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The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon | La Justicia Fronteriza Recap & Review | Limbo Preview

  • Writer: Michael Spillan
    Michael Spillan
  • Sep 29
  • 2 min read

Episode four of The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon Season 3 is a powerhouse hour of tension, chaos, and emotional fallout. After a few quieter, character-driven episodes, this one explodes into one of the most action-packed installments the franchise has seen in years. The episode pivots on hard choices, loyalty, and the growing shadow of a terrifying new enemy — the Primivitos.

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At the start, Roberto’s torn loyalties finally come to a head. Once ready to leave with Daryl and Carol, he pulls back, revealing that his motivation was never about freedom or safety — it was Justina. Without her, he’s no longer interested in leaving. His emotional confusion grounds the episode’s opening moments, a calm before the storm that reminds us how fragile human motives have become in this world.

While Daryl and the group continue work on repairing the boat, the relative peace of Solaz shatters when the Primivitos launch a brutal attack on both the work site and the village. The sequence that follows is massive — flames, chaos, and sheer desperation. It’s the kind of all-out battle that rivals the best of The Walking Dead’s war arcs. The villagers, outmatched and outnumbered, fight tooth and nail to protect their home as Carol and Daryl scramble to organize some form of defense.

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It’s gritty, messy, and unflinchingly violent — a reminder that even in a series three seasons deep, the creative team still knows how to deliver heart-pounding, cinematic destruction.


When the smoke clears, the damage is catastrophic. Dozens dead, homes burning, and a shaken Roberto furious that no one — not even Daryl — was there to protect them. In a moment of defiance and grief, he steals a Primivito vehicle and flees into the night, his face a mix of heartbreak and vengeance. It’s a decision that will no doubt shape the remainder of the season.

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Later, Daryl and Carol interrogate a captured Primivito soldier, and the revelation is chilling: the Primivitos’ goal isn’t conquest — it’s annihilation. They want to burn down every trace of the old world and any new civilization daring to rebuild. It’s a mission of pure destruction, setting them up as one of the most dangerous human threats since the Saviors.


With Solaz in ruins and Roberto missing, Daryl and Carol prepare to track him down before the Primivitos do. The episode ends on a quiet but heavy note — Daryl staring at the smoking wreckage, promising to “finish this.” Episode five is now positioned to be part rescue mission, part reckoning, as the group ventures into hostile territory and confronts the full force of the Primivito agenda.

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Final Thoughts:

Episode four doesn’t just up the action — it reignites The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’s emotional core. Between Roberto’s conflicted choices, Carol’s growing doubts, and Daryl’s unbreakable resolve, the series is setting up a volatile and gripping back half of the season. The fire has started — now the question is who’ll be left standing when it burns out.

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