Are you a little drunk? I knew you were more forthcoming than usual.
You are not the only one who can be spirited.
Well, I could use more spirited friends.
Friends, then?
What I thought about the queer arcs and why it feels unfinished.
The Queer Arcs: Closure Without Commitment
What hurts most about the Stranger Things finale isn’t that it didn’t give certain fans what they wanted.
It’s that it resolved its queer arcs in a way that prioritizes containment over honesty.
Let’s start with Will.
Will’s coming-of-age arc has always been about truth, repression, and survival. The show spent multiple seasons building his interiority: the cost of hiding, the way love functions as both anchor and vulnerability, the way queerness becomes a psychic pressure point in a hostile world. Season 4 made this explicit. Season 5 doubled down...until the very end.
Instead of giving Will a resolution rooted in agency, the finale reframes his feelings as something safely past. Mike is retroactively recoded as his “Tammy,” his love reduced to a youthful misunderstanding, a crush, rather than a meaningful bond that shaped him. This isn’t growth; it’s minimization.
And the solution offered? An epilogue love interest.
A nameless, underdeveloped character whose primary function is to signal that Will is “fine now.” This isn’t representation, it’s narrative shorthand. It bypasses the emotional work of reckoning with the relationship that actually mattered on screen. Will doesn’t move forward through his truth; he moves past it as quickly as possible.
Meanwhile, Mike—whose internal conflict has been conspicuously absent all season—is never allowed a POV that clarifies anything. The show avoids confronting what his silence, hesitation, and emotional distance actually meant. Even in the final romantic beat with Eleven, he still does not say “I love you” back. That omission isn’t subtle. It’s unresolved. Some will say Mike shows love through actions, not words. The problem is that the show already told us that wasn’t enough. Season 4 centers on the damage caused by his silence. Refusing to resolve that in the finale isn’t subtlety, it’s avoidance.
What we’re left with is not a triangle resolved, but a tension quietly shut down. I would say even the Nancy/Jonathan/Steve triangle is resolved with more care.
It’s also telling that Mike’s own ending mirrors this avoidance. His unresolved interiority isn’t confronted; it’s redirected. We’re told he becomes a writer—a way of processing emotion privately, off-screen, without ever naming the truths the story spent seasons circling. In a finale obsessed with “closure,” Mike’s silence isn’t resolved, it’s repackaged. And the question the show refuses to answer remains: why has he struggled to articulate his emotions throughout the series, despite being repeatedly framed as “the heart”?
Now Robin and Vickie.
Their relationship is introduced with care, warmth, and promise—then almost entirely disappears.
Development happens off-screen. Conflict is implied, not explored. By the time we reach the epilogue, Vickie is gone, and Robin delivers a vague line about leaving “overbearing significant others” behind.
That’s it.
For the show’s only openly lesbian arc, the message is strangely consistent with Will’s: queerness exists, but only briefly, only safely, and only insofar as it doesn’t demand narrative focus at the end.
Both queer arcs share the same problem: they are acknowledged, then swiftly depersonalized.
There is no sustained intimacy. No long-term emotional consequence. No commitment to letting queer relationships carry the same narrative weight as straight ones.
This isn’t about ships. It’s about structure.
Straight relationships in Stranger Things are allowed to be messy, cyclical, unresolved, and central. Queer ones are given clarity only by being simplified. They are wrapped up neatly so the story can move on without discomfort.
And that’s the real disappointment.
Not that the show didn’t “go there.” But that after spending years circling queerness as something dangerous, powerful, and transformative, it ultimately chose the safest possible landing.
Visibility without risk. Affirmation without depth. Closure without commitment.
For a show that insists love is what saves the world, it’s striking how carefully it avoids letting queer love do the same.
One of the strangest things about the Stranger Things finale is how little Vecna’s backstory ultimately lands, despite how much importance the show places on it.
We’re told this season that Vecna is “misunderstood,” that there’s more beneath the monster. His most painful memory is framed as something so terrifying that even he avoids it. Naturally, this sets an expectation: this moment should recontextualize him. It should make his arc click emotionally, not just mechanically.
Instead, what we get is this:
As a child, Henry is in a tunnel. He murders a man, takes his suitcase, finds a strange stone-like object, and becomes connected to the Mind Flayer. The story then jumps to familiar Season 4 flashbacks, ending with Brenner capturing him. From this, Henry concludes that the world is broken and aligns himself with the Mind Flayer.
That’s…it.
The problem isn’t that this is dark or disturbing. It’s that the emotional logic is underdeveloped. We aren’t shown a progression from trauma to ideology. We’re shown a sequence of events and told they explain everything.
Compare this to Season 4, where Henry’s childhood was framed around isolation, difference, and a warped moral lens. Those flashbacks did emotional work. They suggested how someone could come to see humanity as cruel, hypocritical, and deserving of collapse. The finale’s reveal doesn’t deepen that foundation, it sidesteps it.
What makes this more frustrating is the implication that Vecna’s emotional depth exists outside the show itself, in supplementary material like the stage play. A television narrative should not require external text to make its central villain’s psychology coherent. If his most feared memory is meant to define him, it needs to function on-screen.
If the show expects us to understand Vecna as tragic, then his defining trauma needs to feel tragic in-story.
If it expects us to see him as corrupted rather than purely evil, then that corruption needs to be shown—not assumed.
And if this memory is meant to be the one he cannot face, the audience should feel why, not just observe that he avoids it.
As it stands, the reveal functions like a missing puzzle piece that doesn’t quite fit the image we’ve already been given. It explains how Vecna became powerful, but not why he became who he is.
In a show that repeatedly insists on emotional truth, Vecna’s story ends up oddly hollow—more symbolic than sincere, more suggestive than earned.
And for a final villain, that’s a strange note to end on.
Stranger Things spent Season 5 telling us one very clear thing:
the Upside Down isn’t just another dimension—it’s a bridge. A fragile one.
We’re explicitly told that destabilizing the exotic matter holding the wormhole between Earth and the Abyss the wrong way could destroy both worlds. Nancy shooting it almost caused catastrophe. Brute force is framed as the worst possible option.
So why does the finale’s solution boil down to:
“bomb the exotic matter and it’s fine actually”?
No new rule is introduced.
No explanation for why this collapse is safe when earlier interference wasn’t.
No consequences shown.
This isn’t sci-fi being unrealistic, it’s the story dropping its own logic to reach a clean ending.
If the bridge can be destroyed safely with enough explosives, then the existential danger around collapsing it never really existed. And if the danger was real, then the finale skips the fallout entirely.
When a story tells you something is unthinkable, then resolves everything by doing it anyway without explanation, the stakes collapse retroactively.
You can’t build a world ending bridge and blow it up for closure.
You have to choose whether the danger was real. Or it never was.
Long post, thematic analysis, Kali/El/ending discussion.
Schrödinger’s El: When a Story Refuses to Choose
I want to start clearly, because nuance seems illegal online right now:
I didn’t hate the Stranger Things finale. Some emotional beats worked. Some endings were genuinely satisfying. I felt the warmth they were aiming for.
But something still feels deeply off. Not because of ships, pacing, or “bad writing” in the lazy sense.
It’s about avoidance.
Specifically, the show constructs mutually exclusive outcomes—ethical, narrative, and thematic—and then refuses to commit to any of them. What we’re left with isn’t ambiguity that invites interpretation. It’s ambiguity that protects the story from consequences.
The clearest example is what I’m calling Schrödinger’s El.
The False Dilemma
By the final arc, El is boxed into what the story frames as a brutal choice:
Run: escape the system, abandon the fight.
Die: sacrifice herself to end the Upside Down and the cycle of violence.
These are presented as the only options. Kali explicitly shuts down the fantasy of escape. Death is framed as tragic but noble.
This is a classic false dilemma: when a narrative insists there are only extreme choices, it’s usually because the real option hasn’t been revealed yet.
Except…the show never reveals one.
Instead, it gestures at all of them.
El appears to choose death.
Then we’re told it might have been an illusion.
Then she might be “somewhere else.”
Then the characters say they believe she survived.
Then the threat is gone.
Nothing is resolved cleanly. Not because the story wants to stay open-ended—but because it doesn’t want to deal with the implications of any choice.
The Disappearing System
This is where the logic collapses.
We are explicitly told El’s blood is valuable. That is why Dr. Kay exists. That is why the abuse continues. That is why El is hunted.
So the finale raises an unavoidable question it never answers:
If El is about to sacrifice herself, why does the system that needs her blood not intervene at all?
No interruption.
No desperate attempt to stop her.
No final confrontation.
We don’t even know what happens to Dr. Kay.
And if El escaped instead—why does Kali have to die? Why can only one of them survive? Why isn’t Kali part of El’s possible escape fantasy?
Which leads to the most uncomfortable question:
Kali: Necessary or Convenient?
Here’s the problem I can’t unsee:
The show stages Eleven’s death without committing to it, and commits to Kali’s death without staging it.
El’s sacrifice comes with plausible deniability. We see her choose to stay behind. We see the Upside Down collapse. We’re meant to feel the weight of martyrdom. But almost immediately, ambiguity is introduced: maybe it was an illusion, maybe Kali intervened, maybe El escaped somewhere else.
El’s death is never allowed to exist as fact.
Kali, meanwhile, is simply dead.
No illusion.
No ambiguity.
No escape hatch.
That asymmetry is not accidental.
If El had truly died, the show would have had to reckon with real consequences: found family broken, Will’s arc about survival and existing despite erasure contradicted, love failing as a sustaining force. The system would have won something real.
The story couldn’t afford that.
So El is placed in Schrödinger’s box: emotionally sacrificed, narratively preserved.
But someone still had to pay the cost of finality.
And that someone was Kali.
What makes this worse is that the show explicitly tells us Kali’s blood wasn’t working for the experiments. Her death doesn’t clearly prevent future harm. It doesn’t clearly save El. It doesn’t clearly change the world.
It exists to close a door.
One less loose end.
One less character who complicates the morality of survival.
One less reminder that escape was possible.
When a story consistently kills characters who represent alternatives to sacrifice, that’s not tragedy. That’s containment.
Ambiguity vs. Commitment
People will defend this ending by calling it “ambiguous.” But ambiguity only works when a story has already committed to its themes.
Here, the show wants everything at once:
El chooses sacrifice, but doesn’t really die.
The system is defeated, but no one is held accountable.
Escape is impossible—until it suddenly isn’t.
Hope is affirmed, but despair is framed as wisdom.
This isn’t complexity. It’s ideological tidying.
The messiest questions—about power, exploitation, survival, and who gets to live—are quietly swept aside so the story can land on emotional closure without structural change.
Why This Matters
The show has always told us:
secrets destroy
truth liberates
love is resistance
But in the end, the system doesn’t fall because it’s confronted.
It falls because the narrative stops looking at it.
And that’s why the ending doesn’t feel earned to me.
Not because it was sad.
Not because it wasn’t sad enough.
But because it refused to choose between despair and change.
This short anonymous survey is for a media project exploring young people’s awareness of vaping and its risks. Your responses will help shap
This short anonymous survey is for a media project exploring young people’s awareness of vaping and its risks. Your responses will help shape an educational digital print product for teenagers. This should take less than 2 minutes. Thank you!