”Euphoria” has wrapped up, and the third season’s final episode appears to have landed better than some fans expected. The eighth episode is now available on HBO Max, and early viewer reactions on IMDb give the finale a solid 7.4 out of 10.
That score is based on a little more than 800 ratings, so it can still move around a bit. Still, it is a decent opening signal for Euphoria season 3 finale IMDb rating, especially for a show that spent years under a microscope after the gap between seasons turned several cast members into much bigger names than when the series started.
What season 3 changes in ”Euphoria”
The new season jumps five years ahead of season 2. The characters are older, messier, and no more emotionally stable than before, which is pretty much on brand for a drama built on trauma, addiction, and bad decisions with good lighting.
Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney, Jacob Elordi, and Hunter Schafer all return, with Sam Levinson once again steering the series. The long break between seasons made a clean ending more likely than an open-ended stretch, and Levinson has now confirmed that season 3 is the end of the road.
Cassie, Superman and the season’s loudest moments
If there was one character who owned the final stretch of the season, it was Cassie, played by Sydney Sweeney. She drew a lot of attention for repeated nude scenes, which kept the fandom busy and the usual online discourse in full sprint.
The penultimate episode also sparked a smaller but very internet-sized side story: viewers spotted a full-size Superman figure in the background, portrayed by David Corenswet. The detail went viral enough that James Gunn weighed in, which tells you everything you need to know about how quickly ”Euphoria” can still hijack the conversation.
How the Euphoria finale compares with recent TV endings
For HBO, a decent ending is better than an embarrassing one. That contrast matters after other recent finales drew brutal reactions online and set records for all the wrong reasons, proving that landing the last episode is often harder than getting people to show up for season one.
The bigger question now is whether ”Euphoria” ends as a defining teen-drama era or as a show remembered more for delays, cast breakout power, and headline-grabbing scenes than for a clean finish. Based on the early response, the finale has at least done the most basic job: it gave viewers something they mostly didn’t hate.

