Will ‘Agatha All Along’ Have a Season 2?
The following story contains spoilers through the ending of Agatha All Along.
WHAT AN ABSOLUTE relief. Honestly, for a while there it seemed like Marvel Studios may have simply lost the juice. Thankfully, though, Agatha All Along proved that the ever-expansive franchise is still capable of putting out a show that’s not only loyal to the long history and lore of Marvel Comics, but is also well-acted, well-written, and just makes for some great television. Reactions to most of the recent MCU shows were divided at best, but it’s hard to argue against Agatha All Along as the studio’s best television project in recent memory.
What made it so great? To start, it certainly had doubters; while Agatha Harkness (played by Kathryn Hahn) was certainly a popular character when WandaVision aired back in 2021, she was still a supporting character in a show that aired more than three and a half years ago. Checking in on the Agatha All Along story, for Marvel fans, was hardly equal to catching up with Tony Stark or Steve Rogers.
But, ultimately, not having those kinds of expectations and that kind of existing framework is what helped to make Agatha All Along great. Because showrunner Jac Schaeffer had the freedom to make the show she wanted to make, it wound up being a piece centered not on cameos or cliffhangers, but characters and how they develop (and also let those characters just lean into having fun when they could).
Agatha also avoided the issue that many of the other Marvel Studios shows had: it’s structured like a TV show. Each episode was self-contained—with it’s own beginning, middle, and end—while still serving the larger over-arching plot; this comes in stark contrast to some of the other shows that are structured in the six-episode format that basically amounted to an overlong movie. Many of those shows dragged in the middle—a problem Schaeffer avoided with both WandaVision and Agatha All Along.
Now that we’ve reached the end of the delightful Agatha All Along, though, you’re probably wondering if the show will get a season 2, and, furthermore, how this story will continue—if at all.
Read on and we’ve got you covered.
Will Agatha All Along have a season 2?
Agatha All Along has been a very popular and well-received show, especially considering the not-great reception that many other recent Marvel shows have gotten. But Agatha All Along was always planned as a limited series, and will almost certainly remain a limited series. Don’t expect a season 2.
We know that sounds shocking—Agatha All Along kind of does end with a cliffhanger. What’s going to happen with Agatha and Billy? Will they find Tommy? These are all certainly story threads that should (and likely will) be picked up in the future. But the fact of the matter is that the story surrounding Agatha is concluded. There’s a reasonable chance, however, that these characters could return in a different series from writer Jac Schaeffer, who wrote both WandaVision and Agatha All Along. Perhaps a Wiccan solo show? Or perhaps both characters show up in Marvel’s planned Vision series (more on that a little below).
But the fact remains that Agatha All Along season 2 does not seem super likely.
Keep in mind that to this point the only Marvel Studios shows to receive a second season are Loki (which concluded with its second season) and What If…? (which is an anthology-style show, and not really an ongoing story). The other Marvel shows, like The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, Ms. Marvel, and Hawkeye, among others, have only been a single season and will likely figure into upcoming movies and other projects rather than receive a second season.
Despite the fact that Agatha All Along has been popular with both fans and critics, this will likely remain the case. But we’ll probably see this story continue…
Marvel’s WandaVision and Agatha All Along story will continue with both Wonder Man and Vision Quest, though—and possibly a Scarlet Witch movie
Think of it as a trilogy—WandaVision was the first chapter, Agatha All Along was the second chapter, and the upcoming Vision series (which at one point was called Vision Quest and will feature Paul Bettany returning as his popular Marvel character, Vision) will probably serve as the third and likely concluding chapter. The showrunner for Vision will be Terry Matalas, who was a co-showrunner and executive producer of Star Trek: Picard, and it’s currently planned for a 2026 release.
Those who watched WandaVision will recall that while the original Vision died in 2018’s Avengers: Infinity War, Wanda Maximoff’s (Elizabeth Olsen) magic brought a version of him (albeit a kind of fake one) back in the Disney+ series. By the end of the show, while Wanda’s fake vision went away, he helped a government-rebuilt White Vision to unlock something in his own head/programming; White Vision then flew away into the oblivion. The Vision series will pick up at this point, and will almost certainly overlap with the events we’ve seen elsewhere in this orbit.
2025 will also see the release of the Wonder Man show, which will star Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Simon Williams/Wonder Man. We haven’t seen this character in live-action just yet, but in the comics, it’s Wonder Man’s brain patterns that are stolen by Ultron to help create Vision. Simon is also a frequent love interest of Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch, so there’s that.
A short teaser for the Wonder Man series recently dropped on Disney+, and Marvel released it as part of a promotional video for upcoming projects:
As far as Billy Maximoff goes, he’s a key member of the Young Avengers, which Marvel has long been teasing with the inclusion of characters like Ms. Marvel, America Chavez, Kate Bishop, and Billy and Tommy themselves. That movie (or show) hasn’t been announced just yet, but it was actively teased at the end of The Marvels.
Finally, there’s also the long-rumored Scarlet Witch movie, which has yet to be officially announced, but certainly has smoke point toward it, and when there’s smoke, there’s (sometimes) fire.
The most compelling piece of evidence pointing toward a Scarlet Witch movie comes from a September article in Production Weekly, an industry magazine that’s commonly shared for crew and production jobs. That listing suggests that Elizabeth Olsen will return as the star, and that Jac Schaeffer and Megan McDonnell—both of whom worked on WandaVision—will write.
Now, this isn’t always 100% reliable, and we know that Marvel Studios projects always change quite a bit behind the scenes. And the fact that the project hasn’t been announced by Disney or Marvel at all means a lot more could change. But for now, signs are pointing toward Wanda Maximoff returning on the big screen—and we’d bet we get to see Vision, Agatha, Billy, and Tommy all along with her.
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