Will There Be a ‘Stranger Things: Tales From ’85’ Season 2?

Published 04/23/2026, 1:43 PM EDT

The neon hum of Stranger Things never really fades. Now, with Stranger Things Tales From '85 finally landing on Netflix, the franchise slips into animation without shedding its analog soul. Despite early review-bomb jitters, the series clings stubbornly to the tactile nostalgia that made Hawkins feel like a second home. Set between Seasons 2 and 3, it taps into that liminal space, Walkman-static, snow-dusted suburbia, and kids pretending normalcy fits. Naturally, the question arrives almost immediately: what comes next?

But here is the real curiosity, does this story even have a next chapter waiting in the wings, or is this a one-season relic preserved in amber?

Has Netflix renewed the Stranger Things Tales From '85 yet?

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As of April 23, 2026, Stranger Things Tales From '85 has not been officially renewed for a second season, which is hardly surprising given the show debuted the same day. Still, the creative machinery behind the scenes is already whirring. Voice actors and showrunners have not just hinted, they have practically storyboarded the possibility in spirit.

Brooklyn Davey Norstedt, the voice of Eleven, told Radio Times:

"I think, right now, they're really focused on the launch of season 1. I think it's going to be a great one for families to see together. We're just all very pumped for the first season, and if anything else comes from it, that would be great."

Showrunner Eric Robles echoed that forward-looking intent, noting that future installments could tether directly into Season 3 of the flagship series, an elegant narrative bridge rather than a detached side quest. Critically, the show is holding its ground. It currently sits at a respectable 75% on Rotten Tomatoes, suggesting that while the pitchforks came early, they did not stick.

Where Are the 'Stranger Things' Cast Now: See What the Actors Are Doing After Saving Hawkins

Which leads to the next, more pressing question, did Season 1 actually leave enough unresolved to justify another descent into Hawkins’ underbelly?

How did Season 1 end and does it demand a Season 2?

Set in the uneasy calm between Seasons 2 and 3, the series reassembles Eleven, Will, Mike, Dustin, Lucas, and Max in a version of Hawkins that pretends it has healed. School corridors replace shadowy labs, but the illusion fractures quickly. Disappearances begin again, and the threat this time is stranger, organic, creeping, and disturbingly self-sustaining. Not quite Demogorgon, not quite flora, something in between, like the Upside Down learning to grow roots.

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The introduction of Nikki, a newcomer who earns her place through survival rather than sentiment, adds a fresh dynamic to the group’s chemistry. Meanwhile, the revelation of a Monster Queen orchestrating the chaos reframes the stakes entirely. By the finale, the group confronts the Queen in the sewers, where a rogue portal threatens to reconnect Hawkins to the Upside Down. Eleven, as always, becomes both a weapon and a firewall.

The origin of the creatures is a reckless scientific experiment involving regenerative serums, lingers like a half-buried cassette tape waiting to be replayed. Hawkins survives, but not cleanly. In the end, Stranger Things Tales From '85 does what the franchise has always done best, it closes a door while quietly unlocking another. Whether Netflix chooses to walk through it now depends on viewership, momentum, and timing.

'Stranger Things: Tales From '85 Ending Explained: Did Eleven and Group Kill The Upside Down Creature? Who Created The Monster Queen?

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Should Hawkins open itself up to another animated nightmare, or is this where the story should pause? Share your take in the comments.

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Sarah Ansari

506 articles

Sarah Ansari is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, transitioning from four years in marketing and automotive journalism to storytelling-driven pop culture coverage. With a background in English Literature and experience writing across NFL, NASCAR, and NBA verticals, she brings a research-led, narrative-focused lens to film and television. Passionate about exploring how stories are crafted and why they resonate, Sarah unwinds through sketching, swimming, motorsports—and yearly winter Harry Potter marathons.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

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