Warning! Contains spoilers for The Boys season 4.

The Boys season 4 creates a major plot with Tek-Knight’s death because the ease with which he dies does not align with his previously established lore. Like most superhero live-action adaptations, The Boys has had a fair share of power-scaling inconsistencies since the beginning. However, none of them have been glaring enough to significantly disrupt a viewer’s suspension of disbelief.

Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about The Boys‘ portrayal of Tek-Knight’s power scales. Tek-Knight was not a part of The Boys‘ initial seasons, but the show has been setting up his arrival since the beginning by dropping subtle clues about his powers and abilities. Even his portrayal in Gen V reveals a lot about what he can and cannot do as a supe. Strangely, however, none of these previously revealed details about his supe abilities are in tandem with what The Boys season 4, episode 6 depicts.

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Tek-Knight Should Have Been Able To Break Free In The Boys Season 4

Tek-Knight’s Death In The Boys Season 4 Does Not Make Sense

In The Boys season 1, a woman at the Association of Collateral Damage Survivors meeting says Tek-Knight accidentally broke her spine while saving her. This establishes that he is far stronger than an average human. Similarly, in Gen V, Dean Shetty recalls that Tek-Knight beat Ironcast to death, who is supposed to be a supe with nearly indestructible metallic skin. The fact that Tek-Knight was able to overpower Ironcast and beat him to death again proves he is incredibly strong. However, despite this, Kimiko and Starlight easily tie him up using leather straps and chains in The Boys season 4.

Although Tek-Knight enjoys it when they torture him because he is a masochist, it just seems odd that a supe who has previously had so many incredible feats of strength could be subdued so easily. When Starlight and the crew start draining his bank accounts, he is not even able to break free from regular leather straps despite being established as a super strong supe. The sequence then ends with Tek-Knight’s Butler, who is a non-supe human, chocking him to death with another leather strap, which again does not align too well with his previously hinted power levels.

Tek-Knight’s Comic Book Suit Can Resolve The Plot Hole

Tek-Knight Dons An Iron Man Suit In The Comics

Tek Knight flying in space in The Boys.

Since Tek-Knight is supposed to be a parody of both Batman and Iron Man, he even possesses an Iron Man-esque suit in the comics. Given how Marvel’s Iron Man is a normal human with no inherent superpowers in the original comics and movies but acquires incredible superhero abilities when he puts his suit on, it seems possible that Tek-Knight achieved his past feats of strength when he had his suit on. This would explain why he seemed powerless against Starlight and Kimiko in The Boys season 4 scene.

Interestingly, even though the show has never explicitly shown his suit, it has subtly hinted that its version of Tek-Knight has one. For instance, there is a scene in a previous season where Ryan plays a supe-fighting game. In the character selection menu for the game, Tek-Knight has a blue mechanical suit. The Deep also mentions that Tek-Knight’s suit is eco-friendly in a commercial where he boasts about how he is saving the environment. However, even though the suit explanation resolves the season 4 plot hole, it is not in tandem with one detail from Gen V.

One Gen V Scene Makes Tek-Knight’s Powers Even More Confusing

Gen V Hints Tek-Knight Is Strong Even Without His Suit

Tek Knight The Boys

After Golden Boy’s death in Gen V, Tek-Knight shows up at Godolkin University to investigate what happened and even interviews several students. During his interview with Cate, he realizes that she might use her “touch” abilities on him to control him. Therefore, he warns her that he will snap her arm if she even attempts to take her glove off. Cate immediately backs off after hearing Tek-Knight’s warning even though he does not have his suit on, establishing that he possesses super-strength even without his suit.

Even in The Boys season 4’s dungeon sequence, Kimiko kicks Tek-Knight, which sends him flying across the room. Any non-supe human would have died from that one kick from Kimiko, but Tek-Knight seems unscathed. Yet, moments later in The Boys season 4, episode 6, Tek-Knight gets murdered by his butler, who is not even a supe.

The Boys Season 4 Poster Showing Homelander with Victoria Neuman Surrounded by Confetti

The Boys

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Comedy

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The Boys is a superhero/dark comedy satire series created by Eric Kripke based on the comic series of the same name. Set in a “what-if” world that reveres superheroes as celebrities and gods who experience minimal repercussions for their actions. However, one group of vigilantes headed by a vengeance-obsessed man named Billy Butcher will fight back against these super-charged “heroes” to expose them for what they are.

Cast

Karl Urban
, Jack Quaid
, Antony Starr
, Erin Moriarty
, Jessie T. Usher
, Laz Alonso
, Chace Crawford
, Tomer Capone
, Karen Fukuhara

Character(s)

Billy Butcher
, Hughie Campbell
, Homelander
, Annie January
, A-Train
, Mother’s Milk
, Kevin Moskowitz
, Frenchie
, Kimiko Miyashiro

Release Date

July 26, 2019

Seasons

4

Streaming Service(s)

Amazon Prime Video

Franchise(s)

The Boys

Writers

Eric Kripke

Directors

Erin Moriarty
, Karen Fukuhara
, Karl Urban
, Jack Quaid
, Eric Kripke

Showrunner

Eric Kripke

Main Genre

Action

Creator(s)

Eric Kripke