![[S3E5] The Perfect Game](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/5b99b2_c6ee2d1f0d2945b1842a3355ce3934f1~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_288,h_192,al_c,q_80,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,blur_2,enc_avif,quality_auto/5b99b2_c6ee2d1f0d2945b1842a3355ce3934f1~mv2.jpg)
[s3e5] The Perfect Game Apr 2026
: The episode title refers to a childhood baseball game where young Dex, an orphan with unerring aim, was pulled from the mound by his coach to give another child a turn. In a cold display of calculation, Dex killed the coach with a ricocheted baseball, later admitting to his therapist that it was intentional.
In the third season of Daredevil , episode five—titled ""—functions as a pivotal character study that shifts the focus from the titular hero to the psychological disintegration of his antagonist. This episode is widely regarded for its stylized direction and its role in grounding the origin of Benjamin "Dex" Poindexter (the future Bullseye) within a "memory palace" constructed by Wilson Fisk. The Anatomy of a Psychopath [S3E5] The Perfect Game
: Under the pressure of the FBI's investigation and threats from Fisk’s fixer, Felix Manning, Karen finally reveals a long-held secret: she was the one who killed Fisk’s right-hand man, James Wesley. She confesses this to Foggy under the protection of attorney-client privilege. : The episode title refers to a childhood
While Dex is the episode's focus, remains its mastermind. After discovering that Matt Murdock survived being thrown into the river, Fisk executes a "Xanatos Speed Chess" move to frame Matt. This episode is widely regarded for its stylized
: Fisk identifies Dex as the city's "new villain," realizing that by removing Dex's anchors (like Julie), he can slide into the role of Dex's new "rock-solid mentor". Interpersonal Collapse





