Roman’s scar was a big part of his character in Blindspot Season 2. It came from a violent moment at the orphanage where a boy attacked him and took his coin. That scar wasn’t just physical; it was tied to his bond with his sister, Alice, who gave him a gum wrapper afterward. Throughout Blindspot Season 2, the scar was clearly visible and served as a reminder of Roman’s trauma, his past, and how closely tied he was to Jane.
But when Blindspot Season 3 started, the scar was completely gone. No scene explained it. No one mentioned it. Fans noticed immediately.
Reddit users started comparing screenshots and asking what happened. Some thought it was just a mistake in makeup continuity. Others had deeper theories. One fan pointed out that Roman was pretending to be Tom Jakeman in Blindspot Season 3, and removing the scar could have been part of creating a clean identity.
Luke Mitchell, who played Roman, confirmed on Twitter that the character had plastic surgery. That’s the only official explanation. Whether it was to erase a link to Jane, forget the past, or help sell his new identity, the scar’s removal was intentional, even if the show never spelled it out directly.
Roman’s vanishing scar in Blindspot Season 3 wasn’t an accident, and here’s why it matters

Roman’s scar was never just background detail; it was a marker of who he was and where he came from. In Blindspot Season 2, the scar on the right side of his face was visible in every scene. It came from a childhood fight at the orphanage, when another boy attacked him and took his coin.
That moment became a turning point. Roman froze. His sister Alice stepped in, defended him, and gave him a gum wrapper as a substitute for the stolen coin. The scar became a reminder of his weakness and his sister’s protection.
But in Blindspot Season 3, the scar is gone. No one mentions it. There’s no scene where Roman addresses it or even hints at having work done. Fans quickly spotted the change, especially when comparing close-up shots from both seasons.
The common theory is that the writers wanted to reflect Roman’s shift from Jane’s brother to Thomas Jakeman, the identity he used to infiltrate Crawford’s world. Removing the scar helped sell that cover.
Luke Mitchell, who played Roman, responded to a fan on Twitter, confirming that Roman had plastic surgery. That tweet became the only direct explanation. It lines up with Roman’s behavior. By Blindspot Season 3, he had fully detached from Jane and Sandstorm. He threw away his childhood coin, cut all emotional ties, and embraced a mission that no longer included his sister. Getting rid of the scar fits into that. He didn’t want reminders of who he used to be.

There’s also a deeper angle. Some fans pointed out that in Jane’s hallucinations of Roman in later seasons, the scar is missing. That detail suggests Jane’s memory might be influencing what Remi sees, meaning the show could’ve used the missing scar as a visual clue about memory blending.
Still, the most grounded reason remains the one Mitchell gave. Roman had the scar removed as part of his transformation. It was practical, emotional, and final. The show didn’t spell it out on screen, but the scar’s absence says everything about the distance Roman was putting between his past and who he chose to become.
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