Viewers around the world will learn whether the star South African sprinter known as the "Blade Runner" is guilty or not guilty of murdering his model girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day 2013.
The judge will begin delivering her verdict on Thursday, six months after the celebrity athlete first wept and vomited when the court heard that Steenkamp's head had "exploded" like a watermelon under the impact of a hollow-point bullet.
At its heart, the trial is simple.
The double-amputee athlete doesn't deny this. The only question is why he did it.
He says he thought he was shooting at an intruder and that Steenkamp was safely in bed.
The prosecution says he killed her in a fit of rage after an argument.
The personality of the Paralympian gold medallist, who won worldwide fame when he competed on his prosthetic 'blades' against able-bodied runners at the London Olympics, was a focus of the trial.
Defence lawyers said there are "two Oscars" -- a world-class athlete and a highly vulnerable individual with a serious disability who acted out of fear, not anger, when he fired the fatal shots.
After testimony from almost 40 witnesses, including neighbours who said they had heard screams and shots and defence experts who said this was impossible, the cast reassembles with Judge Thokozile Masipa taking a central role.
While Pistorius is doomed as always to play the star of a show he would rather not be in, prosecutor Gerrie "Pitbull" Nel and defence lawyer Barry "I put it to you" Roux have become co-stars with their own following.
As in the famed live television trial of US football hero OJ Simpson, who was accused of murdering his wife 20 years ago, most viewers seem to have already decided on Pistorius's guilt or innocence.
