
""We've always assumed that the Upside Down was another dimension opened by Brenner, but it turns out, it's actually a bridge," he says. "More specifically, an interdimensional bridge that rips through space-time. It is wildly unstable, but held together by exotic matter, which we found dead center right above the lab. In theoretical physics, they call this type of bridge a wormhole. And this wormhole connects Hawkins to here, another world that I've coined the Abyss.""
"I'm surprised by how much lore, Upside Down mechanics, and quantum physics the Duffer Brothers introduced in Volume 2, which hit Netflix on Christmas Day. While Volume 1 was more focused on the three-way battle between the kiddos, the military, and Vecnanot to mention Will's shiny new powersVolume 2 is fixated on pulling back the curtains on (or removing the gooey tentacles from) the Upside Down."
Max escapes Vecna's mind only to join the Hawkins group planning to stop a greater threat. Volume 2 expands series lore with Upside Down mechanics and quantum-tinged explanations. Dustin identifies the Upside Down as an interdimensional bridge or wormhole held by exotic matter centered above the lab. The wormhole links Hawkins to another world named the Abyss, which likely houses the Demos and the Mind Flayer and is where Eleven banished Henry Creel as a child. Vecna aims to merge the Abyss with Earth, while Will's new powers and the military factor into the escalating conflict.
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