Chuck's Endings

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Sam: He's saying He's been playing us. This whole time.

Chuck: Come on.
Sam: Our entire lives. Mom, Dad -- everything. This is all you because you wrote it all, right? Because -- Because what? Because we're your favorite show? Because we're part of your story?
Chuck: Okay, Dean, no offense, but your brother is stupid and crazy. And that kid is still dangerous. So pick up the gun. Pick it up, pull the trigger, and I'll bring her back. Your mom.
Dean: No. No. My mom was my hero. And I miss her, and I will miss her every second of my life, but she would not want this. And it's not like You even really care. 'Cause Sam's right. The Apocalypse, the first go-around, with Lucifer and Michael -- You knew everything that was going on, so why the games, Chuck, huh? Why don't you just snap your fingers and end it?!
Chuck: Look, I--
Sam: And every other bad thing we've been killing, been dying over -- where were you? Just sitting back and watching us suffer so we can do this over and over and over again -- fighting, losing people we love? When does it end? Tell me.
Chuck: Dean, don't do this.

Dean: No, we're done talking. 'Cause this -- this isn't just a story. It's our lives! So God or no God, you go to Hell.

– , 14.20 Moriah

God. He is not exactly Shakespeare. He's more of a low-rent Dean Koontz. I had to listen to his whole "writing philosophy", and his very weird, very perv-y obsession with you. And it always ends the same -- one brother killing the other. I mean, this world? He could've ended it in so many ways, and he likes that one. You know, I guess that's why you had to see the werewolf bros die the way they did 'cause "foreshadowing".

Lilith to Dean, 15.05 Proverbs 17:3

God, aka Chuck, creates different worlds for his own amusement. However, he says to Sam that "of all the Sams and Deans in all the multiverse, you're my favorite" [1] He later reveals that he has manipulated the Winchesters lives for his own amusement. [2]

When Sam shoots Chuck with the Equalizer, it created some form of link between Sam and Chuck. Sam theorizes to Dean that since the gun does not fire bullets, he shot a part of himself into God allowing Sam to see the different endings in Chuck's mind through nightmares. Sam initially dismisses them as some form of PTSD.

Lilith reveals to Dean that Chuck that every single one of Chuck's stories end the same way -- one brother killing the other.[3] These are the endings played out in Sam's visions.

Endings

Demon Blood Ending

An alternate ending in which Sam embraced his demon blood addiction and went full Dark Side, becoming the general of the demon army as Azazel intended. In this ending, Sam has killed Bobby and Jody, forcing Dean to pursue him with his own band of hunters, which included Benny Lafitte. After confronting Sam in the Bunker, Dean has his neck psychically snapped by his brother.

Episodes: 15.01 Back and to the Future and 15.04 Atomic Monsters
Sam's eyes go black from the demon blood.
Dean lies dead after having his neck snapped by Sam.

Samifer Ending

An alternate ending where Lucifer was successful in possessing and maintaining control of Sam. Dean attempts to kill Lucifer using the Colt, shooting Sam in the back of the head. The Colt does not work, and Lucifer is easily able to heal the bullet wound in his head before burning Dean alive.

Episode: 15.05 Proverbs 17:3
Dean is burned alive by Lucifer.

Mark of Cain Ending

An alternate ending where Dean has given into the Mark of Cain. After a one-sided fight where Sam attempts to talk Dean down, a Knight of Hell version of Dean picks Sam up by the neck and flashes his black demon eyes before stabbing his brother with the First Blade and killing him.

Episode: 15.05 Proverbs 17:3
Dean as a Knight of Hell.
Dean drives the First Blade into a helpless Sam.

Trivia

  • Chuck's endings where one brother kills the other are reflected from the final battle between Michael and Lucifer during the Judeo-Christian Apocalypse and Cain killing Abel in Genesis, both are events examined in previous seasons incorporating Sam and Dean as representations of these biblical figures.

See also

References