Wednesday Season 2 Part 1: Who
August 24, 2025

When All of Us Are Dead dropped on Netflix in January 2022, it did something most zombie shows stopped doing years ago — it made you care about the people before it started killing them. Forty minutes into the first episode, you already knew which friendships were real, which romance was doomed, and exactly why losing any of these kids would hurt. That emotional groundwork is what separated it from the pack, and it’s also why the Season 1 ending left such an uncomfortable silence.
Four and a half years later, that silence is finally starting to break.
After more than three years of waiting, Netflix announced that Season 2 is now in production. They released a video from the table read featuring the cast.
Filming for Season 2 wrapped in February 2026 after a production period that stretched longer than most fans expected. The show is currently in post-production, which for a series this effects-heavy means the work is far from over — zombie makeup, large-scale action sequences, and international dubbing all take time to do properly.
Netflix hasn’t announced an official release date, and All of Us Are Dead Season 2 was notably absent from Netflix’s confirmed 2026 slate. That absence matters. It almost certainly pushes the premiere into early 2027, though a late 2026 surprise isn’t completely off the table.
The long gap between seasons frustrated a lot of people, but it’s worth remembering that Season 1 itself took years to produce. This is not a show that cuts corners on its visuals, and rushing Season 2 would be the worst thing the production could do, given how high expectations have climbed.
Season 1 was essentially a locked-room survival story. Hyosan High School was the cage, the zombie outbreak was the threat, and the question driving everything was simple: who gets out?
Season 2 doesn’t have that luxury. The cage is gone.
From what’s been confirmed, the story moves beyond the school and into the wider world — specifically Seoul — as the Jonas Virus spreads beyond what the government can quietly contain. That shift changes the entire tone of the show. A school has corridors, stairwells, and defensible rooms. A city has none of that. The scale of danger becomes genuinely harder to comprehend, which is either going to elevate the series or expose weaknesses that the tight first-season structure kept hidden.
The more interesting story development, though, is the hambies.
If you finished Season 1, you know what they are — people infected with the Jonas Virus who didn’t fully turn. Half zombie, half human, capable of thought and feeling but also capable of something much worse. Nam-ra’s reappearance in the finale made it clear the show intends to explore this territory seriously. Season 2 is expected to dig into what it actually means to be a hambie: whether they can coexist with uninfected humans, whether they can control what they are, and whether the real threat going forward is the fully turned zombies or the ones who kept their minds.
That’s a genuinely interesting question, and it’s one the show earned the right to ask.
Several core cast members are confirmed to be returning:
Beyond them, the picture gets murkier.
The most discussed question surrounding the All of Us Are Dead Season 2 cast is Lee Cheong-san, played by Yoon Chan-young. The show never gave him a clean death — he was last seen overwhelmed but the camera looked away before confirmation. In a lesser series, that would just be sloppy writing. In All of Us Are Dead, which has been deliberate about almost everything, it feels like an open door. Whether the writers walk through it or seal it shut is one of the things fans are most anxious about.
New characters are also expected. Expanding into Seoul logically brings in survivors, military personnel, and scientists studying the virus — people with entirely different relationships to the outbreak than teenagers who lived through it from inside a school.

This is the question the All of Us Are Dead fandom keeps coming back to, and honestly the show left it open on purpose. The finale never confirmed his death cleanly — the camera cut away at the critical moment, which is either a storytelling oversight or a deliberate door left ajar for Season 2.
The honest answer is nobody outside the production knows. But the show has been precise enough about everything else that an accidental ambiguity feels unlikely. Whether that means a return, a confirmed death, or something stranger is genuinely unclear — and that uncertainty is part of what makes Season 2 worth watching for.
There’s a version of this where the gap damages the show — momentum lost, casual viewers moved on, the cultural moment passed. That’s a real risk.
But there’s another version where distance is exactly what All of Us Are Dead Season 2 needed. The writers have had time to figure out what they actually want to say rather than just continuing because the algorithm demanded it. The source webtoon runs out of direct material to adapt, which means Season 2 is largely original story — genuinely uncharted territory for the characters and, if the writers are brave enough, for the audience too.
Related: How to Change Subtitles and Audio Language on Netflix
The shows that earn a second season worth watching are the ones that don’t treat it as an obligation. Whether All of Us Are Dead falls into that category won’t be clear until the episodes land — but the signs point toward a production taking its time for the right reasons rather than the wrong ones.

Not a repeat of Season 1. The school setting, the compressed geography, the single-location survival logic — all of that is gone. If you loved Season 1 primarily for its intensity and claustrophobia, Season 2 will feel different in ways that might take some adjustment.
What should carry over, if the writers do their jobs, is the thing that made Season 1 worth watching in the first place: characters whose relationships feel lived-in enough that you genuinely don’t want to lose them. That’s harder to maintain across a city than across a school. It requires more discipline, not less.
Season 2 doesn’t have a confirmed release date yet. But it has enough going for it — a strong foundation, a production that refused to rush, and story directions that feel genuinely curious rather than just louder versions of what came before — to be worth the wait.
Whether it actually delivers is a different question. Ask again in 2027.
If you liked this, you should also check out our list of Best Korean Dramas on Netflix.
When is All of Us Are Dead Season 2 coming out?
No official date has been confirmed. Filming wrapped in February 2026 and the show is in post-production. Early 2027 is the most likely release window based on Netflix’s current confirmed slate.
Is All of Us Are Dead Season 2 confirmed?
Yes. Netflix officially confirmed the renewal. Production is complete and the show is now in post-production.
Who is returning for All of Us Are Dead Season 2?
Cho Yi-hyun, Park Solomon, and Kim Hi-uh are confirmed returning cast members. Additional casting hasn’t been fully announced.
Is Lee Cheong-san alive in Season 2?
His fate was deliberately left ambiguous in Season 1. No official confirmation either way has come from the production.
Where is All of Us Are Dead Season 2 set?
The story is expected to move beyond Hyosan High School into Seoul, expanding the scale of the outbreak significantly.
Will Season 2 follow the webtoon?
Unlike Season 1, Season 2 is largely an original story. The source webtoon doesn’t provide enough material for a direct adaptation at this point.
I’m the writer behind Fandom Watch, where I share news, guides, and fan theories about shows, anime, and the wider world of pop culture. My goal is to make fandom fun and accessible for everyone, whether you’re a casual viewer or a die-hard fan.





