

Krypton
There's more to the legend.
Set two generations before the destruction of the legendary Man of Steel’s home planet, Krypton follows Superman’s grandfather — whose House of El was ostracized and shamed — as he fights to redeem his family’s honor and save his beloved world from chaos.
Why watch Krypton
Superman's grandfather wasn't born a hero—he was born into disgrace. Krypton strips away the cape mythology and asks what it takes to restore honor when your entire bloodline is branded as traitors. Cameron Cuffe carries this weight with quiet intensity, channeling the kind of moral conviction that made the El name legendary in the first place.
This is prestige sci-fi in the vein of HBO's Westworld or Raised by Wolves—lush alien architecture, political intrigue, and a pacing that trusts you to sit with dread. The show builds a fully realized Kryptonian society with its own power struggles and technological wonder, then systematically threatens to tear it apart. The action sequences snap with kinetic precision, but the real tension lives in boardrooms and family dinners, where one wrong word could seal a planet's fate.
If you crave sprawling sci-fi that takes its world-building seriously—think the ambition of Dune meets the character work of The Crown—this is essential viewing. You'll watch a man carry the impossible burden of saving a civilization that despises him, and by the finale, you'll understand why Superman's lineage meant everything. The final twist alone will have you immediately wanting to restart the season.
— The What2Watch desk · US
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The story
Set two generations before the destruction of the legendary Man of Steel’s home planet, Krypton follows Superman’s grandfather — whose House of El was ostracized and shamed — as he fights to redeem his family’s honor and save his beloved world from chaos.
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