Euphoria Season 3 Review: A Flawed Final Season That Still Broke Our Hearts

Euphoria Season 3 divided fans with its darker tone, hypersexualized storytelling and shocking deaths. Here’s why the final season struggled, what worked, and why Rue’s ending still hit hard.

And before I end this review, I need to talk about the performances. Because regardless of what you think about Season 3’s writing, there is one thing that absolutely deserves recognition: Zendaya. At this point, I genuinely don’t know what more this woman has to do to prove she’s one of the greatest actors of her generation. From Season 1 to the very last episode, she carried Euphoria on her back. Every panic attack, every relapse, every breakdown, every moment of hope and every moment of grief felt painfully real. Rue could have easily become an unlikeable character. Instead, Zendaya somehow made us root for her even when she was making the worst possible decisions.

And this season might honestly contain some of her strongest work yet.

The scene where Rue finally starts imagining a future for herself. The quiet moments with Ali. The desperation. The fear. The acceptance. It never once felt like acting.

If there is any justice in awards season, Zendaya should absolutely be in the Emmy conversation.

As for Jacob Elordi, I actually feel a little disappointed for him. Not because of his performance, but because of the material he was given. Nate spent most of Season 3 being beaten down physically and emotionally. There wasn’t much room for the complexity that made him such a terrifying and fascinating character in previous seasons. Jacob is an incredible actor, but this season never really gave him the opportunity to show it.

Then there’s Alexa Demie. Honestly, I don’t think enough people talk about how difficult her job actually is. Maddy doesn’t need long monologues. She doesn’t need dramatic speeches. Half the time she walks into a room, says three words, gives a look, and somehow becomes the most interesting person on screen. Alexa has that rare quality where she can command attention without doing very much at all. Even when she isn’t speaking, you’re watching her.

And if the rumors are true that she’s planning to step away from television for a while, that genuinely sucks because she deserves to be everywhere. She has star quality that very few actors possess.

Sydney Sweeney, on the other hand, spent the first half of this season making me want to throw something at my screen. Cassie somehow found new and creative ways to make terrible decisions every single week. But credit where it’s due. By the end of the season, she won me back. Watching her and Maddy slowly rebuild some version of their friendship was one of the few hopeful things Euphoria gave us. And since the show is officially over, we get to imagine what happens next.

In my version, Cassie never betrays Maddy again. The girls stay together.

They heal. They move on. And for once, they get the happy ending that almost nobody in Euphoria ever got.

Seven years ago, Euphoria introduced us to Rue Bennett.

And if we’re being honest, the moment Rue started narrating her own story in the past tense, a part of us already knew how this would end.

Maybe not when.

Maybe not how.

But deep down, it always felt like Euphoria wasn’t a story about survival. It was a story about inevitability. Now, after three seasons, HBO has officially closed the book on Euphoria. No Season 4. No spin-offs. No second chances.

And somehow, despite all the frustrations I had with this final season, Rue’s death still broke me. Because unlike Nate’s death last week, which felt shocking, Rue’s death felt tragic.

It felt earned. It felt like watching a train you spotted miles away finally crash.

That doesn’t mean Season 3 was perfect. Far from it.

In fact, this was easily the most divisive season of the entire series.

One of the biggest reasons is that Euphoria lost a lot of what originally made it special.

The first two seasons balanced shocking moments with emotional intimacy. Under all the drugs, parties and chaos were characters we genuinely cared about. This season often felt more interested in disturbing us than understanding its own characters.

At times, the show became so hypersexualized and bleak that it crossed the line from uncomfortable to exhausting. Instead of using shocking imagery to tell a story, it sometimes felt like the shock itself became the story.

Several fan-favorite characters were pushed to the sidelines. Jules barely existed. Lexi felt forgotten. Even Rue spent large stretches reacting to events rather than driving them.

The result was a season that often felt disconnected from the emotional core that once made Euphoria one of television’s most compelling dramas.

And yet, despite all of that, the final episodes found their footing.

Because the moment Rue risked everything to get those ID cards out of Laurie’s operation, something changed.

For the first time in years, she wasn’t running from responsibility.

She was running toward it. She wanted a future.

She wanted recovery. She wanted love.

She wanted children. She wanted a life.

Which is exactly why her death hurts so much.

For years, viewers struggled to empathize with Rue because addiction made her destructive, selfish and difficult to root for.

Season 3 finally showed us the version of Rue she could have become.

And then it took her away. The cruelest part is that she didn’t die during a dramatic shootout or a cartel raid. She died because Alamo handed her a Percocet laced with fentanyl after she had already done his dirty work.

That betrayal felt personal. After everything Rue risked for him, there wasn’t even a hint of remorse.

And honestly? I felt absolutely nothing when Ali killed him.

If anything, I was relieved.

Especially after seeing Angel’s ID among the collection of cards and realizing the extent of Alamo’s cruelty. By that point, his death didn’t feel like revenge. It felt overdue.

What remains fascinating is Bishop’s betrayal. The finale never outright explains why he removed the bullets from Alamo’s gun, leaving fans to speculate.

Was he angry about Rue? Did he want to protect Maddy?

Was he secretly working against Alamo?

The most convincing explanation is actually the simplest one: power.

Throughout the season, Alamo constantly belittled Bishop. He treated him like a useful tool rather than a partner. As Alamo’s empire began collapsing around him, Bishop recognized an opportunity.

The DEA was closing in. Laurie was gone.

Alamo was becoming reckless. The throne was vulnerable.

So Bishop made his move.

Even the way he stops Kidd from shooting Ali suggests he had already chosen a side. Not because he was suddenly moral, but because he understood the future belonged to him.

It’s one of the few genuinely interesting unanswered questions the finale leaves behind.

As for Maddy, her ending is complicated.

I don’t think she intentionally caused Rue’s death. But I do think she played a role.

Her loose comments around Alamo helped expose Rue’s connection to the DEA, which likely sealed her fate.

Would Rue have died anyway? Probably.

Addiction has been hanging over her story since Episode 1.

But Maddy unknowingly accelerated a tragedy that was already in motion.

The season’s most emotional moment wasn’t Rue’s overdose.

It was Ali.

Watching him discover her body.

Watching him realize the pills contained fentanyl.

Watching him lose someone he viewed as a daughter.

Colman Domingo delivered some of the best acting of the entire series in those final episodes.

His return to the farmhouse where Rue found peace earlier in the season created a beautiful full-circle ending.

Not just for Ali. Not just for Rue.

But for Euphoria itself.

Was Season 3 as good as Seasons 1 and 2? No.

The writing was messier. The pacing was uneven.

Several characters deserved far more attention.

The hypersexualization often overwhelmed the story instead of serving it.

But despite all its flaws, Euphoria understood one thing by the end:

Rue Bennett was always the heart of this show.

And once she was gone, there was nowhere else left to go.

Seven years later, we’re saying goodbye to one of television’s most complicated protagonists.

A girl who spent years trying to destroy herself.

A girl who finally wanted to live.

And maybe that’s why her ending hurts so much.

Because for the first time, she had something worth staying for.

And then she didn’t get the chance.

Movie/Series: Euphoria Season 3
Directed by: Sam Levinson
Featuring: Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney, Jacob Elordi, Alexa Demie, Hunter Schafer, Maude Apatow, Colman Domingo, Chloe Cherry, Martha Kelly, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Darrell Britt-Gibson
Streaming on: HBO Max
OTT Release Date: April 5, 2026 – May 31, 2026
Run Time: 8 Episodes (Approx. 55–70 minutes each)

Euphoria S3
euphoria season 3 pic courtesy x
Editor's Rating:
3.5

SUMMARY

Euphoria Season 3 divided fans with its darker tone, hypersexualized storytelling and shocking deaths. Here’s why the final season struggled, what worked, and why Rue’s ending still hit hard.
Source HBO Max

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