Abstract Shikari (2020), streaming on ZEE5, concluded with a fragile victory for its protagonist, SP Ajay Singh (Rohit Bose Roy), but left several psychological and procedural threads unresolved. This paper argues that Shikari Season 2 must transition from a “hunter vs. hunted” narrative to a complex exploration of systemic rot, trauma-induced justice, and the cyclical nature of violence. By analyzing the first season’s finale, character arcs, and unresolved subplots, this paper proposes a narrative blueprint for Season 2 that deepens the show’s critique of institutional failure while preserving its taut thriller mechanics. 1. Introduction: The Unfinished Hunt The first season of Shikari introduced viewers to a deceptively simple premise: a suspended police officer hunting a sadistic serial killer (Shikari) who preys on corrupt businessmen and politicians. The twist—that the killer was Ajay’s own protégé, Vikram—elevated the show from a procedural to a psychological tragedy. Season 1 ended with Vikram’s apparent death by suicide, Ajay’s reinstatement, and a lingering question: Is justice ever clean?