Gen V Season 2 has critics and audiences divided with the different Rotten Tomatoes score

Gen V 2 (Image via Youtube/@Prime Video)
Gen V 2 (Image via Youtube/@Prime Video)

In 2025, Gen V, the dark-themed spin-off of The Boys, came back with Season 2, much anticipated. The series, again exploring the chaotic clash of power, ambition, and youth, is set in the morally decadent world of Vought International.

Season 2, unlike its first season, has become a controversial one, not due to its violent and twisted humor but because of its polarizing effect on critics and the general audience.

The critics hailed it as a bold story and keen social commentary, but audiences rated it far lower, a huge disparity that has become one of the most notable talking points of the season on Rotten Tomatoes.


More about Gen V Season 2

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As per the ratings by Rotten Tomatoes, critics have praised Gen V Season 2 as a show that is not afraid of popularizing controversial matters, such as the system's corruption, media control, and the moral concerns inherent in unrestricted authority. They praised the performance as taking a more existentialist turn into the psychological cost of growing up as a weapon by Vought, and the compositional and structural risks.

The audiences, however, were even less tolerant. Critiques by many casual audiences indicated that the season was overly political allegory-heavy and pace-slow, which was not the case with Season 1, which was so binge-watchable. Some of them mentioned tonal changes, how emotional character lines occasionally yielded to depressing, wandering subplots.

Although the audience score for Gen V Season 2 is 63%, reviewers have given it a strong 90% on Rotten Tomatoes. Most fans have been disappointed by the ending, which was not as much a spectacle as more moral grayness, with significant questions left unanswered.

The dichotomy is two approaches to interacting with Gen V: an ironic and biting commentary that critics idealize or a superhero drama with a heavy dose of adrenaline that audiences anticipated.

In comparison, Season 1 received a 76% public rating and a 97% reviewer grade on Tomatometer, and although the way Andre's death was handled and Dean Cipher was introduced was praised by critics, many viewers find the season's tempo and political undertones to be too much to handle.

According to critics, this decision was thematically courageous, emphasizing the hopelessness of revolution in terms of being subjugated by the system. However, viewers were annoyed that the season left them without a resolution of any kind; no massive take down, no satisfying resolution, only the chilling note that the system is still in place.

Gen V Season 2 follows the bloody finale of the first season, as Marie, Emma, Andre, Jordan, and Cate are forced into the limelight after revealing to the world of Vought and his evil experimentation. The group is publicly acclaimed as heroes but secretly stalked, and has a difficult time handling publicity, trauma, and their broken allegiances. Vought tries to justify their activities as evidence of their good intentions, as it secretly increases its super soldier program.


Cast of Gen V Season 2

Gen V Season 2 cast boosts the show with roughness and deep texture. The story is anchored by Jazz Sinclair, who plays the role of Marie Moreau, a person caught between her blood-controlling abilities and the problem of morality.

Chance Perdomo is the character of Andre Anderson, a hero in training who is loyal and conflicted. Lizze Broadway is a bright Emma Meyer who is struggling with emotional development and her changing proportions. London Thor and Derek Luh are lovers of the same woman, Jordan Li, whose personality is fluid in gender and is unwilling to be a leader. Maddie Phillips plays a part of guilt-ridden Cate Dunlap.

Edited by Priscillah Mueni