In a world built without vision, one man sees the truth worth dying for
The third and final season of See (2022) brings Apple TV+'s ambitious dystopian saga to a bold, emotional conclusion. Set in a future where humanity has lost the sense of sight, See flips the post-apocalyptic genre on its head. With epic scale, brutal conflicts, and a surprisingly heartfelt core, Season 3 is a story not only about survival—but about legacy, leadership, and the cost of peace.
Jason Momoa returns as Baba Voss, the fierce warrior and reluctant hero who’s fought for his family across brutal landscapes and against impossible odds. After defeating his brother Edo in Season 2, Baba chooses exile to escape the violence he once embodied. But peace is short-lived. A new threat looms: a hostile kingdom that has harnessed sighted technology to build devastating weapons. When this new enemy threatens his people, Baba must return to a world he tried to leave behind—and face a war that could end civilization as they know it.
The final season raises the stakes both emotionally and thematically. At its core, See has always been about more than just action—it’s about what it means to lead, to believe, and to protect what matters. Baba’s journey is mirrored by his children, Kofun and Haniwa, whose growing understanding of their power as sighted individuals forces them to question the world they live in. Is sight truly a gift—or a curse in a world built on equality through blindness?
Visually, See continues to stun with breathtaking cinematography and immersive world-building. The action sequences are brutal, choreographed with a raw, physical realism that feels earned. But the heart of the series remains in its quiet moments—family bonds, whispered doubts, and the pain of sacrifice. In its final episodes, See becomes less about who wins the war, and more about what kind of world will rise from the ashes.
In the end, See (2022) leaves behind more than just a trail of battles—it leaves questions about human nature, the ethics of power, and the fragile beauty of perception. Baba Voss’s farewell is both heroic and tender, marking the end of a legend who saw more with no eyes than most ever will.