(12-02-2018, 08:33 AM)N_grimm Wrote: That's not my interpretation (although it was my first thought after seeing the episode). Nobody was left behind. I think it was a reset of the timeline, where the evil things never happened. When I use the word dimension, I mean timeline (time is a dimension). But it's not a clean time travel, because things have changed, and both Nick and Diana remember what happened. This is complicated and something Nick or the rest of us will never fully understand. It's a miracle, something divine. Grimm was based on fairytales, not logic.
I'm not saying anyone was left behind. What I am saying is that if this is an alternate universe scenario, then Nick has designed it to his liking, using the staff. *If* he wanted to go back to the previous universe, then Diana and Trubel would be there, and perhaps Kelly. Everyone else he knew would be dead. The alternate universe where Adalind was (sans ring) would cease to exist.
(12-02-2018, 09:06 AM)FaceInTheCrowd Wrote: It's doubtful that Nick was making that specific when he said he could bring them all back. He probably had some more general wish that the whole business with Z coming through and killing everyone had never happened, which was rolled up with memory of promising Adalind that they would find a way to remove the ring. The end result was that the world as it existed at that moment was replaced with one that fulfilled Nick's desire - his friends alive and all together (Trubel didn't originally come to Monroe's house, so that was also different), no Z and that ring finally off Adalind's finger.
Nick wouldn't have to be specific, *if* as proposed, the staff was responding to his thoughts and (I can't believe I'm even typing this), his subconscious.
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.