One of Netflix’s most interesting niches over the past decade has been their various animated adaptations of iconic video game franchises, many of which saw them team with producer Adi Shankar. Beginning with Castlevania, the streamer has explored the worlds of Far Cry: Blood Dragon to Cyberpunk 2077, League of Legends, Tomb Raider and Splinter Cell, amongst others.
Arguably, Shankar’s Devil May Cry immediately established itself as one of the best in its 2025 debut, expertly recapturing the Capcom games’ sense of style, action and tongue-in-cheek edginess, while offering a few solid tweaks to expand on their lore. Season 2 proves that the creative team were just as keen to maintain their core objective from its predecessor, particularly as they finally introduce Vergil properly, though its plot can’t help but feel like a lot of filler.
Devil May Cry Season 2’s Story Feels Like A Lot Of Rehashing To Tell Vergil’s Side
Picking up sometime after the events of the Devil May Cry season 1 ending, season 2 sees Dante still cryogenically imprisoned by Baines and DARKCOM, with the U.S. government continuing to wage their war on Makai, and steadily gaining the upper hand in the fight. This is also thanks to the support of billionaire businessman Arius and his corporation, Uroboros, which has provided impressive technology, all while striving to claim an ancient relic known as the Arcana.
As Lord Mundus sends Vergil to Earth in an effort to win the war for Hell by infiltrating humanity, leading to the world’s learning that demons exist. Knowing he’s the only one whose abilities could possibly match Vergil’s, Baines and Arius reluctantly release Dante from his imprisonment to combat his brother, adding an emotional new ripple to the war for the fate of the world for both the red-coat-donning protagonist and his ally, Mary.
Combining the plot elements of the second and third games in the series, Devil May Cry season 2 gets off to a rollicking start in its story. Vergil’s introduction is an appropriately brutal affair, nicely showcasing his own control of the Devil Trigger, as well as how being raised under the guidance of Mundus twisted him into a ruthless killer ready to wipe out humanity. Additionally, Dante’s reawakening proved an appropriately hysterical one, framed under the guise of a psych evaluation to see if he’s ready to get back into action under DARKCOM’s watch.
The area where it arguably succeeds the most is in its exploration of Arius and his origin story leading to the creation of Uroboros.
As the season progresses, however, Devil May Cry starts to find its pacing far more uneven than its debut outing as it attempts to flesh out Vergil’s backstory in the years leading up to his and Dante’s first fight. With numerous flashbacks to their childhood growing up together, the writing does feel a little too circular in establishing Dante as having been a naturally skilled fighter from birth, while Vergil was a more fragile being, often coddled by the twins’ mother, Eva.
More notably, the season continues to focus so much on Eva’s death, and how it launched the branching paths for the brothers’ lives, that it started to feel like the season had more filler than its predecessor. To its credit, Devil May Cry 3: Dante’s Awakening was largely about the theme of familial conflict, including for “Lady” Mary Arkham, and the show does touch upon that for her and the twins, but doesn’t quite nail the pacing of its gaming counterpart.
The area where it arguably succeeds the most is in its exploration of Arius and his origin story leading to the creation of Uroboros. Without getting into spoilers, it’s one of the biggest deviations from the game that not only does far better to explain how he came to acquire the great sorcery skills he has, but also makes him just as worrisome a foe as Mundus and the power foes in Hell.
Sudio Mir’s Animation Has Gotten Even Better
Across their work on everything from Star Wars: Visions to Netflix’s Witcher spinoff films, Studio Mir has proven to be an absolute powerhouse of an animation studio with a very keen sense of style blending traditional 2D animation with CGI. They proved a largely great fit for Devil May Cry season 1 as they nicely brought Dante’s fighting style and action directly from the games to the screen, though when it came to incorporating its CGI, the 3D demon designs often felt out of place.
Thankfully, going into season 2, Studio Mir has not only maintained the excellent quality of the show’s debut outing, but also given it something of an upgrade. The use of CGI is far more in line with the rest of the show’s hand-drawn designs that both the characters created with it and the actual action sequences utilizing it don’t feel displaced, but rather amplify their elements.
One of the best examples of this is an early-season moment in which Dante, while visiting Nell Goldstein in her debut in the Netflix series, gets to test out his new pistols on a set of training dummies. As with many Devil May Cry action scenes, Dante mixes his acrobatic skills with those of his firearm skills for a thoroughly stylish beat that nicely mixes both the traditional animation with CGI. Some of the later fights in the season, including one beautifully mixing the finales of the second and third games, similarly nail the mixture.
Devil May Cry’s Soundtrack Remains Rocking, But Not Nearly As Impactful
One of the things that’s helped the entire Devil May Cry franchise lean into its tongue-of-cheek edginess is the music, with the licensed music choices in the show having been fantastic in season 1. From Limp Bizkit’s “Rollin” kicking proceedings off over the energetic opening credits to Evanescence’s “Afterlife” offering a really emotional throughline for both Mary and the White Rabbit’s origin stories, the show’s creative team clearly understood the assignment to nail the tone of the games.
Devil May Cry season 2 does generally keep this streak alive and well, though admittedly feels a bit of a step-down from season 1’s needle drops. That’s not to say the season isn’t without a few epic music moments, namely Vergil’s first action scene being set to the tune of Drowning Pool’s “Bodies,” but there’s just not nearly as many memorable scenes as the first season.
Overall, Devil May Cry season 2 proves to be both an improvement and a downgrade from season 1. The show still can’t make the militaristic subplot fit with the more fantastical elements, and the need to show Vergil’s side of the past makes for a somewhat unnecessary retreading of season 1’s events. But with the fan-favorite antihero’s debut still coming with plenty of stylish action setpieces, emotional character evolution, and overall gorgeous animation, it’s still a largely thrilling time from start to finish.
Devil May Cry season 2 is now available to stream on Netflix.
- Release Date
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May 10, 2026
- Network
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Netflix
- Episodes
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8
