Power Book — Ii: Ghost S02e10 Dsrip

The Tariq-Tezada war explodes, and nobody is safe.

Ghost has officially outgrown its “spin-off” label. Episode 10 proves this show is willing to kill its darlings and burn its bridges. Tariq wanted to be a businessman. Instead, he’s started a war. power book ii: ghost s02e10 dsrip

If the first season of Ghost was about Tariq St. Patrick learning to walk in his father’s bloody footsteps, Season 2 has been about him learning to run. And the finale, “Love and War” (DSRIP – Web-DL quality, for those of us watching every frame for clues), doesn’t just cross the finish line—it crashes through it in a hail of gunfire, betrayal, and shocking exits. The Tariq-Tezada war explodes, and nobody is safe

The Tezada Trap Closes All season, the show has been playing a delicate game of chess. Lorenzo Tezada thought he was the king. Monet thought she was the queen. But as we saw in this finale, Tariq is learning that the only way to win in Power universe is to flip the board. Tariq wanted to be a businessman

Lorenzo Tezada, tired of being cuckolded and sidelined, takes matters into his own hands. The kill is swift, brutal, and almost anti-climactic—which is the point. In this world, legends die in back alleys. Mecca’s death isn’t just a shocker; it’s a power shift. Lorenzo now owes Tariq a debt. And in this universe, debts are paid with blood or bodies. If you haven’t watched yet, turn back now.

The showdown at the warehouse. The DSRIP copy really shines here—the shadow work, the grit on the lens, the way the sound mix drops out before the gunfire. It’s cinematic. Mecca’s Endgame (And Sudden End) Let’s talk about Mecca. For weeks, fans theorized he was the true big bad. In Episode 10, we finally get confirmation of his federal informant status. But instead of a long, drawn-out courtroom takedown, Ghost does what it does best: It gets bloody.

The final scene—Tariq staring at his father’s portrait while a voicemail from Tasha plays—is heavy handed, but effective. He isn’t Ghost. He isn’t Tariq. He’s becoming a ghost of his own making. Visually, the DSRIP release handles the finale’s dark, moody cinematography well. The night scenes in Queens don’t get lost in compression, and the audio mix (especially the soundtrack, which features a killer 50 Cent placement) punches hard.