Jax (Michael Kovach) in ‘The Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act’
Glitch
Who is Jax, really?
Viral YouTube sensation, The Amazing Digital Circus, created by Gooseworx and released by Glitch, is officially over, and the Jax question has been answered.
The Last Act delves deep into Jax (Michael Kovach), revealing that the bunny has been hiding his true self the entire time.
Warning—Spoilers Ahead
What Happens To Jax In ‘The Amazing Digital Circus: The Last Act’?
After Caine’s (Alex Rochon) apparent deletion, the group learns the truth about their life in the Circus—they are brain scans, reconstructed from code, not people wearing headsets (confirming the “SOMA” fan theory).
Many of the characters seem to have already suspected this, but shortly after learning the news, Jax isolates himself and abstracts.
While the other characters lament the loss, Pomni regrets not reaching out when Jax tried to speak to her.
In the penultimate episode, Jax panicked when Kinger discussed the origins of the Circus, shocked to learn that his situation was “real.” It’s unclear what, exactly, Jax thought the Digital Circus was, but learning that his companions are real people (sort of) seemed to disturb him.
We learn what his issue is after Pomni faces an abstracted Jax in a hallway, determined to help him.
Using the skills he taught her to shoot all of the ceiling lightbulbs out, Pomni plunges the monstrous Jax into soothing darkness and hugs him.
For a moment, Jax lets his guard down and Pomni enters his mind, witnessing intense intrusive thoughts and interacting with different manifestations of Jax’s personality.
Viewers delve into Jax’s first-person perspective of his early life at the circus, learning that Jax was best friends with a woman named Ribbit (Skye Redden).
In the flashbacks, Jax is uncharacteristically friendly and joyful, growing close to Ribbit and opening up about his secret.
What Is Jax’s Secret?
Jax describes being emotionally abused by his mother, who would relentlessly criticize him and compare him to his absent father.
When Jax tries to open up to his mother about a secret, she berates, then unexpectedly hugs him, and he pushes his mother away. She falls to the floor and Jax fears that she is badly injured, or even dead.
Jax flees the situation and becomes homeless, eventually making his way to a C&A headset and disappearing into the Circus. He never knew the fate of his mother, and has carried the guilt with him ever since.
Ribbit reassures Jax and places her ribbon on his head, seemingly understanding Jax’s implied struggles with gender identity. It’s unclear what Jax is hiding—he seems to like crossdressing and might even be trans, but his exact feelings and identity are left ambiguous.
After the two are interrupted, Jax regrets opening up about his worst moment to Ribbit, and begins to push away her friendship.
A heartbreaking montage of Jax slowly becoming colder to Ribbit follows, with Jax developing the cynical, protective shell that viewers are familiar with. Tragically, Ribbit’s isolation eventually leads to her abstracting, resulting in Jax convincing himself that nothing in the Circus is real.
For a moment, it seems as though Jax might be returning to his normal form, but Pomni can’t save him and he reverts to full abstraction, sealing his fate.
Jax gives up on himself, right after showing Pomni who he really was.
Jax’s anxiety was hinted at in previous episodes, but the finale fully reveals that Jax’s persona was an act—he turned himself into a literal cartoon to survive in the Circus.
Jax’s Looney Tunes-like mastery of the digital world was a result of him leaning into a larger-than-life persona to hide his true self.
Jax Suffers A Tragic Fate
The finale ends with a bittersweet conclusion, the characters accepting their fate and reuniting with Caine for a more balanced relationship, but for Jax, it’s a tragic ending.
Jax remains abstracted, with the others building him a great, dark tent so that he can enjoy peace. Abstracted characters seem to revert to an animal-like psychology—a simple life snoozing in darkness might be the most serene Jax will ever be.
Jax’s new life is accompanied by Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely,” another hint at Jax’s gender identity, implying that Jax’s discomfort in his skin has finally ceased.
Can Jax’s Abstraction Be Reversed?
Abstraction is irreversible in the Digital Circus, as far as we know, a permanent corruption of mind-scan code.
Kinger (Sean Chiplock) has no ability to fix the abstraction (as he explains, the files are impossibly small and nobody could work out how to use them but Caine).
Caine also seems unable to fix the abstracted, even with his new attitude and knowledge.
That being said, Pomni did seem close to a breakthrough when she hugged Jax—might there be a way for the abstracted to fix themselves?
There could just be a possibility, but the question is left unanswered.
Will There Be A Second Season Of ‘The Amazing Digital Circus’?
Series creator Gooseworx has repeatedly confirmed that there will be no second season of the hit show, meaning Jax’s story has ended.
The finale marks a powerful ending for Jax—just as fans got to know the real person behind the grinning rabbit avatar, he disappeared into the void.
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