Title: One Promise. Two Worlds. Devran’s Heart Gets Split in Half.
Let’s talk about Episode 163 of “Homeless.”
Because honestly? This one hurt differently.
Devran is standing in the middle of a war she never asked for. On one side? The promise she made to Azize — something deep, something sacred. On the other side? Her own family. Her blood. The people who share her last name and her history.
And she can’t have both.
This isn’t just drama. This is destruction.
The episode doesn’t give you a hero and a villain. It gives you a woman who loves fiercely on both ends, and that love has now turned into a weapon against itself. Every move she makes helps someone she loves — and stabs someone else she loves just as much.
You can feel her suffocating. And that’s what makes it real.
What’s actually happening inside Devran?
She made a promise to Azize. Not a small one. A promise born from loyalty, from pain, from connection. But her family? They don’t want promises. They want her presence. Her protection. Her loyalty by blood.
So now she’s stuck asking herself questions that have no good answers:
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If I keep my word to Azize, am I abandoning my family?
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If I choose my family, am I a liar?
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And who am I if I lose either one?
Why Azize matters so much
Azize is not just another character. She represents every person who ever trusted Devran when no one else would. Breaking that promise would feel like breaking her own spine.
But her family? They are her origin story. You don’t get to erase where you came from just because the present is messy.
The real truth this episode teaches us
Life doesn’t always give you a good choice and a bad choice.
Sometimes life gives you two terrible choices and whispers: “Which pain can you learn to live with?”
Devran is discovering that loyalty isn’t always beautiful. Sometimes it’s ugly. Sometimes it keeps you awake at 3 AM. Sometimes it makes you the villain in one story while you fight to be the hero in another.
Why you feel this episode in your chest
Because you’ve been there.
Maybe not on a screen. But in your real life. When a friend needed you and your mom needed you at the same time. When keeping one promise meant breaking another. When silence felt safer than speaking — but silence also felt like betrayal.
My honest take
Episode 163 is not about who Devran finally chooses.
It’s about who Devran becomes while choosing.
And that is so much more powerful.
She isn’t looking for applause. She’s looking for a version of herself that can still look in the mirror the next morning without breaking down.
And honestly? That’s the most real thing “Homeless” has ever shown us.



