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What is the plot?
Governor Ahn begins the finale by attacking Eun-woo directly, wrapping his hands around her neck and trying to choke her to death. She struggles helplessly as he tightens his grip, and the situation turns even worse when he gets up with a rock in hand, ready to smash her. At that exact moment, the badly injured Gwang-il rushes in to stop him, forcing Ahn to break off his attack and turn on him instead. Ahn stabs Gwang-il again, then flees, leaving the physician collapsing in pain on the ground.
After the attack, the scene shifts to Gyesoo, where Gwang-il is taken for healing, but he refuses to wake up. Poong prepares to leave for the capital and tells Gye to stay with Eun-woo, who has still not recovered from what happened. The household is left in a tense, exhausted state, with Eun-woo physically weak and Poong already carrying the burden of the next battle before him.
At court, Gwang-il appears on his knees before the King, and the King angrily berates the Royal Clinic for falsely accusing Poong. Gwang-il then reveals Ahn's plan and admits that Ahn murdered Mak-jin. He also recalls Ahn telling them to act as if they knew nothing, and he confesses that he was involved as well. The King responds with sweeping punishment: Ahn is sentenced to be beheaded, Gwang-il is to be exiled, everyone in the Royal Clinic will be replaced, and Poong will become the new Head Royal Physician.
Back in Gyesoo, Eun-woo reaches the end of her strength while Poong and Gye are with her. As Poong holds her, she tells them she hopes they will remember her whenever they see a snowflake, and she asks that they not hold a memorial for her but instead celebrate her death ceremony with a cheerful banquet and music. While she is still in Poong's arms, the two men realize she has died.
After her death, Poong goes to an inn and sits across from a mysterious man who orders the same drink as he does. They stare at each other in shock, and the man insults Poong by calling him a physician who looks like a pimp. He then introduces himself as Baek Gwang-hyun.
The story then moves to Gyesoo again, where Poong is shown setting everything up and sees Eun-woo early in the morning. He reaches to check her pulse because she looks tired, but she refuses. At that moment, a patient appears, and Gyesoo immediately prepares to treat him.
What is the ending?
In the ending, Poong reaches Eun-woo just as Governor Ahn is trying to kill her, and after a frantic struggle Poong saves her. Gwang-il is wounded while trying to stop Ahn, Ahn is arrested and sentenced to death, and Poong is named the new Head Royal Physician. Eun-woo survives, and the story closes with the people around Gyesoo carrying on into a calmer future.
Poong, the Joseon Psychiatrist 2, episode 10 ends in a tense rescue and then moves into the aftermath, where each main character's fate is settled.
The final crisis begins with Governor Ahn pressing his hands around Eun-woo's throat until she is nearly unconscious. Poong arrives in time and shoves Ahn away before Eun-woo can be killed. Eun-woo is left barely breathing on the ground, and Poong immediately tries to treat her with acupuncture, but his hands shake as he faces the fear of losing her. He pauses in desperation, then forces himself to continue and takes up the needle again.
Ahn does not stay down for long. He rises with a rock in his hand and prepares to attack again, but Gwang-il appears, already injured, and throws himself into the struggle to stop him. Ahn stabs Gwang-il once more and escapes, leaving Gwang-il on the ground in pain. Despite the injury, Gwang-il has made his choice in that moment: he has intervened to protect the others rather than stand aside.
The story then shifts into the exposure of the conspiracy. Poong recalls Ahn's earlier words about pretending not to know anything, and he decides not to stay silent about his own involvement anymore. He tells the truth, and the consequences are immediate and public. The King announces that Ahn will be beheaded, Gwang-il will be exiled, the Royal Clinic will be replaced, and Poong will become the new Head Royal Physician.
Eun-woo survives the attack and later gives the exam she had been expected to take. That part of the ending confirms that she remains active and present in the story rather than fading into the background after the rescue. Poong's position also changes completely: he is no longer only a healer trying to recover from trauma, but the physician chosen to lead the royal clinic.
The final emotional movement centers on Granny Guk-hyang. That night, she gives everyone gifts, and Gye looks at her with sadness. She tells Poong and Eun-woo that they did the right thing by saving each other. Then she hugs Poong, closes her eyes, and says she hopes they will remember her whenever they see a snowflake. She asks them not to hold a memorial for her, but instead to have a banquet with cheerful music on the day of her death. Soon after, Poong and Gye realize she has died.
The ending then moves forward to a quieter scene at Gyesoo. Poong is putting everything in place there when he sees Eun-woo early in the morning. He tries to check her pulse because she looks tired, but she refuses. The others overhear and laugh, suspecting that Eun-woo may be pregnant, and she asks for a tonic, which strongly suggests that possibility. The episode closes with a patient arriving and everyone at Gyesoo getting ready to treat him, showing that their work continues.
Is there a post-credit scene?
There is no evidence in the available episode listings or recap material that Poong, the Joseon Psychiatrist Season 2, Episode 10 includes a post-credit scene.
The episode is described as the series finale, and the available recap focuses on the main ending events: Governor Ahn's attack, Gwang-il being wounded while trying to stop him, and the aftermath of the confrontation. None of the sources mention any extra scene after the credits.
If you want, I can also summarize the episode's ending beat by beat.
How does Governor Ahn threaten Eun-woo in episode 10, and who confronts him?
In the finale, Governor Ahn physically attacks Eun-woo by trying to choke her to death, creating the episode's most immediate life-or-death crisis. The scene centers on her struggle against him and the danger that forces Poong and Gye to intervene as they realize what is happening.
What happens to Eun-woo in the episode 10 finale scene, and how do Poong and Gye react?
Eun-woo dies after the confrontation, and the moment is framed through her own wish that people remember her whenever they see a snowflake. Poong and Gye only understand she has passed away after she hugs Poong, closes her eyes, and the scene resolves into the painful realization of her death.
Who is the mysterious man Poong meets at the inn, and what is unusual about him?
Poong meets a mysterious man at an inn who orders the same drink and shocks Poong by sharing his attention when a villager suddenly faints. The man's behavior is unusual because he attempts acupuncture but his hands shake badly, and he then reveals himself as Baek Gwang-hyun.
Why does Baek Gwang-hyun say he wants to quit medicine, and what does Poong say to him?
Baek Gwang-hyun says he is going to quit and become a lawyer, framing his departure as a rejection of medicine. Poong responds by insulting his trustworthiness as a potential lawyer, then offers to cure his hand when Gwang-hyun refuses, and tells him to find his clinic if he ever changes his mind.
Why do the staff at Gyesoo suspect Eun-woo is pregnant in episode 10?
At Gyesoo, Poong tries to check Eun-woo's pulse because she looks tired, but she refuses, which makes the others start teasingly speculating that she may be pregnant. Her request for a tonic indirectly confirms their suspicion, and the moment is followed by a new patient arriving for treatment.
Is this family friendly?
Poong, the Joseon Psychiatrist, Season 2, Episode 10 is not really family-friendly for young children; Apple TV rates it TV-14, which suggests material that may be unsuitable for viewers under 14. It is more suitable for teens and adults than for sensitive children.
Potentially upsetting or objectionable aspects to watch for include:
- Emotional trauma and distress: the episode description explicitly mentions Poong overcoming his trauma, so the episode likely includes serious psychological or emotional material.
- Romantic tension: the episode centers partly on a love relationship, which may include emotionally intense scenes rather than light family content.
- Medical/perhaps intense healing scenes: the series is about a doctor treating patients, so viewers may encounter acupuncture or illness-related content that could be upsetting to sensitive viewers.
- Generally serious tone: the show is framed as a growth story about a doctor treating "heartsick patients," which points to emotionally heavy themes rather than pure comfort viewing.
If you want, I can also give you a very short "safe for kids / not safe for kids" verdict in one line.