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Scorpion
TV Series

Scorpion

2014Action, Crime, Drama • 4 Seasons

Woke Score
1.6
out of 10

Series Overview

Based on the real life of Walter O'Brien, a genius with an IQ of 197. Walter is asked by Homeland Security to put together a special group of gifted individuals to troubleshoot the most difficult problems that the US & the world may encounter.

Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

2/10

Scorpion is a high-octane thill ride based on the true story of Walter O'Brien, an eccentric genius with the world's fourth-highest I.Q. and the creator of a company of brilliant misfits who use their mental muscle to defend the planet against complex high-tech threats of the modern age.

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Season 2

1.4/10

Scorpion begins its second season as Walter O'Brien and his team of brilliant misfits continue to solve the complex, high-tech threats of the modern age.

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Season 3

2/10

In the third season premiere, Team Scorpion must put aside their personal and romantic troubles when anonymous hackers with unknown motives take control of targeted U.S. military aircraft and war ships and point America's weaponry at its own cities.

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Season 4

1/10

Eccentric genius Walter O'Brien and his team of brilliant misfits continue to be the last line of defense against the complex, high-tech threats of the modern age as they solve extreme, life-threatening cases, including a global extinction event, a nuclear missile launch on U.S. soil, and even the perils of geniuses trying to start a family.

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Overall Series Review

Scorpion is fundamentally a procedural drama centered on a team of super-geniuses recruited by the government to handle threats too complex for conventional methods. Across all four seasons, the core dynamic is the interplay between intellectual brilliance and emotional intelligence. The team members possess exceptionally high IQs but struggle significantly with everyday social interactions, a gap consistently filled by Paige Dineen, the emotionally intuitive mother figure. The show consistently champions individual competence and meritocracy; the characters are defined almost entirely by their exceptional abilities to solve intricate technical and global problems. The narrative consistently prioritized high-stakes action and personal relationships over any deep social commentary. Themes across the run focused heavily on national security crises, technological troubleshooting, and the development of traditional romantic arcs—specifically the central relationship between Walter and Paige, alongside the pairing of Toby and Happy. There is a clear preference for traditional structures, with later seasons focusing heavily on marriage, family planning, and relationship commitment among the core group. The show maintains a reliably patriotic stance, positioning the team as essential defenders of global stability. Over its run, Scorpion showed virtually no evolution away from its initial premise. The messaging remained consistent: exceptional intelligence, when appropriately guided by basic emotional understanding, can overcome any obstacle. The series avoided engagement with modern cultural critiques, political ideologies, or systemic issues, focusing instead on celebrating technical prowess and the concept of a modern-day, specialized found family. The show consistently presented a world where technical genius, rather than identity or social awareness, is the ultimate determinant of value and success. In summary, Scorpion is a straightforward, action-heavy procedural built around an ensemble of brilliant but socially awkward experts. It is defined by its commitment to celebrating problem-solving, prioritizing romantic and interpersonal development between crises, and maintaining a firm focus on the unique capabilities of its genius cast. The series delivers consistent, predictable thrills rooted in intellectual superiority and teamwork, offering little in the way of complex social critique.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics1.5/10

Oikophobia1.5/10

Feminism2.5/10

LGBTQ+1/10

Anti-Theism1.8/10