Also, the show continues to ask viewers to believe that Tariq can juggle law school, drug dealing, and family drama without ever facing real academic or legal consequences. The suspension of disbelief is stretched thin. Grade: B Power Book II: Ghost S02E10 is a messy, addictive, and explosive finale that will satisfy fans hungry for action and twists. It’s not the series’ most coherent episode, but it sets up Season 3 with genuine stakes. If you’ve made it this far, you won’t be disappointed — just don’t think too hard about the logistics.
Here’s a review of Power Book II: Ghost Season 2, Episode 10 (“Love and War, Pt. 2” — the WMA (Whitman, Marshall, and Associates) showdown episode). The Season 2 finale of Ghost , titled “Love and War, Pt. 2,” delivers exactly what fans of the Power universe expect: betrayal, bloodshed, and a cliffhanger that resets the board. But while it’s an entertaining hour of television, it also exposes some of the show’s recurring structural issues. The Good: Consequences and Chaos This episode doesn’t hold back on payoff. The central tension around the WMA (Whitman, Marshall, and Associates) murder case — specifically the death of Professor Jabari Reynolds — finally explodes. Tariq (Michael Rainey Jr.) is forced to make a split-second decision that puts him at odds with Davis Maclean (Cliff “Method Man” Smith), and the courtroom drama gives way to street justice. power book ii: ghost s02e10 wma
Similarly, the handling of Detective Whitman feels rushed. A character built up as a real threat to Tariq is disposed of in a way that prioritizes shock over logic. As with many Power finales, the episode crams too much into 60 minutes. Major character decisions happen because the plot needs them to, not because they’re psychologically sound. The pacing is breakneck — one moment we’re in a legal deposition, the next in a shootout, then a heart-to-heart, then another murder. It’s exciting, but emotionally thin. Also, the show continues to ask viewers to