Fire Country has always kept a busy romantic calendar, and for three seasons that was part of the deal.
You came for the fires; you stayed for whoever Bode was almost kissing in a hallway, and the show managed to make the love lives feel like a natural extension of its complicated characters.
Fire Country Season 4 turned the dial up past the point where any of that felt natural, and by the time the finale wedding rolled around, we had watched three main characters get paired with three new partners inside a single season, all of whom we barely knew anything about.

Manny met Camille at a rodeo emergency on Fire Country Season 4 Episode 14.
Ahem, well, they matched on a dating app first, and she immediately unmatched because of his energy, but the rodeo is where the show decided they were a story.
Sharon met Alexi when he turned up to fix a rig on his day off on Fire Country Season 4 Episode 17, and he took her motorcycle riding the same night.
Eve somehow hooks up with Eleanor, and Jake gets married to Violet before the credits roll. Fire Country’s version of speed dating is leaving less space for grounded relationship storytelling.
Fire Country’s Ever-Present Problems With Storytelling
The show circles around Bode, yes, but it also throws in romance plots that hit you out of nowhere.
Violet has had less screentime than several of the show’s extras, which made the speed of the wedding all the more confusing.

She had entered the show as Oxalta’s general counsel in Fire Country Season 3, the corporation poisoning Three Rock’s water supply, which should have given her a reason to exist beyond being in Jake’s orbit.
By the fourth season, she was navigating a Cal Fire job offer with a conflict-of-interest condition attached, and Jake was down on his knee proposing to her.
Forget the viewers. How much does Jake even know about her?
Manny and Camille had the same compressed energy, and maybe they indeed played off the speed-dating idea.
They first saw each other on a dating app, and Camille unmatched Manny after looking at his “flashy frat-boy energy.
Which, honestly, is like half of the characters on Fire Country, before reconsidering when she saw his competent side during the rodeo emergency.

That was a good setup, yes, but then again, the show has them smooching in like three days?
Isn’t that exactly the opposite of what overly cautious characters do, with a history of bad exes?
I guess they had to throw in Roberta for exactly that reason, to give the relationship some space to breathe.
But it only ended up being a convoluted mess, starting as a love triangle and ending with a weird “We’re family” cliché.
Bode and Chloe together are still hard to digest, given how hard the show has been pushing them together from the beginning.

Bode seems to have forgotten all about Audrey and their promise, which was another rushed relationship, but still better written than pigeonholing a SEAL Team fanfare.
We all saw that “I love you” coming from a mile away. The whole affair is as cringe as it is, but them trying to emulate the Vince-Sharon dynamic the show built up on, makes it even worse.
The Flood Took the Rings and the Show Gave Back Something It Had Been Holding Since Season 1
For all its matchmaking chaos, Fire Country Season 4 at least closed with a plot that stuck out like a thorn in Jake’s character development for years.

Jake’s rings were in his truck when the floodwater took it, and he was standing at the altar in a tan suit with nothing to offer Violet except the panic written across his face.
Bode stepped in and untied Vince’s wedding ring from the necklace he had been wearing since the season premiere, and Sharon slipped her own ring off her finger and handed it to Violet, approving the whole gesture like a loving mother figure.
That, right there, was the moment when Jake had proof he was as much Leone as he is Crawford. He finally knew he was part of the family.
Jake had spent years being adjacent to the Leone family without ever quite belonging to it, and had spent the last four seasons jealous of Bode.
Walking into his marriage wearing the ring of the man who had treated him like a son put an end to all of that, thankfully.

It seems that the writers’ room wanted to send every character into the summer with a partner, regardless of whether the relationship had had time to earn one.
But it’s all well if it ends well, right?
Fire Country comes back for Season 5 in Fall 2026, per CBS, and the romances it built in eight episodes will have to survive a hiatus before they get the chance to become real.
Did the Vince ring moment earn back everything Season 4’s speed-dating roster cost, or does Fire Country owe us at least one slow burn that actually takes its time?
Drop your verdict in the comments, and subscribe before Season 5 so we can track which of these romances the show remembers it was supposed to build.


