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The Witcher season 4 currently holds a 58% amongst critics on Rotten Tomatoes, and an 18% audience score, and both have set records for the series. With the 58%, season 4 is now the lowest critics’ average of all four seasons, as season 1 was the previous low point with 68%. Season 3 holds a 79%, while season 2 holds the series’ highest bow at 95%. The audience score is also the lowest amongst seasons, and in both cases, Cavill’s departure seems to be a consistent through line.
Right now, season 4’s 18% is just 2% down from season 3’s audience score of 20%, and both are down substantially from season 2’s 54% audience score. Season 1 actually had the highest audience score with 88%, and which is interesting since it is the second lowest critics’ score. It’s interesting to see how critics and audiences have been so far apart over the course of the series. Season 2 is the highest critical rating, and yet it holds just a 54% with audiences.
Neither of those records are great records to break, and it’s unfortunate, since some of it feels directed towards the change in Geralt as opposed to the quality of the show overall. In the full review of season 4, I highlight how it feels like all three main character journeys feel compelling on their own merits as opposed to being overly reliant on one central star, and when you have a property that has such rich and layered lore as The Witcher, you want to spread that out a bit and explore several sides of it. Season 4 does that better than any previous season when taken as a whole, and when the stories do weave together, it feels important and like a real payoff as a result.








