The latest episode of the Paramount+ Halo series is an action-packed throat punch from the moment it starts. That punch to your windpipe will sting a little more if youâre a big fan of a certain character from the games, who bit the proverbial dust this week.
Halo season 2 episode 4, titled âReach,â marks one of the bigger deviations from the gameâs established canon since the series announced it created its own timeline. This deviation doesnât necessarily detract from the episode, as itâs perhaps the strongest yet, but the specific way in which it opts to get rid of a well-known Halo figure is strikingly unceremonious. If people were mad about Master Chief taking his helmet off (and it staying off in the second season), if they were irate about him getting his gravity hammer wet, theyâll be angrier than a freshly kicked hornetâs nest about what happens in âReach.â
Spoilers for Halo season 2 episode 4 and the Halo game series follow.
This episode kills off Commander Keyes (Danny Sapani) during the Covenantâs invasion of Reach. In the first Halo game (which takes place after the Fall of Reach in the seriesâ timeline), the Commander is captured by the Covenant, tortured, rescued by Master Chief, and then infected by the zombie-like Flood. Master Chief mercy-kills Keyes when he discovers that the Commander has been subsumed along with other human minds into what would eventually become the Gravemind, a Flood with near-omniscient powers. Itâs a brutal death for a beloved character, but the Halo series really said, ânah, letâs have him die because he forgot how to fuel up a ship.â
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Yes, Commander Keyes, in the midst of trying to evacuate Reach with others, realizes that the ship theyâre on is still connected to the dock via its fuel line. Even though Keyes knew that the Fall of Reach was nigh, he didnât get a getaway car ready. And for that planning error, he got smoked. At least he got a great speech beforehand, delivered with impressive gusto by Sapani, and a funny, final one-liner.

But Keyesâ death sucks because he isnât nearly as compelling here as he is in the games, mainly due to the seriesâ laser-focus on the Spartans. While I maintain that the Halo show is strongest when it focuses on John and the Spartansâ struggle to both protect the human race and reckon with who they are and what the UNSC made them, that choice means that other characters get less fanfare. Less fanfare means deaths are less impactful, and when a beloved game character unceremoniously dies at a point when heâs, canonically, not supposed to, it stings.
Aside from Keyesâ untimely death, âReachâ is a badass, action-packed episode. There are some great nods to the games, including a huge Covenant Wraith tank decimating the city streets, a crunchy, messy hand-to-hand fight between an armor-less Chief and an Elite, and a few messy, goopy explosions courtesy of some good olâ UNSC frag grenades.
âReachâ also doesnât shy away from killing off characters like itâs a round of Halo 3 Team Deathmatch. From Vannak-134 (Bentley Kalu), whose love for animals made him one of my favorite people on the show (and whose death sent me into a hysterical spiral for a few minutes), to Louis-036 (Marvin Jones III) and his partner, âReachâ racks up a pretty high body count. The emotional beats hit, even if youâre unhappy with who didnât make it off Reach alive. Despite the changes, despite the Spartans literally losing their armor this episode (lol at how the Mjolnir fanboys must feel), Iâm still firmly on the side of âHalo TV series good.â