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Teen Titans Go!
TV Series

Teen Titans Go!

2013Animation, Short, Action • 9 Seasons

Woke Score
5.3
out of 10

Series Overview

Superhero roommates Robin, Cyborg, Starfire, Raven and Beast Boy love saving the day, but what happens when they're done fighting crime?

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Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

4/10

When these superheroes are off duty, their life as roomies and pals is anything but dull, with teen antics, angst and bickering in equal measures.

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Season 2

3.2/10

The absurd adventures of the Teen Titans continue as they deal with demons, travel to other planets and thwart their archenemies, the H.I.V.E. Five.

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Season 3

3.8/10

In this season, the Titans learn about cartoon violence, Beast Boy joins a pyramid scheme and Starfire takes a stressed Cyborg to a secret garden.

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Season 4

5/10

In this season, the teen superheroes fight a dragon, out-hack computer pirates and save Halloween and Easter from Santa and the Tooth Fairy.

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Season 5

5.2/10

No overview available.

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Season 6

4.6/10

No overview available.

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Season 7

7/10

No overview available.

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Season 8

7/10

No overview available.

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Season 9

7.6/10

No overview available.

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Overall Series Review

Teen Titans Go! operates as a sustained deconstruction of the traditional superhero genre, trading the nobility of classic heroics for a cynical, absurdist worldview. Across its nine seasons, the series consistently portrays its protagonists as selfish, lazy, and fundamentally incompetent. Rather than acting as defenders of justice, the characters often function as the primary sources of chaos within their city, treating the concept of duty as a punchline. This narrative framework relies on a persistent moral vacuum where traditional values and institutional authority are routinely mocked, dismantled, or reframed as absurd burdens. A defining pattern throughout the series is the sharp contrast between its male and female leads. The male characters, particularly Robin, are defined by neuroticism, vanity, and persistent failure, serving as the constant targets of ridicule and emasculation. Conversely, the female characters are consistently depicted as more grounded, capable, and authoritative. This dynamic reinforces a recurring theme where the traditional masculine hero archetype is systematically stripped of dignity and relevance, leaving only a chaotic, nihilistic void in its place. As the series has progressed, it has become increasingly self-aware, frequently functioning as a meta-commentary on the DC Universe and media culture at large. The show treats cultural traditions, historical significance, and the legacy of established heroes with irreverence, often reducing them to commercialized jokes or outdated relics. By prioritizing slapstick humor and cynicism over moral growth or merit-based storytelling, Teen Titans Go! presents a world where objective meaning is discarded in favor of perpetual, mean-spirited subversion.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics3.7/10

Oikophobia5.3/10

Feminism7.6/10

LGBTQ+2.7/10

Anti-Theism6.7/10

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