When Citadel was first announced, Amazon didn’t just promise a spy series. It promised a global universe. A bold experiment where stories from different countries—India’s Honey Bunny, Italy’s Diana, and the U.S. mothership—would all intertwine into one cinematic web.
But here we are. Two of its most successful spinoffs have been axed. And to make up for it, Amazon says Honey Bunny and Diana will now be “integrated” into Citadel Season 2. Sounds noble, but let’s be honest—it’s a consolation prize.
Honey Bunny was the most-watched Prime Video series globally during its debut weekend. Diana had the best Italian launch ever on the platform. Yet both have been folded into the main storyline, not because of lack of audience, but because the grand vision fell short elsewhere. It wasn’t the shows that failed—it was the mothership that never took off.
Let’s not forget Citadel’s original run was met with lukewarm reception. Critics panned its weak writing. Viewers didn’t latch on. And perhaps most damning—there was no real marketing push to help it gain momentum. In a world where streaming success is often dictated by buzz, Citadel was oddly quiet for the scale it carried.
Now, instead of doubling down on regional chapters that were actually working, Prime Video has chosen to patchwork everything into Season 2. The issue? These three shows exist in different timelines.
Citadel is set in the present.
Honey Bunny plays in the early 90s.
Diana is a Cold War-era thriller.
Try stitching those together without creating a timeline mess. It’s like trying to write Inception meets The Godfather meets Stranger Things in one season—and expecting it to make sense.
Instead of embracing the uniqueness of each, Amazon has chosen to blur the lines. The risk? Losing the very charm that made these regional stories stand out.
A shared universe sounds cool on paper. But if your foundation is shaky, no amount of stitching can hold it together.
This isn’t innovation. It’s retreat in disguise. A proper hotch-potch.