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Mr. Robot
TV Series

Mr. Robot

2015Crime, Drama, Thriller • 4 Seasons

Woke Score
6.8
out of 10

Series Overview

Elliot is a brilliant introverted young programmer who works as a cyber-security engineer by day and vigilante hacker by night. He also happens to be suffering from a strange condition similar to schizophrenia which he futilely tries to keep under control by regularly taking both legal and illegal drugs and visiting his therapist. When a strange feisty young woman named Darlene and a secretive middle-aged man calling himself Mr. Robot, who claims to be the mysterious leader of an underground hacking group known as F-Society, offer Elliot a chance to take his vigilantism to the next level and help them take down E-Corp, the corrupt multi-national financial company that Elliot works for and likes to call Evil Corp, Elliot finds himself at the crossroads. Mr. Robot, who has personal reasons for wanting to take down E-Corp, also reveals that he already has one ally, an even more mysterious, secretive and highly dangerous shadowy hacking group known only as Dark Army. Meanwhile, Elliot's childhood and only friend, Angela, who blames E-Corp for the death of their parents, tries to take down E-Corp legally by joining their ranks and trying to dig up evidence of their corruption from the inside. A wild card in this scheme becomes Tyrell Wellick, an unhinged psychopathic E-Corp yuppie, originally from Scandinavia, who has a very unusual relationship with his dominant and ambitious wife Joanna. After many twists and turns, Mr. Robot's plan is finally put in motion - with catastrophic (un)intended results. But that's just the end of the beginning of the real story.

Season-by-Season Breakdown

season_1.0

7/10

Elliot finds himself at a crossroad when the mysterious leader of an underground hacker group recruits him to destroy the firm he is paid to protect. Compelled by his personal beliefs, Elliot struggles to resist the chance to take down the multinational CEOs he believes are running (and ruining) the world.

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season_2.0

7/10

Following the events of fsociety’s 5/9 hack on multi-national company Evil Corp, season two explores the consequences of that attack as well as the illusion of control.

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season_3.0

6/10

Picking up immediately following the season two cliffhanger, season three explores each character’s motivations and the disintegration between Elliot and Mr. Robot.

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season_4.0

7/10

follow my boy @sktty yo

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Overall Series Review

Mr. Robot is a relentlessly cynical and technically ambitious techno-thriller centered on a core mission: the violent dismantling of corrupt global power structures. From its opening season, the show established its world as one fundamentally broken by predatory capitalism and unchecked corporate influence, primarily personified by Evil Corp. The narrative consistently frames its protagonists not as petty criminals, but as necessary revolutionaries fighting an entrenched oligarchy that controls everything from finance to surveillance. The series is defined by its deep-seated distrust of institutions, treating both religious faith and established government as tools of mass control. Over its four seasons, the focus sharpened from the initial anarchist fervor of the 5/9 hack into a complex, global conspiracy narrative. While the initial call was for an economic reset, the later seasons explored the catastrophic real-world consequences of that chaos, forcing the hero, Elliot Alderson, to navigate immense moral ambiguity. The plot remained deeply political, explicitly criticizing economic inequality and the pervasive nature of digital surveillance. Key antagonists and powerful figures were consistently shown to be ruthless operators, often operating within shadowy groups like the Dark Army and the Deus Group. A consistent pattern throughout the series is the depiction of complex, highly competent female characters who navigate and often dominate these corrupted systems, proving themselves just as capable and ruthless as their male counterparts. While the central conflict is overwhelmingly economic and psychological—focused on class warfare and Elliot’s dissociation—the supporting cast always features diverse identities in positions of power, with the show maintaining an aggressively anti-religious stance throughout. Overall, Mr. Robot functions as a high-stakes psychological drama wrapped in the guise of a social revolution. It is a technically brilliant study of trauma, identity, and paranoia set against a backdrop of relentless anti-establishment fervor. The series ultimately succeeds in completing Elliot’s difficult journey, providing a definitive, if deeply ambiguous, conclusion to the fight against the systems designed to control humanity.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics5/10

Oikophobia7.3/10

Feminism7/10

LGBTQ+6.5/10

Anti-Theism8.3/10