Why does Kit Connor not want to make Heartstopper after a fourth and final season?

Promotional poster for Heartstopper | Image via Netflix
Promotional poster for Heartstopper | Image via Netflix

There’s something about Heartstopper that hits differently. It’s soft, honest, and full of heart, like reading a diary you forgot you needed. While fans around the world hold onto the story with all the love in their hearts, Kit Connor, who plays the beloved Nick Nelson, quietly gets ready to move on. Not because he’s tired of the story, but because sometimes, it’s just time.

In an interview with The Cut, published on April 9, 2025, Kit revisited something he first shared back in November 2024 with The Hollywood Reporter: he doesn’t want a fourth season to happen just for the sake of keeping the show alive. He believes the story deserves to end with intention, not be dragged out. He explained that he’s feeling the need for something new, saying,

“I’d like to have a little bit of a break just to sort of cleanse my mind and my palate, and then I’d like to do something completely different.” He also added, “I want to try and spend the next few years doing things that are quite difficult to try and force myself to get better.”

According to reports by TeenVogue, he remarked,

“You don’t want to see Olivia Colman driving a 30-year-old Kit Connor to high school.”

So, while it’s clear how much Heartstopper has meant to him, it’s equally clear that he’s ready for the next chapter. And maybe that’s exactly what makes his journey with the series so special, it was never about staying comfortable. It was about growth from start to finish.


A quiet story that says a lot

Heartstopper isn’t loud. It’s not trying to shock you. It doesn’t rush through the mess of emotions. Instead, it sits with them. It takes its time.

The show follows Charlie Spring, a sweet, openly gay teen who unexpectedly starts falling for Nick, the school’s star rugby player. At first, it’s just friendship, nervous smiles, and text messages full of hope, but gradually, it becomes something more. Something deeper. And what’s beautiful is how the show doesn’t shy away from the awkwardness, or the fear, or the joy. It leans into all of it.

But Heartstopper isn’t just a love story. It’s about identity, friendship, mental health, and self-discovery. It touches on what it means to feel different and what it feels like to be loved exactly as you are. That’s where the magic is. It doesn't try to be perfect. It just tries to be real.


The cast that made it feel real

What really brought these characters to life is how much heart the cast poured into them. Kit Connor made Nick feel layered and believable, someone quietly figuring things out, unsure but brave. Before Heartstopper, Kit had already been in Rocketman and His Dark Materials, but this role made people stop and really see him.

Joe Locke, who plays Charlie, had never acted professionally before the show, but you’d never guess it. His performance is so vulnerable and grounded, it just clicks. Yasmin Finney, as Elle, brought a kind of quiet strength and warmth that stayed with viewers long after the episodes ended. William Gao, Corinna Brown, Kizzy Edgell, and everyone else added something essential. The chemistry between the cast doesn’t feel like acting. It feels like a real friendship.

Heartstopper | Image via Netflix
Heartstopper | Image via Netflix

From webcomic to the screen

Heartstopper started as a webcomic by Alice Oseman back in 2016. It was soft, slow-paced, and full of emotional detail, everything mainstream stories often rushed past. The comic found an audience almost immediately, and when it became a graphic novel, its fanbase only grew. Eventually, Netflix saw its potential and brought it to life on screen.

What’s great is that Alice Oseman didn’t just hand the story over. She stayed on as the writer of the show. That’s probably why it still feels so true to the original. And with Euros Lyn directing (he worked on Doctor Who and Broadchurch), they created a visual style that feels like flipping through the pages of the comic itself. The colors, the animated leaves, the little sparks of light, it’s all done with so much care.


What changed from page to screen?

The show sticks pretty closely to the books, but there are a few additions that really work. For starters, characters like Isaac and Imogen were created just for the series, adding more layers and perspectives. And while the main storyline stays true, the show spends more time developing the side characters, giving them space to grow.

Some events happen in a slightly different order, and a few scenes are expanded to let moments land more fully. But none of it feels out of place. If anything, it helps the story breathe in its new form.

Heartstopper | Image via Netflix
Heartstopper | Image via Netflix

What people are saying

From critics to fans on TikTok, Heartstopper has been embraced with open arms. The first season has a perfect score on Rotten Tomatoes, which almost never happens. People love how it centers queer joy instead of just focusing on trauma or struggle. It’s honest, but it’s also hopeful, and that’s powerful.

Online, the response has been overwhelming. Fan art, playlists, edits, heartfelt DMs to the cast- people aren’t just watching this show. They’re living it. And for a lot of viewers, especially younger LGBTQ+ fans, it’s the first time they’ve seen themselves reflected back with love.


So, why is Kit ready to move on?

After spending years growing up with Nick Nelson, Kit seems to be feeling the pull of something new. And it’s not just speculation. He’s been open about it. In a recent Interview with The Hollywood Reporter, he said:

“I don’t know if Heartstopper will be back for a Season 4.”

This kind of honesty doesn’t come with bitterness, just realism. Right now, there’s no confirmation, and Kit sounds at peace with that.

He also shared a glimpse into where his head is at professionally:

“I’d like to have a little bit of a break just to sort of cleanse my mind and my palate, and then I’d like to do something completely different.”

And he added something that says a lot about where he wants to go next:

“I want to try and spend the next couple years just doing quite hard stuff so that I can try and force myself to get better.”

It’s clear he’s not walking away from Heartstopper because he’s tired of it; it’s because he’s ready to grow beyond it. And that’s something fans, as much as they’ll miss him, can respect.

Heartstopper | Image via Netflix
Heartstopper | Image via Netflix

And what about the future of the show?

Alice Oseman has said that if a fourth season happens, it’ll be the final one. She’s always had a clear idea of how Nick and Charlie’s story should end, and she wants to make sure it ends well. No dragging it out. No unnecessary drama. Just a proper goodbye.

If Kit doesn’t return for that last chapter, it’ll be sad, yes. But also understandable. He gave everything to Nick. And you can feel that in every scene. Whether the show ends in season three or goes one more round, it’s already made its mark. And it’s one that’ll last.

Edited by Sohini Biswas