Splinter Cell: Deathwatch is an adult animated espionage action television series created by Derek Kolstad, based on the Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell video game franchise by Ubisoft. The series stars Liev Schreiber as the voice of Sam Fisher alongside Kirby as Zinnia McKenna. It is directed by Sun Creature Studio co-founder Guillaume Dousse and produced by Ubisoft Film & Television while animation services are provided by FOST Studio.
The series premiered on October 14, 2025, on Netflix. A day after the premiere, the series was renewed for a second season.
Voice cast and characters
Main
- Liev Schreiber as Sam Fisher, a retired field agent who initially served as a Splinter Cell operative for the Third Echelon sub-division of the NSA. He eventually became the spymaster and commander of the covert Fourth Echelon counter-terrorism unit, which answers directly to the President of the United States. Fisher was previously voiced by Michael Ironside and Eric Johnson in the video games.
- Kirby as Zinnia McKenna, a Splinter Cell field operative of Fourth Echelon
Supporting
- Janet Varney as Anna Grímsdóttir, the former chief technical analyst of Third Echelon and the former technical operations officer of Fourth Echelon who became its commander following Fisher's retirement. Grímsdóttir was previously voiced by Claudia Besso, Adriana Anderson, and Kate Drummond in the video games.
- Helen Hong as Jo Ahn, the technical operations officer of Fourth Echelon
- Joel Oulette as Thunder, a skilled Canadian hacker whom Grímsdóttir recruits to join Fourth Echelon
- Kari Wahlgren as Diana Shetland, the CEO of Displace International, a former private military company that is involved in clean energy production
- Aleks Le as Charlie Shetland, Diana's half-brother
- Kiff VandenHeuvel as Douglas Shetland, Diana and Charlie's father, and a former close friend of Fisher who he served alongside in the Navy SEALs. Shetland founded Displace International after he was dishonorably discharged and was killed by Fisher after attempting to instigate a world war. Shetland was previously voiced by Marcel Jeannin in the video games.
- Bella Dayne as Freya Niemeyer, the second-in-command of Karimi's unit
- Dayne also voices Milena, one of Diana's employees
- Navid Negahban as Reza "Gunther" Karimi, the leader of a mercenary unit working for Diana
- JB Blanc as Thomas, Diana's personal assistant
Episodes
Production
In July 2020, it was revealed that Ubisoft Film & Television was developing an animated adaptation of the Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell video game franchise for Netflix. Derek Kolstad was hired to serve as the lead writer for the series, which was initially reported to have received a two-season order but[1] Kolstad later stated that only the first season had been green-lit and that it would take a few years before the series was released.[2] Kolstad imagined the series with an older Sam Fisher, and he wrote the story such that the history behind the games was canon for the show. He also maintained the clandestine feel from the games by utilizing long periods of silence before sudden bursts of action.[3]
In August 2024, Michael Ironside, who had previously voiced Sam Fisher in the video games, stated that he was too old to portray the character for television and that Liev Schreiber had taken over the role for the series.[4] This was confirmed the following month, when Netflix released a first look of the series and announced Schrieber's casting. Animation was provided by the Danish/French Sun Creature Studio and the French studio Fost.[5] Guillaume Dousse began working on the series at Sun Creature as a creative director, and as development progressed, his responsibilities grew to director of some episodes and then the whole first season. The scale of the production was too large for Sun Creature, so most production animation was done at Fost, where Dousse worked with co-director Félicien Colmet-Daâge to lead that aspect.[6]
On October 15, 2025, Netflix renewed the series for a second season.[7]
Release
Reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 86%, based on 14 reviews.[10] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 70 out of 100, based on 4 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[11]
The series was nominated for "Best Adaptation" at The Game Awards 2025.[12]
External links
References
- Joe Otterson. Splinter Cell Anime Series From John Wick Writer Derek Kolstad Set at Netflix (Exclusive) Variety, Penske Media Corporation, July 30, 2020^
- Jeff Sneider. Splinter Cell Netflix Series Writer Derek Kolstad Reveals New Details, Including Episode Length Collider, Valnet, March 22, 2021^
- Anthony Breznican. Is Netflix About to Drop the Next Great Video Game Adaptation? Esquire, Hearst Communications, October 9, 2025^
- Grant Hermanns. Netflix's Splinter Cell Anime Gets Surprising Casting Update From OG Sam Fisher Actor ScreenRant, Valnet, August 30, 2024^
- J. Kim Murphy. Splinter Cell: Deathwatch Confirms Liev Schreiber as Sam Fisher in First Look at Netflix Anime Series Variety, Penske Media Corporation, September 20, 2024^
- Kévin Giraud. Guillaume Dousse On Netflix/Ubisoft’s Splinter Cell: Deathwatch Cartoon Brew, October 13, 2025^
- Jim Vejvoda. Splinter Cell: Deathwatch Renewed for Season 2 - IGN Fall Fan Fest 2025 IGN, October 15, 2025, retrieved October 15, 2025^
- Mercedes Milligan. Netflix Animation Returns to Annecy with Stranger Things, In Your Dreams, Fixed & Much More! Animation Magazine, April 23, 2025, retrieved April 23, 2025^
- Mercedes Milligan. Anime NYC: Netflix Previews New Seasons of Blue Eye Samurai, Sakamoto Days, Devil May Cry & More! Animation Magazine, August 21, 2025, retrieved August 21, 2025^
- retrieved October 31, 2025^
- retrieved October 15, 2025^
- Claire Lewis. Here are all The Game Awards 2025 winners Polygon, December 11, 2025, retrieved December 11, 2025^