Warning: SPOILERS for WandaVision episode 4.

FBI Agent Jimmy Woo has a lot of questions about what's happening in WandaVision, and here are the best answers for each one. The first three episodes of Marvel's Disney+ series almost completely focused on the mysterious domestic lives Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany) now find themselves in. While this allowed WandaVision to parody sitcom eras, the show also slowly teased that something isn't right in Westview.

Fans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe have spent the last few weeks asking questions and generating theories about what is really happening in WandaVision. The early episodes stayed clear of confirming anything, but that changed with the debut of episode 4. The latest chapter in WandaVision's story shows the MCU outside of Westview and explores what the real-world knows. It turns out that SWORD, the FBI, and just about everyone else is as clueless as to what is happening. But, Jimmy Woo's (Randall Park) appearance in episode 4's cast made him the surrogate for audiences.

Related: WandaVision Answered Avengers: Endgame's Biggest Question

In his first MCU appearance since Ant-Man and The Wasp, Woo teams up with Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) to investigate a missing person case in New Jersey. However, Monica is pulled into the energy field surrounding Westview, leaving Woo to then call in SWORD for more support. He quickly becomes part of SWORD's ongoing investigation and works with Darcy Lewis (Kat Dennings) to get answers. They don't have much luck in that department though. Instead, Woo keeps updating a whiteboard with unanswered questions he and others have about the current situation. While Woo doesn't have the answers to these questions, we might in some instances.

Why Hexagonal Shape?

WandaVision Episode - Hexagon

Jimmy Woo's first WandaVision question is admittedly the most difficult one to answer. The continued use of a hexagon symbol throughout the early episodes is something viewers already started to pick up on, but the meaning of it has not been confirmed. Episode 4 added another wrinkle to this mystery too, as it revealed the energy field surrounding Westview is also the six-sided shape. SWORD used various scans to try and determine the significance of the hexagon, but they've come up short so far.

Without a clear answer to the hexagons, WandaVision leaves this mystery for viewers to debate. One early theory that developed from the hexagon shapes was that AIM is responsible for WandaVision. Some iterations of the organization, which made its MCU debut in Iron Man 3, include a logo that incorporates a hexagon. There has yet to be any further evidence that AIM is back in the MCU and influencing the events of WandaVision, but it remains one possibility.

Hexagons have a variety of different meanings and purposes in real-life that could potentially be applied to WandaVision. One detail that might be worth remembering as the show moves forward is the geometric makeup of a hexagon. The shape covers and creates the biggest opening area possible while minimizing the boundary. This limits materials need to form such a boundary, making it easier to maintain. Hexagons also have ties to representing time, and its esoteric meaning is the fruit of life. With Westview playing with time and recently creating life with the births of Billy and Tommy, these could be other explanations for the hexagon shape.

Related: WandaVision: Vision Is The Biggest Threat To Scarlet Witch’s Fake Reality

There are also some other possible reasons for the hexagon if some leaps are allowed to be made. For starters, the casing around the Mind Stone that used to be in Vision's head is six-sided but not a perfect hexagon. There's also the chance the hexagon shape itself is a reference to Scarlet Witch's hex powers. Even though the MCU hasn't referred to Wanda's powers as hexes, that is what they were known as in the comics. The hexagon shape also has another MCU connection, as it is the shape of portals for the Universal Neural Teleportation Network.

Why Sitcoms?

Scarlet Witch and Vision dancing in WandaVision

Jimmy Woo's second question wonders why WandaVision is being presented to them as a sitcom. The show itself has yet to provide a good explanation for this, but Darcy notes that it can't be just for her enjoyment - or that of the audience. Those involved with WandaVision have teased there is a reason for the sitcoms and that the answer will come at a later date. But until the truth is revealed, the best answer for the sitcom styling is tied to the perfect reality Wanda is living in. Many have theorized that this is because she is controlling their reality and is using her knowledge from watching sitcom reruns as a kid as the basis for WandaVision.

The sitcoms could also be tied to how the person, entity, or organization responsible for WandaVision's events are trying to keep Scarlet Witch subdued. She certainly has some level of understanding that this new life isn't normal, and episode 4 really pushes the narrative that Wanda is behind it all. However, there are still some signs that even if Wanda has some control over Westview, she isn't in complete control. In order to keep Wanda as happy as possible, the lightness of sitcoms could be designed to keep Wanda's mental state in check.

Same Time & Space?

Wanda Maximoff using her powers in WandaVision

The time and space that WandaVision takes place in is something that the show has started to reveal. Yes, the events have already copied the look of sitcoms from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, but that isn't when it appears to take place. WandaVision episode 4 confirms that only a day or two have passed between when Monica Rambeau first entered Westview and Scarlet Witch threw her out. Monica didn't age significantly during this time, despite appearing in multiple eras of sitcoms. So it does appear that time runs at a similar pace in Westview as it does outside.

Related: Marvel Confirms When WandaVision Is Set In The MCU Timeline

As for the space that WandaVision's events happen in, there are two main explanations at this point. The energy field around Westview is either shielding those on the outside from seeing what happens inside or those who enter are transported to another reality/space - a pocket dimension. SWORD can't get any readings as to what is happening beyond the energy field, which could point to the first explanation being the right one. It's also possible Westview acts as a doorway to another dimension or reality, and that could be one way for the show to set up Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Perhaps it even purposefully sits on a secret portal of the Universal Neural Teleportation Network and is teleporting those who enter to another point in space and/or time.

Is Vision Alive?

WandaVision Episode 4 - Corpse Vision

The easiest one of Jimmy Woo's questions to answer should be whether or not Vision is alive. He was killed twice at the end of Avengers: Infinity War - once by Scarlet Witch and then again Thanos. The MCU has yet to reveal what happened to Vision's body after Avengers: Infinity War, but Bettany has teased that all will be revealed by the end of WandaVision. At this point, there is no sign that Vision truly is back alive, though. SWORD has no knowledge that would indicate the synthezoid is back alive.

The expected explanation for Vision's role in WandaVision is that he is still alive as part of the altered reality he and Wanda are in. This is further hinted to be the case in episode 4 when Scarlet Witch sees him as the colorless version of himself with a hole in his head where the Mind Stone used to be. Unless Wanda managed to acquire Vision's body after Avengers: Endgame, this version of the android isn't the real one that she fell in love with.

MORE: What WandaVision Episode 4's End Song Says About Scarlet Witch

Key Release Dates