7 Shows you must watch if you loved Mobland

Sayan
MobLand (Image via Paramount+)
MobLand (Image via Paramount+)

If you watched MobLand, then you know it never needed loud scenes to feel dangerous. It built tension in quiet rooms and made every word count. People died not because of chaos but because someone chose to move a piece off the board. You see someone smile and know something bad is coming. You watch someone nod and know a plan is already in motion. That slow pressure is what made the show hard to look away from.

But MobLand is not the only show that works like this. There are others that take you into cold boardrooms and violent streets and make silence feel sharper than any weapon. These shows do not chase shock value. They follow people who know how to hold power without showing it. They focus on control and fear, and timing.

If you want more stories where every character is playing a different game and every move has weight, then these seven shows will give you that. Some take place in cities and others in backrooms, but all of them understand one thing. The real danger does not shout. It waits. It watches. And when it finally moves, it makes sure there is no way back.


7 Shows you must watch if you loved Mobland

1. Gangs of London

Gangs of London (Image via Sky Atlantic, AMC+)
Gangs of London (Image via Sky Atlantic, AMC+)

This show starts with a murder that changes the balance of power. The head of a powerful gang is killed, and his son tries to hold everything together. What follows is a war between different factions where everyone wants control.

Violence hits without warning. Rooms stay quiet until someone flips the table. Sean Wallace does not say much, but when he moves, everyone watches. You feel the same pressure as in MobLand, where one look can carry a threat.

Deals are made behind closed doors. Trust barely lasts a day. The show moves from rich homes to dark alleys without losing focus. Power shifts constantly. The most dangerous people are the ones who say the least. That is where it connects to MobLand. Nothing feels safe. Every moment carries weight. You watch and wait because you know someone is going to fall. You just do not know when.


2. Peaky Blinders

Peaky Blinders (Image via Netflix)
Peaky Blinders (Image via Netflix)

This show follows Thomas Shelby and his family as they rise from small-time bookmakers to major power players. It starts after World War I and shows how they build an empire. Every move is planned. Every word matters.

Tommy does not yell. He does not rush. He lets others speak and then makes his decision. That calm control is what connects it to MobLand. He plays both sides and always walks away without a scratch.

Family comes first, but trust breaks often. Allies shift. Enemies become useful. The show focuses on the power that builds slowly. Fights do not come from nowhere. They come from tension that has been waiting. In the same way that MobLand turns silence into pressure, Peaky Blinders does the same with style. You never know if the next conversation will end with a deal or a bullet. That’s what makes it stick.


3. Top Boy

Top Boy (Image via Netflix)
Top Boy (Image via Netflix)

Set in East London, this show digs into the drug trade with a focus on class control and survival. Dushane and Sully run things in a way that feels close to MobLand. They use fear quietly. They build trust, but know it will break.

There is no flashy violence. Most tension builds through silence. You hear a door open and know something is wrong. People are followed. People are watched. And everyone has a reason to lie.

The streets are cold, and the risks are real. The show looks at power without dressing it up. Everyone in charge is balancing on a thin line. What makes it work like MobLand is how it shows strategy in everyday life. A phone call can change everything. A simple nod can start a war. It all moves under the surface. Nothing is random. Someone always has a plan.


4. Boardwalk Empire

Boardwalk Empire (Image via HBO)
Boardwalk Empire (Image via HBO)

This show takes you to Atlantic City during Prohibition. Nucky Thompson runs the town while keeping one foot in crime and the other in politics. He dresses sharply and speaks softly, but controls everything.

Deals are made over drinks, but someone always pays the price. Like MobLand, this show hides danger behind calm faces. You don’t hear threats. You see the results. One look from Nucky means something bad is coming.

Betrayal comes from people closest to him. Family and loyalty mix with greed and fear. What links it to MobLand is how power operates quietly. There are no big speeches. Just small moves that change everything. Someone gets promoted. Someone disappears. That’s the way control works in this world. If you want to see how crime blends with business and how silence carries weight, this one delivers that with every step Nucky takes.


5. Ray Donovan

Ray Donovan (Image via Showtime)
Ray Donovan (Image via Showtime)

Ray works in Los Angeles cleaning up the messes of powerful people. He fixes things behind the scenes while his own life falls apart. His family is full of secrets. His father causes problems. Ray never flinches.

He walks into any situation and handles it. He knows who to bribe, who to threaten, and when to walk away. That same calm force runs through MobLand. Harry Da Souza would get along with Ray without saying a word.

Violence only happens when needed. Control is more important. Ray moves like someone who knows the end before the beginning. The show does not waste time. It shows pressure building and how one wrong move brings everything down. If you liked MobLand for its quiet strength and broken families, Ray Donovan brings that same weight. Every scene shows how hard it is to keep power and how easy it is to lose it.


6. ZeroZeroZero

ZeroZeroZero (Image via Amazon Prime Video, Canal+)
ZeroZeroZero (Image via Amazon Prime Video, Canal+)

This show follows one shipment of cocaine and shows how it moves across Mexico, Italy, and the United States. It is told from different sides—the sellers, the buyers, and the ones moving the product.

Everyone is lying. Everyone is scared. And no one is safe. What connects it to MobLand is how power moves without shouting. A phone call changes everything. A smile hides a death sentence.

The pacing is cold and sharp. You do not see loud chaos. You see quite a control. The show looks at global crime like a business. Mistakes are paid for in blood. No one trusts anyone. And when someone tries to do the right thing, it always backfires. If MobLand made you think about who really holds power, ZeroZeroZero takes that question and spreads it across three continents. The silence hits just as hard as the violence, and that is what makes it work.


7. Animal Kingdom

Animal Kingdom (Image via TNT)
Animal Kingdom (Image via TNT)

This show starts when a teenager moves in with his criminal relatives after his mother dies. He finds out they run a crew led by their grandmother, Smurf, who controls everything behind the scenes.

Smurf is not loud. She is cold and calculating. She hugs you while planning how to use you. If Maeve Harrigan kept you on edge in MobLand, Smurf does it with even less mercy.

Each family member has a role, but no one is safe. Loyalty depends on usefulness. The crimes they pull off are planned with care, but it’s the family drama that drives the show. Betrayals come from the inside. People turn on each other to stay in the game. If you want more cold leadership and dangerous quiet, this show delivers that. Every look means something. Every word is calculated. Power comes from contro,l and Smurf has all of it.


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Edited by Sohini Biswas