Devil May Cry Netflix showrunner Adi Shankar calls himself "generational talent" after final season announcement: "I am a ratings God"
Devil May Cry is returning for a third and final season
Devil May Cry is back for a third – and final – season, and showrunner Adi Shankar had a lot to say about it.
"The success of Devil May Cry Season 1 and Season 2 has clarified something that most people suspected, some people feared, and a few trolls are still emotionally negotiating with: Adi Shankar is a generational talent," Shankar wrote on Twitter.
"I am a generational talent in the measurable sense. In the 'Adi Shankar can take a globally beloved video game franchise, metabolize twenty-plus years of iconography, preserve its soul, re-arrange its body, expand its audience, trigger its purists, convert its skeptics, and still make the algorithm bend the knee' sense.
"My Devil May Cry anime wiped the floor with AAA IP adaptations with millions of dollars in marketing. I am a ratings God …. Two seasons in a row," he continued.
"I set out to make American animation cool. I set out to expand the footprint of Devil May Cry by orders of magnitude so that there can be more of it. I set out to prove that video game adaptations do not have to be flavorless corporate sludge assembled in a content factory by emotionally vacant brand managers who secretly loathe the source material.
"Mission accomplished. For those of you who have been paying attention to the episode names, I have been showing you the structure the entire time. Season 3 was an inevitability.
"This was always Dante’s Divine Comedy with guns and a red coat Season 1 was Inferno. Season 2 was Purgatorio. Season 3 is Paradiso.
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"These three seasons make up 'The Force Edge Saga'. Since inception 'The Force Edge Saga' was designed as a movie trilogy disguised as a television series.
"One last thing … '3' is not going to be a normal third 'season' of a TV show. With 'Season 3,' I am doing something very different. I am crafting a blueprint for how this game is won. See You all in 'Paradise,'" he concluded.
The success of “Devil May Cry” Season 1 and Season 2 has clarified something that most people suspected, some people feared, and a few trolls are still emotionally negotiating with: Adi Shankar is a generational talent. I am a generational talent in the measurable sense. In… pic.twitter.com/xwji8Zq7PvJune 4, 2026
According to Netflix, Devil May Cry season 1 drew 21.7 million views in 2025, and season 2 has brought in 6.4 million views in two weeks. Just what to expect from season 3 isn't clear yet, but, judging by Shankar's comments, we can expect something seismic.
"I'm fortunate to be in a spot where I have so much control over the show [and] the destiny of the show," Shankar told us recently.
"There's an art by committee thing that has proliferated through Hollywood as a result of, really, the 'Marvel-ification' of movies, right? The art by committee thing has seeped its way into a lot of things IP, and also not IP," he added.
"I'm in a fortunate position where I'm not part of that. Netflix and Capcom [are] like, 'You have a vision, go execute your vision,'" he explained. "Which I think is pretty rare in today's day and age. But I come from the film world, and all the people who mentored me were all auteurs."
Devil May Cry season 3 doesn't yet have a release date. While you wait, check out our guide to all the upcoming video game adaptations worth getting excited about.

I'm a Senior Entertainment Writer here at GamesRadar+, covering all things film and TV for the site's Total Film section. I previously worked on the Disney magazines team at Immediate Media, and also wrote on the CBeebies, MEGA!, and Star Wars Galaxy titles after graduating with a BA in English.
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