‘None of Your Gates Are Real’ — Stranger Things Fans Warn Each Other Not to Get Upset When ‘Conformity Gate’ Theory Turns Out to Be Nonsense

‘None of Your Gates Are Real’ — Stranger Things Fans Warn Each Other Not to Get Upset When ‘Conformity Gate’ Theory Turns Out to Be Nonsense


Stranger Things fans have concocted a theory that suggests a true, secret ending episode to the series is coming out this week — and now the community is having to issue a warning not to get upset when it turns out to be false.

Warning! Spoilers for Stranger Things Season 5 Episode 8, The Rightside Up, follow:

In the wake of Stranger Things Season 5’s divisive finale, the so-called ‘Conformity Gate’ theory has spread like wildfire across social media, especially TikTok. It posits that the lengthy epilogue we saw in the final episode was an illusion created by villain Vecna, who remains alive and well. So the theory goes anyway.

The ”clues” fueling this theory include students having their hands positioned in the same way Henry Creel does during the graduation scene at Hawkins High, the shorter hairstyles worn by the likes of Nancy, Mike, and Karen, and the appearance of the “WHATZIT?” board game (the kidnapped children knew Henry as Mr. Whatsit).

If that sounds like a stretch to you, there’s more. Fans are fussing over a blank yellow poster spotted in the background of the graduation, and the final shot of the Dungeons & Dragons books, which appear to spell out “X A LIE.” The Abyss was once known as Dimension X, the world from which the Mind Flayer and all the demo monsters originate. Oh, and if you’re wondering why all those characters (where is Vickie?) were mysteriously absent from the epilogue, Vecna doesn’t know they exist, so they’re not part of his illusion. The theory even includes a supposed release date for the true final episode of Stranger Things: January 7, 2026.

“Absolutely delusional,” said one fan. “There is no evidence,” said another. “Please think critically and stop buying into dumb conspiracies.” “This is some Mass Effect 3 ending levels of cope,” one fan of both Stranger Things and BioWare’s sci-fi role-playing series suggested. “I remember back in 2012, fans like myself were so fucking dissatisfied with Mass Effect that it resulted in many fans creating the Indoctrination theory as a way to cope. It entails the main character Shepard was being mind controlled by the Lovecraftian machines which meant that the shitty ending was nothing more than a trick. That’s how bad Mass Effect’s ending was.”

The Duffer Brothers have done the rounds in the wake of the finale’s release, explaining their thinking in multiple interviews. They’ve even confirmed a spinoff will answer one burning question from Season 5. Perhaps it’s time to let it go. And if you’re really desperate for more, there’s the Stranger Things documentary, One Last Adventure: The Making of Stranger Things 5, due out January 12.

Image credit: Netflix.

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.





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