TV

All’s Fair Episode 6 Ending Drops a Game-Changer for Chase and Allura’s Divorce

All’s Fair Episode 6 Ending Drops a Game-Changer for Chase and Allura’s Divorce
Image credit: Legion-Media

Hulu's All's Fair explodes in Episode 6 as Allura Grant and Chase Munroe's mediation devolves into wasabi-fueled tears, jaw-dropping confessions, and a courtroom meltdown that blows the season wide open.

Hulu's All's Fair just dropped its messiest hour yet. Episode 6, 'Divorce Is Like a Death,' throws Allura Grant and Chase Munroe into mediation and then lights a match. We get wasabi tears, illegal embryo drama, match-fixing receipts, and Sarah Paulson climbing onto a table. It is a lot, and it mostly works because the show leans into the chaos.

The setup: tears on demand and a very weird pep talk

We open with Carrington Lane (Sarah Paulson) coaching Chase (Matthew Noszka) for mediation like he's auditioning for a tear-jerker. She fusses over his hair, sprays dry shampoo, and goes full control freak. Her secret weapon: tissues laced with wasabi so he cries on cue.

'Every tear you shed adds another $100K in your pocket.'

Mediation kicks off at Grant Ronson Greene with Judge Robert DeLancie (Peter MacNicol). Allura (Kim Kardashian) sits beside Dina Standish (Glenn Close); Chase has Carr and Alberta Dome (Lorraine Toussaint). Before anyone can breathe, Chase texts Allura: 'You look hot.' Emerald Greene (Niecy Nash) shows up late and hands Dina a sealed folder that makes Dina smile and Carr panic. Not subtle.

Chase performs sincerity, then accidentally finds it

The judge wants the exes to talk directly, so Carr literally kicks Chase under the table to get him going and then micromanages his delivery. He finally speaks, and against all odds, it lands. He tells the story of seeing Allura at a football game, how she actually saw him, and calls her the light in his life. Between the wasabi and the memories, he melts down. For a minute, you believe him.

Bathroom break: the embryo secret

Allura bolts to the bathroom and tells Dina she just got her period. Translation: the embryos she secretly implanted three weeks ago failed. She never told Chase and did it without his consent. Dina is horrified because, legally, those embryos count as shared property. That is not a small mistake.

Back in the room, Allura gives her own speech about the life they planned, the kids they were supposed to have, and how hard she backed him. She closes with a simple gut-punch: 'I just really believed in you.' Chase tries to respond; Carr cuts him off like a buzzer at the Oscars.

Recess revelations: the Vermont landmine

During the break, Alberta drops a bomb: Allura owns a property she never disclosed in the prenup, a reform school in rural Vermont. Allura explains the whole thing. Her mother sent her there at 14. The place was abusive, full stop. Her dad pulled her out, then drank himself to death over the guilt. Years later, Allura bought the school and shut it down, then created the Albus Grant Charitable Trust in her father's name to fund scholarships at her real high school.

The catch: not listing that property is a technical prenup violation. Alberta and Carr pounce, and the judge floats proceeding as if there were no prenup at all. That's a massive swing in Chase's favor and terrible for Allura.

The embryo grenade goes off

When embryos come up, Carr tries a power move and offers Allura all of them. Allura doesn't take the bait. She blows everything up instead.

'There are no embryos.'

She explains she implanted the last two three weeks earlier and got her period that morning. Carr threatens a pile of new lawsuits, calls it illegal implantation of communal property, and even throws out the word manslaughter because the embryos didn't survive. Then Chase stuns everyone by stepping in to defend Allura. 'I don't care if I'm not supposed to say it, I am so sorry, Allura,' he tells her, and says he wants the whole thing settled that day.

Power shuffle: Emerald steps in, and brings receipts

Dina gets a call from Nurse Rose at Doug's (Ed O'Neill) hospice — her husband is dying — and she has to leave. With Liberty (Naomi Watts) out of town, Emerald takes over for Allura and immediately sharpens the knives.

Emerald produces evidence that Chase has been fixing football games to pay off gambling debts, backed by emails showing he made 'statistically impossible' errors on purpose. Then she queues up dashcam footage from Carr's DUI arrest (from the previous episode), where Carr makes inappropriate comments about her relationship with Chase. Carr snaps, climbs onto the mediation table, and goes on a full-tilt rant before fleeing the room. It's unhinged and, frankly, great TV.

An unexpected olive branch

Outside, Emerald approaches Carr with something shockingly kind: she offers to help Carr's daughter get into Benedict Hall, the school where Emerald's triplet sons thrived. Allura joins and apologizes for leaving Carr behind a decade ago when she, Emerald, and Liberty bailed on their old firm. She owns it, no excuses, and you can see it land.

The deal: who got what

When everyone returns, Carr backs off the nuclear options. She agrees to honor the prenup and split assets evenly. Here's where it all lands:

  • Prenuptial agreement: honored and upheld
  • Asset division: 50/50 split
  • Allura's company: stays entirely hers
  • Embryos: no longer exist (failed implantation)
  • Chase and Allura: relationship ends with a goodbye kiss
  • Carr vs. Allura: grudge settled

Goodbye, for real

Chase waits for Allura at her firm. They share a soft, final kiss, and she walks away alone. Across town, Dina is at home with Doug as he passes peacefully. It's a quiet, sad counterpoint to the circus we just watched.

When to watch

All's Fair is streaming on Hulu and on Disney+ internationally. New episodes drop every Tuesday through December 9, 2025.