Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Ending Explained

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Ending Explained

WARNING! This article contains major SPOILERS for Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves!Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ ending sees a triumph for the band of heroes while leaving room for more adventures to come. Based on the hit tabletop role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons, the 2023 film stars Chris Pine, Michelle Rodriguez, Justice Smith, Regé-Jean Page, and Sophia Lillis as a band of thieves uniting to reclaim a long-lost relic while facing evil forces. Hugh Grant also stars in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ cast as Forge, a powerful conman and former ally of Edgin, Holga, and Simon. Throughout the movie, the thieves go on a quest to find the Helmet of Disjunction, which they intend to use to block Sofina’s magic, rescue Kira, and retrieve the resurrection tablet for Edgin’s wife.

In Honor Among Thieves’ ending, the characters succeed in obtaining the Tablet of Reawakening and rescuing Kira, but find themselves battling Sofina to foil her plan to enslave the people of Neverwinter. During the fight, Simon masters his magical powers and the group defeats the Red Witch Sofina, but realizes that Holga has been fatally wounded. After Edgin uses the resurrection tablet to revive Holga, the old Lord of Neverwinter is restored, Forge is sent to prison, and the band of thieves is declared heroes for their efforts. With some loose ends untied, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ ending also sets up potential sequels after strengthening the characters for defeating their inner conflicts.

Why Edgin Chooses To Resurrect Holga Instead Of His Wife

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Ending Explained

The primary motivation for the thieves’ quest in Paramount’s Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves was to resurrect Edgin’s wife Zia with the tablet, as he had been carrying the guilt of her death with him for years. Edgin even lost two years of time with his daughter because of his unyileding search for the resurrection tablet, which he thought would be worth it once he brought his wife back to life. However, after defeating Sofina, his best friend and Kira’s surrogate mother Holga was killed in battle, leaving him with a nearly impossible choice to make. Upon realizing that it was finally time to let Zia go, stop blaming himself for her death, and move forward, he and Kira used the tablet to resurrect Holga.

While Kira would always love her mother, Holga was the one who effectively raised her and served as her mother figure throughout her life, so resurrecting her was the right choice for each character. Holga had also sacrificed much of her own life before death to help Edgin raise Kira and search for the tablet, so resurrecting her was a massive repayment for her loyalty. Ultimately, resurrecting Holga was an honorable act that proved Edgin was using the tablet for the right reasons instead of trying to relieve his guilt. Zia had already been gone for so long that Kira made peace with her fate, whereas Holga’s death could be undone quickly without the heartbreak of Kira losing yet another mother.

Why Edgin Sees The Dragonfly Again In Honor Among Thieves’ Ending

Chris Pine as Edgin in Dungeons and Dragons Honor Among Thieves

Edgin frequently sees a small dragonfly in the distance throughout Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, which has an important symbolic meaning. The dragonfly first appears during Zia’s funeral, followed by moments on his adventure, in a flashback to when Zia was still alive, and when Holga dies. The dragonfly is a representation of Edgin’s wife Zia and his refusal to move forward, as Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ flashback scene to the couple seeing a dragonfly included Zia saying that some things need to be let go. Remembering her words, Edgin spotting the dragonfly again in Honor Among Thieves’ ending finally convinces him to let her go and save Holga instead.

How Simon Finally Got The Helmet Of Disjunction To Work

Justice Smith casting a spell in Dungeons and Dragons Honor Among Thieves

The insecure Simon struggles to use his magical powers throughout Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves unless his life depends on it, as those are the times when he’s able to get out of his head and simply think about survival. At first, Simon wasn’t able to make the helmet work because he had to attune with it, and his own fears and insecurities about his powers got in the way. Simon saw himself as a disappointment who couldn’t repeat the greatness of his ancestor Elminster Aumar, with his self-deprecations standing in his own way.

In Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ ending, Simon is able to realize how strong he truly is and that his powers are great if he lets them be. In another life-or-death situation, Simon takes away his fears of not being enough to use the Helmet of Disjunction, master his magic, and battle the powerful Red Witch Sofina. The only thing standing between Simon and mastering his powers was himself, so his confidence in Honor Among Thieves’ ending allows him to be the great wizard he hindered himself from becoming.

Are Doric & Simon A Couple Now? Why He Finally Got His Second Date

Chris Pine as Edgin the Bard, Michelle Rodriguez as Holga the Barbarian, Justice Smith as Simon the Sorcerer, and Sophia Lillis as Doric the Druid confronting the gelatinous cube in Dungeons & Dragons Honor Among Thieves

Simon originally helped recruit the owlbear-shaping tiefling druid Doric to the team of thieves because he had once been on a date with her, though Justice Smith’s Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves character still had feelings for her during their quest. Similar to how Simon was finally able to master his powers, his ability to finally believe in himself and gain self-confidence was what led Doric to finally go on another date with him. After recognizing that Simon’s self-esteem was raised on their quest, Doric was convinced to allow him to court her again, suggesting the two could be a couple in a sequel to Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves.

What Happens To Forge Now? Can He Return For Dungeons & Dragons 2?

Hugh Grant as Forge on his knees in Dungeons and Dragons Honor Among Thieves

After revealing that he had imprisoned the real Lord of Neverwinter, aided a Red Witch’s attempt to make zombie slaves, and tried to steal riches from wealthy people betting on the games he’s hosting, Hugh Grant’s Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves character Forge was sent to prison. He was locked in the same prison that held Edgin and Holga at the beginning of the movie, with Forge even attempting to escape the same way. However, Forge is set to be stuck in prison for some time, suggesting he won’t be back for a Dungeons & Dragons sequel movie as a villain or ally.

Are The Red Witches Defeated? How D&D: Honor Among Thieves Sets Up A Sequel

Daisy Head in Dungeons & Dragons Honor Among Thieves

While Edgin, Holga, Simon, Doric, and Kira successfully defeated Sofina in their final battle, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ ending suggests there are even more powerful evil forces still at play. Above Sofina is the powerful Red Wizard villain Szass Tam, who had been overseeing her attempt to enslave more people after previously destroying the Thay. The heroes may have beaten Sofina, but Szass Tam is still working from the shadows, and is set up as a far more formidable foe. As such, Edgin and the thieves already have the next villain to take down in a potential sequel to Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. However, Paramount has yet to confirm whether Dungeons & Dragons 2 will happen.

The Real Meaning Of Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ Ending

Dungeons And Dragons Honor Among Thieves Simon, Edgin, Doric, Holga

As the title suggests, one significant theme in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is to have honor in one’s misdeeds. The adventurers may be thieves who steal from the rich, but they decide to return such goods to the masses instead, making them a Robin Hood-like group in Honor Among Thieves’ ending. The movie also warns against selfishness and greed, as the team is only rewarded once they risk their own safety to defend the people from Sofina, which meant losing the treasures they could have claimed from Forge’s ship. Forge is then sent to prison with nothing to show for his schemes for Sofina, whereas Dungeons & Dragons’ title thieves emerge with the riches of self-fulfillment, pride, and comradery.

The meaning of Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ ending also preaches that everyone’s worst enemy is themselves. Edgin was the one standing between himself and happiness with Kira and his path to moving on. Because he couldn’t let go of his guilt for Zia’s death, his dogged pursuit of finding the resurrection tablet created a broken relationship with his daughter and an inability to move forward. Edgin was so stuck in the past that he couldn’t live in the present, thus sabotaging his relationships with those still alive. In Honor Among Thieves’ ending, Edgin was finally able to find peace once using the tablet to save Holga instead of his wife, which also helped heal his relationship with Kira.

The same lesson in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ ending also applies to Simon. He was the one person standing between himself and his path to becoming a great wizard. The pressure of living up to his family legacy and his constant self-doubt kept him from being the successful and confident magician and person he could have been, which is why he’s finally able to master his powers upon gaining more self-assurance. However, the power of teamwork and friendship was also instrumental to the success of the heroes’ quest, and thus also the happy endings of Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’ main characters.