It's been a wonderful tournament at the Alexandra Palace - and it certainly got the final it deserved.
Luke Littler's fairytale run ended at the final hurdle but the 16-year-old's exploits have brought a plethora of new fans - and perhaps future players - to the sport.
There were will be many days ahead for the teenager but Luke Humphries' story is just as inspirational.
From a man once so plagued by anxiety that he could barely play on the big stage to becoming PDC world champion and world number one.
Thanks for ing us these past few darting days - we hope you've enjoyed our coverage and, come on, get that dusty dartboard out the shed and start throwing a few arrows, eh? Never know where you could end up.
Postpublished at 22:23 Greenwich Mean Time 3 January 2024
22:23 GMT 3 January 2024
Littler 4-7 Humphries
Luke Humphries has also lifted the Ballon D'Art tonight - the trophy for most 180s in the tournament.
It's poignant for him as his father-in-law has recently been diagnosed with prostate cancer - and tournament sponsors Paddy Power have been donating £1,000 to Prostate Cancer UK for every 180 hit at the Alexandra Palace.
There's been more than 900 so the bookmakers will be handing over not much shy of a million pounds.
'A moment I'll never ever forget'published at 22:18 Greenwich Mean Time 3 January 2024
22:18 GMT 3 January 2024
Littler 4-7 Humphries
More from world champion Luke Humphries to Sky Sports:
"This is a moment that will never ever be forgotten. Everything I've wanted to do, I've done now.
"Now it's about motivating yourself to do more and more - now I want be double world champion, I want to win loads of majors.
"The world is my oyster, I can win as much as I want - but I will never dominate because we are in a sport now that is so competitive.
"But Luke has been an unbelievable talent - not just on the dartboard, he has been fantastic with all the media. He took defeat so well there.
"You will never see a 16-year-old kid as down to earth as him - he's just something else. He is one of the best players in the world, no doubt about that."
'Can't put into words how this feels'published at 22:14 Greenwich Mean Time 3 January 2024
22:14 GMT 3 January 2024
Littler 4-7 Humphries
New world champion Luke Humphries to Sky Sports:
"I could not put into words how great this feels.
"Honestly I was thinking in the back of my mind, 'get this one now' because he's going to dominate world darts soon! He's going to win plenty I'm sure.
"He's an incredible player and when I was on the brink of winning he was relentless - but I was really, really proud of the performance.
"That double eight at the end, I can't lie, my hand was shaking like mad. I'm world champion, world number one, I can't ask for more.
"It makes it more incredible because there was a time in my life when I was really depressed and I couldn't do it up on the big stage and had a lot of problems - so to be world champion is unbelievable."
Postpublished at 22:05 Greenwich Mean Time 3 January 2024
22:05 GMT 3 January 2024
Littler 4-7 Humphries
Luke Humphries is in tears as he embraces his friends and family. He sank to his knees on the stage and gave Luke Littler a big hug too.
A stunning performance from the world number one.
He was 4-2 down to 16-year-old Luke Littler but reeled off five successive sets - including a string of nerve-wracking deciding legs to become world champion.