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Crime is down, people feel safer, and Captain Lance even calls off the Anti-Vigilante Task Force. Oliver believes he can finally have a private life and asks Felicity out on a date. But the second Oliver takes his eye off the ball, a deadly villain reappears in Starling, forcing Oliver to realize that he can never be Oliver Queen – not as long as the city needs The Arrow. In Season Three, Oliver faces an even greater threat, when another lethal face emerges from his dark and tortured past – Ra’s Al Ghul!
These writers are trying to kill us with Olicity, I'm sure of it. I had a brief round of ugly sobbing after that dream kiss on "Midnight City," which got even worse when I realized it was Oliver's dream -- not Felicity's. Someone pinch me.
"Midnight City" is a wonderfully self-aware episode, one that appears keenly cognizant of how ridiculous Roy and Laurel look suited up and flying to the rescue in a helicopter that Diggle can barely fly.
By taking the time to dig into the show's more problematic and underdeveloped characters, the creative team have employed a really nice way of holding us over until [Oliver's] return (which looks to be next week).
Whatever comes Thea's way is that goofy DJ, Chase, who apparently works for Ra's al Ghul and is contact with Maseo, revealing that both Thea and Malcolm Merlyn are in Starling City. Not much of a final stinger, but hey, we'll take it.