The season culminates in a desperate mission to the Permian period to stop a temporal catastrophe. Cutter confronts Helen in the harsh, desolate world of the past, realizing she is no longer the woman he loved.
When a Gorgonopsid —a Permian predator that predates the dinosaurs—tears through the Forest of Dean, the government can no longer look away. Cutter is joined by his loyal friend , the brilliant but socially awkward Connor Temple , and zookeeper Abby Maitland . Under the watchful, cynical eye of government official James Lester , they form a makeshift line of defense.
Cutter stands in a world that looks the same, but is fundamentally broken. The Anomalies aren't just doorways for monsters; they are erasers of human history.
The emotional core of the story is Cutter’s obsession. He discovers that Helen didn’t die—she escaped into the past. As the season progresses, Helen emerges as a "ghost" appearing across different eras. She has seen the beginning and the end of the world, and it has stripped her of her humanity.
When Cutter returns to the present, he expects victory. Instead, he finds the ultimate cost of meddling with time. A tiny change in the past has rippled forward: , the government liaison he had begun to love, no longer exists. No one remembers her name, her face, or her life.
The season culminates in a desperate mission to the Permian period to stop a temporal catastrophe. Cutter confronts Helen in the harsh, desolate world of the past, realizing she is no longer the woman he loved.
When a Gorgonopsid —a Permian predator that predates the dinosaurs—tears through the Forest of Dean, the government can no longer look away. Cutter is joined by his loyal friend , the brilliant but socially awkward Connor Temple , and zookeeper Abby Maitland . Under the watchful, cynical eye of government official James Lester , they form a makeshift line of defense.
Cutter stands in a world that looks the same, but is fundamentally broken. The Anomalies aren't just doorways for monsters; they are erasers of human history.
The emotional core of the story is Cutter’s obsession. He discovers that Helen didn’t die—she escaped into the past. As the season progresses, Helen emerges as a "ghost" appearing across different eras. She has seen the beginning and the end of the world, and it has stripped her of her humanity.
When Cutter returns to the present, he expects victory. Instead, he finds the ultimate cost of meddling with time. A tiny change in the past has rippled forward: , the government liaison he had begun to love, no longer exists. No one remembers her name, her face, or her life.