The new trailer for Will Trent Season 4 signals a shift from the usual procedural tension to a more personal, psychological thriller. In exclusive clips, Will Trent (Ramón Rodríguez) is seen screaming, “Get out of my head,” as the promo dives into his inner turmoil.

Executive producers Liz Heldens and Daniel Thomsen reveal that Will will be unraveling emotionally this season, forced to confront his long-suppressed feelings through therapy sessions and new relationships.

For years, Will has survived by avoiding introspection, but now, those buried emotions are breaking free, threatening to destabilize his career and personal life. ​

The season picks up five months after the Season 3 finale, during which the GBI team faced a domestic terrorism attack, and Amanda Wagner was shot . The promo shows Will grappling with his own mental health while the rest of the team worries about his well-being.

Margaret Cho’s character even advises Will to embrace therapy, marking a major turning point for a man who has always kept his guard up. The trailer’s darker tone reflects Will’s internal struggles, as he tries to hold onto his identity while everything around him changes. ​

The new season is expected to delve deeper into Will’s past, exploring how his childhood experiences continue to shape his decisions and relationships. Fans can anticipate more nuanced interactions between Will and his colleagues, as well as a broader look at the impact of trauma on law enforcement professionals.

The show will also highlight how Will’s unique perspective as a survivor of abuse and neglect influences his approach to solving crimes and connecting with victims.

GBI’s Most Challenging Cases and Personal Crises

Season 4 promises to continue the show’s tradition of high-stakes crime solving, but with added emotional weight. The GBI team is still reeling from the aftermath of the Season 3 finale.

Amanda Wagner (Sonja Sohn), who was shot while protecting Angie Polaski (Erika Christensen), is recovering, and her return is confirmed despite initial uncertainty. Michael Ormewood (Jake McLaughlin), diagnosed with a brain tumor, also survives his collapse, but his health remains a major concern for the team.​

Angie, now in her second trimester of pregnancy, continues to work alongside Will, but their dynamic has shifted. Scott Foley’s character, Seth, will be present throughout Angie’s pregnancy, further complicating Will’s relationships.

Meanwhile, the team faces new threats, including the return of manipulative figures from Will’s past, such as Ulster, whose presence forces Will to confront unresolved trauma. The promo hints at new cases that will test the team’s loyalty, courage, and emotional resilience.

Will Trent Season 4 Trailer Drops, Will’s Mind Unravels as New Cases Test His Limits - 1

Will Trent Season 4 (Credit: ABC)

The new season is expected to delve deeper into Will’s past, exploring how his childhood experiences continue to shape his decisions and relationships. Fans can anticipate more nuanced interactions between Will and his colleagues, as well as a broader look at the impact of trauma on law enforcement professionals.

The show will also highlight how Will’s unique perspective as a survivor of abuse and neglect influences his approach to solving crimes and connecting with victims.

Romance, Family, and New Beginnings

Season 4 introduces fresh storylines for Will’s personal life. With the resolution of major Season 3 cliffhangers, the showrunners are focusing on Will’s growth and new connections.

Executive producer Daniel Thomsen teases that Will may try casual dating, exploring relationships that don’t carry the same emotional baggage as his previous ones. This new approach gives Ramón Rodríguez opportunities to explore different facets of Will’s personality, from playful to vulnerable. ​

The return of Will’s biological father, Caleb (Yul Vazquez), opens up new family drama. Will’s journey to understand his roots and reconcile with his past is expected to be a major arc this season.

The showrunners suggest that Will’s newfound willingness to open up emotionally will lead to both heartwarming and heartbreaking moments as he navigates his evolving relationships with family, friends, and colleagues. ​

The new season is expected to delve deeper into Will’s past, exploring how his childhood experiences continue to shape his decisions and relationships.

Fans can anticipate more nuanced interactions between Will and his colleagues, as well as a broader look at the impact of trauma on law enforcement professionals. The show will also highlight how Will’s unique perspective as a survivor of abuse and neglect influences his approach to solving crimes and connecting with victims.

Will Trent Season 4 premieres January 6, 2026, on ABC , promising a mix of intense crime solving and deep personal drama.

The new trailer sets the stage for a season where Will’s emotional walls finally crumble, leading to some of the most compelling episodes yet. Fans can expect more twists, new challenges, and a deeper look at the man behind the badge.

Season 4 ended with The Boys scattered, captured, or corrupted while Homelander tightened his grip on the United States, leaving fans with two brutal questions: Did anyone actually make it out alive, and had Billy Butcher finally crossed a line he could never come back from?

The first season 5 trailer wastes no time addressing both, confirming that the core team escapes captivity and eventually reunites with the same broken, foul-mouthed energy that made the show’s early years so addictive.​

The season 4 finale pushed everyone to an extreme : Frenchie and Kimiko were dragged off by Gen V-aligned forces, Hughie was taken by superpowered enemies, and M.M. wound up in a nightmare reunion with Love Sausage, while only Starlight slipped through Homelander’s new authoritarian net.

At the same time, Butcher murdered Victoria Neuman, stole a supe-killing virus that threatened both Kimiko and Starlight, and drove away alone with terminal brain damage and a genocidal plan, seemingly burning every bridge left.​

The new trailer answers the survival question first.

Footage shows Hughie imprisoned in one of Tek Knight’s internment-style camps, complete with drab, propaganda-coded uniforms and militarized guards, then cuts to Starlight blasting the compound’s lights into an electric storm, clearly positioned as the spark for a daring breakout.

Other sequences reveal the full team together again in later scenes, confirming that M.M., Kimiko, and Frenchie escape their separate hellholes sooner rather than later, instead of spending half the final season stuck in different torture setups.​

That choice says a lot about how showrunner Eric Kripke intends to use the final run. Rather than drag out imprisonment drama, the trailer signals a pivot back to what fans tune in for: the group’s chaotic chemistry and their impossible mission inside a fascist America.

It also softens the sting of season 4’s cliffhanger for some viewers, because the trailer removes any real doubt about the team’s fate, confirming in a few shots what many suspected during the credits last year.​

Butcher’s Return, A Fragile Truce, And A Dark Comic Book Shadow

The second big question from season 4 was emotional rather than logistical: after killing Neuman, threatening his own allies, and weaponizing a virus that could wipe out every supe, did Butcher finally become too dangerous to stand beside?

The trailer’s answer is complicated but clear, revealing that he finds his way back into the fold and that the others accept his help, not because they forgive him, but because they know their odds against Homelander are almost zero without him.

Several shots detail a hesitant reunion, with The Boys sharing cramped safe houses and war rooms under a regime that now openly takes its cues from Homelander instead of pretending to care about accountability.

Commentary from outlets like GamesRadar notes how the footage emphasizes tension in the group’s body language, underlining that this alliance works more like a ceasefire than a heartfelt reconciliation, with everyone aware that Butcher is running out of time and patience.​

This is where the trailer quietly nods toward the comics. In Garth Ennis’ original run, Butcher’s story ends in a bleak, self-destructive spiral that turns him into a final antagonist for his own team, and analysts have pointed out that the season 5 teaser seems to lean toward that arc more strongly than previous years.

A key suggestion highlighted by genre sites is that Butcher’s virus and his willingness to sacrifice even supe allies position him as much of a threat to the future as Homelander, setting up a last-act showdown that may pit his ruthless strategy against Hughie’s stubborn sense of conscience.​

The trailer’s imagery supports that tension. While Homelander continues his transformation into an open dictator, Butcher stalks through ruined American streets and fortified bunkers with the air of a man who has already accepted his death and is only deciding how many bodies he takes with him.

Homelander’s Regime, Ryan’s Choice, And How The Final Fight Is Shaping Up

Beyond those two headline questions, the season 5 trailer starts to sketch the new normal after Homelander’s victory in season 4’s election-night horror show, where he effectively took control of Vought and the U.S. government through a puppet presidency.

Prime Video’s own teaser and coverage from outlets like TechRadar and Tom’s Guide describe a United States reshaped into something like a supe-run police state, with propaganda marching across screens and militarized Vought assets replacing any illusion of democratic oversight.​

Visually, that shift comes through in the images of Tek Knight’s camps, heavily branded uniforms, and protestors who now feel more like insurgents than citizens, placing The Boys firmly in insurgency territory rather than off-the-books black ops.

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The Boys Season 5 (Credit: Amazon Prime Video)

Commentary from GamesRadar and IGN stresses how the final season is positioning Homelander as a tyrant whose mask is finally off , ruling almost entirely by fear while indulging his ego in increasingly graphic public displays of violence.​

The trailer’s most unsettling recurring shot shows Homelander repeatedly pummeling someone who can actually withstand his blows, a rare sight for a character typically framed as untouchable, and fans have zeroed in on burn marks on his suit as evidence that Ryan might be on the other side of those punches.

YouTube breakdowns and Reddit threads argue that this beatdown may represent a critical turning point in Ryan’s arc, either as a tragic confirmation that he has become his father’s enemy or as a brutal “lesson” meant to lock him further into Homelander’s grip.​​ ​

The trailer also brings back Soldier Boy, stepping out of containment once again, and introduces Jared Padalecki’s new character, which several outlets have flagged as a potential wild card in the final conflict.

With Homelander’s biological father and his son both on the board, season 5 seems ready to turn the show’s ongoing obsession with toxic, absent, and weaponized parenthood into a literal three-generation war that reflects the political chaos outside Vought Tower. ​ ​

On the resistance side, the footage hints at ties to sister series Gen V, with references to the supe virus and academic experiments that first surfaced on that spinoff, suggesting a shared endgame across both shows.

Critics have noted that connecting these threads gives season 5 a broader sense of scale, implying that the fate of supes everywhere, not just Homelander’s inner circle, hangs in the balance on whether The Boys decide to use or destroy the very weapon in Butcher’s hands.​

What stands out most from the trailer is its momentum.

Instead of stretching season 4’s cliffhangers across half a season, it quickly answers whether the core team survives and whether Butcher finds his way back, then pivots toward bigger questions about power, complicity, and how much blood feels “acceptable” in the name of saving a broken country.

As streaming competition grows and superhero fatigue lingers, sites like TechRadar and Tom’s Guide have already framed The Boys’ final run as a rare event series that still feels dangerous, precisely because its heroes are only marginally better than the monsters they are trying to stop.