FNAF 2 screams up $118M in box office

Freddy Fazbear Returns: “FNAF 2” Powers Holiday Box Office Surge

Heading into the final stretch of 2025, the box office looked like it was flatlining. Then Blumhouse’s “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2”, “FNAF 2”, kicked down the door with a jump scare debut, jolting theaters back to life. Freddy and his animatronic crew didn’t tiptoe onto screens—they stormed them, delivering one of the year’s biggest horror openings and proving this franchise still bites.

Freddy’s Return

Per Variety, “FNAF 2” clawed its way to $65 million domestic and $118 million worldwide in its opening weekend, instantly claiming the top spot. That’s a monster win for Blumhouse and Universal after a sluggish fall where even blockbuster tentpoles struggled to connect.

The sequel’s success comes down to:

  • A fiercely loyal fanbase that turned the first film into a streaming phenomenon.
  • Expanded lore that dives deeper into the FNAF nightmare.
  • A holiday release window that gave restless crowds something thrilling to sink their teeth into.

Disney’s Animated Heavyweight

While FNAF 2 was busy scaring up numbers, Disney’s “Zootopia 2” kept its marathon pace, crossing $900 million globally. The sequel’s staying power proves families are still showing up in force, even as horror and action dominate headlines.

Together, Freddy and “Zootopia 2” represent the two sides of the rebound: horror fans packing theaters for jump scares, and families flocking back for animated comfort food.

A Year‑End Rebound

As EW points out, “FNAF 2” isn’t just another sequel win—it’s the spark of a December turnaround. After months of underperformance, the year is closing with momentum.

Freddy didn’t just scare audiences—he scared off the narrative that theaters were doomed to limp into 2026. Paired with “Zootopia 2’s billion‑dollar trajectory, the rebound shows that franchises, when handled right, can still deliver the goods.

The animatronics are back, the box office pulse is stronger, and Hollywood heads into the new year with something it desperately needed: momentum.

More Great Content