The Witcher Season 4 Review: A Bold New Chapter With Liam Hemsworth – But Can It Live Up to the Hype?

The Witcher Season 4 Review: A Bold New Chapter With Liam Hemsworth – But Can It Live Up to the Hype?

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Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], October 30: Let’s face it: when a show like The Witcher announces a seismic shift — new lead actor, revamped tone, and one of the biggest budgets in streaming history — the expectations don’t just arrive… they storm the castle. Season 4’s arrival on Netflix (October 30, 2025), with Liam Hemsworth replacing Henry Cavill as Geralt of Rivia, is that very invasion.

And yes — the wild thing is, this new season almost delivers a fresh, gleaming version of the Continent. But “almost” is the operative word.

The High Stakes & What’s At Play

The narrative foundation remains anchored in Andrzej Sapkowski’s books (via adaptation), centring on Geralt, Ciri and Yennefer contending with war, monsters and destiny. Season 4, as announced, begins the arc that will conclude in Seasons 4 and 5.

Behind the scenes, the stakes soared: industry estimates suggest an eye-watering budget of approximately US$221 million (≈ US$27 million per episode) for Season 4 alone, bringing the franchise’s cumulative budget to an estimated US$720 million+. It’s not hyperbole to say Netflix has bet big here.

From a PR-lens, Hemsworth stepping in is positioned as a “refresh” — a new energy injected into the series, with showrunner Lauren Schmidt Hissrich promising tonal evolution: equal parts brooding darkness and dry humour.

The Witcher

What Works — And What Wins Over

  1. Fresh Charm & Energy: Hemsworth brings a lighter layer to Geralt’s stoicism. Fans of the show’s earlier grimness might raise an eyebrow, but there’s something energising in the slight tonal tweak. He acknowledges the enormity of taking over the role and admits the initial fan noise got to him.

  2. Production Value Unleashed: With that mammoth budget, the visuals are lush — creatures feel more menacing, the Continent’s landscapes more expansive, and the editing sharper. If you’re watching for spectacle, you’ll find it.

  3. Narrative Re-Configuration: Season 4 uses the recasting as a narrative pivot-point rather than just a cosmetic change. The separation of Ciri, Geralt and Yennefer at the end of Season 3 sets up a structural fresh start rather than just “same old, new face”.

The Witcher

The Cracks in the Armour — And They’re Visible

  • Fan Loyalty Tested: Cavill’s departure left a vacuum of goodwill. While Hemsworth handles the assignment with professionalism, many viewers still struggle with the change. That nostalgia-hangover eats at the immersion.

  • Cost Doesn’t Guarantee Cohesion: A high budget can mask flaws, but it can’t rewrite them. Some story threads feel rushed or shoe-horned to accommodate the “big franchise move” rather than let the narrative breathe.

  • Tone Shift = Risk: The promise of injecting levity is admirable, but in a world that previously thrived on bleakness, even a slight misstep in tone can tip the balance from “rich dark fantasy” into “gloom with awkward laughs.”

  • Pacing & Expectation Pressure: With the finish line in sight (Season 5 will wrap the saga), there’s a sense of “let’s hurry up and get to the big battles” rather than luxuriating in character arcs. Some fans feel that urgency spoils the slow burn.

The Witcher

Latest Buzz & Fan Reactions

  • Hemsworth’s own comments resonate: stepping into the role meant silencing social media to avoid the “noise” of comparison.

  • Reports suggest that the cost increase is part of what the producers hope will restore faith in the series — perhaps responding to critiques of Seasons 2 & 3.

  • On the other side, there’s rumbling that some fan-films or smaller-budget productions evoke a stronger emotional core than expensive spectacle. One commentary candidly noted: “a low-budget YouTube Witcher fan film… captures the vibe better than the Netflix show in my opinion.”

The Witcher

PR-Delivery With a Wink

Dear Witcher-faithful and Continent-curious alike: buckle in. Season 4 arrives as a well-produced, polished chapter that knows it’s part of something big. If you’ve ever wondered what Geralt might look like when the sequel cast finally took over the saga, the answer’s here — new actor, new mood, same monsters.

But yes — that new mood is both the charm and the caution. Because when you invest hundreds of millions and hand the baton to a new lead, you’re also saying: “Don’t only trust us because it looks shiny. Trust us because the story still matters.”

And to its credit, this season tries to deliver. It’s not flawless. The cracks of transition show. But if you remember why you came to the show — monster fights, moral ambiguity, a vice-like trio (Geralt, Yennefer, Ciri) welded by destiny — then this chapter is worth your time.

Final takeaway? If you were preparing for the same old but expected something bold, you got both. A high-end fantasy spectacle; a franchise in flux. Whether it completely convinces will depend on patience, openness to change, and your willingness to ride the next phase of the Witcher saga.

Final Verdict

Score: 7/10 (or “solidly good with big ambitions”)
Should you watch? Absolutely — but not with the same expectations as previous seasons. Enter as a fresh chapter, not just a continuation.
Budget reminder: With estimates of ~US$27 million per episode, the stakes have never been higher. 
Bottom line: Season 4 of The Witcher is a grand gesture — one that mostly lands. The narrative shakes off some old shadows, but the shadows still linger.

PNN Entertainment

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