Sunday night saw the tribe split down the middle, with two alliances of four refusing to budge.
The crowned princes of chaos, Myles and AJ, had a thirst in their eyes hoping that the deadlocked vote would send them into a rock draw and ending. With even votes on both Logan and Zara, the tribe had to come to a unanimous decision or face the wrath of rocks.
Going to rocks means Logan and Zara would become safe - as would Kaelan due to winning individual immunity - and the remaining five players would pick a rock at random. The odd rock would be eliminated from the game.
Having made it this far into the game, Logan was hopeful that her social connections with Kristin and Kaelan were strong enough that they could move forward together. But Kristin won a reward, taking Logan and Morgan away to a retreat and providing Zara with the perfect opportunity to firm up her alliance with Kaelan, AJ, and Myles - now known as the 'Post Graduates'.
Returning from the reward and into the next immunity challenge, Logan could sense the shift immediately.
"I could see the way Kaelan wasn't approaching me as much, he's got an obvious tell in that way where he's generally very avoidant of conversations he doesn't want to have," Logan told 10 Play.
To further complicate things, the tribe was divided into two teams for the immunity challenge, and the first team to make it through an obstacle course would battle it out for the shot at the immunity necklace.
"I absolutely hated it," Logan said. "I feel like if it's an individual immunity, there should be absolutely no one else in control of your game and AJ is adamant to this day that he didn't throw it. But I did not believe him.
"I could feel the shift, that they wanted to send me home," she continued. "It felt to me like he was not giving his all in that challenge, he was preventing me from winning immunity."
With her neck on the chopping block, Logan went into Tribal Council hopeful that she had done enough to either convince the Post Graduates alliance to split their votes or to flip Kaelan. But when it was clear that there was a 4-4 split, Logan wasn't optimistic.
"I knew I had lost. I just knew that I was done for," she admitted "I only just flipped Morgan and Kate, they weren't a strong alliance with me. They were just trying to get through to the next vote, and I couldn't pitch anything to the other side because they were so strong together.
As for the chance of going to rocks, where Logan would be safe, it was a tough ask for Kristin, Morgan and Kate who had a higher chance of pulling the odd rock. "I was never going to put someone in the position where I force them to take the risk," Logan added.
More frustrating, Logan could see what huge threats were sitting on the other side of the bench, and that if the Post Graduates made it through this vote, they'd potentially be an impenetrable foursome that could steamroll to the end.
"I knew I was falling on my sword there, but at least we got a really fun Tribal out of my last day playing the actual game," she continued. "I'm glad I went out in a spectacular fashion. It feels fitting."
Looking back at her time in the game, Logan had high highs and some low lows. Making it to merge with an Idol in her pocket after surviving a brutal Tribe Swap, where she was forced to play from the bottom, she felt like things had turned a corner and her luck was about to change.
Then, just before being blindsided, Karin told Logan to play her Idol, saving her but ultimately sending her bestie Laura to the jury.
"It was a good day for Logan haters," she laughed. "That was definitely my worst day out there. It was really challenging, I had built the social connections and thought I had done a reasonably good job of that, but here comes AJ and Myles who wanted to take down Laura and me.
"I mean, that's the game of Survivor but it definitely stung when I felt like I had worked so hard and Laura had been working really hard on the other side to get Kate and Morgan - and for them to switch over so easily for someone who had just called other people hostages and was voting out their friends without a care in the world, it was difficult to stomach."
On top of that, Logan said the blurring lines between the game an personal relationships became more and more difficult.
"That night I remember I was so overwhelmed and was crying, and the person whose arms I was crying into was Kaelan, and then he continued to put my name down while he was holding me when I was crying," she said.
"I do have really bad ADHD and one of the issues that I have is impulse control and being able to control my emotions," Logan explained. "I think what viewers don't see is how challenging the situation is out there. You're with people 24 hours a day, people you wouldn't normally be friends with and you're put in the situation where you're forced to make friends and listen to people who don't have the same opinion or values you do.
"The whole thing is really overwhelming, and it's so f**king fun. But you're always on, and that's really hard," she continued.
"The lines blur constantly and trying to be strategic 24/7 for 39 days sends you into an absolute mental spiral so I would beg the viewers to give some people some grace."
Throughout the season, Logan also received criticism from viewers about her growing frustration that votes would often be chopped and changed at the last moment.
"I think there was a stage where everyone was frustrated that the vote wasn't going the way they suggested," she explained. "I was pushing for the right people, I really was. I could see the game, where it was headed and who was controlling it.
"It was really important for me that I took control of my own game," Logan said. "You come into Survivor and you have this idea of how you want to play, how you want to strategically vote and the people you want to gather around you.
"And then someone comes in and does the weirdest thing you've ever seen on TV, it's really hard to adjust to that and you do get frustrated having to live with someone day after day who constantly throws a grenade onto your plans."
Even more frustrating for Logan was how people seemed to rally around players like AJ and Myles who have revelled in their chaotic, at times overly complicated and often bombastic moves.
"People decided that was a shield instead of someone who was making the game chaotic rather than strategic," she said. "It was clear to me that Myles and AJ were running the game, and it's not the game I wanted to play - it's not the game everyone else out there wanted to play, but they continued to let them.
"It's frustrating but I mean that's the game. It was a very different game than one that I've ever really seen on Survivor, but it was fun to play, I won't lie. I'm very good friends with pretty much everyone from the cast," Logan said, adding that despite what we see play out she's still mates with Myles and AJ and catch up with them regularly.
"As much as it looks like they're pissing me off out there, we're very good friends," she laughed. "A lot of the cast really respect the game so, I mean the fact that Karin can forgive me for flipping on her and getting her out and we're still besties now is evidence of how much we respect the game and how much we love it. We're all bonded for life now."
Australian Survivor continues Sundays at 7.00pm and Mondays at 7.30pm on 10 and 10 Play