Tulsa King Season 3 feels bigger than ever. Sylvester Stallone is back as Dwight “The General” Manfredi, and he is still the heart of the show.
Fans are abuzz about what is coming next, especially with Season 3, Episode 8, Nothing is Over, right around the corner. Set to drop on Sunday, November 9, 2025, Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 8 follows a season full of dangerous standoffs and jaw-dropping twists. The Dunmire family is right in the thick of it, and bringing in someone like Samuel L. Jackson just turns up the heat.
Paramount+ drops new episodes every Sunday at midnight ET (that is 3 AM on the West Coast, or 8 AM in the UK). With Episode 8 almost here, you can feel the tension building, especially with all the talk about possible betrayals inside Dwight’s crew.
Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 8: Release date, time, and streaming platform

Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 8 drops on Sunday, November 9, 2025, exclusively on Paramount+.
For Season 3, new episodes land every Sunday, and they go live right at midnight Pacific Time (12:00 AM PT). If you are on the East Coast, that means 3:00 AM ET. Basically, as soon as Sunday starts, the episode is ready to stream.
All you need is your Paramount+ login. Once the episode is up, you can watch it right away. To watch Tulsa King Season 3, you will need a Paramount+ subscription. There are two main choices:
First, there is the Essential plan. It is $7.99 a month or $59.99 for the year, which actually saves you about $36 if you go with the annual option. With Essential, you get access to over 40,000 episodes and movies, you can stream on up to three devices at once, and there are some ads.
If you want to skip ads, there is the Premium plan at $12.99 per month or $119.99 for the year (again, about $36 in savings annually). Premium is ad-free, except for live TV. You get access to Showtime originals and movies, local CBS live channels, the option to download shows for offline watching, and you can stream in 4K UHD if you have the setup for it.
New subscribers can test out either plan with a 7-day free trial before deciding. If you just want a budget-friendly way to watch and don’t mind a few ads, Essential does the trick. If you are after the full experience, no ads, Showtime, offline downloads, and better picture quality, Premium makes more sense.
Here is who you will see in Tulsa King Season 3, Episode 8:
Sylvester Stallone leads the way as Dwight “The General” Manfredi. He is still at the center of all the mafia drama, juggling power plays and dodging betrayals left and right.
Martin Starr is back as Bodhi, Dwight’s steady right-hand guy. Jay Will plays Tyson, another trusted ally at Dwight’s side.
Robert Patrick returns as Jeremiah Dunmire, a big name in the rival family, with Beau Knapp as Cole Dunmire, both pretty deep in the ongoing feud.
Bella Heathcote steps in as Cleo Montague, a new face with a lot of pull in the current storyline. Dana Delany’s Margaret Deveraux keeps stirring up trouble, political and personal, where Dwight is concerned.
Neal McDonough plays Cal Thresher, tangled up in all the criminal and political mess. Annabella Sciorra appears as Joanne Manfredi, Dwight’s estranged wife. Frank Grillo takes on Bill Bevilaqua, always scheming behind the scenes.
You will also spot Chris Caldovino as Goodie Carangi, McKenna Quigley Harrington as Grace, Michael Beach as Mark Mitchell, and Mike “Ca$h Flo” Walden as Bigfoot, each one adding something different to the mix.
And Samuel L. Jackson joins the cast this season as Russell Lee Washington Jr.; how much he shows up in Episode 8 is still part of the unfolding story.
What is Tulsa King Season 3 about?

Season 2 ended with Dwight getting snatched up and told, flat out, “You work for us now.”
Tulsa King Season 3 kicks off with Dwight back in Tulsa, trying to keep his operation running, but it is not business as usual. He has the FBI, especially Agent Musso, breathing down his neck. The old New York mob ties won’t leave him alone. And now there is a new threat in town, local rivals who want a piece.
He and his crew buy the Montague Distillery. On paper, it looks legit. Underneath, it is just another layer in Dwight’s criminal empire. Tucked away in the distillery: 200 barrels of rare 50-year-old bourbon, the kind of stash people kill for. That bourbon turns into the heart of everything.
Jeremiah Dunmire isn’t having it. He fights the deal every step and doesn’t play nice. He spreads fear, torches the Montague house, and Theo Montague ends up dead. So now Dwight’s crew is hustling to protect the distillery, hunt down the stolen bourbon, and still handle the usual headaches: rival gangs, police crackdowns, old-money families pulling strings.
Meanwhile, Musso isn’t letting up. He knows about Dwight’s past: the prison killing and the informant. He dangles that over Dwight’s head, using it to squeeze the Tulsa operation.
Back in New York, the mob world keeps pulling at Dwight. There are hints that he is getting offered a spot back in the old crew, or maybe he is just being set up. Either way, the past isn’t done with him.
As Dwight tries to grow the business in Tulsa King Season 3, his crew, Tyson, Bodhi, and Mitch, feel the heat. Mistakes happen. Bodhi botches a money drop and starts to crack under the pressure.
There is a personal angle too. Cleo, Theo Montague’s daughter, steps in. She and Mitch hit it off, which pulls Dwight even deeper into the distillery mess and raises the stakes for everyone.
The risks are bigger now. This isn’t small-time street crime anymore. Dwight’s juggling high-stakes bourbon, old-money families, and relentless law enforcement.
By Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 7, titled Art of War, things really blow up. Dunmire starts losing his grip, lashes out, and the violence ramps up. The bourbon heist, the Montague estate burning, Musso tightening the screws as Dwight’s world isn’t just getting bigger, it’s getting a lot more dangerous.
Here is what to look for the rest of the season:

Does Dwight hang onto the distillery and that bourbon stash, or does he lose it all?
What’s the Dunmire family really up to? Their plan is still a mystery: how far are they willing to push things, and what do they actually want?
What is Musso’s real play here? Is Dwight just another piece on the board, or does he find a way to turn the whole game upside down?
Will Dwight’s crew stick together when things get tough, or do we start to see some cracks?
The New York mob is still out there. Are they going to pull Dwight back in, or push him into some choices he doesn’t want to make?
There is also the legit business side: does the bourbon business turn into Dwight’s biggest asset, or does it end up being the thing that drags him under?
And finally, you can feel it building; this season isn’t about slow change. There is a big turning point coming near the end of Tulsa King Season 3, and it is not just business as usual.