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If you'd like to dive deeper into this episode, I can help you with: of the 1970s flashbacks.

for J or Pope during this specific arc.

The episode's title, " Know Thy Enemy ," acts as a double-edged sword. While the Codys are usually looking for external threats—the police, rival gangs, or former associates—this chapter forces them to look inward. Smurf’s secret battle with cancer is no longer just a personal burden; it becomes a structural flaw in their criminal enterprise. J (Finn Cole) continues his cold, calculated ascent, proving that he has learned Smurf’s lessons almost too well. His maneuvers in this episode highlight a central theme of the series: that the only way to survive a predatory family is to become the ultimate predator yourself.

While Smurf and J play their high-stakes game of chess, the middle brothers—Pope, Craig, and Deran—grapple with their own identities. In this episode, the cracks in their cohesion are palpable. Craig and Deran, often the more "human" elements of the family, struggle with the logistical and emotional fallout of a heist gone wrong and a mother gone distant. Pope, the family’s Enforcer and most damaged soul, remains the wild card, his loyalty to Smurf warring with his budding awareness of her betrayals.

"Know Thy Enemy" is a masterclass in building tension through character study rather than just action. It marks the moment the Codys realize that their greatest enemy isn't the law or a rival crew—it’s the inevitable passage of time and the rot at the heart of their own home. As Smurf prepares for an end she cannot control, the episode leaves the audience with a chilling question: when the crown finally falls, who will be left standing to claim the ruins?