User blog comment:Gogogadget831/Every Episode of Total Drama Reviewed: Episode 106 - The Final Wreck-ening/@comment-25297892-20150818170223

To me this episode isn't that bad you depicted, and certainly, infamous reset button apart, doesn't have the same unforgivable flaws of other previous episodes. The way it was rushed and poor really disappointed me, and I expected a more climactic end for Mal, but as I said many times, the low PGN rate was the curse of this character, on which the Writers couldn't build up a serious characterization and plot in order to not scare the younger viewers of the show. So, which was the less serious (and problematic) way to handle the Whole MPD problem and solve it in front of a Young audience? The button. We can blame Writers as much as you want for this, we can keep call Mike offensive, but there should be the courage to say that in their place, you would have not known how to orchestrate this matter KNOWING THAT THE AUDIENCE YOU TARGET IS VERY YOUNG. All the backlash that followed was quite of blind hate that left no space for compromises, and none realized that they were arrived at a cùl de sac with Mal.

Aside from the reset button scene, and the generally rushed plot, I enjoyed the episode more than the majority of the other episodes of TDAS, good interactions between Al, Heather, Cam and Gwen, and as much it lasted, the conflict Zoey-Mal offered some entertainment, and the final kiss between Mike and Zoey was Amazing to see, more for a movie than for a "reality" show, but Amazing. I was glad to see them as finalists. *Get shot*

Definitely TDAS disappointed the expectations, even if I wasn't that hype before the premiere and honestly cared only about the only characters I liked (Lindsay, Jo and Mike), I already knew this season would have sucked cause of the TDI cast composed by all screenhoggers and, after Suckers Punched, I had the confirm that '''THE WRITERS HAD LITERALLY NO SOLID IDEAS TO CONTINUE WITH THIS CAST AND HAD NO IDEA HOW TO KEEP IN THE GAME DUNCAN & COMPANY AND, MOST OF ALL, HOW TO TREAT A POTENTIAL ARCH-VILLAIN LIKE MAL, IN A SERIOUS WAY BUT NOT OFFENDING THE SENSIBILITY OF THE YOUNGER AUDIENCE. CONTINUITY WAS INEXISTENT, INTERACTIONS WERE ALL FORGETTABLE, AND MISSING OWEN, IZZY, HAROLD AND DAWN WAS A COMPLETE CONDAMN.'''