The conclusion of every Westworld episode typically leaves viewers with a host of unanswered questions—questions that have spawned some totally insane fan theories. True to form, the season 2 finale of HBO’s mind-bending sci-fi series left fans somewhere between extremely satisfied and utterly confused.
“The Passenger” proved to be a 90-minute mind fuck that saw formations of unexpected alliances, new revelations, and one helluva cliffhanger.
#Westworld became a top trending topic on Twitter as users logged on to debate the episode’s meaning—and even ponder their own existence:
https://twitter.com/Ozzaikeru/status/1011239290490277888
I have no idea what happened on the season finale of #Westworld, but I think it was good. I’m also not sure if I’m real.
— Adam Hoge (@AdamHoge) June 25, 2018
I wonder if I did some tequila shots, smoked some cannabis, dropped acid, consumed shrooms & peyote, if #Westworld would become a linear story line that would make perfect sense… 🤔
— Edan Clay 🇺🇸 (@EdanClay) June 25, 2018
https://twitter.com/Wieneraaron/status/1011115797924573185https://twitter.com/yungstevenwinn/status/1011120421024849920https://twitter.com/DakotaKai_WWE/status/1011118673548009478
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What the fuck#Westworld— James Ray 🔻 (@GoodVibePolitik) June 25, 2018
https://twitter.com/PorgStrong/status/1011240178957082625
WESTWORLD : you may ask, what is free will? Is it an illusion? The answer is yes.
HBO Exec: (pantomiming wildly to pad things out)
WESTWORLD:…or is it? Let’s take 3 more seasons to explain.— mr. “just joined a new forum” (@Papapishu) June 25, 2018
How I feel watching the finale of #Westworld but I still can’t wait for next season. pic.twitter.com/xLNkbh42b4
— Brandy (She/Her) (@Brandle07) June 25, 2018
Some thought they knew what it all meant… until they saw the post-credits scene:
https://twitter.com/7hontor/status/1011078911407640577https://twitter.com/CaseyBake16/status/1011080587434758144
The show frequently features instrumental covers of classic rock songs. One viewer proposed that the use of Radiohead’s original recording of “Codex” implies that some Westworld characters are no longer operating in an artificial consciousness.
The fact that Codex by Radiohead was NOT a cover but the actual song is symbolic because they are now in the real world OMG #Westworld
— Jose Munoz (@josemunoz2008) June 25, 2018
What do you think?
h/t: Syfy Wire