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We’re talking about a character who always stayed on the front lines, but in an indirect way: organizing strategies, leading friends, trying to anticipate the enemy’s moves โ just that. But that seems like a deliberate choice from the Duffer Brothers, not a coincidence; it’s smart narrative manipulation. Despite the many complaints from fans about plot holes and other questionable decisions, here the showrunners seem to have been careful with this character’s arc.
Mike Had Never Been in the Upside Down Until Stranger Things Season 5

Out of all the main characters, Mike (Finn Wolfhard) is the emotional and strategic backbone of the gang. But considering he’s been a leader since Season 1, it’s almost ironic to think he went through disappearances, monsters, deaths, and psychological attacks โ and still never crossed the dimension that connects all the series’ threats. For some fans, it’s an easy detail to overlook. But the question now is: “Why hadn’t he gone in before?” Since Stranger Things ended, the Duffer Brothers haven’t commented on this, so we’re left to speculate. But even if it wasn’t a deliberate choice, it’s a fascinating coincidence for Mike’s arc, though. And why? Because it makes his first experience feel like something that actually counts.
Mike has never been just another character filling space; as mentioned, he’s always been the group’s moral center, the guy who makes tough calls and keeps everyone together (even though he hadn’t been as active in that role for a while). That alone already makes his first experience in the Upside Down feel especially meaningful. And not every show can build suspense like this and make it feel natural.
But the cool thing for his character development is that this waiting game created a payoff you don’t even realize is there until it finally happens. What does that actually mean? Let’s get into it.









