'The Boys' Season 5 Enters Final Season With a Bang as Critics’ Rating Surfaces
If chaos had a graduation ceremony, The Boys Season 5 would arrive as valedictorian with blood on its gown. Billy Butcher, now terminal and terrifyingly empowered, charges toward genocide with a sentient tumor in tow, while Homelander rules America like a wrathful deity, complete with camps and puppets. Add Annie January leading resistance and Soldier Boy re-entering the family drama, and subtlety quietly exits the room, even when it comes to critics' voices.
It is, therefore hardly shocking that The Boys Season 5 debuted with such an uproar of praise from critics.
The Boys' last season gets the ultimate approval from critics
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The early critics have nothing but praise for The Boys season 5 as it debuted with a perfect 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes, a rare feat to accomplish. At present, it has a 95 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes, still an amazing score. The final season is landing exactly where it should: with critics applauding its dark sense of humor and its sharp character work. The real triumph is that Eric Kripke actually delivers on his promise, crafting episodes that feel like a finale with teeth.
"Soars wildly to the finish line, its confidence only matched by its craziness," said one of the reviewers, which is a sentiment shared by many of them. At the same time, according to Slash Films, these early reviewers were only handed episodes one to seven. Meaning that the full extent of The Boys season 5 is yet to be fully assessed for the time being until the finale's official date, May 20.
While the critics have already made their verdict loud and glowing, the audience score for The Boys Season 5 is still under wraps, and that absence is bound to shift the overall perception once it arrives. The real test begins on April 8, when viewers finally step into the chaos on Amazon Prime Video, with a two-episode premiere followed by weekly releases.
As fans process Eric Kripke confirming the finale is not movie-length, they are already dissecting how Season 5 reviews stack up against the previous seasons.
How The Boys season 5 is in comparison to the previous seasons
The Boys season 5 does not merely improve on Season 4; it corrects it. Where Season 4 was criticized for circular plotting and episodes that felt like filler, this final season moves with intent, placing Billy Butcher’s deteriorating condition and Homelander’s political dominance at the center. The narrative feels coiled, with each episode actively pushing toward a conclusion rather than stalling.
That difference matters because the earlier seasons built the world through surprise and escalation, while Season 5 seems determined to cash in on every promise at once. Reviewers are pointing to stronger character work, especially for figures who were previously pushed aside. The result is a season that feels less like a detour and more like the main event.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The Rotten Tomatoes comparison is especially striking: Season 5 debuted at 100 percent, ahead of Season 4’s 92 percent, and above Season 3’s 98 percent and Season 2’s 97 percent. Even Season 1, which had a fresh shock factor, sits lower at 85 percent. In that sense, Season 5 is not just catching up to the best of the series; it is arriving with a perfect score.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
What do you make of the early reviews of The Boys season 5? Let us know in the comments!
ADVERTISEMENT
Edited By: Adiba Nizami
More from Netflix Junkie on Hollywood News
ADVERTISEMENT











