The second season of Wednesday not only brought back the protagonist but also expanded the presence of the Addams family. Jenna Ortega returns to Nevermore Academy alongside Pugsley, Morticia, and Gomez. But as Alfred Gough explains about the central dynamic with Tyler, for Wednesday he is a monster and exactly where he should be.
Season 2 Part 1 shifts the tone of the series toward more direct confrontations, both emotional and physical. With Morticia now working on campus, her protective stance over her daughter’s psychic abilities creates a constant point of friction. These shifts open room for the writers to go back to threads left hanging in the first season, especially the fallout from Tyler being revealed as the Hyde. In their interview with Variety, creators Alfred Gough and Miles Millar made it clear that his fate, and whether rehabilitation is possible, is part of the conversation. It sits within a broader look at how the series plays with contrasts between families, where moral lines get drawn, and how past choices keep shaping the present. That focus connects Tyler’s journey to the overall framework of the season.
Wednesday’s view of Tyler
From the perspective of the title character, there is no possibility of redemption. Tyler, who once appeared as a quiet and gentle young man, had his true nature exposed. Gough made clear that Wednesday sees him in absolute terms and wants him to remain locked away. In contrast, Sheriff Galpin’s position offers a very different outlook. Having already lost his wife and now facing the reality of his son’s transformation, he continues to believe that some part of Tyler remains salvageable. This contrast between rejection and hope defines their roles in the ongoing conflict.

Scenes that underline the conflict
Tyler’s story in Part 1 is closely connected to the events at Willow Hill Psychiatric Hospital, where the Long-term Outcast Integration Study, or L.O.I.S., is being conducted. The program’s purpose is to remove the abilities of outcasts and transfer them to normies. This operation is led by Judi Stonehurst, later revealed to be the murderer behind a series of attacks.
During the final episode of Part 1, chaos erupts when the L.O.I.S. subjects are freed. In the midst of this, Tyler kills Marilyn Thornhill, the figure responsible for unlocking his Hyde nature in Season 1, and then attacks Wednesday by throwing her through a glass window before escaping. These scenes confirm the danger he poses and establish an open question about the consequences of his escape for what comes next.

Building the character
According to Gough, parts of Tyler’s behavior in the first season were real. He was
“a kid who didn’t know who he was, and secrets were kept from him by his father”.
The revelation from Thornhill acted as a turning point, unlocking his hidden side while also showing how he had been manipulated or used by others. This combination of concealed truth and external influence positions Tyler as a tragic figure, shaped as much by his circumstances as by his own actions.
Parallels and central themes
Tyler’s arc runs in parallel to Wednesday’s own challenges. While he navigates the fallout of his actions and the loss of both parents, she faces the sudden loss of her psychic ability. The problem arises after she pushes her power too far without fully understanding it. Morticia intervenes, taking away Goody’s book and insisting that her daughter rest.
The tension between power, control and consequence runs throughout the season. The exploitation of abilities appears in multiple forms: in Wednesday’s overuse of her visions, in the L.O.I.S. experiments, and in the manipulation of individuals by those seeking to gain from their talents. These elements anchor the season’s narrative in moral choices and the limits of personal agency.

Expectations for Part 2
Millar confirms that the answer to what is possible for Tyler will come in the second half of the season. Viewers will see the character outside of the asylum, and the development is promised to be
“surprising but also inevitable”.
It points to a role that will keep moving, with more of his story still to be uncovered before the season closes. Part 2 doesn’t have a confirmed release date yet, but the split-season approach hints that the wait should be shorter rather than longer. There are still plenty of threads hanging loose, and the way Part 1 ended, letting dangerous forces out into the open, means the next episodes have work to do. They’ll need to tie those pieces together and, most likely, open the door to new problems at the same time.
Final considerations
Wednesday keeps circling back to the push and pull between families, the weight of secrets and the way truths can surface without warning. Tyler’s path sits right in the middle of that. It shows how the series avoids quick fixes, leaning instead on uncertainty and the kind of tension that doesn’t go away overnight. With Wednesday holding her ground and Galpin holding on to hope, where he ends up is still unclear, and that uncertainty is part of what keeps viewers watching.
It’s the mix that gives the show its pull, the mystery, the way the characters are built, the conflicts that overlap. All of it has helped cement its place among Netflix’s biggest current hits. Splitting the season has only sharpened that feeling, turning the break into a point where attention naturally lingers, waiting to see what Part 2 will do with Tyler’s story and the fallout from Wednesday’s choices.