Euphoria season three ends amid mixed reviews and record viewership

May 30, 2026 - 19:02
Updated: 2 days ago
0 22
Euphoria season three ends amid mixed reviews and record viewership
Photo source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c78qyn1d7qvo

Rue is swallowing balls of drugs and smuggling them between America and Mexico. Cassie is making erotic content on OnlyFans to pay for wedding flowers. Nate is losing fingers and toes in blood-soaked revenge scenes, and Jules is giving up her artistic career to search for a sugar daddy.

If Euphoria once felt like an exaggerated but emotionally resonant portrait of Gen Z adolescence, its latest season has pushed that chaos to near-surreal extremes.

After seven weeks that polarized both critics and social media, the series concludes on Monday. Some viewers speculate this will be a relief to its central cast, who they say have outgrown the show. Many fans who were teens when the show launched in 2019 say they too are ready to move on.

Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney and Jacob Elordi, all now major names, star as a group of young people navigating sex, drug addiction, friendship, love and trauma. Season three picks up half a decade after the characters left high school, following them into a far darker and more fractured version of adulthood.

When Euphoria first launched, it quickly became one of the defining shows of its generation. After a five-year break marked by strikes, rewrites and cast departures, it returned to a noticeably more divided response.

In December, ahead of the season three launch, showrunner Sam Levinson said this is our best season yet. The response from critics may not have borne that out. The season has a weighted average of 56 percent on review aggregation site Metacritic. Viewing figures, however, are the show's highest ever.

The first episode drew a US audience of more than 12.3 million, while global viewership surpassed 20 million, a 68 percent increase on the season two premiere over the same period, according to Warner Bros. Discovery.

Euphoria has always thrived on viral moments, but some viewers believe certain scenes in season three have been concocted specifically with memes and social media in mind, at the expense of character and plot.

Weeks after the relevant episodes aired, feeds are still flooded with edits and jokes about Cassie dressing up as a baby and Nate telling her you have been a bad, bad dog.

Journalist and author Jess Bacon says the show is almost rage bait at this point. She argues its apparent eagerness for viral moments has led to a one-dimensional plot unworthy of its heavy subject matter and star cast. This season, she adds, feels almost unrecognizable compared with the relatable or thought-provoking teenage experiences seen in Euphoria's earlier episodes.

Fan Eve Rigby, 23, agrees. I remember Euphoria resonating strongly within my friend group as the characters felt like a more stylized version of us as 17-year-olds, but season three is harder to resonate, she says. Rigby says the show's visual identity, neon LED strip lighting, gemstone eye looks and not-so-family-friendly outfits worn to your small town's community events, mirrored the aesthetics young people were embracing. Beneath the glitter-heavy visuals, it also reflected issues many young women recognized from their own lives.

Cassie's objectification, Maddy's domestic abuse, Kat's body consciousness, Jules's relationship with older men, and Rue's addiction reflected things girls had experienced or seen within our circles, Rigby says. By comparison, the latest season feels noticeably more detached from reality. Surprisingly, most of us are not OnlyFans creators or getting kidnapped by the mob, she adds. Even Lexi's normal life, a Warner Bros 9-to-5 while living alone in an LA apartment, would be a great gig for friends who tell me they are watching season three via TikTok clips rather than paying for another subscription.

Some fans have found the latest storylines more intense. Bacon says the show's brutality makes it almost unwatchable at times. She adds that while it continues to tackle hard-hitting themes such as sex work, misogyny and tradwife culture, it no longer approaches them with the same emotional depth and now lacks the nuance the show has been known for.

Writing in Vogue, journalist Daisy Jones criticized what she described as the series' peculiar and persistent obsession with sex work, arguing the subject is explored in a way that now feels dated and two-dimensional.

On the Chicks in the Office podcast, Noah Ives says the season has been growing on him and he has been way more entertained by the last few episodes, which see Rue secretly working for the DEA, Nate being buried alive, and Cassie becoming increasingly eager for validation on OnlyFans. The whole group getting back together makes it way more interesting and feels somewhat like Euphoria again, he says, though he adds the plot is still ridiculous.

Another fan said outrageous storylines were the way it has always been on the show. For the creators to make the giant leap from high school to where they are now, without missing a beat, is fantastic, the fan added.

Many fans have also praised the show's acting, with Sydney Sweeney and Zendaya drawing particular kudos. Other viewers believe Euphoria's emotional depth is still alive and kicking, particularly in its portrayal of addiction.

Addiction therapist Gonzalo Sanchez argues that in earlier seasons, drug taking was portrayed in a highly stylized and fast-paced way, but as the series has developed, there has been a clear shift toward showing the deeper emotional and psychological realities of addiction. The series increasingly highlights themes that are very familiar within therapeutic work like shame, unresolved trauma and the complicated nature of recovery, Sanchez says.

Many critiques of the show, accusations of style over substance, glamorizing trauma and prioritizing spectacle, were there from the very beginning. But in 2019, the shocks perhaps felt fresher. When the show launched, the Guardian said it made Skins look positively Victorian, while Time called it the first teen drama to fully exploit the Xanax-numbed aesthetic that defines Gen Z.

In Vogue, Jones said season one storylines like Barbie Ferreira's Kat having nude photos leaked felt pertinent and discerning, as this was before platforms like OnlyFans exploded into mainstream culture. Levinson's continued fascination with those themes now feels not just late, but mildly cringe-inducing, she adds.

James Kirkham, a brand strategist and culture commentator, agrees that the themes that once made Euphoria feel culturally defining are now more mainstream. The cultural conversation they were having in 2019 about identity, queerness, mental health, is now the conversation everyone is having everywhere, so the show no longer feels like a frontier, Kirkham says.

Comparisons have frequently been drawn between Euphoria and Skins, the youth-focused series that became hugely influential in the 2000s before later seasons struggled to maintain the same cultural relevance. Kirkham says it is almost inevitable that modern youth dramas will lose relevance over time and the miracle is when a youth show catches fire even once. Expecting it to do it twice, in different cultural weather, with the same writers, is always hard, he says.

What's Your Reaction?

Like Like 0
Dislike Dislike 0
Love Love 0
Funny Funny 0
Wow Wow 0
Sad Sad 0
Angry Angry 0

Comments (0)

User