Spy x Family Season 3 Episode 2 delivers one of the series’ most emotionally diverse episodes yet, blending absurd comedy with heart-wrenching tragedy. Titled “Avoid Getting Tonitrus Bolts / [REDACTED]’s Memories,” this episode begins with a hilarious school escapade but ends with a devastating look into Loid’s past, revealing how the boy once known as “Loid Forger” became the master spy Twilight.
The episode opens at Eden Academy, where peace and discipline are suddenly shattered by the return of Mistress Schlag, one of the school’s most terrifying disciplinary council members.

With a glare that could freeze time and a hand faster than a ninja’s, Schlag doles out Tonitrus Bolts, the school’s punishment marks, with reckless abandon. Her presence instantly creates panic among students, and the once-calm campus becomes a battlefield of trembling children desperate not to fall short of her impossible standards.
Unlike Henry Henderson, whose strictness hides a heart full of pride and compassion for his students, Schlag’s cold, mechanical approach exposes a disturbing side of Eden’s elite culture.
Spy x Family Season 3 Episode 2 sharply contrasts these two figures, showing that authority without empathy becomes cruelty. Schlag’s idea of “elegance” feels more like tyranny, and naturally, Anya Forger becomes one of her victims.
Anya’s chaos meets her bad luck in Spy x Family Season 3 Episode 2

Anya’s attempt to save Damian Desmond, who forgets his handkerchief, turns into an adorable act of chaos. In classic Anya fashion, her telepathic powers allow her to overhear Damian’s panic, prompting her to rush to his rescue.
What he perceives as a sweet gesture of friendship (or love) is, in reality, Anya’s desperate move to preserve “world peace” and keep Operation Strix on track. Of course, Anya’s luck runs out, and she earns another Tonitrus Bolt, ironically, this time for helping rather than fighting Damian.
The symmetry between her first and second bolts, both involving the same boy, feels poetic and hilarious. Fans were quick to point out online that every one of Anya’s punishments somehow brings her closer to Damian, making her academic disasters weirdly romantic.
A sharp turn into Loid’s memories

Then, the tone changes, abruptly, devastatingly, and beautifully. The comedic tension of the first half gives way to a somber second story: Loid’s childhood memories. What begins as a simple fainting spell from stress becomes a haunting flashback to his early life during wartime.
In the episode, we see a young Loid, innocent and full of dreams, living in a small town where he idolizes soldiers and longs to be one. His father, however, disapproves, striking him for glorifying war and trying to instill the importance of peace.
But tragedy soon arrives. Loid’s guilt over lying to his father, pretending to buy a reference book instead of playing with friends, saves his life. When bombs fell on his hometown, everyone he ever knew, from his friends to the shopkeeper, all wiped out in an instant.
This is where his life changed, as he was now just the boy who once dreamed of being a soldier is left alone among ruins, his innocence shattered forever. The contrast between Anya’s cartoonish misadventures and Loid’s traumatic past is staggering yet intentional.
It’s as if the show reminds us that even the lighthearted comedy of the Forger family is built upon scars, personal, emotional, and historical. In conclusion, Spy x Family Season 3 Episode 2 is a masterclass in tonal balance. The episode leaves viewers with a powerful truth: behind every act of love or laughter in Spy x Family lies the memory of loss and the determination never to repeat it.