Coronation Street Spoiler: Becky Swain’s true nature: from victim to revenge – murder plot involving children?
Becky Swain – a character who seemed to have gone through enough trauma, now reveals her true nature, shocking everyone.
The article from Metro reveals: “Becky’s true nature revealed in Coronation Street as she plots murder revenge child.”
Becky has always been left behind, hurt – but now she is no longer passive.
She begins to plan – a plot that is not just about revenge against adults, but also involves a child – making the audience wonder: who is Becky’s real target? Who hurt her so much that she accepts to step into the dark?

I dig deeper: Becky can see her life being stepped on – and she decides to “take it back”. Recent Scene: Becky texts a cryptic text – “I won’t let my child be left behind again” – then quietly stalks her suspect. There’s a scene where she sneaks into her rival’s house, looking for evidence in the dark, the lights are dim, shadows are moving – the whole atmosphere is more like a drama than a soap.
What makes this scene painful: when the victim becomes the one who acts – and she feels justified. The viewer will have to ask themselves: is it more pitiful or dangerous? Is Becky losing control? Or is she protecting what she thinks is right? And the child – what is her role? Is she the innocent one, caught in the cycle of revenge? When Driscoll/Megan is circling Will – Becky is circling the child – the tension is gradually woven together.

Picture it: Becky sitting in the car outside – rainy night, tree falling, she looks out the window to see the other person with the child – she pulls out her phone to record, but then turns it off. The steps are gentle but determined. The audience feels more “fear” than “pity”.
Conclusion: Becky is proof of the line “no one is completely evil, no one is completely good” – and the next scene will definitely explode when the plan is revealed. Note: there may be a night of change, when Becky is discovered or she herself causes a big incident. Be prepared.
![]()