Supernatural probably has one of the most divisive series finales of any long-running television show. And if you’re among the many fans who felt short-changed by the ending and have longed for a conclusion that better captures the spirit of the franchise’s early years, then you’re in luck. A new ending is on the way for Dean and Sam Winchester that will feel more in line with those classic seasons. There is, however, one catch.

The CW’s Supernatural had one of the most active and passionate fanbases of any television series, so it was only natural that the show’s finale would inspire a wide range of opinions. As a quick recap, fans will remember that the second-to-last episode, “Inherit the Earth,” effectively wrapped up the series’ main storyline while also featuring Castiel’s devastating sacrifice and heartfelt confession of love for Dean.

The actual series finale, “Carry On,” shifted its focus almost entirely to Sam and Dean, returning the brothers to the more grounded hunting lifestyle that defined the show’s early years rather than the cosmic adventures of its later seasons. During what appeared to be a routine vampire hunt, Dean was impaled on a piece of rebar and mortally wounded, leading to an emotional farewell between the brothers before he passed on to Jack’s rebuilt Heaven.

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Sam then went on to live a normal life, eventually starting a family before reuniting with Dean and Bobby in Heaven at the end of his own life. While some fans found satisfaction in this bittersweet conclusion, many had at least one major complaint. For some, Dean’s death felt too lackluster for such an iconic character. Others felt Castiel’s story remained unresolved, while many argued that “Carry On” unnecessarily closed the door on future stories.

Now, Supernatural is getting a new series finale, and the best part is that, unlike “Carry On,” it promises to leave the door open for more adventures starring Dean and Sam Winchester.

Dynamite’s Supernatural Comes to an End in August (At Least For Now)

Main Cover by John Amor for Supernatural #10 (2026)

Supernatural #10 main cover
Supernatural #10 main cover

If you haven’t been keeping up with all things Supernatural, you may not know that Dynamite currently has an ongoing comic series from writer Greg Pak that sees Dean and Sam Winchester return for new monster-hunting adventures. The series is part of official Supernatural canon and takes place between Seasons 1 and 2 of the CW show, returning the Winchester brothers to the classic “monster-of-the-week” format that defined the series’ early years.

Currently, seven issues are available to read, and while the series has received a mostly positive reception from fans, Dynamite’s August solicitations have revealed that the run will come to an end on August 26, 2026, with its tenth issue. The official synopsis teases that, “It’s the end of the road for this inaugural SUPERNATURAL series,” as Sam and Dean prepare to face one final foe.

Because the comic takes place between Seasons 1 and 2 of the television series, the finale will likely feel much more in line with Supernatural’s classic era. It also guarantees that, no matter what happens during the story’s climax, readers already know Sam and Dean will make it out alive.

Another major advantage of this finale is that it promises to leave the door open for Dean and Sam’s return, unlike the series finale of the CW show. The synopsis teases that, “Sam and Dean must face one final foe (for now!) and set a new course for creature feature adventures yet to come!” That wording all but confirms that the Winchester brothers will return for more adventures somewhere down the road.

Given that one of the biggest criticisms of the CW finale was that “Carry On” felt like it unnecessarily closed off future possibilities for a continuation, the comic series finale already has an advantage by leaving the door wide open for future hunts. While it may not be the Supernatural series finale do-over that some fans would prefer, it does promise a bright future for the franchise and its continued adventures in comics.



















From Lawrence to Lebanon · Eight Questions
How Well Do You Know Supernatural?
“Saving people, hunting things — the family business.”

🚗Baby’67 Chevy Impala

🪶The TrenchcoatCastiel, Angel of the Lord

🔪Demon BladeRuby’s knife

📕John’s JournalHunter scripture

🎸Wayward SonThe Road So Far

01

Supernatural premiered on The WB on September 13, 2005, and ran a record-breaking 15 seasons / 327 episodes through November 2020 across The WB and The CW. The series creator and original showrunner — who’d later create NBC’s Timeless and develop Amazon’s The Boys — pitched it as a road-trip horror anthology before two brothers took over the centre of the show. Name him.




✓ Correct! Eric Kripke. He’d originally pitched the show to Warner Bros. as a tabloid-reporter anthology titled “Tape” before reformulating it around two brothers. Kripke ran the show through Season 5 (the original planned ending), then handed off to Sera Gamble, Jeremy Carver, Andrew Dabb and Robert Singer over the next decade. The Boys (2019–) is essentially Kripke processing the same superhero/horror genre concerns at a much higher budget.

✗ Wrong showrunner. The answer is Eric Kripke. Greg Berlanti is the Arrowverse / DC superhero TV mogul (Arrow, The Flash). Joss Whedon was the Buffy the Vampire Slayer / Firefly creator whose work clearly influenced Supernatural but who has no credit on it. Bryan Fuller did Pushing Daisies and Hannibal. Kripke is the one who took the show from a Vancouver pilot to a fifteen-season behemoth.

02

Dean Winchester — the older, classic-rock-loving, demon-blade-wielding brother who introduces himself with “hey, Sammy” and a leather jacket and ends the series in a pickup-bed funeral pyre — was played by an actor whose pre-Supernatural CV included Days of Our Lives (as Eric Brady), Dark Angel (as Alec) and Smallville (as Jason Teague). Name him.




✓ Correct! Jensen Ackles. He’d actually originally auditioned for Sam, the younger brother, before being moved to Dean opposite Jared Padalecki. Ackles directed six episodes of the series himself (his first was Season 6’s “Weekend at Bobby’s”). Post-Supernatural he reunited with Eric Kripke to play Soldier Boy in Season 3 of The Boys, and headlined the short-lived prequel The Winchesters (2022–23) as a narrating older Dean.

✗ Wrong Winchester. The answer is Jensen Ackles, who plays Dean. Jeffrey Dean Morgan is John Winchester — the brothers’ father, who originated the lead-by-a-grizzled-cowboy energy Negan would later inherit. Misha Collins is Castiel. Jared Padalecki is Sam, the younger, taller brother. Ackles plays Dean — the shorter, leather-jacketed, classic-rock-quoting older one.

03

Across all 327 episodes, the brothers’ constant other than each other was their car — a 1967 Chevrolet model affectionately known as “Baby,” inherited from their father John, with army-men in the ashtrays and Sam and Dean’s initials carved in the back seat. Eric Kripke wrote an entire Season 5 episode (“Swan Song”) from the car’s perspective. Name the model.




✓ Correct! 1967 Chevrolet Impala — specifically the four-door Sport Sedan, originally chosen by Kripke because its trunk was big enough to hide a body. The production wore through more than two dozen Impalas across the run, since the car gets demolished, dunked, dropped from cliffs, and possessed regularly. Jensen Ackles bought the “hero” Impala used in the final season after the show wrapped in 2020.

✗ Wrong Chevy. The answer is the 1967 Impala, four-door Sport Sedan. The Camaro is too sporty — Kripke specifically wanted a body-in-the-trunk family sedan. The Chevelle SS is a muscle car, and the Bel Air is closer to ’50s-cool than ’60s-menace. The Impala is “Baby” — chosen because, in Kripke’s words, “it could fit four people and a body in the trunk.”

04

The Winchester brothers grew up on the road after their mother Mary was murdered — pinned to the ceiling and burned alive by the yellow-eyed demon Azazel — in Sam’s nursery on November 2, 1983. The family lived in a Midwestern college town the show returns to repeatedly across the run (most notably in “Home,” S1E9). Name the city.




✓ Correct! Lawrence, Kansas. Kripke chose the town in part because of its Wizard of Oz adjacency and the “Bleeding Kansas” historical resonance — Lawrence was sacked in 1856 during the pre-Civil-War conflict over slavery, an act of evil literally seared into the local geography. Mary Winchester’s nursery fire on November 2, 1983 is the show’s foundational trauma; the date and the ceiling-fire image recur all the way to the finale.

✗ Wrong Midwestern town. The answer is Lawrence, Kansas. Sioux Falls, SD is Bobby Singer’s hometown and salvage yard. Pontiac, IL is where Dean digs himself out of his own grave at the start of Season 4. Lebanon, KS is where the Men of Letters Bunker is hidden — you may want to remember that one. Lawrence is the home of the fire — and the show’s foundational trauma.

05

In the Season 4 premiere “Lazarus Rising,” the show pivoted from monster-of-the-week into Heaven-and-Hell mythology by introducing an angel of the Lord — wearing a beige trenchcoat over the body of a Pontiac, Illinois religious tax accountant named Jimmy Novak — who pulls Dean out of Hell and becomes the brothers’ near-permanent third. Played by Misha Collins, name the angel.




✓ Correct! Castiel — named for Cassiel, the Jewish-mystical angel of solitude and tears. Misha Collins was originally signed for a six-episode arc; Castiel ended up in 145 episodes across twelve seasons, including the controversial Season 15 “Despair” love-confession episode. The trenchcoat (a Burberry knock-off) became so iconic that fans send Collins replicas at conventions, and his on-screen vessel Jimmy Novak became its own minor character.

✗ Wrong angel. The answer is Castiel. Gabriel turns up later as the Trickster (Richard Speight Jr.). Uriel is Cas’s Season 4 angel partner, who gets killed off as a Lucifer sympathiser. Balthazar (Sebastian Roché) is Cas’s snarky friend introduced in Season 6. Castiel is the trenchcoat-wearing tax-accountant-vessel angel who pulls Dean out of Hell — and the show’s third lead from Season 4 onward.

06

Supernatural famously opted not to use a proper title-card theme — instead, every season finale opens with a “The Road So Far” recap montage scored to the same 1976 prog-rock track by an American band who, in a happy coincidence, share their name with the brothers’ home state. Name the song.




✓ Correct! “Carry On Wayward Son” by Kansas, off 1976’s Leftoverture. Eric Kripke chose it for the Season 1 finale and made it a tradition every finale thereafter. Kansas frontman Steve Walsh said in interviews that Supernatural’s use revived the song so completely it now makes more annual royalties from streaming than the band did from its 1976 release. The song also closes out the series finale “Carry On” (2020).

✗ Wrong classic-rock cue. The answer is “Carry On Wayward Son” by Kansas. Renegade, More Than a Feeling and Don’t Fear the Reaper are all Supernatural-vibe tracks from the same era and several appear in episodes — but the season-finale ritual is reserved for Kansas’s track. Wayward, Kansas, brothers… Kripke layered every available pun into the show’s signature musical cue.

07

The brothers’ surrogate father — a gruff, trucker-hat-wearing, Sioux Falls salvage-yard owner whose phone line is in every fake FBI agent’s wallet, who calls the boys “idjits,” and who takes a shotgun to a Leviathan in the Season 7 episode that finally kills him — is played by an actor who in HBO’s Deadwood played Whitney Ellsworth, the kindly miner who marries Alma Garret. Name the character.




✓ Correct! Bobby Singer, played by Jim Beaver. Eric Kripke literally named the character after his Supernatural co-executive-producer Robert Singer — in part as a gag, in part as a dare to write a self-aware character around the joke. Bobby dies at the end of Season 7’s “Death’s Door” (E10) but returns repeatedly in flashback, alternate universes, and in the show’s last few seasons as a parallel-Earth Bobby. Beaver’s Deadwood role is Ellsworth, who marries Alma and is shot dead by Hearst’s men.

✗ Wrong hunter. The answer is Bobby Singer. Rufus Turner (Steven Williams) is Bobby’s old-friend rival hunter. Garth Fitzgerald IV (DJ Qualls) is the goofier hunter who later turns out to be a werewolf. Jody Mills (Kim Rhodes) is the Sioux Falls sheriff who becomes a found-family figure. Bobby is the salvage-yard idjit-caller, named for Kripke’s own co-EP Robert Singer.

08

In Season 8 (“As Time Goes By,” E12), the brothers discover their grandfather Henry Winchester was part of a secret academic-magic order, and inherit its abandoned base — a 1950s steel-and-concrete bunker hidden under an unassuming Kansas town’s main street that becomes their home for the rest of the series. The town has fewer than 250 people and is geographically near the centre of the contiguous United States. Name it.




✓ Correct! Lebanon, Kansas. Population fluctuates around 218 and a stone marker near town claims it as the geographic centre of the contiguous 48 states — perfect for an organisation hiding from the supernatural. The Men of Letters Bunker becomes the closest thing to a home base the brothers have ever had: kitchen, library, dungeon, garage. The real Lebanon’s Main Street has become a Supernatural pilgrimage site since the show ended in 2020.

✗ Wrong Kansas town. The answer is Lebanon — population 218, near the geographic centre of the contiguous US, perfect for a hidden order’s bunker. Topeka is the state capital. Wichita is the largest city. Manhattan is home to Kansas State University. Lebanon, with its tiny Main Street and middle-of-nowhere geography, is where the Men of Letters Bunker hides — and where the brothers finally have a home.

The Hunt · Family Verdict
Your Winchester Standing

🚗

/ 8

Top hunter — or red-shirt vessel?

Supernatural #10 from Dynamite will be available to read on August 26, 2026!



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