TV

The Flash's Finale is a Super-Sized Four-Part Epic The Show Deserves

The Flash's Finale is a Super-Sized Four-Part Epic The Show Deserves
Image credit: The CW

Here's how and when you can watch The Flash's four-part finale.

The end of The Flash is finally upon us, which promises to be doubly climatic because it will also serve as the conclusion for the whole of Arrowverse. And to make that conclusion truly epic, the showrunners decided to stretch out the show's final installment into four parts.

The whole finale is titled 'A New World,' and the first part of it has already aired, kicking off the plot with Barry's sudden disappearance as he was thrown back in time to the year 2000. The first part also featured Flash's arch-enemy, Eobard Thawne, and revealed a new mega-threat, which is even more troublesome than the Reverse-Flash.

All in all, as The Flash goes into the final run, stakes increase rapidly. When and where can fans watch the remaining three parts of the finale, and what can we expect to see in them?

  • A New World, Part 2
  • Wednesday, May 10
  • 5 p.m. PT/8 p.m. ET

Like the rest of the series, Part 2 of 'A New World' is going to air on The CW. Streaming will be available through The CW's own app one day later. To stream the episode earlier, you'll need to use a live streaming service, such as fuboTV.

This chapter will focus on the team's search for Barry, while the main character himself will attempt to get home to his time, and the whole plotline will morph into a major struggle to, as always, save the world from a demise.

  • A New World, Part 3
  • Wednesday, May 17
  • 5 p.m. PT/8 p.m. ET

Naturally, Parts 3 and 4 will be available through the same channels. In this episode, fans will see a few familiar faces, as the characters Nora West-Allen (Jessica Parker Kennedy) and Eddie Thawne (Rick Cosnett) are said to make an appearance.

  • A New World, Part 4
  • Wednesday, May 24
  • 5 p.m PT/8 p.m. ET

It shouldn't be an overestimation to suspect that, by the finale of the finale, things in the show will escalate to the point where the whole timeline, and possibly the whole of existence, stand on the brink of destruction. No one expects anything less grandiose from The Flash's concluding episode.

So it looks like the idea behind 'A New World' is as epic as the fan-favorite show deserves. Hopefully, the execution will also prove to be as great in the subsequent parts, as Part 1 of the finale was generally praised by fans (even those of them who didn't enjoy Season 9).