With Season 6 of the popular Karate Kid-based drama Cobra Kai closing out,series co-creator Hayden Schlossberg has taken to X to explain the divisive ending of one of the series' characters. Cobra Kai's final season has finally arrived,
After six seasons, this “Karate Kid” spinoff, on Netflix, is closing up its dojo. But as one creator put it, “we are not ready to leave this universe.”
Cobra Kai co-creator Hayden Schlossberg has revealed the one thing he would have changed about the Netflix series during a no-holds barred Q&A on Twitter.
Cobra Kai never dies, and neither does the Karate Kid franchise. Here are some of the Cobra Kai spinoff shows we'd like to see come to pass.
Cobra Kai's creators clearly aren't ruling out any spin-offs as Hayden Schlossberg reveals the creative team has been working hard on "multiple different possibilities" for future projects.
Cobra Kai has finally come to an end after 6 seasons that ran for almost 7 years. The show introduced new characters besides featuring The Karate Kid's original stars - Ralph Macchio and William Zabka.
Cobra Kai wisely left Mr. Miyagi’s dark past untouched. Could Karate Kid: Legends with Jackie Chan finally explore those hidden struggles?
Cobra Ka i Season 6 Part 3 also culminates Johnny’s emotional journey as he is finally able to overcome his childhood trauma that was caused by abuse at the hands of his mentor, John Kreese. Talking about how the arc concludes in the finale, Schlossberg said:
The Cobra Kai showrunners look back on the Karate Kid spinoff's origins — and the future of Daniel LaRusso, Johnny Lawrence, and the whole dojo
The 1994 flick is the first in the series not to feature Ralph Macchio, with future Oscar-winner Hilary Swank playing the role of a pupil in desperate need of Mr. Miyagi’s sage guidance (Julie Pierce).
The last five episodes of Cobra Kai ‘s fifteen-episode final season are upon us, and after the Sekai Taikai melee that ended Part 2 in tragedy, you wonder exactly where creators Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg will go. It turns out that the show will end where it began: Back in the Valley.
The series has not only attracted "Karate Kid" fans who watched the original 1984 movie in theaters but also younger generations.