Billions - Season 1 May 2026
For anyone who loves high-stakes drama, sharp writing, and performances that oscillate between Shakespearean tragedy and locker-room trash talk, Billions Season 1 is essential viewing. It reminds us that the most dangerous place in the world isn't a war zone. It's the space between two people who refuse to lose.
Looking back, Billions Season 1 stands as a tight, ten-episode symphony of avarice. It works because the stakes are not billions of dollars—they are psychological. It is a show about two men who have everything, yet cannot stop fighting because stopping would mean admitting they are empty. Billions - Season 1
What makes the first seven episodes so riveting is the slow-burn construction of the vendetta. Chuck doesn’t go after Axe because of a specific crime; he goes after him because Axe represents everything Chuck hates: unchecked capitalism, the vulgarity of new wealth, and the fact that his own wife, Wendy (Maggie Siff), has a deeper professional intimacy with Axe than with him. For anyone who loves high-stakes drama, sharp writing,
In the golden age of prestige television, antiheroes are a dime a dozen. We’ve had the drug lord, the serial killer ad man, the ruthless news anchor, and the twisted cop. So when Billions premiered on Showtime in 2016, it could have easily been dismissed as “Wall Street House of Cards ”—another cynical drama about rich people doing terrible things. But Season 1 succeeded not because of its novelty, but because of its precision. It built a perfect cage, put two alpha predators inside, and simply watched them tear each other apart. Looking back, Billions Season 1 stands as a