Skip to main content

Season 3- Episode 3 | Invincible -

The title teases a classic superhero upgrade, and yes, Mark gets a new suit (the blue-and-black one from the comics). But the episode smartly uses the costume as a metaphor. The new suit isn’t a victory lap; it’s a bandage. Mark thinks changing his look will change how he feels — but Cecil’s cold assessment (“You’re still the same kid who almost died”) cuts to the bone. The costume reveal is deliberately anti-climactic, which is the point.

Here’s a review of Invincible Season 3, Episode 3, “You Want a Real Costume?”

The episode ends on a predictable “someone is spying on Mark” stinger that feels like a leftover from a less interesting show. INVINCIBLE - Season 3- Episode 3

She gets one great scene confronting Mark about his emotional distance, but otherwise, she’s relegated to supportive girlfriend. Given that her own arc (family issues, her powers’ potential) was teased earlier, it’s disappointing to see her sidelined here.

Mark staring at himself in the mirror after putting on the new suit, not with pride, but with exhaustion. The title teases a classic superhero upgrade, and

The episode doesn’t shy away from the aftermath of his near-death at the hands of his father, Nolan (Omni-Man), and the brutal beating he took from Angstrom Levy. Mark is irritable, detached, and clearly traumatized — but he’s repressing it. The quiet scene where he snaps at Eve then immediately apologizes feels painfully real. Steven Yeun delivers his most layered performance yet, balancing Mark’s trademark earnestness with a simmering rage he can’t fully express.

After the emotional gut-punch of the season premiere and the world-building of episode two, episode three slows the pacing down to focus on character work — specifically, Mark Grayson’s fractured psyche. “You Want a Real Costume?” is essentially a Mark-centric therapy session disguised as a superhero drama, and it’s one of the most mature episodes the show has done. Mark thinks changing his look will change how

Mark fights a new teleporting villain named Multi-Paul (a distant relative of Dupli-Kate). The fight choreography is solid, and Multi-Paul’s power set is creatively used, but he’s clearly a distraction from the real conflict. The episode might have worked better without any physical antagonist, letting Mark’s internal battle be the only threat.