That said, this might finally be about to change. The idea of using the spin-offs to eventually bring these characters back together again is something that now seems to be in development. Nothing has been officially confirmed yet, but considering this idea came from a fairly reliable source, and that past interviews have hinted at something similar, it’s possible we’re looking at what could genuinely become an Avengers: Endgame-style moment on TV.
The Walking Dead May Be Close to Getting a Full Character Reunion Series
image courtesy of amc
The Walking Dead has come a long way over the course of 11 seasons, ending with a conclusion that sent several of its biggest characters off in completely different directions. Daryl leaves the Commonwealth on his own (and later reunites with Carol in The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon); Michonne is alive and sets out on her own journey to find Rick (which leads directly into The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live); and Maggie and Negan each go their separate ways (only to eventually cross paths again in The Walking Dead: Dead City). But is that it? According to insider Daniel Richtman (DanielRPK), who is well known for sharing rumors, leaks, and early information about movies, TV shows, and games, there’s still a light at the end of the tunnel for fans hoping for a proper ending.
According to the informant, there’s a chance a massive crossover could happen in a brand-new series, on the same kind of scale audiences saw in theaters in 2019 with the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The project would already be in development at AMC. And that’s exciting news, because this kind of report tends to surface exactly when several spin-offs are nearing their end and when The Walking Dead universe feels like it desperately needs a point of convergence. The idea of bringing these stories together doesn’t come out of nowhere; it comes from the realization that the franchise has become too fragmented, and continuing down that path will only weaken the overall impact of everything that came before. And honestly, that’s pretty obvious.
Back in 2024, this topic was brought up to The Walking Dead chief content officer Scott M. Gimple in an interview with TVLine, where he openly expressed his desire to see a reunion happen. “So when it comes to something like [an ‘Avengers: Endgame‘-style, all-series crossover event], yeah, I do have dreams of merging this all together, and I have laid little breadcrumbs toward that, but you never know exactly when and how [it will come together], because of a variety of reasonsโฆ” he said. “I will just say that I’m building those pathways, but there could be all sorts of pivots along the way that change it.”
And honestly, let’s be real that it’s been way too long since Rick and Daryl shared a scene together, right? Who doesn’t want to see them reunited? And this isn’t a small detail or random nostalgia talking. It’s a structural flaw in how The Walking Dead chose to end (or not end) its main storylines. Rick disappeared from the flagship series without reuniting with the people who helped define him (something fans dreamed about for years), and Daryl was left carrying an absence that was never truly resolved. Even though The Ones Who Live gave Rick and Michonne emotional closure, it was clear that this ending was selective.
On top of that, every spin-off focused on characters from the original series keeps leaning into increasingly isolated stories. Daryl Dixon works well as a character study, but it also pulls the character even further away from what made him emotionally relevant in the first place. Dead City, meanwhile, relies almost entirely on the Maggie-Negan dynamic โ which is compelling, but has arguably already run its course within its own bubble. These shows aren’t bad, but they’re limited precisely because they lack the collective weight that was always the soul of The Walking Dead. Yes, there’s still an audience for all of them, but anyone who followed this zombie apocalypse universe from the start knows nothing compares to the cultural phenomenon it once was.
Why a New The Walking Dead Crossover Series Is the Right Move
image courtesy of amc
The idea of a crossover is, actually, less about spectacle and more about logical storytelling. An Endgame-style event wouldn’t need to reinvent anything; it would just need to do what the franchise has always done best: put different characters in the same space, force old conflicts back to the surface, and let choices shape the ending. The difference this time is that it would serve as an actual conclusion, not yet another vague “to be continued.” And here’s the frustrating part: the franchise has already proven it knows how to do this. The early seasons worked because everything felt connected โ losses, separations, and reunions all had real consequences. Now, it feels like the characters exist in parallel universes that never touch. A crossover would be the chance to fix that and remind viewers that these people survived the same hell, even if they’re scattered across different places now.
And of course, there’s a risk involved. A poorly executed crossover could easily turn into a shallow parade of cameos and rushed decisions with little substance. But the risk of doing nothing is even bigger. If The Walking Dead ends its stories as a collection of disconnected epilogues, the final feeling will be fragmentation, not closure. And that would be a waste for a franchise that, even with all its missteps, knew how to handle tension, emotion, and consequence better than most shows on TV (and yes, even with its bumps along the way).
image courtesy of amc
At the end of the day, I (and I’d argue most fans) don’t want a crossover because it sounds big and marketable. I want it because it makes sense. Because it’s long overdue for these stories to collide again. Because The Walking Dead shouldn’t end as a set of disconnected afterthoughts. An Endgame-style event wouldn’t fix every problem the franchise has, I know that. But it would fix the most important one: giving both the characters and the fans a shared, earned sense of closure after such a powerful run on TV. After everything that’s been built over the years, that shouldn’t feel optional โ it should feel inevitable.
This is the last real opportunity to give meaning to the current dispersion. It’s about acknowledging that these stories belong to one another. Characters like Rick, Daryl, Carol, Maggie, and Negan aren’t isolated pieces; they’re part of the same larger narrative. Pretending otherwise only weakens the identity, the purpose, and the impact of a universe that firmly made TV history.
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