The Boys S04 Vp3 !full! May 2026
Homelander takes Ryan to visit the abandoned Vought lab where Ryan was born (via a breast milk bottle of his own mother’s milk, of course). The interesting part? Homelander genuinely tries to bond — but only by showing Ryan a preserved fetus of a failed Supe. He calls it Ryan’s “brother.” Ryan is visibly horrified. It’s a masterclass in showing Homelander’s complete inability to understand human emotion, while also revealing his loneliness.
If you meant V P3 as in (like the promo clips from the Vought News Network on YouTube), let me know — those have different content (like a teaser about Tek Knight’s prison). Otherwise, Episode 3 of S4 is widely considered the season’s turning point. the boys s04 vp3
In Episode 3, The Deep is tasked with “milking” an octopus for a mysterious Vought supplement. But the twist? The octopus is his ex-lover, Ambrosius . He has a full, tender conversation with her while mechanically extracting her secretions. The scene is played tragically and hilariously — he even tries to romance her afterward. It’s peak Deep: pathetic, sexual, and deeply uncomfortable. Homelander takes Ryan to visit the abandoned Vought
>!The final scene shows Butcher injecting himself with Temp V again , despite his terminal brain condition, because he sees Kessler (hallucination) convincing him that dying as a monster is better than dying as a failure.!< He calls it Ryan’s “brother
It seems you're referring to (likely meaning Season 4, Episode 3).
Black Noir (the new one) asks Sister Sage what her grand villain plan is. Her answer? “Fix the subway system.” She explains that if Vought can improve New York City’s infrastructure in visible, helpful ways, people will overlook the evil. It’s a biting satire of corporate “social good” campaigns. The internet loved how refreshingly mundane and plausible her evil genius is here.
The title “We’ll Keep the Red Flag Flying Here” is a lyric from the socialist anthem “The Red Flag.” This directly contrasts with Homelander’s growing fascist imagery (red, white & blue flags) and foreshadows the episode’s theme: regular people trying to keep hope alive under a fascist regime.