Skip to main content

Don’t expect the Netflix ‘Witcher’ series for a few more years

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt - Killing Monsters Cinematic Trailer

Production is moving along nicely on the Netflix adaptation on The Witcher book series by Andrzej Sapowski. The series has already been made into a game series by CD Projekt Red, of course — but don’t expect to see Geralt on your television for a few more years.

Recommended Videos

Writer Lauren S. Hissrich revealed on Twitter that the production team was “moving quickly” and is enthusiastic about the project, but anticipated that it would not air until 2020. Thought the pilot episode was written back in January, Hissrich said it still needs to be polished and the other seven episodes haven’t been written yet.

Hissrich added that it will consist of eight episodes and will be shot in Eastern Europe, as that setting was the only one appropriate for the story.

“And no, we haven’t cast [the roles] yet,” she said. “Don’t even try.”

For our money, we’re hoping Alexander Skarsgård ends up with the title role, though its possible the producers will want to go with an older actor whose hair wouldn’t have to be died silver.

Eight episodes seems like a pretty short amount of time to tell a story in the Witcher universe given its massive scope. The games can take dozens of hours to complete, with detailed side quests, and long character arcs. Netflix does have experience with limited-episode series based on existing properties, however. Its Castlevania animated show premiered its first four episodes last year, and the final eight will be released later this year. It has managed to tell a compelling story, complete with a cast of characters fans of the games will recognize, in a limited amount of time.

Video game adaptations — if you can call The Witcher that — have been making a comeback on the big screen as well. Tomb Raider and Rampage recently released in theaters, if to somewhat middling reviews, and it appears there is even a new film based on the Doom series in the works. Id Software’s shooter was first turned into a movie back in 2005 with Dwayne Johnson and Karl Urban. It’s mostly unwatchable, but there is a neat first-person sequence thrown in as a nod to players.

Gabe Gurwin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Dragon Age: The Veilguard special editions don’t even include the game
Knights below a giant dragon in Dragon Age: The Veilguard.

We got the news on Thursday that Dragon Age: The Veilguard is set to release on October 31, along with how best to preorder it. As with most AAA studio releases, there are multiple editions you can buy, from a standard edition with just the game and a preorder bonus to a deluxe edition with a bunch of cosmetics.

BioWare and publisher Electronic Arts are also offering special editions with some The Veilguard merchandise, but oddly, unlike other special editions, they don't come with a copy of the game.

Read more
Don’t expect Grand Theft Auto 6 to launch on Xbox Game Pass
A man drives away in a boat with stolen money in Grand Theft Auto 5 art.

If you were hoping Grand Theft Auto 6 would launch day one on Xbox Game Pass, you're out of luck. Take-Two Interactive execs have been hesitant to launch the company's games on subscription services on Xbox Game Pass, and that will continue to be the case, according to the CEO's recent comments.

In an interview with Gamesindustry.biz ahead of the company's latest financial report, CEO Strauss Zelnick candidly said that while he believes the addition of the Call of Duty franchise will push players to the service for a bit, it won't affect Take-Two's release strategy.

Read more
I missed watching this underrated 2021 movie until now. Don’t repeat my mistake
A man looks behind him in Black Box.

2021 was a weird time to go to the movies. COVID was still a thing to be feared and protected from, and theatrical movies were few and far between. A trip to the theater meant venturing out into a landscape more The Last of Us than anything else. No, there weren't any mutant monsters to encounter, but you had to mask up, arm yourself with the appropriate equipment (mostly hand sanitizer), and plot very carefully who you came into contact with and what surfaces you could or couldn't touch.

As a result, I didn't see many movies in theaters that year, and thus missed out on a lot of quality films I otherwise would've watched with a crowd of popcorn-munching strangers. Three years later, I'm still catching up, and recently, I discovered a great thriller from that period that no one talks about: Black Box.

Read more