She flew but looks like problems with the gimballing system and keeping the engines all firing in coordination. It landed hard and kaboom. R.I.P. SN8. Long live SN9.
According to reports what appeared to me to be a problem with the gimballing system and first one than a second engine failing was actually planned shutdown of those engines and the immediate compensation by the gimballing to keep the thrust going through the center of mass, which was pretty violent and the separation of the not firing engine was to put it in a neutral position where it wouldn't interfere with the other engines moving. The hard landing was from low pressure in the fuel system. Why the low pressure? No explanation from SpaceX yet.
If I understand it correctly the fuel pressure is maintained by hot reaction mass from the engines fed back into the tanks. Perhaps the system isn't fully compensating for less than 3 engines firing. Just a guess.
In spite of the hard landing SN8 did land on target.
Apparently components for SN16 have begun showing up. SN15 apparently has some major improvements from earlier. SN9 is ready to fly barring adjustments from things learned from the SN8 flight.
Not Starship related but the Hyabusa 2 mission did successfully return asteroidal material to Earth. The Osiris Rex mission has picked up its own samples from another asteroid (a carbonaceous chondrite) and returns next September. The Chinese automated sample collection from the moon is on its way back too.
All told. Way to go SpaceX!