HE WAS SUPPOSED TO BE THE CHOSEN ONE, BUT KANN HAD OTHER PLANS! šŸ”ØšŸ’€

Mortal Kombat 2 just hit theaters and the “main character energy” has officially left the building in the most gruesome way possible. We all saw the hate Cole Young got in 2021, but did anyone actually expect the sequel to go this far?

There’s a reason he’s missing from the trailers, and it’s not because he’s a secret weapon. The “Deadpool” arena just claimed its most controversial victim yet, and the sound of that hammer strike is going to haunt your dreams. Is he truly gone, or is this just the beginning of a darker transformation?

See the frame-by-frame breakdown of the most brutal fatality in MK movie history! šŸ‘‡šŸ”„

In the world of Mortal Kombat, death is a revolving door, but for Cole Young, the door may have just been smashed off its hinges with a spiked war hammer.

The 2021 reboot of the legendary fighting franchise introduced Cole Young (Lewis Tan) as a brand-new “chosen one,” a descendant of Scorpion designed to be the audience’s entry point into the lore. However, the reception was far from legendary. Fans on Reddit and X (formerly Twitter) spent years voicing their rejection of the non-canon protagonist. Now, with the release of Mortal Kombat 2 in 2026, it appears the filmmakers didn’t just hear the criticism—they answered it with a blood-soaked exclamation point.

The Rise and Rapid Fall of Cole Young

When the first movie debuted, the backlash was immediate. “Cole Young was the generic hero nobody asked for in a universe full of icons,” wrote one prominent user on the r/MortalKombat subreddit. Critics pointed to his “plot armor” and the controversial decision to have him defeat Goro—the Shokan Prince—as the moment the character lost the core audience.

In the 2026 sequel, the shift in direction is palpable from the opening frames. Gone is the heavy focus on Cole’s family life. Instead, the spotlight has been aggressively pivoted toward fan favorites like Johnny Cage (Karl Urban), Kitana (Adeline Rudolph), and the terrifying Shao Kahn (Martyn Ford).

The Deadpool Massacre: A Play-by-Play

The climax of Cole Young’s arc occurs roughly 50 minutes into the film, during a sequence that community insiders are already calling the “Deadpool Massacre.” In a departure from the “intro-death” rumors that circulated during production, the movie gives Cole one final, surprisingly competent stand.

Fighting in the iconic Deadpool arena—a grime-streaked, acid-filled industrial nightmare that looks pulled straight from the 1993 game—Cole faces off against Shao Kahn. For a few brief minutes, Cole’s “Arcana” armor holds its own, absorbing the Emperor’s blows and converting them into explosive counterattacks. For a moment, the theater audience is led to believe the “chosen one” might actually pull off another miracle.

That hope is extinguished when the film reveals Shao Kahn’s secret weapon: Shinnok’s Amulet. Using the artifact’s regenerative powers, the Emperor shrugs off what should have been a fatal neck wound delivered by Cole.

What follows is a sequence of pure, unadulterated Mortal Kombat brutality. Kahn shatters Cole’s armor with a series of devastating hammer strikes, leaving the protagonist broken on the floor. In a split second of gore-heavy realism, Kahn swings his hammer with full force, literally exploding Cole’s head on screen.

“Course Correcting” with Extreme Violence

The reaction from the community has been a mix of shock and morbid satisfaction. On Discord servers dedicated to the franchise, fans are praising the move as a “bold course correction.”

“They didn’t just sideline him; they fed him to the fans,” one viewer noted. The cruelty didn’t stop at the hammer strike. To ensure there was no ambiguity, the film shows Shao Kahn shoving the remains of Cole’s body into the Deadpool acid, where his corpse begins to dissolve before the camera cuts away.

This level of violence marks a significant tone shift for the sequel. While the 2021 film was criticized for its “sanitized” feel in certain fight scenes, Mortal Kombat 2 fully embraces the “M-Rated” roots of the source material.

Life After Death? The Fan Theories Begin

Because this is Mortal Kombat, the conversation has already shifted to how Cole Young might return. The film’s ending hints at a mission to reclaim lost souls, leading to several high-traffic theories on social media:

The Ermac Connection: Many believe Cole’s soul will become a prominent part of the soul-construct ninja, Ermac.

Noob Saibot’s Successor: While Bi-Han is the traditional Noob Saibot, some speculate a corrupted Cole could take on a wraith-like mantle.

The Kenshi Re-imagining: Some fans are theorizing that a “resurrected” Cole might return stripped of his previous powers, eventually becoming a version of the blind swordsman, Kenshi.

Final Verdict: A Bold Move for the Franchise

By killing off their original protagonist, the creators of Mortal Kombat 2 have performed a “Fatality” on the very concept of the 2021 reboot. It is a rare instance of a studio acknowledging a misstep and resolving it through narrative violence rather than a quiet retcon.

Whether Cole Young stays dead in the acid or returns in a new, darker form, one thing is certain: Mortal Kombat 2 has reclaimed the “shock factor” that made the games a cultural phenomenon in the first place. The “Ton” of Outworld is much more dangerous now, and no one—not even the protagonist—is safe.