8 best shows like Severance

Adam Scott sitting at a desk in Severance

The wait is officially on for Severance Season 3, so if you’re desperate for another show like Severance to watch, don’t worry – we’ve got you covered.

We know, we know. It’s not the same, and we understand. Severance is one of the best Apple TV+ shows on Apple TV+ (if not one of the best TV shows ever), but do you really think we’re going to suggest that you watch any old rubbish?

No, we wouldn’t do that to you. Instead, our TV and Movie experts have used their encyclopedic knowledge of the small screen to pick eight shows that share the same mysterious DNA as Severance so they’ll hopefully scratch the same itch. 

Black Mirror

The Black Mirror season 7 logo
  • Release date: December 4, 2011 – present
  • Genre: Sci-fi/horror/thriller/comedy
  • Cast: Bryce Dallas Howard, Jon Hamm, Anthony Mackie, Cristin Milioti, Jesse Plemons
  • Where to watch? Netflix
  • How long is it? 6 seasons (26 episodes and two specials)

What it’s about: Charlie Brooker’s twisted, dystopian anthology series shines a dark light on the world’s cliff-edge addiction to technology. Each episode is a cautionary tale with the same warning: obsession with innovation could be our undoing. 

Why we like it: Severance doesn’t exist without Black Mirror; its premise could slot into a twisted trilogy with ‘The Entire History of You’ and ‘Playtest.’ While the former is undeniably easier to watch (the latter literally starts with a politician shagging a pig and contains some of the most harrowing stories ever aired on TV), there’s a clear link between them: they both question the lengths people will go to with technology make their life a little bit easier. 

Written by Cameron Frew

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Silo

Shows like Fallout: Rebecca Ferguson as Juliette and David Oyelowo as Holston in Silo
  • Release date: May 5, 2023 – present
  • Genre: Sci-fi
  • Cast: Rebecca Ferguson, David Oyelowo, Common, Tim Robbins
  • Where to watch? Apple TV+
  • How long is it? 2 seasons (20 episodes)

What’s it about: After an unknown cataclysm renders the Earth’s surface uninhabitable, a sliver of humanity survives in a giant underground silo. To maintain the protection of the silo, this community is bound by strict rules and laws which have helped to keep the peace for more than 100 years. 

Why we like it: Like Severance, Silo is a compelling look at agency and autonomy, which also happens to explore salient and timely ideas around community, security, and authoritarianism. Basically, it’s a show that asks the viewer, what would you be willing to sacrifice to stay safe and would you fight for your freedoms?

What I like about Silo, though, is that it doesn’t give easy answers to those thorny ideas; there are no black-and-white solutions – it’s a world as grey as the Silo walls. Thankfully, just like Severance, there’s also plenty of intrigue, action, and devious politicking, so you don’t get lost in its musings on the philosophy of governance. 

Written by Tom Percival

Westworld

Still from Westworld Season 1
Westworld started out strong
  • Release date: October 2, 2016 – August 14, 2022
  • Genre: Sci-fi
  • Cast: Evan Rachel Wood, Thandiwe Newton, Jeffrey Wright, Ed Harris, Anthony Hopkins
  • Where to watch?
  • How long is it? 4 seasons (36 episodes)

What it’s about: An extraordinarily immersive, futuristic Wild West ‘experience’ attracts high-paying holidayers looking to cut loose like cowboys, shootouts, drinking whisky in saloons, brothels – the works. However, amid their wanton behavior, the park’s robot hosts start malfunctioning. 

Why we like it: Westworld’s Delos Inc. could be a sister company of Severance’s Lumon. Both corporations corrupt the natural order ostensibly in aid of the human experience, and there’s something far more sinister bubbling under the surface – only in Westworld’s case, it’s less about a retro-futurist cult and more about the blood flooding its blind eye. Word to the wise: Season 2 is a headache-inducing slog, but it quickly recovers, so stay with it. 

Written by Cameron Frew

Homecoming

Julia Roberts in Homecoming
  • Release date: November 2, 2018 – May 22, 2020
  • Genre: Thriller/Drama
  • Cast: Julia Roberts, Stephan James, Bobby Cannavale, Shea Whigham 
  • Where to watch: Prime Video
  • How long is it? 2 seasons (17 episodes)

What it’s about: A caseworker at a mysterious rehabilitation facility that helps soldiers transition to civilian life starts to question her own past when an investigator comes looking for answers.

Why we like it: If Severance made you question your workplace (and your sanity), Homecoming is for you. The first season is a masterclass in tension, with Hitchcockian framing and an unsettlingly sterile atmosphere that makes even the most mundane interactions feel sinister. Roberts is magnetic, and Esmail’s direction keeps you on edge. Sure, Season 2 didn’t quite match up, but that first season? Utterly gripping and very Lumon-coded. 

Written by Daisy Phillipson

Mr. Robot

Rami Malek in Mr Robot
  • Release date: June 24, 2015 – December 22, 2019
  • Genre: Thriller/Drama
  • Cast: Rami Malek, Christian Slater, Carly Chaikin, Portia Doubleday, Tyrell Wellick 
  • Where to watch: On-demand
  • How long is it? 4 seasons (45 episodes)

What it’s about: A socially anxious cybersecurity engineer is recruited by an underground hacking collective to take down the system – only to discover reality isn’t as stable as he thought.

Why we like it: If you love the corporate dystopia and psychological mind games of Severance, welcome to your next TV obsession. Mr. Robot is all-consuming, twisting your perception of reality with unreliable narration, fourth wall breaks, and jaw-dropping reveals. Malek delivers a haunting performance as Elliot, while Esmail crafts a world that feels both terrifyingly surreal and all too real. By the time you finish, you’ll be questioning everything – your job, your memories, and maybe even yourself.

Written by Daisy Phillipson

Maniac

Emma Stone and Jonah Hill sitting at a table in Netflix's Maniac
  • Release date: September 21, 2018
  • Genre: Psychological drama
  • Cast: Emma Stone, Jonah Hill, Justin Theroux, Sonoya Mizuno
  • Where to watch? Netflix
  • How long is it? 1 season (10 episodes)

What it’s about: Set in a world somewhat like our world, in a time quite similar to our time, Maniac
tells the stories of Annie Landsberg and Owen Milgrim, two strangers drawn to the late stages of a mysterious pharmaceutical trial that claims it could fix anything wrong in a person’s mind.

Why we like it: Maniac was critically acclaimed and lauded at awards ceremonies, but it remains one of Netflix’s most quietly brilliant shows; dense, strikingly visualized, and admirably cold with its storytelling. It also has one blatant parallel with Severance: both shows deal with troubled people looking to escape the weight of their own fears and anxieties… and they’re both weird.

Written by Cameron Frew

Twin Peaks

Dale Cooper speaking into a dictaphone in Twin Peaks.
  • Release date: April 8, 1990 – September 3, 2017
  • Genre: Mystery drama
  • Cast: Kyle MacLachlan, Sheryl Lee, Sherilyn Fenn, Michael Ontkean, Lara Flynn Boyle
  • Where to watch? Paramount Plus
  • How long is it? 3 seasons (48 episodes)

What it’s about: It’s a normal morning in Twin Peaks, a misty town in the Pacific Northwest – until Laura Palmer, the local homecoming queen, is found dead on the banks of a river. FBI agent Dale Cooper is assigned to investigate, uncovering all sorts of insidious and mysterious goings-on in the pursuit of her killer.

Why we like it: As a Severance fan, you may not be immediately drawn to Twin Peaks; it has a minimal connection to sci-fi, it’s a bit older (even though there’s a revival season), and it may seem a little intimidating. However, there’s an argument to be made that it was the first in a long line that led to Severance: a puzzle box show that raises harrowing, bonkers questions and bounces off surreal and wacky characters along the way. It is iconic; think of it as a sacred text.

Written by Cameron Frew

Devs

Nick Offerman in Devs
  • Release date: March 5 – April 16, 2020
  • Genre: Sci-fi thriller
  • Cast: Sonoya Mizuno, Nick Offerman, Jin Ha, Zach Grenier, Cailee Spaeny
  • Where to watch? Hulu
  • How long is it? 1 season (8 episodes)

What it’s about: When her boyfriend vanishes after starting a new job in a secretive division of Amaya, a cutting-edge tech company, Lily begins to suspect that his disappearance may not be as clear-cut as it seems – and it leads her to a conspiracy that could change the world.

Why we like it: One of Severance’s main plot lines is Mark trying to find Gemma, his supposedly dead wife who’s actually trapped in the underground labyrinth of Lumon. Devs follows a young woman trying to find out the truth behind her boyfriend’s disappearance via a terrifying, ominous tech company. Need I say more about why Severance fans should enjoy it? Okay, one last thing: it’s created by Alex Garland, the writer of 28 Days Later, Sunshine, and Dredd.

Written by Cameron Frew

Looking more great recommendations? Check out our list of the best movies ever made or we have a list of the best sci-fi movies. If you’re looking for other small-screen picks why not read our list of the best Netflix shows you can binge now.

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