WARNING: This article contains spoilers for She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 7!She-Hulk: Attorney at Law stands out from other Marvel Cinematic Universe projects, and it is this difference that will likely see the show subvert a traditional MCU finale trope. Following the life of Bruce Banner's lawyer cousin, Jennifer Walters, She-Hulk is a character-focused comedy through and through, demonstrating the Marvel universe's push for more unique spins on the superhero genre in Phase 4. It is this humorous tone and focus on character that will likely see the show avoid the usual Marvel finale trope.

Marvel's newest TV series, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, subverts expectations by focusing less on action and more on character. Jennifer Walters (Tatiana Maslany) is not interested in following in her cousin, the Incredible Hulk's footsteps as an Avenger, instead proclaiming her series to be a "lawyer show". She-Hulk has only seen a handful of fights, most notably She-Hulk's battle against Titania (Jameela Jamil) and a family disagreement with Mark Ruffalo's Hulk in episode 1. While the over-arching story of a group of internet trolls with immense resources led by someone known as HulkKing suggests that a big battle is coming, the series has honed in on Jen as a character and put laughs above fights.

Related: She-Hulk's Best HulkKing Reveal Was Set Up In Episode 4

She-Hulk: Attorney at Law's "slice of life" style and focus on character drama strongly hint that the series will not end with a typical final Marvel battle. Every MCU movie tends to finish with a big battle with the film's villain, and even character-driven shows like WandaVision and Moon Knight can fall into this trap. With She-Hulk clearly establishing itself as a lawyer show rather than an action-heavy superhero show, it may well be one of the first shows, alongside Loki, to break this tradition. This fits in with the show's premise of being a legal comedy and is a welcome change to the usual Marvel Cinematic Universe formula.

Jennifer Walters, Not She-Hulk, Can Stop HulkKing Without A Huge Fight

Tatiana Maslany as Jennifer Walters

The power of a normal person like Jennifer Walters is clearly being built up as one of She-Hulk's key elements, further hinting that the series will be resolved without a traditional Marvel-style fight like those seen in Captain America and Iron Man's solo movies. She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 7 showed the value of Jen, not She-Hulk, so it seems only logical that the series will end with Jen using her lawyer skills to take down HulkKing. Everything shown so far hints towards Jennifer Walters, not the gamma-powered She-Hulk, resolving the situation using her law degree, not her Hulk strength. After all, it was her legal brains that got Emil Blonsky - a.k.a. Abomination - out of prison, and aided Wong in stopping Donny Blaze from practicing magic.

Of course, She-Hulk is still a Marvel Cinematic Universe show, so a fight of some sort will almost certainly take place in the final episode. Additionally, Charlie Cox's Matt Murdock still has yet to appear despite appearing in his new Daredevil costume in the trailer. With this in mind, it seems likely that She-Hulk and Daredevil will team up to take down a villain before the show concludes, but whether that is the nefarious Josh, Titania, or HulkKing remains to be seen. What seems likely is that the She-Hulk: Attorney at Law finale will mix up the typical Marvel finale formula, just as it has put its own quirky spin on what a Marvel project can be.

New episodes of She-Hulk release on Thursdays on Disney+.

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