In General Hospital, revenge has never been simple. But what Jenz Sidwell is planning for Sonny Corinthos feels different — colder, smarter, and far more dangerous than a bullet.

Because Sidwell isn’t coming for Sonny’s life.
He’s coming for everything Sonny is.
The biggest clue lies in how Sidwell operates. He doesn’t act in rage. He builds systems. He manipulates people. And most importantly, he lets his enemies destroy themselves while believing they’re still in control. That’s what makes this feud so terrifying — Sonny may already be inside the trap and not even realize it yet.
One of the strongest theories right now is that Sidwell is setting up a full-scale framing operation. We’ve already seen how easily narratives can be rewritten in Port Charles, especially when evidence goes missing or gets “adjusted.” If Sidwell controls even part of that pipeline — whether through pressure on law enforcement or hidden influence — then Sonny doesn’t need to be guilty. He just needs to look guilty.
And once that happens, everything Sonny has built starts to collapse.
But the deeper layer — the one fans are starting to pick up on — is that this may not just be about crime. It’s about identity. Sonny has always survived because of one thing: control. Control over his territory, his enemies, and most importantly, his family. So what does Sidwell attack?
Not Sonny’s empire.


His foundation.
If Sidwell begins targeting the people Sonny loves, the game changes instantly. Sonny doesn’t make calculated decisions when his family is threatened. He reacts. And that’s exactly the opening Sidwell needs. Push Sonny far enough, and he won’t need to frame him at all — Sonny will make the fatal mistake himself.
That’s where things get even darker.
There’s a growing possibility that Sidwell is orchestrating a scenario where Sonny is forced to pull the trigger. Not out of ambition. Not out of power. But out of desperation. And when that moment happens, the entire narrative flips. Sonny doesn’t look like a protector anymore. He looks like exactly what his enemies have always claimed he is.
A monster.
And if that’s the plan, it’s genius.
Because it doesn’t just destroy Sonny publicly — it destroys him internally. Imagine Sonny realizing, too late, that every move he made… every decision… every reaction… was anticipated. Designed. Controlled. Not by fate, but by Sidwell.
There’s also another layer fans shouldn’t ignore: the system itself. If Sidwell truly has ties to larger forces — whether that’s influence over the WSB or pressure on figures like Jordan Ashford — then Sonny isn’t just fighting an enemy.
He’s fighting a structure.
And structures don’t bleed.
They close in.
That means Sonny could soon find himself in a position where there’s nowhere left to turn. His allies compromised. His enemies invisible. His moves predicted before he even makes them. And the worst part?
He may not even know when the game actually started.
Because if Sidwell has been planning this long enough… then this isn’t revenge.
It’s execution.
Slow, precise, and irreversible.
And when the truth finally comes out, the real shock won’t be what Sidwell did.
It will be how long Sonny was already losing.


