Let’s make this simple: You want to know if there are any post- or mid-credits scenes in Tron: Ares. The answer is yes, there is a mid-credits scene. That scene, along with the film’s “regular” final pre-credits scene, has some pretty big implications for the potential future of the franchise.
Full spoilers for Tron: Ares follow…
The third film in the Tron series, Tron: Ares follows a program, Ares (Jared Leto), who is brought into the real world by his creator, Dillinger Systems’ CEO Julian Dillinger (Evan Peters), as the most advanced and powerful among a group of digitally-created super soldiers. Julian is the grandson of Tron’s nefarious Ed Dillinger (played by the late David Warner), and took over as CEO from his mother, Elisabeth (Gillian Anderson), who has a lot of trepidation about her son’s plans. Those plans include increasing profits by selling Ares and his troops to the military, but Julian has a big problem, which is that nothing he brings forth from the Dillinger Systems Grid, including the humanoid programs or their incredible vehicles or weapons, will maintain in our world after 29 minutes.
This 29-minute barrier is a problem shared by Dillinger’s rival, ENCOM, with their digital creations, for which they have much more altruistic intentions. But when Julian learns ENCOM CEO Eve Kim (Greta Lee) has found the permanence code created by the legendary Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges) that allows these digital beings to stay in the real world without restriction, he orders Ares to get it from her.
Code Breakers
The film’s MacGuffin is the aforementioned permanence code, which Eve first discovers in Alaska at a remote hideaway used by her late sister, Tess (Selene Yun), who died of cancer. In the midst of tons of old floppy disc-held files left by the long-missing Kevin Flynn, Eve finds a copy of the permanence code, overjoyed by what it could mean for the future.
Upon returning to the city, Eve is confronted by Ares and his partner, his fellow warrior program Athena (Jodie Turner-Smith), with the duo using Light Cycles to chase her on her own motorcycle. When she’s cornered on a dock, Eve destroys the drive holding the permanence code in order to stop them from getting it, but Julian’s contingency plan is to have Eve herself shot with a laser, sending her into the Dillinger Grid. Eve might not be able to rewrite the code, but having seen it, it’s now stored inside the recesses of her memory. Julian orders Ares and Athena to extract it from her while derezing her, despite knowing this will lead to her permanent death in both the Grid and the real world.
Having seen Julian’s disregard for his fellow programs’ existence and now realizing that he’s even willing to kill other humans to achieve his goals, the increasingly curious and empathetic Ares turns on Julian and helps Eve escape back to the real world, where he does his best to protect her from his former ally, Athena, even as he’s still hindered himself by the 29-minute limit. Ares convinces a wary Eve to help him get the permanence code, promising it will be kept from Dillinger. As Eve has learned, the file Eve found at Tess’ hideaway was a copy; the original can be found in a building she already goes to every day.
Achieving Impermanence
Eve takes Ares to Kevin Flynn’s old office, circa 1989, which was preserved as a display inside ENCOM. There, they find the server where the permanence code is housed, which is inside the original Grid created by Kevin. Ares travels inside the Grid and finds…Tron, as in a Grid that still looks just like the one from the first Tron movie in 1982, old school-looking digital effects included. After encountering a recreation of Bit from the first film and even getting to ride an original era Light Cycle, Ares reaches the tower in this Grid’s center where he is greeted by none other than Kevin Flynn himself; well, sort of.



