The Hunting Wives released its first season on July 25, 2025, with all eight episodes available for binge-watching. In an interview with Collider, Brittany Snow credits the series’ mix of shock value and emotional depth for its positive reception. Snow also discussed Sophie's journey and described her emotional involvement with Margo, which also sets up the climax of the show's first season. She highlighted a scene that might be explored in more detail in season 2.
Sophie, even when drunk, is seen protecting Margo in front of Abby. The actor says,
“I think the end is really interesting, and I know that we would deal with it in Season 2. There are a lot of questions that didn’t get answered because Rebecca wants to answer them in the next season if we get one.”
Therefore, what Season 2 holds is only to be seen; until then, enjoy The Hunting Wives Season 1, and read on to learn what Snow revealed about her character and the show's conclusion.
Here is what Brittany Snow said about The Hunting Wives' conclusion
Snow expressed how she finds Sophie's journey compelling by the end of The Hunting Wives. Sophie is portrayed as a woman who has fallen into a web of secrets, desires, and betrayal, forcing her to confront her own identity. In episode eight, Sophie learns that Margo, the woman she idolized, has killed Abby using nothing but Sophie's gun.
"It’s really a big blow to her that, no matter what she was doing, even when she blacked out, she’s always been trying to protect Margo in this way, and then Margo just completely turned around and lied. I think that’ll be a really big question for the next season."
Snow shed light on how Sophie was devastated and dealing with the complete betrayal of the loyalty she had shown. Therefore, guilt, protection, and betrayal between Sophie and Margo are something Season 2 would delve into.

Snow also said what she loves about Sophie in The Hunting Wives,
"The thing that I love about the character of Sophie, and I feel like what I loved about reading all eight scripts, was that Sophie ends up, at the end of episode eight, exactly where she was probably in the flashback before we even see her. She’s had this full circle transformation of finding herself again, and yet here we are. Her true self is a mess."
What Brittany Snow liked most about her character is that Sophie ultimately embraces her true self.
"What I really loved about the character is that she comes back to herself, and she is not a good person."
Snow will appear in Murdaugh Murders and The Best in Me, and she expresses excitement about directing again. She also still holds deep affection for her early 2000s series American Dreams, calling it a formative experience.