TV Shows

Severance Season 3 might be the best television of the decade: No spoiler discussion

Apple TV+ took three years between seasons and the wait was worth every second. Severance Season 3 is operating at a level that very few shows reach.

What makes it work (no spoilers):

  • The pacing has improved dramatically. Season 2 had a few episodes that felt like stalling. Season 3 hits the gas from episode 1 and never lets up.
  • The innie/outie dynamic has deepened in ways I did not see coming. The philosophical questions about identity, consent, and corporate control are sharper than ever.
  • Adam Scott gives the performance of his career. Playing two distinct versions of the same person and making both equally compelling is extraordinary acting.
  • The production design. Every hallway, every room, every prop in Lumon Industries feels intentional. The set design tells stories that dialogue does not.

The bigger picture: Severance is the most relevant show on television because it is essentially about work-life balance taken to its logical extreme. In a post-pandemic world where remote work and corporate surveillance are real debates, severing your work self from your personal self does not feel like science fiction. It feels like a pitch in a boardroom somewhere.

Where to watch: Apple TV+ exclusively. If you have not started the show, Season 1 Episode 1 hooks you within 15 minutes.

Source: Apple TV+, personal viewing through Episode 3

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:23 AM

5 Comments

Adam Scott deserves an Emmy this year and if he does not get one, the awards system is broken. The range he shows playing Mark S. versus Mark is subtle and devastating.

The fact that Apple TV+ greenlit a third season after that long gap shows confidence in the creative vision. Most streamers would have cancelled after the Season 2 wait.

If you work in a corporate office and watch this show, it will ruin Monday mornings for you. Every waffle party joke at my office now hits different.

The workplace horror genre that Severance created is genuinely new. No show has made fluorescent lighting and corporate jargon feel this menacing.