Unlike most space operas that start with a laser battle, The Expanse opens with a missing persons case. Detective Joe Miller (Thomas Jane, giving a career-best performance) is a washed-up cop on Ceres Station. He’s tasked with finding a rich heiress, Julie Mao. His plotline is Blade Runner meets The Wire —dripping rain, corrupt bosses, and a profound sense that the solar system is rigged against the little guy.

Let’s be honest: The first three episodes of The Expanse can feel like homework. You’re thrown into a cold war between Earth, Mars, and the “Belters” (asteroid miners). You hear a made-up patois called Lang Belta. And for a while, you have no idea who the good guys are.

Watching these ten episodes back-to-back changes the pacing. On first airing, the slow burn frustrated some viewers. But binged as a complete set, the tension becomes unbearable.

Why The Expanse Season 1 is the Smartest, Most Rewarding Sci-Fi Prequel You’ll Ever Watch

Then there’s James Holden (Steven Strait), the idealistic XO of an ice hauler. When his ship gets nuked by a stealth frigate, he becomes the most wanted man in the system. His plotline is All the President’s Men in zero-G. Every message he broadcasts starts a new war. Every decision he makes kills someone.

This isn't a season you watch for closure. It’s a season you watch to earn the right to watch Season 2.

You watch Chrisjen Avasarala (Shohreh Aghdashloo, stealing every scene in a sari and a foul mouth) torture a Belter on Earth while Holden freezes in the void. You see the conspiracy tighten like a garrote. And then, in the finale, you get the single best “genre shift” in television history. (No spoilers, but if you know, you know: “It reaches out.” )