This week’s pause in the schedule has given us a rare chance to sit with everything Outlander has set in motion in season 8 and to realize just how much still needs to be resolved. With only two episodes left, the series is staring down a long list of unfinished arcs. If it wants to avoid the “season 8 curse” (yes, Game of Thrones, we’re looking at you), it has serious narrative ground to cover.
Here are the storylines we’re hoping to see play out by the series finale.
- Lord John’s rescue and King’s Mountain will be the main plot lines in the endgame
- Marsali should stay on the Ridge with her family
- William needs to know about time travel
Lord John’s rescue and King’s Mountain will be the main plot lines in the endgame
At the core, only three major book plot lines remain: the Battle of King’s Mountain, Lord John’s abduction and subsequent rescue, and William’s evolving relationship with Jamie — the latter of which finally began to shift in Episode 8. But the show has added other major changes to the story that are now begging to be resolved.
The rescue of Lord John won’t be just about saving him, but also about reconciliation. Jamie and William working together to rescue John set the stage for healing the fractured relationships between all three men. If handled well, this could clear the air around the emotional aspect of this season just in time for the final conflict.
That conflict, of course, is King’s Mountain. Everything points to it unfolding in the series finale. Jamie’s apparent death and Claire’s use of her healing powers to bring him back would bring the story full circle, reaffirming the show’s core as a blend of history, romance, and fantasy.
At this point, a happy ending on the Ridge — Jamie and Claire together, surrounded by their children and grandchildren — feels not just likely, but necessary.

Marsali should stay on the Ridge with her family
But beyond these central arcs, it’s the side stories that raise the most questions.
Take Marsali and her children. Are we really meant to believe she would set off, pregnant, into an unfamiliar and potentially dangerous environment based solely on the word of Percy Beauchamp — the same “Slippery Fellow” who betrayed Lord John? Either this storyline takes a dark turn, or it returns to the Ridge, offering a quieter but satisfying resolution: a new print shop, deserved stability, and long-overdue peace.
It’s hard to imagine Episode 8 being her final appearance, especially with so much left unsaid… like the glaring omission that she and Fergus never explicitly learned about time travel.

William needs to know about time travel
William’s arc is equally unfinished. His identity crisis can’t fully resolve without the truth — not just about Jamie being his father, but about time travel itself. Accepting that the British will lose the war is one thing; understanding the deeper forces at play is another. Whether he ends up on the Ridge, Mount Josiah, or even Jocasta’s estate (as some fans are speculating), his future hinges on whether he can truly become part of the Fraser clan.
Then there’s the lingering mystery around Fanny’s potential time-traveling abilities, which feels like a thread waiting to be pulled. Add to that the question of whether William will discover that Jane was his niece, and you have a storyline that could either deliver a quiet emotional punch, or remain frustratingly unresolved.

And bonus side story: What about Claire’s possible 18th-century brother? It’s the kind of detail the show might never revisit, especially since even readers aren’t sure of his fate and Outlander has never hinted at this character. More likely, that mystery will be left for Blood of My Blood to explore.
There’s also the future of the franchise itself to think about. With shows like Peaky Blinders and Downton Abbey successfully transitioning to film sequels, the idea of an Outlander movie doesn’t feel that far-fetched to us. If it happens, a shift in focus would be welcome — less Revolutionary War, more time travel, and a return to Scotland, maybe?
Two episodes. That’s all that remains to finish the job and stick the landing. The pieces are all there — the question is whether the show can assemble them into an ending worthy of its legacy.
Outlander will be back next Friday, May 8, on Starz for its second-to-last episode.
