Wille’s response is devastating. He can’t. He’s trapped. The tears streaming down his face as he says, “I can’t... I can’t be with you if I have to lie,” aren't tears of cruelty—they are tears of a boy who realizes his life was never his own. Episode 4 is the best episode of the first season. It’s the moment Young Royals stops being a boarding school romance and becomes a sharp, painful study of systemic power. The cinematography leans into the gray Swedish winter, mirroring Wille’s internal frostbite. The sound design is sparse—you can hear the oars creaking, the snow crunching, the silence of a boy screaming inside.
Warning: Major spoilers for Young Royals Season 1, Episode 4 ahead. Young Royals - Season 1- Episode 4
If Episode 3 of Young Royals ended with the warm, fuzzy illusion of a fairy tale (snowy movie night, a stolen kiss, two boys finally admitting how they feel), then Episode 4, aptly titled “The Crown,” is the bucket of ice water that follows. This is the episode where the weight of a thousand years of tradition comes crashing down on Wilhelm’s shoulders—and he doesn’t handle it well. Wille’s response is devastating
Simon, patient and furious, rows them out to the middle of the lake. He refuses to be a secret. He refuses to be a scandal. In one of the most mature and heartbreaking exchanges in teen TV, Simon gives Wille an ultimatum of his own: “Tell the truth, or lose me.” The tears streaming down his face as he says, “I can’t
By the end, when Wille denies the video in the official statement, we don't feel relief. We feel sick. Because we know what that “yes” cost him. And we know that Simon is watching from his window, heart shattered into a thousand pieces.
This is where the show’s genius shines. The villain isn't a cartoonish aristocrat. It’s obligation . It’s the crushing, invisible cage of duty. Wille isn't just choosing between Simon and his family; he's choosing between a moment of happiness and a lifetime of pre-written destiny. Let’s talk about August. In this episode, his mask slips entirely. We learn the terrifying truth: his family’s estate is bankrupt. He isn’t the wealthy, untouchable prefect he pretends to be; he’s a boy clinging to a sinking ship. His desperation to maintain his status is what drives him to leak the video (implied heavily here, confirmed later), but in this episode, we see the paranoia. He tries to get close to Sara, he tries to assert control over Wille—and when that fails, he snaps.