Last Updated on 22/02/2026 by Jack Anderson
2026 is shaping up to be one of the most exciting years in science fiction television history. Streaming giants are betting big on the genre, with dozens of new and returning shows scheduled across Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+, HBO, Apple TV+, and Paramount+.
- Blade Runner 2099 (Netflix) — Michelle Yeoh leads this long-awaited cyberpunk drama, set 50 years after Blade Runner 2049.
- The Boys Season 5 (Prime Video, April 8) — The acclaimed superhero satire wraps up its run with a final, explosive season.
- Star Trek: Starfleet Academy (Paramount+) — A fresh entry point into the Trek universe following a new class of cadets.
- Lanterns (HBO) — A “True Detective”-style cosmic mystery starring Aaron Pierre and Kyle Chandler as Green Lanterns.
- Star City (Apple TV+) — A For All Mankind spin-off exploring the Soviet perspective of the alt-history space race.
- Fallout Season 2 (Prime Video) — The post-apocalyptic hit picks up in the ruins of New Vegas.
- Silo Season 3 (Apple TV+) — The subterranean thriller continues to unravel its mysteries.
Whether you are a lifelong Trekkie, a cyberpunk devotee, or a casual viewer looking for your next obsession, this guide breaks down every major sci-fi series premiere of 2026 — with release dates, platforms, cast details, and honest assessments of what to expect.
1. Why 2026 Is a Landmark Year for Sci-Fi Television
Every decade or so, television goes through a seismic shift. The 1990s had The X-Files and Babylon 5. The 2000s brought us Battlestar Galactica and Lost. The 2010s delivered Westworld, Stranger Things, and The Expanse. Now, the mid-2020s are looking like the next great leap forward for the genre — and 2026 might be the year that defines it.
We are living through what media analysts are calling a “second golden age” of science fiction television. Streaming budgets have reached cinematic levels. VFX technology has matured to the point where showrunners can put almost any world on screen. And audiences, now more than ever, are hungry for stories that grapple with real-world anxieties — artificial intelligence, climate collapse, corporate overreach, identity, and what it means to be human.
“Science fiction has always been the genre that dares to ask ‘what if.’ What we’re seeing in 2026 is a generation of showrunners who grew up reading Asimov and Dick and Gibson, and they’re finally getting the resources to answer those questions on screen in ways that were previously impossible.”
— Annalee Newitz, science fiction author and cultural critic (Wired)
The numbers back this up. According to industry tracking firm Ampere Analysis, sci-fi and speculative fiction titles now account for nearly 30% of all premium streaming originals globally — up from 18% just five years ago. The genre’s rise is not a trend. It’s a tectonic shift.
In 2026 specifically, several factors converge to make the year exceptional. Multiple long-gestating flagship productions are finally arriving after years of development. Classic literary properties — cyberpunk novels like William Gibson’s Neuromancer, and franchise universes like Blade Runner and Star Trek — are getting ambitious new treatments. And a wave of genuinely original ideas is also breaking through, not just sequels and reboots.
Let’s meet them all.
2. The Big Table: Every Major Upcoming Sci-Fi Series 2026 at a Glance
| # | Series Title | Platform | Est. Release | Type | Key Cast |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Blade Runner 2099 | Netflix | 2026 (TBC) | New | Michelle Yeoh, Hunter Schafer |
| 2 | The Boys Season 5 | Prime Video | April 8, 2026 | Returning | Antony Starr, Karl Urban |
| 3 | Star Trek: Starfleet Academy | Paramount+ | 2026 | New | Melissa Navia, new ensemble |
| 4 | Lanterns | HBO | 2026 | New | Aaron Pierre, Kyle Chandler |
| 5 | Fallout Season 2 | Prime Video | Early 2026 | Returning | Ella Purnell, Aaron Moten |
| 6 | Star City | Apple TV+ | 2026 | New | Rhys Ifans |
| 7 | Silo Season 3 | Apple TV+ | 2026 | Returning | Rebecca Ferguson |
| 8 | VisionQuest | Disney+ | 2026 | New | Paul Bettany |
| 9 | Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S2 | Apple TV+ | Feb 27, 2026 | Returning | Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell |
| 10 | Neuromancer | Apple TV+ | 2026 | New | Callum Turner |
| 11 | Spider-Noir | Prime Video | 2026 | New | Nicolas Cage |
| 12 | Daredevil: Born Again S2 | Disney+ | March 4, 2026 | Returning | Charlie Cox, Vincent D’Onofrio |
| 13 | Dark Matter Season 2 | Apple TV+ | 2026 | Returning | Joel Edgerton, Jennifer Connelly |
| 14 | Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 | Netflix | 2026 | New | Animated spinoff |
| 15 | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds S4 | Paramount+ | 2026 | Returning | Anson Mount, Ethan Peck |
This table covers the confirmed and highly anticipated slate as of early 2026. Several additional series are also in production or development, and we’ll cover the most significant ones further below.
3. The Shows You Absolutely Cannot Miss — Deep Dives
🔥 Most Anticipated
Blade Runner 2099
📺 Netflix🗓 2026 (Date TBC)🎬 New Series
Netflix
Ask any serious sci-fi fan what single show they’re most excited about in 2026, and Blade Runner 2099 is likely at or near the top of the list. Michelle Yeoh — fresh from her Oscar-winning turn in Everything Everywhere All at Once — leads this series set half a century after the events of Denis Villeneuve’s visually breathtaking Blade Runner 2049.
Set in a world where the battle between humans and replicants has evolved in unpredictable ways, the show is reportedly closer in visual DNA to Ridley Scott’s original 1982 noir-drenched masterpiece than to the sweeping landscapes of 2049. Series star Tom Burke described the show as exploring “what makes somebody human and what makes somebody not human,” suggesting the philosophical depth fans of the franchise are hungry for.
The casting of Yeoh as the lead is a masterstroke. She brings gravitas, physical presence, and genuine star power to a franchise that demands both. Hunter Schafer co-stars, bringing a whole new generation of fans to a property that has influenced everything from gaming to streetwear culture. Early teases suggest the visual language is stunning, the world-building is immersive, and the story is emotionally grounded.
“Blade Runner 2099 has the potential to do for streaming sci-fi what Game of Thrones did for fantasy — show that television can be as ambitious, as cinematic, and as culturally important as any feature film.”
— Graeme McMillan, Senior Entertainment Writer (The Hollywood Reporter)
🎬 Series Finale
The Boys — Season 5 (Final Season)
📺 Prime Video🗓 April 8, 2026🔄 Returning Series
Prime Video
All good things must end, and showrunner Eric Kripke has confirmed that Season 5 will be the final chapter of The Boys — one of the most genuinely subversive, brutally funny, and socially sharp shows of the streaming era. Homelander (Antony Starr, terrifying as ever) is at peak power, while Hughie, Billy Butcher, and the rest of the team are assembling for one final, likely catastrophic confrontation.
The show started as a satire of superhero franchise culture but has evolved into something that genuinely comments on authoritarianism, media manipulation, and the dangers of unchecked celebrity power. Soldier Boy is confirmed to return in a major capacity, and the creative team has promised an ending that won’t be “safe.” Whatever happens, the cultural conversation around this finale is going to be deafening.
If you haven’t started The Boys yet, you have time to binge all four previous seasons before April. It’s not comfortable viewing — it is, at times, genuinely upsetting — but it’s some of the most thoughtful genre television ever made.
🌌 New Universe
Lanterns (HBO / DCU)
📺 HBO🗓 2026🎬 New Series
HBO
Perhaps the most intriguing new sci-fi concept of 2026 is Lanterns, HBO’s foray into James Gunn’s newly reconstructed DC Universe. The show is officially part of DCU Chapter One: Gods and Monsters, created by Chris Mundy, Damon Lindelof, and Tom King — a creative team that individually has produced some of the best prestige television of the past decade.
Aaron Pierre stars as John Stewart, a younger, more by-the-book Green Lantern, paired with the legendary Hal Jordan (Kyle Chandler). Together, they investigate a murder in rural Nebraska that quickly spirals into a cosmic horror conspiracy threatening their entire sector. The tonal pitch, according to creators, is aimed squarely at True Detective — grounded, atmospheric, noir-inflected, with the galaxy-spanning mythology as a backdrop rather than the foreground.
Nathan Fillion reprises his role as Guy Gardner; Laura Linney, Kelly Macdonald, and Garret Dillahunt round out a remarkable cast. This might be the show that finally proves DC can produce prestige television to match what Marvel has been doing at its best — and what HBO does better than almost anyone.
🚀 Franchise Expansion
Star Trek: Starfleet Academy
📺 Paramount+🗓 2026🎬 New Series
Paramount+
Created by Gaia Violo, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy takes a refreshingly different angle on the Trek universe. Rather than putting us on the bridge of a starship or deep into a conflict with a classic villain, the show follows the first new class of Starfleet cadets in over a century — young people learning, failing, falling in love, making enemies, and discovering what it truly means to be an officer of the Federation.

The show has already earned strong early praise from critics who’ve seen early footage, with the consensus being that it successfully threads the needle between the franchise’s optimistic humanism and the expectations of a modern streaming audience. If you were turned off by the darker tones of some recent Trek entries, this one is being positioned as genuinely hopeful — but not naive.
It’s also worth noting that this is a show that is actively trying to reach new, younger Trek fans. The coming-of-age framing, the diverse new ensemble cast, and the focus on the Academy rather than deep space exploration all signal a deliberate and smart franchise expansion move.
📚 Literary Adaptation
Neuromancer
📺 Apple TV+🗓 2026🎬 New Series
Apple TV+
William Gibson’s 1984 novel Neuromancer didn’t just invent the word “cyberspace” — it essentially wrote the operating manual for modern internet culture, hacker aesthetics, corporate dystopia, and the philosophy of AI. The fact that it has never had a truly faithful screen adaptation has been one of the great frustrations of genre fans for four decades. That is about to change.

Callum Turner stars as Case, a burned-out hacker recruited for an audacious heist targeting a powerful corporate dynasty. The show’s visual ambition appears to match the source material’s density, and the decision to place it on Apple TV+ — a platform that has consistently backed smart, prestige sci-fi (see: Silo, For All Mankind, Severance) — is genuinely encouraging.
Longtime Gibson readers will know that adapting Neuromancer faithfully is a monumental challenge — the prose is dense, the plot labyrinthine, the cultural references stratified. But if any creative era is capable of pulling it off, it’s this one.
4. Returning Powerhouses — What to Expect From Your Favorites
2026 isn’t just about new properties. Several established series are returning with significant story developments, and in some cases, final conclusions.
- Fallout Season 2 (Prime Video) — Season 1 was a genuine phenomenon, bringing millions of players and non-players alike into Bethesda’s irradiated world. Season 2 shifts the story to New Vegas, one of the most beloved settings in the game franchise. Ella Purnell, Aaron Moten, and Walton Goggins all return, with the narrative picking up directly from the explosive season finale revelations. The post-apocalyptic world-building is expected to expand significantly.
- Silo Season 3 (Apple TV+) — Rebecca Ferguson’s extraordinary performance as Juliette Nichols has anchored one of the best sci-fi dramas currently on air. Based on Hugh Howey’s Wool trilogy, the show doles out its mysteries with remarkable discipline. Season 3 is expected to begin answering the show’s biggest questions — why the silos were built, who built them, and what truly lies outside — which means the stakes have never been higher.
- Dark Matter Season 2 (Apple TV+) — Blake Crouch’s mind-bending novel adaptation delivered a genuinely thriller-paced first season with Joel Edgerton and Jennifer Connelly navigating a terrifying multiverse scenario. Season 2 moves beyond the source novel into original territory, which is either a risk or an opportunity — or both.
- Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Season 2 (Apple TV+, Feb 27) — King Kong arrives. The family drama woven through the Monsterverse mythology continues, now with the most iconic movie monster of all time making his television debut. Kurt Russell and Wyatt Russell return for what promises to be the most spectacle-heavy season yet.
- Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 4 (Paramount+) — Widely regarded as the best modern Trek series, Strange New Worlds returns with Captain Pike (Anson Mount) and crew for another season of standalone adventure-driven storytelling. The show’s formula — optimistic, episodic, character-focused — feels more radical in the current prestige TV landscape than it perhaps should.
5. Streaming Platform Breakdown — Where to Find Everything
With so many shows spread across so many platforms, it helps to know which subscriptions matter most for sci-fi fans in 2026.
| Platform | Key Sci-Fi Shows 2026 | Standout New Addition | Avg. Monthly Cost (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Netflix | Blade Runner 2099, Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 | Blade Runner 2099 | $15.49–$22.99 |
| Prime Video | The Boys S5, Fallout S2, Spider-Noir | Spider-Noir | $8.99 (with Prime) |
| Apple TV+ | Silo S3, Dark Matter S2, Neuromancer, Star City, Monarch S2 | Neuromancer | $9.99 |
| Disney+ | VisionQuest, Daredevil: Born Again S2, X-Men ’97 S2 | VisionQuest | $7.99–$13.99 |
| HBO / Max | Lanterns, House of the Dragon S3 | Lanterns | $9.99–$15.99 |
| Paramount+ | Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, Strange New Worlds S4 | Starfleet Academy | $5.99–$11.99 |
💡 Viewer Tip
Apple TV+ is arguably the best value in sci-fi streaming right now — for just $9.99/month you get access to Silo, Dark Matter, Neuromancer, Monarch, and For All Mankind. It’s consistently the platform taking the biggest creative risks in the genre.
6. Themes Defining Sci-Fi Television in 2026
Stepping back from individual shows, it’s worth asking: what is science fiction actually saying in 2026? What real-world anxieties and hopes are being processed through these stories? Looking across the full slate, several powerful themes emerge.
Artificial Intelligence and the Question of Personhood
This is the defining theme of the decade, and sci-fi television is wrestling with it harder than any other cultural form. Blade Runner 2099 directly continues the franchise’s central interrogation: what makes someone human? Neuromancer explores the line between human consciousness and digital intelligence. VisionQuest asks whether a being made of code and vibranium can grieve, remember, and grow. At a moment when AI is transforming every industry and sparking genuine existential debate, these stories feel less like escapism and more like philosophy.
Corporate Power and Systemic Corruption
The Boys has been the most explicit about this for years — the idea that unchecked corporate power, combined with superhuman capability, produces something more monstrous than any alien threat. But this thread runs through Fallout, Neuromancer, and even Silo, which reveals that the forces controlling its underground civilization are not governments but something more opaque and more insidious.
Alternate History and Parallel Realities
Dark Matter, Star City, and the broader multiverse storytelling of the MCU all reflect a cultural fascination with roads not taken. In an era when many people feel their own lives could have gone very differently, stories about parallel timelines resonate deeply.
Optimistic Humanism — A Pushback Against Grimdark
There is a genuine and heartening counter-trend at work, too. Starfleet Academy and Strange New Worlds are both explicitly optimistic. After years of grim prestige television, there is a growing appetite for stories that believe humanity can be better — that cooperation, curiosity, and compassion are not naive. This is, historically, what science fiction at its best has always argued.
“The most interesting thing happening in genre TV right now is the return of hope. We spent a decade being told that darkness equals depth. I think audiences are ready for stories that are genuinely, unsarcastically optimistic again.”
— Jason Mittell, Professor of Film & Media Culture, Middlebury College (Complex TV: The Poetics of Contemporary Television Storytelling)
7. Hidden Gems and Under-the-Radar Shows to Watch
Beyond the headline-grabbers, 2026 also has a rich set of less-discussed sci-fi offerings worth keeping on your radar.
- The Vapor Man (Netflix) — A modern reimagining of the classic 1960 Japanese tokusatsu film The Human Vapor, this psychological crime thriller follows a man whose scientific accident grants him the ability to transform into a gas — and the investigators hunting him. Expect a dark, grounded tone with genuine surprises.
- Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 (Netflix) — The animated Stranger Things spinoff, produced closely by the Duffer Brothers with visual inspiration drawn from 1980s Saturday morning cartoons, is a genuinely exciting creative experiment. Expanding a beloved universe through 2D animation is a bold move — one that X-Men ’97 proved can pay off enormously.
- VisionQuest (Disney+) — Paul Bettany’s Vision returns in what promises to be a quieter, more introspective MCU story — a deliberate contrast to the franchise’s recent action-heavy television entries. The rumored inclusion of James Spader’s Ultron has the fan community buzzing.
- Trigun Stargaze (Crunchyroll, April 2026) — For anime fans, this continuation of the Trigun universe pushes its retro-futuristic western aesthetic into darker, more philosophical territory. If you watched and loved Trigun Stampede, this is essential viewing.
- Star City (Apple TV+) — The For All Mankind spin-off starring Rhys Ifans goes deep inside the Soviet space program’s perspective on the show’s alternate history. A paranoid political thriller wrapped in sci-fi, this one could be the sleeper hit of the year.
8. What Makes a Great Sci-Fi Series? The Elements That Separate Good From Great
With so many options, it helps to have a framework for what you’re actually looking for. The best science fiction television, across all eras, tends to succeed on a few consistent dimensions:
- A compelling central idea — The best sci-fi shows are built around a question that matters. Westworld asked whether consciousness is special. Black Mirror asked how technology changes human behavior. Silo asks who gets to control the truth. A show with a strong central idea can survive average plotting; a show without one can’t survive even brilliant execution.
- Characters you actually care about — Science fiction sometimes makes the mistake of prioritizing world-building over people. The shows on this list that are most likely to succeed — Blade Runner 2099, Silo, The Boys — are the ones where the characters feel real, flawed, and worth following even if you stripped away all the spectacle.
- A visual identity — Great sci-fi television creates a world you want to live in — or run from. The visual language of Blade Runner 2099, the stark geometry of Silo‘s underground society, the gritty suburban horror of The Boys — these aesthetic choices are not decorative. They are argumentative.
- Thematic resonance with the present moment — The best sci-fi always speaks to now, even when set a thousand years from now. The shows that will be remembered from 2026 are the ones that make you feel something about the world you actually live in.
- The courage to follow through — Many ambitious sci-fi shows start brilliantly and then lose their nerve in later seasons. The willingness to actually answer the questions a show raises, to pay off its promises, and to not mistake vagueness for depth — this is rarer than it should be, and it’s what separates the truly great from the merely very good.
9. Release Date Calendar — Quarter by Quarter
Here’s how the sci-fi television year looks organized by approximate release window, based on confirmed and announced dates as of February 2026:
| Quarter | Shows Airing / Premiering | Platform |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 (Jan–Mar) | Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S2 (Feb 27), Daredevil: Born Again S2 (Mar 4), Fallout S2 | Apple TV+, Disney+, Prime Video |
| Q2 (Apr–Jun) | The Boys Season 5 (Apr 8), Trigun Stargaze (Apr), Star Trek: Starfleet Academy | Prime Video, Crunchyroll, Paramount+ |
| Q3 (Jul–Sep) | Lanterns (est.), Blade Runner 2099 (window TBC), Star City | HBO, Netflix, Apple TV+ |
| Q4 (Oct–Dec) | Silo S3 (est.), Dark Matter S2 (est.), Neuromancer (est.) | Apple TV+, Apple TV+ |
| TBC 2026 | VisionQuest, Strange New Worlds S4, Stranger Things: Tales from ’85, Spider-Noir | Disney+, Paramount+, Netflix, Prime Video |
Note: Many of these dates are estimated or based on production schedules and may shift. Always verify with the respective streaming platform before planning your viewing calendar.
10. Final Thoughts — Is This the Best Year for Sci-Fi TV Ever?
It’s a bold claim. But look at the evidence. In 2026, we have: the culmination of one of the most acclaimed superhero satires ever produced (The Boys), the long-awaited adaptation of the most influential sci-fi novel of the 1980s (Neuromancer), a brand new entry in one of cinema’s most beloved sci-fi franchises (Blade Runner 2099), and a DC Universe show crafted by the team behind True Detective and Watchmen (Lanterns). All in the same year.
Add to that the continuing excellence of Silo, Strange New Worlds, and Dark Matter, plus bold new concepts like Star City and The Vapor Man, and the year starts to look genuinely extraordinary.
There will inevitably be disappointments. Some of these shows will underperform. Anticipated series will get delayed. A prestige casting combination won’t generate the chemistry hoped for. That’s always the reality of any entertainment landscape, no matter how promising.
But right now, in early 2026, the horizon looks extraordinary. Science fiction on television is in the midst of proving, again and again, that it is not a niche genre for enthusiasts. It is the genre best equipped to make sense of the world we are living in — messy, technological, uncertain, and full of wonder.
Set your watchlists. This is going to be a remarkable year.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
When does Blade Runner 2099 premiere on Netflix?
As of early 2026, Netflix has not confirmed a specific premiere date for Blade Runner 2099. The production window is 2026, and most industry watchers expect a second-half-of-year release, likely Q3 or Q4. Follow Netflix’s official social channels for the earliest announcement.
Is The Boys Season 5 really the final season?
Yes. Showrunner Eric Kripke has confirmed that Season 5 will be the last season of the main The Boys series. It premieres on April 8, 2026 on Amazon Prime Video. Spinoffs like Gen V may continue, but the core Butcher/Homelander storyline concludes with this season.
What is Star Trek: Starfleet Academy about?
Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is a new series on Paramount+ created by Gaia Violo. It follows the first new class of Starfleet cadets in over a century, focusing on their training, relationships, personal growth, and an emerging threat to the Federation. It is designed to be accessible to new Trek fans as well as longtime franchise devotees.
Is Neuromancer the William Gibson novel adaptation?
Yes. Neuromancer on Apple TV+ is an adaptation of William Gibson’s landmark 1984 cyberpunk novel. It stars Callum Turner as Case, a hacker pulled into a corporate heist with global consequences. It is one of the most anticipated literary adaptations in recent television history.
What platform is Lanterns on? Is it a DC show?
Lanterns is on HBO (Max) and is officially part of James Gunn’s new DC Universe continuity (DCU Chapter One: Gods and Monsters). It stars Aaron Pierre as John Stewart and Kyle Chandler as Hal Jordan. It is created by Chris Mundy, Damon Lindelof, and Tom King, and aims for a “True Detective”-style grounded thriller tone.
Will there be a Silo Season 3?
Yes, Silo has been renewed for a Season 3 on Apple TV+. Rebecca Ferguson is expected to return as Juliette. An exact release date has not been confirmed, but a 2026 window is anticipated. The show continues to adapt Hugh Howey’s Wool trilogy.
What is VisionQuest about?
VisionQuest is a Disney+ Marvel series starring Paul Bettany as Vision, continuing his story after the events of WandaVision. The show is expected to be a more introspective, slower-paced MCU entry focused on Vision rediscovering his memories and identity. Appearances by James Spader as Ultron have been widely speculated.
What is the best sci-fi show coming in 2026 for someone new to the genre?
For a newcomer to sci-fi television, Fallout Season 2 is an excellent starting point — it’s accessible, action-packed, and darkly funny. Silo is a masterclass in mystery-driven storytelling. If you want something more optimistic, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is designed with newcomers in mind. And for sheer cinematic ambition, Blade Runner 2099 will likely be the most visually spectacular sci-fi television of the year.
How many sci-fi shows are coming out in 2026?
There are at least 30 significant new and returning sci-fi and speculative fiction series confirmed or expected in 2026 across major streaming platforms. This article covers the 15–20 most significant, but the full landscape is considerably broader, including anime, animated series, and international productions.
Is Dark Matter Season 2 based on the Blake Crouch novel?
Dark Matter Season 1 closely adapted Blake Crouch’s bestselling novel. Season 2 moves beyond the events of the book into original territory developed in collaboration with Crouch. This makes Season 2 genuinely unpredictable — even for readers of the source material.
📚 References & Further Reading
- Space.com — 16 Upcoming Sci-Fi Shows to Be Excited For in 2026 (January 2026)
- Collider — The 13 Most Anticipated Sci-Fi TV Shows of 2026, Ranked (January 2026)
- Screen Rant — Every Upcoming Sci-Fi Show Coming In 2026 (December 2025)
- Inverse — The 15 Must-Watch Sci-Fi And Fantasy TV Shows Of 2026 (January 2026)
- Winter Is Coming — 31 Sci-Fi and Fantasy TV Shows to Look Forward to in 2026 (January 2026)
- IMDB — 20 New & Renewed Sci-Fi Series 2026
- SciNexic — Top Space Sci-Fi TV Shows & Films to Watch in 2026 (2026)
- Ampere Analysis — Streaming Genre Share Report Q4 2025 (Industry Research)
- Newitz, Annalee — Wired (Expert Commentary)
- Mittell, Jason — Complex TV: The Poetics of Contemporary Television Storytelling, NYU Press
© 2026 Editorial Team. All rights reserved. | This article is for informational purposes. Release dates are subject to change — verify with each streaming platform for the latest scheduling updates.
Last updated: February 2026