Love, Death & Robots Season 4 Trailer Confirms Netflix Release Date & Reveals First Look At 10 Striking New Episodes
Love, Death & Robots season 4 gets a new trailer, revealing the return of the hit Netflix show. Created by Tim Miller and featuring David Fincher as an executive producer, the hit adult animated anthology series first released on Netflix in 2019, bringing to life a variety of different dark sci-fi, fantasy, and horror tales in a number of different animation styles. Season 3 was released in May 2022, with Love, Death & Robots season 4 subsequently confirmed in August.
Now, Netflix releases the trailer for Love, Death & Robots season 4, providing a first look at the ten upcoming episodes and confirming that the show will return on May 15. The trailer features brief flashes from a number of very different stories, including one involving what looks to be a cyborg woman and fighting dinosaurs, another that follows a bomber pilot, and another that includes giant babies. The trailer also teases another miniature episode in the vein of season 3's "Night of the Mini Dead," this time with invading aliens. Check out the trailer below:
Accompanying the trailer release are several different images from the new season, teasing an array of animation styles and stories. A poster is included as well, putting a new spin on the series' logo. All the images are included below:
What This Means For Love, Death & Robots Season 4
The Netflix Show Continues To Push Animation Boundaries
Love, Death & Robots has featured, since its first episode, an abundance of blood, gore, nudity, sexuality, and coarse language. The season 4 trailer confirms that these elements will be back in force in the new episodes, with one shot of a blue dildo with eyes making very clear that this is still a show aimed at mature audiences. The trailer also confirms that, like past seasons, there will be lots of variety with season 4, with each episode sporting a unique animation style and storytelling tone.

Love, Death & Robots Season 3: Every Episode Ranked From Worst To Best
Netflix's animated anthology series traverses genres and galaxies, with lots of love, death, and robots in between. And here's every episode ranked.
One episode, for example, looks to take place during a massive concert, with the main characters having been animated like marionette dolls, with strings extended up into the sky. Another episode, which looks to be more comedic in tone, features a claymation-like animation style, with a talking computer remarking about the flatulence of his slovenly owners. Of course, some of the best episodes of Love, Death & Robots have featured a life-like animation style, and there will be at least one episode with this style in season 4, with what appears to be a cyborg battling dinosaurs.
Our Take On The Love, Death & Robots Season 4 Trailer
The Series Is A Highlight Of The Streaming Era
Love, Death & Robots season 4 won't be as big of a release for Netflix as something like Stranger Things season 5, but it's still one of the positive things to come out of this new streaming era. A show like this would never really work on a normal TV channel, due to a variety of factors, including its format, cost, and mature themes. In bite-sized episodes, different creative teams get to tell unique stories with animation styles that aren't normally used for animated feature films.
Love, Death & Robots enjoys a strong 86% score on Rotten Tomatoes.
Love, Death & Robots season 4 is once more leaning into this, and that's why it continues to be an exciting show. The latest trailer suggests there will be something for everyone in the new season, with the stories ranging from scary to hilarious to action-packed. It remains to be seen if the reception to Love, Death & Robots season 4 will be as positive as the responses to previous seasons, but it's certainly one to look forward to next month.
Source: Netflix

Love, Death & Robots
- Release Date
- March 15, 2019
- Network
- Netflix
- Directors
- Víctor Maldonado, Patrick Osborne, Robert Valley, Alfredo Torres Martínez, Jerome Chen, Emily Dean, Rémi Kozyra, Léon Bérelle, Dominique Boidin, Alberto Mielgo, Maxime Luère, Andy Lyon, Robert Bisi, Dave Wilson, David Nicolas, Simon Otto, Damian Nenow, Laurent Nicolas, Kevin Van Der Meiren, Vitaliy Shushko, Owen Sullivan, István Zorkóczy, Javier Recio Gracia, Oliver Thomas
- Writers
- Tim Miller, Philip Gelatt
Cast
Bruce Thomas(voice)
Uncredited
- Creator(s)
- Tim Miller



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