← Back to Directory
Gen V
TV Series

Gen V

2023Action, Adventure, Comedy • 2 Seasons

Woke Score
8.5
out of 10

Series Overview

From the world of "The Boys" comes "Gen V," which explores the first generation of superheroes to know that their super powers are from Compound V. These heroes put their physical and moral boundaries to the test competing for the...

Weekly Alert

Get the Weekly Woke Watchlist

New and trending movies scored for woke bias, preachy messaging, and forced political themes — before you waste your evening.

No spam. One useful email per week.

Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

8/10

No overview available.

View Full Season Analysis

Season 2

9/10

As America adjusts to Homelander's reign, at Godolkin University, the new Dean preaches a course to make students more powerful than ever. Cate and Sam are heroes, while Marie, Jordan, and Emma return to class, after months of trauma. War is brewing between Humans and Supes and our crew learns of a secret program from the 60s that may be significant to today. And, somehow, Marie is a part of it.

View Full Season Analysis

Overall Series Review

Gen V transforms the superhero genre into a sharp critique of modern institutional power. By moving the action to the campus of Godolkin University, the series reframes the traditional search for identity as a struggle against corporate exploitation and systemic abuse. The narrative centers on young students who must navigate a world where their public image and personal identities are treated as commodities, ultimately exposing the predatory nature of the organizations that claim to support them. The series evolves by framing social and political tensions as the core conflict of the Supe world. What begins as a personal journey for its protagonists grows into an exploration of historical guilt and the dangers of blind institutional loyalty. By drawing clear lines between the corruption of the establishment and the moral clarity of marginalized groups, the show positions its characters as the only force capable of challenging an inherently fascistic status quo. This progression highlights a shift from individual survival to a broader commentary on power. The transition from secret human experimentation in the first season to the wider exploration of systemic civilizational failings in the second shows an increasing focus on the cycle of oppression. Throughout, the show remains deeply cynical toward traditional authority, viewing nationalistic and corporate structures as the primary villains that stifle authentic human connection and individual agency. Overall, the series stands as a bold, fast-paced examination of how power is manufactured and sustained. It utilizes the backdrop of a university setting to dissect how society weaponizes identity for branding and control. By challenging the concept of heroism, it offers a stark look at how the next generation might dismantle a system built on the exploitation of those it claims to protect.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics9/10

Oikophobia7.5/10

Feminism8/10

LGBTQ+10/10

Anti-Theism6.5/10

Weekly Alert

Get the Weekly Woke Watchlist

New and trending movies scored for woke bias, preachy messaging, and forced political themes — before you waste your evening.

No spam. One useful email per week.