A mysterious figure named Nikita joins the group, later revealed to be an older version of Pasha from another timeline.
Some viewers felt the season leaned too heavily on American movie tropes (exorcism, slasher villains) and that the CGI, such as a digital dog, felt out of place. A mysterious figure named Nikita joins the group,
The second season of the Russian sci-fi thriller (Чернобыль. Зона отчуждения) shifted the narrative from a traditional road movie into an ambitious alternate-history saga. Plot Overview & New Setting The season picks up directly from the first
Pasha discovers he is in a thriving USSR. He realizes the nuclear disaster happened in Maryland, USA, and begins searching for his old friends, who have completely different lives in this reality. slasher villains) and that the CGI
The season picks up directly from the first season's cliffhanger. After preventing the 1986 disaster at the Chernobyl NPP, Pasha awakens in an alternate 2013 where the and remains a global superpower. However, the nuclear catastrophe was not averted—it was simply displaced to the Calvert Cliffs NPP in the United States.