Highlights
- Stranger Things: Tales From '85 arrives just weeks after the divisive Stranger Things finale
- The animated spin-off trades trauma-heavy storytelling for humour, faster pacing and classic monster chaos
- New character Nikki emerges as one of the franchise’s most interesting additions
Netflix returned to Hawkins before fans had time to miss it
The biggest talking point around Stranger Things: Tales From '85 is not its monsters or animation style, it is its timing.
Netflix has brought viewers back to Hawkins unusually quickly after the finale of Stranger Things split opinion online. For some fans, that makes the spin-off feel rushed. Set shortly after season two, the story takes place before Vecna’s arrival and before Robin Buckley became part of the core group.
The gang believes life is finally returning to normal, only to face another supernatural threat involving snow sharks, tentacled creatures and yet another crisis that somehow never gets mentioned later. That continuity issue is difficult to ignore.
It fixes the franchise’s growing seriousness
As Stranger ThingsStranger Things became bigger, darker and more emotionally heavy, some viewers felt it lost the playful energy that made earlier seasons work. This spin-off appears to address that.
The animated format allows for faster action sequences, sillier humour and a more colourful tone. It feels far less burdened by mythology and emotional weight than the final season.
Nikki may be the franchise’s best new addition
The standout surprise is Nikki, voiced by Odessa A'zion. The punk-inspired character quickly becomes central to the story through her friendship with Will Byers.
She brings humour, invention and a fresh dynamic that helps the series feel less repetitive. The show also continues Eleven’s struggle for independence.
It works best when treated as bonus content
Fans expecting essential franchise storytelling may leave disappointed. But viewers who treat Stranger Things: Tales From '85 as a standalone side adventure may enjoy it far more. It may not fit perfectly into the wider mythology, but it delivers something many fans missed in later seasons — fun.












