"Mr. Robot" season 2 release date is expected to be on June or July next year. What are fans most excited about the show's return?
Elliot Anderson (Rami Malek) and his crew may have succeed in taking down Evil Corp but it is just the tip of the ice berg.
Aside from his battle with her inner demons, the vigilante hacker also has other enemies looming which will be revealed when "Mr. Robot" season 2 release date arrives. One of whom is someone he is working with. He just doesn't know this guy is a turncoat.
Except from Elliot's journey as a vigilante hacker, another side story that has fans raving is White Rose, the enigmatic Dark Army hacker who only has a total of at least six minutes of appearance in the whole season.
BD Wong's White Rose, who Elliot turned to once for help, is working with new Evil Corp chief Phillip Price as seen in the last few minutes of "Mr. Robot" finale. That alone should be seen as a threat to Elliot's mission.
What can fans expect from White Rose when "Mr. Robot" season 2 release date comes? Series creator Sam Esmail said that scene is just a reminder of how much work Fsociety still needs to do.
"Because fsociety in essence succeeded, I wanted to let audiences know that there wasn't necessarily a victory, rather something larger at play," he said in an interview with Deadline.
"There are chess movies higher up, higher than the biggest conglomerate on the planet. I wanted the looming threat of something more devious."
In separate interview with Vulture, Wong said White Rose will be playing "what appears to be two sides of this complicated coin" in second season.
"It's the whole idea of, who is who? Elliot is asking himself, "Who are you?" and at the same time, "Who am I?" In some cases, they turn out to be the same thing," Wong said.
"What Sam is starting is some kind of an exploration of an even deeper understanding of that identity. There is some reason why Whiterose is the creature that she is. There is a reason none of us yet know. Sam probably does. And that reason would have to do with the understanding of self-identity, or someone else's perception of someone's identity."