Now, here's where things get a little confusing. And it is then that Bigby realizes the person he thought was Nerissa isn't Nerissa at all. As Nerissa is heading off, likely to start a new life somewhere else, she turns to Bigby and says, "You're not as bad as everyone says you are." This instantly triggers Bigby's, and by extension the player's, memory to a similar exchange between Faith in Episode 1. Before she showed up, most of what Bigby had to say about The Crooked Man being involved was little more than hearsay. Sure, The Crooked Man was likely responsible for plenty of wrongdoing in Fabletown, but it was only with Nerissa's evidence that Bigby was able to justify any punishment. That in of itself is a big revelation because it paints a new light over the player's ultimate decision. Nerissa put Faith's head on Bigby's apartment building stoop hoping that he would jump on the case. Although she had listened in on some of The Crooked Man's underhanded dealings. Nerissa lied about having heard The Crooked Man discussing killing Faith or Lily. So, what exactly happened? Well, in a final conversation with Nerissa ( Fables version of The Little Mermaid) Bigby Wolf learns two things: How players responded to it, however, was not. Ultimately, though, there were countless different ways the finale to The Wolf Among Us Season 1 could have played out, but the final scene - the big twist, if you will - was universal. For example, choosing to kill The Crooked Man by ripping his head off renders a "The people of Fabletown are afraid of Bigby" message, while bringing The Crooked Man to justice by more honorable means delivers a more ambiguous "The people of Fabletown will remember that." Specifically, how players, as Bigby Wolf, choose to deal with The Crooked Man should inform how the people of Fabletown will react to Bigby and the government moving forward. All the choices players have made up until that point coalesce into a few morally grey decisions that (presumably) will shape the future of the series. Much like with The Walking Dead, Telltale Games' The Wolf Among Us doesn't fully come together until the final moments. In other words, if you haven't finished The Wolf Among Us turn back now. And now that the title's first season has come to a close it's time to look at The Wolf Among Us as a cohesive whole, but more importantly we want to talk about that ending. Those who have been keeping up with our The Wolf Among Us reviews know that we are pretty big fans of the episodic game.