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Stranger Things Season 5 Release Schedule: Final Episodes Drop This Holiday

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Stranger Things

The Final Chapter: Stranger Things Returns for One Last Battle

Right, let’s talk about Stranger Things season 5, because after nearly a decade of Demogorgons and Upside Down nightmares, we’re finally getting closure. And honestly? It’s about bloody time.

Netflix is splitting the final season across three release dates, kicking off November 26th with four episodes. Christmas Day brings another three, and New Year’s Eve delivers the grand finale. Eight episodes total to wrap up the Hawkins gang’s story, with that last one getting a proper theatrical release in over 350 cinemas across the US and Canada.

Co-creators Matt and Ross Duffer have been sitting on the final scene for years apparently, which explains why this feels less like milking a franchise and more like they’ve genuinely been building toward something. “We’ve known for a really long time what the final scene was going to be,” Matt told The Hollywood Reporter, and you can feel that purpose in how they’ve structured this final run.

The episode titles alone tell you they’re going big: ‘The Crawl’, ‘The Turnbow Trap’, ‘Sorcerer’, leading up to ‘The Rightside Up’ for the finale. That last one screens in theatres at 8pm ET on December 31st, same time it drops on Netflix, which is a brilliant move for fans who want that communal experience.

After ten years of watching these kids grow up fighting interdimensional horrors, ending it on New Year’s Eve feels weirdly perfect. One chapter closes as another begins and all that. The Duffers admit they’re going to miss having that safety net of returning to these characters, and honestly, so will we.

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Events

UK & Ireland Comic Cons 2026: Your Complete Convention Calendar

Every major comic con, anime expo, and fandom event happening in the UK and Ireland in 2026. Dates, venues, guests, and what you need to know.

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Comic Con

Why 2026 Is Shaping Up to Be Massive

If you’ve been to a UK con in the past few years, you’ve probably noticed the crowds getting bigger, the guest lists getting wilder, and venues scrambling to keep up. That trend isn’t slowing down.

2026 is already shaping up with some interesting patterns worth watching: MegaCon’s aggressive expansion across four cities, MCM holding down both spring and autumn London dates plus a Birmingham return, and anime events finally getting the venue upgrades they deserve. Whether you’re chasing voice actor autographs, competing in cosplay, or just hunting for that one obscure figure at the vendor hall, there’s something here for you.

Here’s everything announced so far, month by month.


January 2026

MegaCon Live Dublin Dates: January 17–18 | Venue: RDS, Dublin, Ireland

Kicking off the year with a stacked voice actor lineup including Kari Wahlgren (Haruko in FLCL), Barbara Goodson (Rita Repulsa herself), and Anairis Quinones. If you’re into anime dubs, this is your first must-attend of the year. The guest list also includes Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant for the Doctor Who crowd—an interesting mix that suggests MegaCon is casting a wide net.

MegaCon Live London Dates: January 24–25 | Venue: ExCeL Convention Centre, London

Same week, different city. Many of the Dublin guests are doing double duty here, including the Iron Man comics legend Bob Layton. Worth noting: ExCeL is massive, which usually means better vendor variety but more walking. Plan accordingly.

Exeter Comic-Con Date: January 31 | Venue: Matford Centre, Exeter

Paul McGann (the Eighth Doctor) headlines alongside Colin Baker, making this a quiet gem for Who fans in the southwest. Ross Mullan—the man behind multiple White Walkers in Game of Thrones—rounds out a guest list that punches above its weight for a regional con.


February 2026

AnimeCon Manchester Dates: February 28 – March 1 | Venue: Manchester Central Convention Complex

Three days including workshops, silent disco, and karaoke—plus Kaiji Tang and Zeno Robinson on the guest roster. The Lego and Minecraft zones make this more family-friendly than some anime events, if you’re planning to bring younger fans along.


March 2026

Kaizoku-Con Dates: March 20–22 | Venue: University College Cork, Ireland

Student-run and proud of it. The name means “pirate” in Japanese, and the vibe matches—scrappier, more community-focused, with a cosplay competition and light show. Guests TBA, but worth watching if you’re in Ireland and want something different from the MegaCon circuit.

MegaCon Live Birmingham Dates: March 28–29 | Venue: The NEC Birmingham

The NEC is a beast of a venue—you could genuinely get lost in there. Guests TBA, but MegaCon’s track record suggests expect a mix of anime VAs, classic sci-fi actors, and comic creators. The kids zone makes this one of the better options for families.


May 2026

MCM Comic Con London Dates: May 22–24 | Venue: ExCeL Convention Centre, London

The big one. MCM London is the UK’s flagship pop culture event, and if you can only make one con this year, this is usually the one to prioritise. Three days of gaming, anime, and pop culture—guests TBA at time of writing, but historically this is where you see major TV and film announcements, surprise appearances, and the most elaborate cosplay outside of Japan.


June 2026

AnimeCon Birmingham Dates: June 12–14 | Venue: National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham

David Matranga (Shoto Todoroki in My Hero Academia, among dozens of other roles) is confirmed. Same DNA as the Manchester event—workshops, panels, silent disco—but in the Midlands. The NEC location means excellent transport links if you’re coming from anywhere in England.

SunnyCon Anime Expo Dates: June 19–21 | Venue: St. James’ Park (Newcastle United Football Ground), Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Yes, that St. James’ Park. There’s something surreal about an anime expo in a Premier League stadium, and SunnyCon leans into the uniqueness. Cosplay guests Advent Dragon Creations and Bat and Blossom Cosplay are confirmed—worth following if you’re into costume crafting.


July 2026

MegaCon Live Manchester Dates: July 25–26 | Venue: Manchester Central

MegaCon’s fourth UK city of the year. Guests TBA, but if the pattern holds, expect some crossover with their other 2026 events. Manchester Central is a solid mid-size venue—big enough for variety, small enough you won’t need GPS to navigate.


August 2026

Tokonatsu Dates: August 6–10 | Venue: Boyd Memorial Camp Site & Activity Centre, Henlow, Bedfordshire

This one’s different. Five days of camping combined with anime, cosplay, and a matsuri (Japanese festival) atmosphere. If you’ve ever wanted to do a con that’s more “experience” than “event,” Tokonatsu is it. The Toko Arcade and tabletop gaming run late into the night. Not for everyone, but if it’s for you, it’s really for you.

MCM Comic Con Birmingham Dates: August 7–9 | Venue: NEC Birmingham

MCM’s Midlands return. Expect TV and film stars, independent creators, and strong UK cosplay presence. MCM describes it as having “all the little moments you just don’t get anywhere else”—which tracks. The Birmingham events tend to feel slightly more intimate than the London megashows while still pulling solid guests.

Kitacon Dates: August 14–16 | Venue: Warwick Arts Centre / University of Warwick, Coventry

University campus setting gives this one a different energy—more intimate, more community-driven. Covers the full geek spectrum: anime, video games, cosplay. Worth considering if you want something between a massive expo and a tiny local meetup.


October 2026

MCM Comic Con London Dates: October 23–25 | Venue: ExCeL Convention Centre, London

MCM’s autumn return. If you missed the May event (or just can’t get enough), this is your second shot at the UK’s biggest pop culture gathering. Music, gaming, anime, comics—the full spread. October dates often pull different guests than spring, so it’s worth watching both announcements.


September, November & December 2026

Nothing confirmed yet for these months, though several cons from previous years (Wales Comic Con, London Film & Comic Con) haven’t announced 2026 dates. We’ll update this guide as new events drop.


What to Watch

A few things we’re keeping an eye on: MegaCon’s rapid expansion across four cities suggests they’re going for market dominance—interesting to see how that affects guest exclusivity. MCM holding firm with three major events (two London, one Birmingham) shows they’re not ceding ground. The voice actor lineups lean heavily American dub talent, which could be a sign of what’s selling tickets right now.

Guest lists and schedules will evolve throughout the year. Bookmark this page—we’ll update it as new reveals hit.

Missing an event? Let us know: hello@fanaticalfandom.com

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Games

Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma Brings Its Village-Building Magic to PS5 and Xbox

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Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma

Half a million people have already lost themselves in the fields and festivals of Azuma, and now PlayStation and Xbox players finally get their chance. Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma is making the jump to PS5 and Xbox Series X|S on February 13, 2026, and if you’ve been waiting for a game where you can spend hours perfecting your village layout, wooing a literal god, and purifying corrupted lands with sacred dance powers, this might be exactly what you’ve been looking for.

While the game launched on Switch and PC back in June 2025, the PlayStation and Xbox versions aren’t just straight ports. You’re getting all the free post-launch content baked right into the base game from day one. Marvelous Europe is also throwing in the Rune Factory 4 Hero Outfit Bundle as a bonus for all digital versions.

Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma

The game drops you into Azuma, a sprawling Japanese-inspired world where you play as an Earth Dancer, essentially a mystical farmer with combat skills and the power to literally dance corruption away. But you’re not just tending your own plot of land, you’re rebuilding entire villages from the ground up, strategically placing buildings to bring people back and restore the land. You can recruit the villagers you’ve befriended to fight alongside you or help manage your growing empire.

What caught my attention is the sheer variety packed in here. You’ve got monster collecting, village construction, exploration across seasonal-themed areas, dynamic combat with new weapons like bows and talismans, and the classic Rune Factory romance options where you can court gods and mortals alike. The anime-style graphics look gorgeous, with each village drawing from different aspects of Japanese culture and festivals.

Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma

The digital editions start at €59.99 for standard, €69.99 for Digital Deluxe with the Seasons of Love and Festive Attire bundles, and €79.99 for Super Digital Deluxe that adds a soundtrack and art book. Physical editions for PS5 will be up for pre-order soon. If you’re planning to dive deep, you could easily sink a hundred hours into perfecting your villages, maxing out relationships, and hunting down every secret tucked away in those seasonal landscapes.

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Games

The Boys VR Game Announced: Trigger Warning Hits Quest & PSVR 2 in 2026

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The Boys

The writers’ room from The Boys actually worked on this game. That’s not the usual “inspired by” licensing deal where developers get a style guide and some logo files. Developer Arvore sat down with the people who craft those jaw-dropping twists and the cast who deliver them.

The Boys: Trigger Warning launches in 2026 for Meta Quest and PlayStation VR 2, putting you into an original story as a brand new Supe. You’re not playing as Homelander or Butcher. Instead, you’ll uncover a grotesque Vought secret that turns a family outing into carnage. So they’re not holding back on the show’s signature brutality.

Series creator Eric Kripke had been teasing “other kinds of video games” for weeks, and now we know what he meant. This stealth-action VR experience has you infiltrating Vought alongside The Boys, seeking revenge “in the most chaotic way possible.” If you’ve watched the show, you know exactly what kind of chaos we’re talking about.

The game drops the same year as the fifth and final season of The Boys, which premieres April 2026 on Prime Video. Vought Rising, the 1950s prequel series, is also on the horizon. Arvore seems positioned to expand the universe right when everything else wraps up.

We’ve seen Homelander pop up in Call of Duty and Mortal Kombat, but a dedicated game exploring original Vought horrors? That’s new territory. The Boys delivers hilarious, sometimes genuinely disturbing moments that keep you hooked with its wild storyline, so stepping into that world in VR sounds very exciting.

Keep your eyes on any gameplay footage for Vought facility details. Those production designers love hiding lore in background signage and corporate propaganda. We’ll be pausing every frame.

The Boys series returns for its fifth and final season in April 2026 on Prime Video.

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