After years of development and multiple delays, the Halo TV show is finally here. Pablo Schreiber stars as a new take on the Master Chief, and you're not going to want to miss it. We've rounded up all the ways to watch Halo, both in the US and globally, and in some cases, you might be able to stream the series without paying extra.
Anyone in the US, Canada, Latin America, Australia, and the Nordics can subscribe to Paramount+ with plans that start at $5/month after a free seven-day trial. Paramount+ has Essential [$5/month with ads] and Premium [$10/month with mostly no ads] options, while subscribers can pay monthly or annually. The annual option comes with a savings of 16% compared to paying monthly.
For fans outside of Paramount+'s supported regions, the Halo TV series streams in Italy and Germany on Sky, while people in France can watch through Canal+, according to TechAdvisor. UK fans won't get to stream the show officially until it arrives on Sky through Paramount+ this summer, though people in the UK--or anywhere else, really--can watch the Halo series with a VPN. This isn't always guaranteed to work, however.
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The Halo show carries a massive production budget, with Paramount+ reportedly spending $10 million per episode, which puts the show on a similar level to Game of Thrones in terms of per-episode budget.
Halo TV Series Episodes:
March 24: Episodes 1 and 2March 31: Episode 3April 7: Episode 4April 14: Episode 5April 21: Episode 6April 28: Episode 7May 5: Episode 8May 12: Episode 9
"Halo the series will weave deeply drawn personal stories with action, adventure and a richly imagined vision of the future," reads a line from the show's description. "Nobody can save humanity alone-not even the Master Chief. Meet the heroes who will risk losing everything to come together and protect humankind from the universe's greatest threat..."
The Halo TV show will reveal Master Chief's face for the first time, and it was a purposeful decision. Showing him without his iconic helmet on will help humanize the super-soldier, executive producer Kiki Wolfkill told GameSpot.
"We set out to tell a story about Master Chief--and specifically to tell a story about John," Wolfkill said. "John is someone that we explore in the books, not the side of him that we tend to explore in the games. And so that was a decision that the story really made. And it just became so clear, as we were getting into what that journey would look like, and what it means for John to discover his humanity and his place in the world and his place in the UNSC that you had to be able to see him outside of the armor and without the helmet."
The Halo TV show has its own canon, the Silver timeline, so what happens on the show doesn't necessarily affected the game series.
Natascha McElhone (Dr. Halsey)Jen Taylor (Cortana)Bokeem Woodbine (Soren-066)Shabana Azmi (Admiral Margaret Parangosky)Natasha Culzac (Riz-028)Olive Gray (Miranda Keyes)Yerin Ha (Kwan Ha Boo)Bentley Kalu (Vannak-134)Kate Kennedy (Kai-125)Charlie Murphy (Makee)and Danny Sapani (Captain Jacob Keyes)