If you love dystopian series you'll love this. Concept isn't visionary(feels like a twist on A quiet place to me) but it's not one that's been explored much; premise is on par with any other dystopic, difference being this is backed by a powerhouse in AppleTV giving it a big enough budget to have someone like Jason Mamoa on it. First season was the best one but the next two still hold their ground. It's gory, bloody and it's about survival, politics and family, all paced well to keep your attention throughout.
A few standouts for me as the series went on was Bautista finally played a role I've always said he'd be great in. Most of his roles are tough guy with a soft spot or husky meathead for humor, some reminiscent of Dwayne Johnson's but I've always wanted him to play a somber, dark killer-esque character with a grim ambience whenever he's on. He partnered well with Mamoa.
Third season flactuatesd a little, prior to this when the action was seldom the story was enough to keep you gripped, but with time See starts to follow a more generic story, not to say it's bad, the twists and turns are more logical so nothing blows your mind story wise. I do think the show has some really remarkable fight sequences, very memorable, Baba Voss with the slavers in season one comes to mind for instance.
Most of the cast does a good job but I must say the queen's voice and character are a little over the top. The show's also really not that deep, which was fine in the first season as an introduction to this reality but it now needs more so as to not get generic and start dragging itself out but S3 is the last, good timing, can't say what the future was but they quit while ahead. Some have questioned the logic at times, I think to some extent that's due to Apple TV plus Jason mamoa attracting viewers new to the genre, because if you watch enough dystopics you start to realize their realities aren't always realistic.
I love dystopian series and think those were humanity regresses into more primitive society have a special feel to them. See is an amazing addition to the genre and it's great to see what dystopian series could be capable of when taken up by big studios and actors.