The Walking Dead’s Most Essential Negan Episodes
As The Walking Dead: Dead City continues its story with a third season on AMC, we’re bringing you a comprehensive guide to the most essential Negan Smith episodes.
Looking back on Negan’s Walking Dead journey to date, the reformed villain has been the focus of some incredible franchise installments, from his introduction as the baseball bat-wielding leader of the Saviors to his current position at Maggie Greene’s side, as the pair navigate their ongoing survival in an apocalyptic New York and beyond.
Over the years, Negan has earned his place as one of The Walking Dead’s most enduring and compelling characters. Let’s rewind and remember how he became one of the main protagonists in a new era of the beloved franchise.
“The Day Will Come When You Won’t Be”
Season 7 Episode 1
Although Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) already made his first appearance in The Walking Dead’s season 6 finale, he finishes his deadly game of “Eeny… meeny… miny… moe” in the season 7 premiere, “The Day Will Come When You Won’t Be.” This is where we see how far Negan is willing to go to make a point, and how much violence he is ready to dish out. Having already killed Glenn and Abraham, Negan isn’t satisfied that Rick is scared enough of him and seeks to utterly break Rick so he will succumb to him completely.
“You answer to me, you provide for me, you belong to me, right?” he asks Rick after almost forcing him to cut off his own son’s arm. When Rick agrees, most of the group are finally allowed to depart, but Glenn’s wife Maggie will never be the same again. The act of killing Glenn will kick-start one of the show’s longest beefs between Negan and Maggie and also one of its longest redemption arcs, as character after character has to ask themselves whether Negan can ever possibly be forgiven for his reign of terror.
“The Big Scary U”
Season 8 Episode 5
“The Big Scary U” is the first episode to try to humanize Negan rather than portray him as a more one-dimensional villain. The installment starts with Negan dismissing a plan from his Savior subordinates that would see many of Hilltop’s denizens attacked and killed, telling them that “people are a resource” and that he intends to be more selective and strike at people whose deaths would have the most impact on the group’s morale.
However, when Rick’s group attacks the Sanctuary, Negan’s plans go awry and he gets trapped in a trailer with Gabriel, whom he ends up connecting with. He also reveals a key part of his background: he cheated on his wife when she was sick and couldn’t directly kill her after she got bitten. The show will later unveil the finer details of this era in Negan’s past, but in “The Big Scary U,” we begin to understand that Negan has a genuine philosophy (albeit a twisted one): fear creates order. He isn’t just getting off on the pleasure of eliminating anyone who gets in his way; in his mind, he is trying to prevent further bloodshed by using pointed executions that put people in line.
“Wrath”
Season 8 Episode 16
The season 8 finale of The Walking Dead sees Rick’s army head into what they hope will be a final battle with Negan’s Saviors. Rick and Negan end up going toe-to-toe, with Negan seemingly gaining the upper hand and taunting Rick about his parenting. Even as Negan seems to delight in the opportunity to finally take out his enemy, Rick asks Negan to imagine Carl’s vision for a future where the cycle of revenge finally ends, exploiting his fatherly feelings for Carl and slashing Negan’s neck while he pauses, unsure and gripped by grief for a brief moment.
The slash isn’t enough to kill Negan, and he is saved. Rick suggests that mercy should triumph over wrath, but he demands that everyone stop following Negan’s lead, and he imprisons Negan as a reminder that change is possible. Negan and Maggie definitely aren’t fans of Rick’s decision, but this episode starts Negan on a real path to redemption. It does not quell Maggie’s desire to kill him herself, however.
“Adaptation”
Season 9 Episode 9
In this season 9 episode, Negan quickly takes advantage of the trust that Rick’s young daughter, Judith, has begun to place in him by escaping from Alexandria and heading back to the Sanctuary, where little remains of his dominance. Sensing that his time as a leader and his relevance in general have dissipated, he eventually returns, telling Judith there’s nothing out there for him anymore.
It’s an important step for the character. He no longer feels trapped by circumstance and realizes that he is heading toward an unknown future. The world has simply moved on without him, and the old Negan is firmly in the past. By the end of the episode, he has confronted the truth of his current position and returns to Alexandria, willing to work for any trust the people he’s hurt place in him, rather than exploit it for his own gain.
“Here’s Negan”
Season 10 Episode 22
The Walking Dead’s season 10 finale offers us a long glimpse at the man Negan was before he became a villain. It’s largely considered the best episode about the complex character, and for good reason: by exploring how the tragedy of his wife’s death affected and hardened him, we can see that he is capable of change and that there was once a man inside him who would do anything for love.
After Negan is banished from Alexandria, he is told, point-blank, that Maggie will never forgive him for Glenn’s death. He reflects on his life before the fall as an unemployed, entitled man, and also on his marriage to his faithful wife, Lucille. He betrayed her trust by cheating on her with her best friend at a time when she was being diagnosed with cancer. Though Negan swears he will redeem himself with Lucille, risking everything to keep her chemotherapy going, he ultimately fails.
The circumstances of his marriage and his wife’s tragic suicide plague him in the present, and he returns to Alexandria despite being warned away, understanding that Maggie may kill him and that might be what he deserves. In a way, Negan has given Maggie an open opportunity to be an avatar of his destruction, leaving his fate in her hands just as his wife’s fate was in his. Negan has truly surrendered.
“Walk With Us”
Season 10 Episode 12
“Walk With Us” marks the start of Negan’s real transition to a potential hero from just a struggling former villain. As Hilltop is overwhelmed by hoards of walkers that the villainous Whisperers have guided to them, Negan uses his influence and connection with their leader, Alpha, to turn the tide in favor of his old foes, slitting Alpha’s throat and bringing her decapitated head to Carol.
The episode uses the audience’s uncertainty about where Negan’s loyalties will ultimately lie after he captures Alpha’s daughter and uses her as a pawn. Negan’s Achilles’ heel has always been his care for children. He was a teacher before the apocalypse and has continued to look out for the likes of Carl and Judith, even when they’ve technically been his enemies. Alpha’s determination to kill her own daughter is simply the last straw in his mind.
A key episode in Negan’s journey, “Walk With Us” is where many of our heroes start to realize that having Negan on their side is a lot better than fighting him, and that there are some lines that he won’t cross.
“Rest in Peace”
Season 11 Episode 24
The mainline series closes out with Negan leaving our ragtag band of heroes as they celebrate their final victory of the show. Here, he earnestly apologizes to Maggie for killing Glenn, but although Maggie acknowledges Negan’s positive and heroic actions in the years since his crimes against her family, she can’t look at him without reliving the horrors of that day.
After hearing this, Negan accepts that he must leave the group so Maggie can find peace. He departs as Daryl gives him a nod of respect. Negan has earned their trust, and while he will never be forgiven or excused for his past actions, he has fought at their side and become a changed man, much more selfless and willing to adapt for the greater good.
“People Are a Resource”
Dead City Season 1 Episode 3
“Talk is cheap anyway, kid. Believe me, I oughta know. It doesn’t matter what people say. It only matters what they do,” Negan tells his young companion Ginny during one of the many flashbacks in “People Are a Resource,” though he might as well be talking to himself as he recommits to being one of the good guys.
Maggie and Negan try to navigate their complex history and work together in this third episode of The Walking Dead spinoff series Dead City, and she also learns that Negan had a new family and sent them away in the hope that they’d be safer without him.
He was potentially quite right to do so, as his reputation as a violent leader continues to haunt him. Negan may have evolved past viewing people as having worth beyond what they can provide as “a resource,” but his old ways still seek to drag him back into the darkness, and it becomes clear that the battle to redeem himself is far from over, especially in Maggie’s eyes.
“Doma Smo”
Dead City Season 1 Episode 6
Ginny doesn’t want to leave Negan in the season 1 finale of Dead City, so Negan tells her some harsh truths to rebuff her, admitting he killed her father. As Ginny finally departs, Negan is devastated about hurting her so badly, which Maggie notices as the two go to rescue Hershel, Maggie’s son. Once again, it’s obvious that Negan’s instinctive care for children and his desire to protect them make him much more vulnerable than Maggie had imagined, and she feels confident ushering him into a deadly trap in which she trades his life for Hershel’s.
Negan suggests that he expected her betrayal. “The fact is, Maggie, it doesn’t matter what excuses I give you, or how many apologies I offer, you can’t get over it. And you shouldn’t,” he says. But after an argument with Hershel, Maggie realizes that her obsession with Negan has damaged her relationship with her son, and she starts a new chapter in her life.
While this is an important part of Maggie’s journey in The Walking Dead franchise, her trade with the violent Burazi group also forces Negan to confront the reputation he once created for himself as a violent leader, as the group looks to get him back on that diabolical track.















































































































































































