It’s Cruel Intentions meets The Count of Monte Cristo , but everyone’s wearing school uniforms and carrying trauma instead of textbooks.