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Season 3 starts with new events when El and Max face a way to look for Billy and Will will have a new experience without the girls. Steve and Dustin moved on to a new competition, and Joyce and Huber return to Hawkins' laboratory. Over time, Karen urges Nancy to blush in their scheme, and Robin finds a map that may change things.
In a pleasant surprise, Stranger Things Season 3 manages to walk the line between conscious growth and mood maintenance, demonstrating self-awareness without puncturing its painstakingly recreated '80s bubble.
Stranger Things 3 is effectively-told populist entertainment, the kind of breezy, exciting, emotionally accessible spectacle Steven Spielberg would be proud of.
Season 3 balances good-natured laughs with charming nostalgia through likable characters doing battle against looming horrors. Yet it feels like it's propping up its past to justify its present.
By doubling down on relationship stories, Season 3 of "Stranger Things" delivers an oft-charming, deeper-than-expected, and ultimately enjoyable new chapter.
It's also worth noting that there's a new scene stealer in Priah Ferguson, who plays Lucas' sister Erica, whose bratty attitude translates into hilarious disposition for the entire group.