Netflix renewed Stranger Things: Tales From ’85 for a second season on Tuesday, just five days after the animated spinoff made its debut — a swift vote of confidence that telegraphs how much the streamer has riding on the franchise’s expansion beyond its beloved live-action original.
The 10-episode first season premiered on April 23 and landed at No. 7 on Netflix’s global top 10 list, accumulating 2.8 million views in its opening week — enough to crack the platform’s all-time top 15 animated series debuts. Season 2 is eyeing a fall 2026 return, with sources pointing to a pre-Halloween window.
The speed of the renewal is less surprising than it appears. Much like high-profile animated titles such as Splinter Cell and Tomb Raider, Netflix tends to greenlight multiple seasons of animated projects in advance to maintain a steady release cadence — a strategy that avoids the prolonged gaps that have plagued other productions. Reports suggest the second season was quietly ordered before the first even aired.
The series is set in Hawkins during the winter of 1985, filling the narrative gap between the second and third seasons of the live-action flagship. None of the original cast members return; instead, a new ensemble of voice actors brings Eleven, Mike, Will, Dustin, Lucas, and Max back to life, joined by Odessa A’zion, Lou Diamond Phillips, and Janeane Garofalo. Robert Englund, who played Victor Creel in the live-action series, also appears in a voice role.
Showrunner Eric Robles, speaking exclusively to The Hollywood Reporter, said the audience response had exceeded expectations. “Seeing fans connect with these characters — whether they’ve loved them for years or are just meeting them for the first time — has been truly special,” he said. He added that Season 2 will send the Hawkins Investigators Club into the town’s abandoned silver mines to face a new paranormal threat.
Robles has emphasized that each season of Tales From ’85 connects directly to the next, suggesting an arc-driven approach rather than standalone adventures. The broader Stranger Things universe continues to perform: all five seasons of the Duffer Brothers’ original series have accumulated 1.5 billion combined views through March 2026, just months after the show’s final season concluded at the end of last year.
Critical reception for Season 1 was mixed. Rotten Tomatoes shows a 63% critics score, with reviewers split between those charmed by its Saturday-morning-cartoon nostalgia and those who found it closer to fan fiction. Audience scores came in lower, at 54%. The renewal, arriving before those numbers could fully settle, reflects Netflix’s confidence in the franchise’s commercial pull regardless of press reception.





















































