When Paradise Season 1 aired, I had no idea what the fuss was about, but the penultimate episode changed everything.
The internet lost its mind, and of course, I could see why. That episode was so sharp and gripping that you could drop it on a friend without context and hook them instantly.
Plus, Paradise Season 1 Episode 7 worked as a standalone short film too, which is saying a lot.


Paradise Season 2 is different, though!
Things are a little messier because the story leans heavily on the past episodes.
I was buzzing… okay, maybe not buzzing, I was borderline panicking about the implications of what’s coming.
The finale promises to answer lingering questions, and I can’t help but theorize about what’s next.
Strap in, because if you thought Paradise was wild before, the finale might bend reality itself.
Paradise Season 2 Twist: Is Alex a Human or a Program?


If there’s one mystery that refuses to sit quietly on Paradise Season 2, it’s Alex.
Right now, we’re working with pieces, not the full picture. We know Alex was Henry’s ailing wife.
Henry, a professor deeply rooted in quantum entanglement and the man behind Vestige Quantum, made a heartbreaking call when he chose to end her life.
And just when that moment landed, Billy stepped in and killed Henry. It’s messy, tragic, and still not the strangest part.
What really throws you off is seeing Alex in the Colorado bunker later, especially when Link is set on taking her out.


That reaction doesn’t line up unless there’s more to Alex than we were first told. And there is.
The show keeps hinting that ‘Alex’ isn’t a person anymore, if it ever was in the way we assumed.
It’s likely a system, something built, coded, and far more dangerous than it appears. So the big question becomes, who gave it that name?
Sinatra’s claim that she’s not a monster has led some to think she named it out of respect. That doesn’t quite sit right.
In my view, she’s calculated, not sentimental. If anything, this feels like Henry’s doing.


He builds it, names it after Alex, and then Sinatra ends up with it after taking over Vestige Quantum.
Now, what exactly does this thing do? That’s where it gets serious.
They’ve described it as a last resort, something meant to kick in when the planet becomes completely unlivable, when heat wipes out everything above and below ground.
Well, it’s not a backup since it’s the last card on the table.
But how the hell does it actually save anyone?
There are only a few ways this could go. Time travel feels like a headache waiting to happen.


Even shows that have tried time travel have often struggled to keep it from collapsing under its own rules.
Space travel sounds logical, but finding a new planet that supports human life is easier said than done.
That leaves one option that fits the clues a little too well: moving between universes.
It sounds wild, but the show has already been dropping hints. Link, or Dylan, shouldn’t exist the way he does.
The fact that he’s the age Dylan would’ve been if he’d survived raises eyebrows, and it feels way too deliberate to ignore.


Project Alex might not fix this world, but lead to another Earth where things didn’t fall apart.
Whether the finale shows that jump or just points straight at it is still up in the air, but everything so far is nudging in that direction.
Exodus Twist: Paradise Season 2 Multiverse Theory
Paradise’s Season 2 finale is called Exodus, and the name already carries weight.
Obviously, it reminds me of the story of Moses leading the Jewish people out of Egypt, with plagues and peril all around.
But it could also just refer to any desperate escape when your home is no longer safe.
Given the creator’s Jewish background, the fact that the series and the bunker share the name ‘Paradise’, and the church scene with Xavier and Annie, I’m leaning toward the first interpretation.


Inside the bunker, people have two obvious options: suffocate quietly or hope Link and his crew break in and get Alex.
Both feel uncertain, and I can’t stop thinking about what could go wrong. But then there’s the hidden third choice: multiversal travel through Project Alex.
We might not see Sinatra actually lead everyone through the portal, but I think the finale will tease it heavily, leaving us questioning who survives and who gets left behind.
Things take a surprising turn when you realize what those nosebleeds everyone’s experiencing actually mean.
I think they’re the first clue that the multiverse is real. Link is Dylan from another universe, one where he didn’t die from a disease.


Maybe he came here to save this world, maybe he failed, and now he’s trying to figure out a way back or prevent total disaster.
Either way, his body isn’t syncing with this reality, and the nosebleeds are a physical warning.
Billy and Sinatra experience them too, which suggests proximity matters and that the multiverse rules aren’t confined to just one person.
Xavier is the wild card because he never met Link, yet he’s seeing visions and acting off.
I think the Graceland plane crash flung him through a wormhole from Project Alex, and everything looks normal, so he doesn’t notice at first.


But those visions are probably pieces of his alternate self leaking through. It’s a slow burn, and it makes me wonder how many people are stuck in the wrong universe without even knowing it.
If Xavier’s experience is any indication, then the finale could make us rethink the rules of reality on Paradise completely.
Who else might already be out of place, and what will that mean for everyone trapped inside the bunker?
I have so many questions, and I can’t wait to see how the writers untangle them.
The Multiverse of Jane: Paradise Season 2 Finale Theory
Well, Jane’s death on Paradise Season 2 Episode 6 didn’t hit the way I expected.


We spent an entire episode on Jane!
Watching Alex, in any form (human, advanced program, or alternate-universe version who dodged Huntington’s Disease), race to stop herself from becoming a killer is both thrilling and terrifying.
And yet, after all that setup, she just dies. I have to say, it landed with a thud.
Sure, she took out Billy, Baines, and a few others, but compared to the billionaires who basically wrecked the world, that’s peanuts.
So, why all the drama over stopping Jane? I think Jane isn’t really gone.
The version we’ve been following may be dead, but there are countless other Janes across the multiverse, and each of them is a threat.


Alex was probably trying to prevent the ‘good’ Jane we knew from turning fully evil, because there are alt-universe Janes who are truly soulless and could end the multiverse if left unchecked.
Gabriela going ahead and killing the good Jane just raised the tension. Now, all those evil Janes out there are the ones we need to worry about.
And if we’re talking multiverse logic, there are more Billys, too. I’m willing to bet that alternate versions of Billy exist, locked in some tragic, eternal battle with their respective Jane counterparts.
It’s almost like a heartbreaking, multiversal love story with no happy ending. But what about everyone else?
Alternate Xaviers, Sinatras, Dylans, Janes, and Billys are fair game, but Cal? My gut says no.


His death feels like a canon event, unshakable no matter the universe.
In the future, we might see Robinson or Jeremy trying to save another version of Cal, but for now, the finale will almost certainly focus on Jane and her evil counterparts.
Ah, that’s my theory.
The multiverse has made the story bigger, messier, and infinitely more dangerous, and I can’t wait to see how it all plays out.
If you’ve got your own wild ideas about Jane, the multiverse, or anyone else, I’d love to hear them.
Ergo, drop them in the comments before episode eight hits our screens.





























