With the release of Netflix's Locke & Key, horror fans have a new show to obsess over. The series, based on the comic of the same name by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodríguez, follows the Locke family as they deal with the death of their patriarchal figure. Shortly after the family moves into Keyhouse, the childhood home of their father, things start to get really spooky.

As with any show, there are plenty of reasons why it would be great to get another season. And, like any show, there are plenty of reasons why some people may not want to see another season. Here are five reasons why we need a second season of Locke & Key, and five reasons we don't.

10 Why: Kinsey's Fear Is Still Out There

Kinsey used the Head Key to get rid of her inner fears, but what may seem like a good idea turns out to be a pretty bad plan. While Kinsey is more confident now, her fear is running around the woods of Matheson attacking people. The last time we saw Kinsey's fear, it clawed Eden's face and ran off.

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A savage fear monster isn't something the Locke kids can just leave out there without it coming back to cause more problems. In the second season, we could see the consequences of Kinsey's actions.

9 Why Not: A Lack Of Wonder

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In the comics, Hill and Rodríguez fill the story with some amazing imagery. While the show touches on some of this, most notably when Bode and Kinsey use the Head Key to enter their own minds, the rest of the series is lacking in the wonder department. Part of this may be because of the pacing of the story. Where the comic took more time to set up the different keys, the show rushes through them, not letting the characters really explore each key's ability. Losing that takes away a lot of the fun of the story.

8 Why: Will Duncan Regain His Memories?

Duncan Locke, the younger brother of Rendell and the uncle to the Locke kids, is oblivious to the true past of Keyhouse and the tragedy that happened there when he was a child. It isn't because he missed all the action; Rendell used the Head key to pull the horrors of what happened from his little brother's mind, allowing Duncan to live a normal life.

Tyler and Kinsey found Duncan's memories, and if the series continues, they will have to decide whether or not to give them back to their uncle.

7 Why Not: The VFX

For a horror show like Locke & Key to work, the ghosts, demons and other spooky creatures need to look like they are part of the world, and unfortunately, the VFX for the show's first season wasn't up to the task. Using CGI for the demons makes sense, but why it was used for Bode and Sam when they became ghosts is another matter. TV shows and movies have been creating ghosts without CGI for years, and it almost always looks better when it is just the actor with some simple effects.

6 Why: What Is The Well Demon's Ultimate Plan?

While the Locke kids think they defeated Dodge and stopped all the craziness of Keyhouse, we know the truth. The demon from the well that started all of this appears to have left behind it's Dodge appearance to take on the guise of Kinsey's new boyfriend Gabe. At the same time, Eden has been possessed by another demon that escaped from the Black Door.

But after everything we've seen, we still don't know what the ultimate goal of the demons is. A second season would give us some more clues.

5 Why Not: The Comics Are Better

As a TV series, Locke & Key is good, but it has the same problem that just about every adaptation has; the source material is better. The Locke & Key comics are able to pull off things that the show can't and spend more time focusing on fleshing out the world.

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There are character changes that are strange for fans of the comics, like the loss of Tyler's hat and the deeper meaning it holds for him. If you really want to know the story of Keyhouse, the comics are the best place to find it.

4 Why: What Is The History Of Keyhouse?

If reading the comics isn't your thing, you'll need at least another season to learn the history of Keyhouse. In the first episode, while showing off the portraits of past Lockes, Duncan mentions that Keyhouse has been standing since the Revolutionary War, but that just scratches the surface of the home's past and how it all connects to the magical keys hidden inside.

With more seasons, Locke & Key could take the time to show us the intricate history of Keyhouse and the generations of the Locke family that Joe Hill created.

3 Why Not: Netflix Made Locke & Key Too Netflixy

Netflix has a style to their shows, and for the most part, that style works. Stranger Things and The Haunting of Hill House, for example, fit nicely into Netflix's way of doing things, but for Locke & Key, the Netflix style doesn't work as well. As a comic, each story arc was six to seven issues, and usually around twenty-five to thirty-five pages. Forcing a single story arc to be ten hours throws off the pacing considerably. Add on that each episode is an hour, and things start to feel too stretched out.

2 Why: Where Is Sam's Spirit?

Sam Lesser is one of the more tragic figures in Locke & Key. Coming from an abusive home, feeling like the Locke family tricked him, and being manipulated by the Well Demon, Sam murdered Rendell Locke. When he showed up at Keyhouse to help the Well Demon get the Head Key from the Locke kids, he finally realized that he was being used, but it was too late.

After the Well Demon used the Ghost Key on Sam, his spirit still wanders the Earth. Is he still hanging around Keyhouse? Only a second season can tell us.

1 Why Not: Sometimes Not Knowing Is Better

Dodge in Locke and Key

Some of the greatest mysteries in the history of television were ruined because they were answered. Way back in 1995, fans of The Simpsons eagerly waited for four months to find out which of the residents of Springfield had shot Mister Burns. When the culprit was revealed to be Maggie Simpson, the baby of the Simpson clan, viewers at the time were less than happy.

Sometimes, knowing the answers to every question can ruin a good story. Sometimes, a show answering every question leads to bad answers. Maybe not knowing is better.

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