Steve Harrington’s Scariest Moment in the STRANGER THINGS Finale Explained by Creators

by · GeekTyrant

For years, fans of Stranger Things have braced themselves for the same fear. If anyone was going to die before the series wrapped up, it would be Steve Harrington.

The babysitter. The protector. The guy who kept surviving when it felt like his luck had to run out eventually. So when the final episode puts Steve in mortal danger, tumbling from the radio tower in the middle of the chaos, it hits exactly where the audience expects it to.

That moment lands hard because it taps into a long-running expectation. Steve has lived at the top of death prediction lists since Season 2, and the show has never exactly gone out of its way to reassure viewers. The fall feels sudden and brutal, just long enough to make it seem like the prediction has finally come true. But the rescue that follows shifts the meaning of the scene entirely.

Jonathan Byers is the one who grabs Steve and pulls him back up. According to Matt Duffer, the scene wasn’t designed to mess with fans or toy with Steve’s popularity. It was about resolving something that had been sitting between these two characters for years:

“It wasn’t designed to torture fans who are terrified that Steve is gonna die. I’ve never really understood why they’re so worried about Steve dying. Really, it was about him and Jonathan coming together, and that’s why that moment is in there.

“We wanted those two to find common ground by the end of the series, and it leads to that conversation they have in the Abyss where they finally open up about their feelings and their conflict as it relates to Nancy.

“And Joe [Keery, who plays Steve] and Charlie Heaton, who plays Jonathan] in real life are very close, and we wanted to tap into that bromance and have that reflected on screen in some way. We wanted the least likely person to save Steve.”

Steve’s near-death experience isn’t about shock or suspense for its own sake, it’s about closure. Steve and Jonathan have spent most of the series orbiting the same people while rarely understanding each other. Their shared history with Nancy created tension that never fully disappeared, even as they fought on the same side.

By making Jonathan the one who saves Steve, the finale forces that tension into the open. The conversation that follows in the Abyss finally lets both characters acknowledge what they’ve been carrying.

It’s awkward, honest, and grounded, which makes it feel earned. This isn’t a rivalry resolved with a punch or a joke. It’s resolved through vulnerability.

The moment also reflects how far Steve has come. Early in the series, he was defined by ego and insecurity. By the end, his survival depends on someone he once viewed as an obstacle rather than an ally.

The rescue reinforces that Steve’s arc was never about how he dies, but about how he learns to care, trust, and be part of something bigger than himself.

For fans who have spent years waiting for the other shoe to drop, the fake-out might still sting. But in context, it becomes one of the finale’s best character beats.

Source: Tudum