Stranger Things Season 5 Finale Review: Not Perfect, But the Goodbye We Needed

Saying goodbye is rarely neat, especially when it involves telekinetic teens, flesh-eating monsters, and a town that has survived more apocalypses than it deserves. With Stranger Things Season 5, Netflix’s cultural juggernaut finally powers down its Christmas lights. And while the finale doesn’t stick every landing, it delivers something arguably more important: emotional closure that feels earned.

For a show that has lived rent-free in pop culture for nearly a decade, expectations were always going to be unrealistically high. Fans wanted answers, spectacle, heartbreak, triumph – preferably all at once. The good news? The Duffer Brothers mostly understood the assignment. The even better news? When Stranger Things remembers what it’s actually about, it soars.

Stranger Things Season 5

The Ending We Wanted… and Then Some

The final episode leans heavily into wrapping things up, perhaps too heavily. Time jumps, quiet moments, and future peeks, the show serves up multiple epilogues like a farewell buffet. Individually, these scenes work beautifully. Together, they occasionally drag, softening the momentum of what should feel like a relentless final sprint. 

That said, Stranger Things Season 5 never feels emotionally hollow. It knows fans have invested years into these characters, and it respects that bond. Every goodbye matters. Every glance feels intentional. Even when the pacing wobbles, the heart stays firmly in the right place.

Vecna, Villains, and Missed Potential

Vecna remains one of the show’s most compelling antagonists, though the finale doesn’t fully capitalise on what made him terrifying in the first place. His backstory adds complexity without quite deepening the menace. We understand him more – but fear him less.

There were tantalising threads left dangling: his obsession with time, the world he imagined remaking, and the philosophical weight behind his choices. Instead of digging deeper, the story opts for resolution over exploration. It’s not disappointing so much as slightly restrained – as if the show played it safe when it could have gone darker.

Stranger Things Season 5

The Subplots That Slowed Things Down

If there’s one element that overstays its welcome, it’s the military storyline. Functional? Yes. Fascinating? Not quite. Compared to the emotional stakes unfolding elsewhere, these scenes feel like narrative filler – necessary but uninspiring.

Thankfully, the payoff ties back into Eleven’s arc, which remains the emotional spine of the series. Her journey has always been about agency, sacrifice, and self-worth, and the finale honours that without cheapening it.

Character Arcs: Where the Finale Truly Wins

This is where Stranger Things Season 5 earns its applause. Hopper and Eleven’s relationship is handled with warmth and maturity, reflecting how far both characters have come. Mike, often sidelined in recent seasons, finally steps back into emotional relevance – and makes it count.

The show also remembers that Stranger Things has always been about friendship. Not destiny. Not power. Friendship. The final confrontation reinforces that theme beautifully, reminding us why these kids mattered long before monsters entered the picture.

Spectacle, Scale, and One Last Scare

Visually, the finale delivers. While parts of the season occasionally felt stage-bound, the climactic showdown is anything but small. The Mind Flayer’s final appearance is grotesque, thrilling,g and suitably cinematic – the kind of chaos fans hoped for.

Is the ultimate victory a little too neat? Perhaps. But after years of escalating horror, there’s something satisfying about seeing the nightmare finally end.

So, Was It Worth the Ride?

Absolutely. Stranger Things Season 5 doesn’t reinvent television in its final hour – and it doesn’t need to. What it offers instead is sincerity. It prioritises emotional truth over shock value, character over chaos.

The finale understands that greatness isn’t always about surprise; sometimes it’s about saying goodbye properly. And while this farewell isn’t flawless, it’s heartfelt, generous, and deeply human.

In the end, Stranger Things leaves the way it arrived – with friendship, fear, and a whole lot of feeling. And if that final wave feels a little long, maybe that’s the point. Some worlds are hard to leave.

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