Warning: This article contains major spoilers for the entirety of "Gen V" season 2.

Creating a hit streaming series like "The Boys" that taps into both current politics and broader entertainment trends is unfathomably hard. Spinning off a new series about kids at a school for superheroes with entirely new characters and without living entirely in the parent show's shadow might be even harder. But making lightning strike twice with a second season that's not only more heartfelt and sincere than the first ( as I reviewed for /Film here ), but also pulls off a storyline that multiple big-budget movies tried and failed to do in years prior? That's the kind of balancing act that "Gen V" has made its bread and butter.

We're not exactly going out on a ledge here when we claim that "Gen V" i

See Full Page