Stranger Things Season 5: Steve Harrington Has the Best Character Development, But it Still Doesn’t Justify His Feud With Dustin

Stranger Things Season 5: Steve Harrington Has the Best Character Development, But it Still Doesn’t Justify His Feud With Dustin
Television

Steve Harrington has come a long way. From arrogant jock to the group’s reluctant dad figure, his arc spans five seasons of genuine growth. 

Stranger Things Season 5 shows a Steve who’s evolved past his Season 1 narcissism. He’s funny. He’s brave. He’s the guy who drives a car through a Demogorgon without flinching.

But somewhere in all that development, something darker emerged. Steve’s turned into a jealous parent. 

Stranger Things Season 5: Steve Harrington Has the Best Character Development, But it Still Doesn’t Justify His Feud With Dustin
(Courtesy of Netflix)

And Dustin’s locked himself away from the one person who should understand him most. 

Their feud isn’t about disagreement. It’s about grief, jealousy, and two people who forgot how to talk to each other.

Steve’s growth is real. He went from Nancy’s clueless boyfriend to the protector everyone leans on. 

Yet Season 5 reveals something his growth couldn’t hide: insecurity masquerading as protection.

Eddie’s Ghost Still Haunts Them — And Steve Can’t Handle It

(Netflix/Screenshot)

Dustin’s still grieving. Eddie’s death hollowed something out inside him. 

The older guy who saw potential in the weird kid. The rock star who didn’t judge. The friend Dustin thought would actually stick around.

Then Steve watched. Watched Dustin and Eddie bond. Watched them connect in ways that took Steve years to build. 

Watched his carefully earned position as Dustin’s mentor get overshadowed by Eddie’s charm and immediate acceptance.

And instead of understanding that Dustin needed that, Steve got jealous.

(Courtesy of Netflix)

Now he acts like a threatened parent. He questions Dustin’s choices. He keeps his distance. He’s become the emotional equivalent of a closed door when Dustin needed an open one. 

Steve’s protective instincts twisted into possessiveness. The guy who grew into someone better somehow forgot how to make space for someone else’s grief.

Dustin, meanwhile, is still raw. Eddie’s absence is loud every single day. He lost someone who saw him. Really saw him. 

Not the weird kid. Not the liability. Just Dustin. Now Steve’s treating him like he’s making bad choices, like he’s being reckless, like he doesn’t deserve to grieve at his own pace.

So Dustin closed off. He locked Steve out. Not out of cruelty. Out of self-preservation.

(Courtesy of Netflix)

When Protection Becomes Possession, Everyone Loses

The show wants us to believe that Steve’s jealousy and Dustin’s grief have created an unbridgeable gap between them. 

But the problem is this feud wasn’t properly built. It feels sudden and forced. It arrived without the emotional scaffolding that makes conflict believable.

There’s no clear turning point where things went wrong. No moment where Steve said something unforgivable or Dustin did something Steve couldn’t accept. 

The tension just exists because Season 5 decided it should. That’s lazy writing for two characters who deserve better.

(Courtesy of Netflix)

In earlier seasons, when Steve and Dustin had disagreements, they felt earned. They had history. They had a dialogue that showed genuine friction building. 

This feud? It landed like a cold slap with no setup. On one episode, they’re functional. On the next, they’re barely speaking. 

Where’s the slow deterioration? Where’s the scene where one of them says something that actually breaks the other?

The show spent four seasons building their bond. They’ve been through hell together. Dustin’s worn Steve’s clothes. Steve protected Dustin with his life. 

And now, the writers expect us to believe that Eddie’s death is enough to shatter everything? Not because they properly explored that conflict, but because the plot needed tension?

(Gaten Matarazzo)

Real betrayal takes time, and real hurt needs a foundation. This feud has neither. 

It’s surface-level drama grafted onto characters who deserve nuance. The chemistry between Joe Keery and Gaten Matarazzo is still there, but the narrative framework they’re given is hollow.

Steve should know better. His entire arc taught him that love means letting people breathe. But when it comes to Dustin, he reverted. 

And the show presents this without acknowledging how sudden and unearned it feels. Dustin’s equally guilty — he’s closing Steve out when Steve’s the only person who could actually help him grieve. 

But again, the show doesn’t explore why Dustin’s trust shattered so completely, so quickly. Both characters are acting out of pain. Both have legitimate reasons to hurt. 

(Courtesy of Netflix)

But the feud itself wasn’t fleshed out and certainly didn’t feel earned.

It just happened because the script demanded conflict, and it shows.

There is only so much time left to mend this rift, and it somehow feels more significant than stopping Venca or eradicating the Upside Down.

Does the feud between Steve and Dustin feel natural to you, or does it seem rushed and poorly developed?

Let us know in the comments — we want to hear if you’re buying this conflict or if it’s falling flat for you too.

The post Stranger Things Season 5: Steve Harrington Has the Best Character Development, But it Still Doesn’t Justify His Feud With Dustin appeared first on TV Fanatic.

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