[Ed. note: This story contains spoilers for The Witcher season 3, volume 1.]
Part 1 of The witcherNetflix’s third season just arrived, but if you’ve been scrolling through Netflix’s latest offerings, you know it ends on a huge cliffhanger. Netflix has broken up The witcher season 3 in two parts, just like it did with one of his other big television hits, Stranger things. Unfortunately, it will be almost a month before part 2 arrives on the streaming service.
Fortunately, we don’t have to wait a month for information on part 2 – a few things about the upcoming episodes have already been revealed. So here’s everything we know so far The witcher season 3 part 2.
When is part 2 of season 3 of The Witcher coming out?
The witcher‘s next batch of episodes will be released on July 27th, leaving fans with almost a full month to wait between the first and second installments.
How many episodes are there in season 3 of The Witcher?
Volume 1 will have five episodes and volume 2 will have three episodes, though we don’t know how long those episodes will be. The second part of Stranger things season 4 featured episodes that ran well over an hour, and it may be the finale Witcher episodes featuring Henry Cavill will also be longer than usual.
What is The Witcher season 3 part 2 about?
Based on the first part of the season, part 2 should probably follow the second half of The Witcher novel Time of contempt. But without spoiling anything too juicy, we’ll probably get the culmination of all the intrigue, underhandedness and plotting that builds up during the Part 1 finale in Aratuza, and then the fallout that follows.
Is The Witcher Season 3 Henry Cavill’s Final Season as Geralt?
Yes, unfortunately Cavill’s time as Geralt will end after this final batch of Season 3 episodes. When Season 4 rolls around, probably a year from now, Geralt will be played by Liam Hemsworth.
While we don’t know how the change will happen or what might be involved in the story, Witcher said executive producer Tomek Baginski Yahoo UK that it will be lore accurate and “very, very close to the meta-ideas that are deeply entrenched in the books, especially in book five.”