Season 2’s midseason finale proved with Sophia’s death that there was no line this show wouldn’t cross. Season 4’s final episode saw the characters finally arrive at Terminus, a supposed safe haven, and delivered a shocking twist when they realized what really awaited them there. But for all the great moments that made viewers fall in love with the show, there were plenty of Walking Dead moments that made those same viewers quit the show, too. Some of The Walking Dead’s worst episodes were so bad that they made audiences stop watching the series.
10 Last Day On Earth
Season 6, Episode 16
For some Walking Dead fans, the season 6 finale, “Last Day on Earth,” was the final straw. The season as a whole had been quite controversial for its reliance on cheap gimmicks, like Glenn’s fake-out death. After spending the whole season building up to Negan’s debut, the finale delivered the cheapest gimmick of all. When Negan picked out a character to execute and swung his bat to beat them to death, the episode cut to a P.O.V. shot, forcing viewers to wait months to find out who died. Some viewers didn’t bother coming back to see who got the bat.
9 What We Become
Season 10, Episode 13
Danai Gurira made her final regular appearance as Michonne in the season 10 episode “What We Become,” and the way she departed felt wildly out of character. After finding some vague evidence that Rick might still be alive, Michonne decides to abandon her kids to go looking for him. As yet another beloved cast member left in yet another baffling and contrived way, a lot of viewers reevaluated their relationship with the show and wondered why they were even still watching when so few of their favorite characters were still around.
8 Wrath
Season 8, Episode 16
Once Negan showed up, The Walking Dead basically became torture porn. For two whole seasons, the Saviors relentlessly tormented and terrorized Rick’s group, and they were powerless to stop it. In the season 8 finale, when the all-out war against Negan’s armies culminated in a climactic battle, Rick finally had the chance to kill Negan, but he chose to save his life instead. It made sense for Rick’s arc to spare Negan’s life (it was Carl’s dying wish), but it was pretty disappointing — and it paved the way for Negan’s undeserved redemption, so it was quitting time for some audiences.
7 Live Bait
Season 4, Episode 6
Midway through season 4, The Walking Dead reintroduced the Governor, secretly watching Rick’s group at the prison from afar. This seemed like a tantalizing return for a widely hated villain. But the following episode, “Live Bait,” was told entirely from the Governor’s perspective. By the end of the episode, there’s still no sign of getting back to the characters we actually care about — and, sure enough, the whole next episode would stay focused on the Governor — so some viewers noped out. This was the first of many Walking Dead episodes that would bafflingly switch focus to much less interesting characters.
6 Swear
Season 7, Episode 6
Right around the time Scott Gimple became the showrunner, The Walking Dead settled into a frustrating structure of rotating between characters to focus on. It meant that when an episode reached a shocking cliffhanger ending, viewers would have to wait a few weeks before the show cycled back around to that storyline. One of the most egregious examples of this was the season 7 episode “Swear.” Right after Carl was revealed to be sneaking into the Saviors’ community, the show spent an entire episode with Tara just wandering around on her own. Some viewers were understandably irritated by this.
Season 8, Episode 8
Season 8’s midseason finale, “How It’s Gotta Be,” is technically a very eventful episode, with real stakes and consequences, but it’s so slow-paced that it just comes off as boring. It ignores the established rules of zombie infection for a bit of cloying melodrama. After Carl is bitten, he has hours and hours to say his goodbyes to all the people he cares about. The episode handled Carl’s death terribly — Rick has a very underwhelming reaction to his son’s demise — so a lot of viewers who’d been with the Grimes family since season 1 gave up after this episode.
4 Diverged
Season 10, Episode 21
3 The Grove
Season 4, Episode 14
Season 4’s “The Grove” is considered to be one of The Walking Dead’s strongest episodes, but it was just too dark for some viewers. It’s a standalone psychological thriller in which Carol and Tyreese struggle to keep Lizzie, Mika, and Judith safe as Lizzie quickly loses her mind. After Lizzie stabs and kills her own sister, Carol has no choice but to kill Lizzie. She takes her out into the wilderness and guns her down like Lennie in Of Mice and Men. It’s an incredible hour of television, with really powerful performances, but it was too grim for some audiences.
2 What Comes After
Season 9, Episode 5
1 The Day Will Come When You Won't Be
Season 7, Episode 1
The episode that made the most viewers quit the show — so many that it had a significant impact on the ratings — was The Walking Dead’s season 7 premiere, “The Day Will Come When You Won’t Be.” After the season 6 finale’s cliffhanger, the season 7 opener revealed that the character Negan killed was Abraham. But the torture didn’t end there. Negan also killed a second person, Glenn, threw Rick into a horde of zombies for the fun of watching him fight for his life, and almost forced him to cut off Carl’s hand as a show of loyalty.
The Walking Dead suffered a massive dip in viewership between this episode and the next one, because it was just too grueling and gratuitously gory. There’s a sustained shot of a blood-drenched Glenn with his eyeball hanging out (which was much more palatable as a black-and-white drawing in the comic book). The Walking Dead wasn’t fun to watch anymore, so a lot of people just stopped watching.