What is the plot?

A murder occurs deep in the Amazon forest, and the immediate aftermath pushes Luna and Inês into motion as they set out to find Eric, who has been missing since the events that ended season 1.

The episode then follows Luna and Inês as they move through the forest and along the waterways, driven by Luna's urgent need to reconnect with her father and by Inês's determination to locate him before the supernatural forces around them can reach him first.

Their search leads them toward the hidden world of the entities, where the consequences of the Dry Body conflict and Eric's altered condition continue to shape every decision the characters make.

Matinta Perê appears and offers her services, presenting herself as someone who can help them with what is happening, while Luna and Inês must decide whether to trust her guidance in their search for Eric.

Eric and Luna are eventually brought back into each other's orbit, and the reunion is not simple or reassuring because Eric immediately senses that Inês knows more than she is saying.

As they sit together, Eric's attention shifts to the tension in the group, because Inês's guarded behavior signals that she is withholding important information about what has happened to him and what lies ahead.

The episode establishes that the search for Eric is not just a rescue mission but a move deeper into the conflict between the human world and the mythological one, with the murder in the forest serving as the trigger that pulls Luna and Inês further into danger.

What is the ending?

Eric's ending is tragic and sacrificial: he loses control after taking powers from other entities, reaches Luna in Marangatu, and then chooses to enter the sacred waters so he can give those powers back and stop himself from becoming a danger to everyone.

Luna's ending is that she is brought to Marangatu with the guardian entity tied to her destiny, and she is forced to watch her father walk away from her into the water after Jaciara tells her to let him pass.

Inês's ending is that she dies after sacrificing herself to slow Eric down, and her death is treated as the cost of buying Luna enough time to complete what she must do.

Debora's ending is that she is confronted with the truth about her past: she learns she was stolen as a child and manipulated into cruelty, and she realizes the desire for gold was not the full truth of her life.

Short, simple narrative:

Eric finally reaches Luna, but he is no longer safe to be around. Inês dies trying to stop him, and Eric chooses to give up his stolen powers in the sacred waters of Marangatu, leaving Luna behind as the destiny tied to her life is fulfilled.

Expanded scene-by-scene ending narrative:

Eric comes to Luna after a long, violent pursuit, and by this point he has become increasingly unstable because of the powers he has taken from others. He is no longer simply searching for his daughter; he is overwhelmed by rage and by the force of the entities inside him.

As the final stretch closes in, Inês intervenes to hold Eric back. She uses what she can to slow him down and buy time for Luna, but Eric is too far gone in his delirium. In that struggle, Eric kills Inês, and the moment lands on him as a devastating mistake rather than a victory. He is shaken by what he has done, and he understands that his own corruption has now cost the life of the person who was protecting Luna.

After that, Eric continues toward Luna and reaches her in Marangatu. Luna is there with the guardian entity connected to her fate, and Jaciara tells her to let Eric pass. Eric then makes his final decision: he enters the sacred waters and begins moving away from Luna instead of toward her. In that act, he returns the powers he had taken from the other entities and gives up the force that had turned him into a threat.

Luna is left standing at the water's edge, watching her father disappear into the ritual space that ends his active role in the conflict. The ending frames her as the one whose destiny remains, while Eric's path ends in sacrifice.

Debora's ending runs alongside this resolution in a different way. The truth about her life is revealed to her: she was taken as a child and shaped by lies, and the gold obsession that defined her was not the whole story of who she was. The ending makes her confrontation with the past a separate kind of resolution, one based on memory and origin rather than violence.

If you want, I can also give you the ending in a tighter "previously on / final scene / character fates" format.

Is there a post-credit scene?

No. There is no post-credit scene in Invisible City season 2, episode 1, "My Biggest Wish," because the query appears to mix up the show title. The search results for the post-credit scene refer to Invincible, not Invisible City.

If you meant Invincible season 2, episode 1, then yes: the post-credit scene returns to the destroyed machine site, where a badly burned Mauler twin finds Angstrom Levy alive and heavily disfigured, with an enlarged brain and fragmented memories from alternate versions of himself. Levy, furious and convinced Mark is responsible for his suffering, vows revenge and leaves through a portal.

How does Eric return to life in Season 2 episode 1, and what does his revival mean for his role in the story?

In Season 2, Eric is no longer dead when the story resumes; he has returned to life in sacred waters near Belém do Pará, and his new condition pushes him into a search for Luna rather than the old police investigation from Season 1. The revival matters because it shifts him from a human detective into a more mysterious figure tied to the forest and its powers, which is why viewers often ask what exactly changed about him after his sacrifice.

What is Luna’s situation at the start of “My Biggest Wish,” and why is everyone trying to find her?

At the start of the episode, Luna is the central person being searched for, and the season's action is driven by Eric's attempt to find his daughter. The episode synopsis also places Luna and Inês on their own mission to find Eric, which means both sides of the story are separated and actively looking for each other.

Who is Danilo, and what are the workers searching for in the forest?

Danilo is the man leading workers who are searching for gold in the forest in episode 1. Their presence is tied to exploitation of the forest's riches, so questions about Danilo usually focus on his role as the human face of the mining operation and the threat he represents to the setting.

What is the mysterious pool of brown water in the episode, and why does it matter to the characters?

A large pool of murky, brown water appears in the episode and is one of the key visual elements mentioned in the recap. Because the season begins with Eric's return in sacred waters and centers on forest powers, viewers commonly focus on whether this pool is connected to the supernatural side of the story and to the characters' movements in the forest.

How do Eric and Luna’s paths split in Season 2 episode 1, and what does each character want?

Eric's immediate goal is to find Luna, while Luna and Inês are on a mission to find Eric, so the episode is built around a two-way search that keeps the characters moving in different directions. This separation is one of the main character-driven plot questions because it defines the episode's tension and the emotional stakes of the reunion they are both chasing.

Is this family friendly?

No, it is not especially family friendly; the series is described as a crime/fantasy drama and IMDb explicitly notes it is not directed to children or having family appeal.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements for children or sensitive viewers include:

  • Murder in the episode premise, including a death-related investigation in the Amazon forest
  • Violence, which a season 2 review describes as frequent
  • Profanity, also noted as present in season 2
  • Brief nudity and sex, both mentioned in the season 2 review
  • Dark or frightening supernatural content, since the show centers on mythical creatures, an underground realm, and a battle between visible and magical worlds
  • Threatened danger involving a child, since season 2 focuses on protecting Luna and the risk around her

If you want, I can also give a very short "safe for what age?" style recommendation.