Vampire Academy Tv Series Episodes Online

Now we’re cooking. This episode slows down to explore Lissa’s spirit magic—a dangerous, addictive power that heals but fractures her mind. The show’s horror edge shines in a nightmare sequence where Lissa hallucinates blood pouring from walls. Meanwhile, Rose begins her guardian training with the stoic, scarred Dimitri Belikov (now played with gruff warmth by Kieron Moore). Their chemistry is electric, and their first "bad guy–good girl" banter feels earned. Rose drunkenly confessing her fears to Dimitri by a bonfire. Worst moment: A subplot with Christian (Lissa’s fire-wielding love interest) feels rushed. Verdict: A huge step up. The emotional stakes finally match the supernatural ones. Episode 3: "Death Watch" Rating: 9/10

The series’ best early episode. A strigoi attack during a royal gala forces Rose to make an impossible choice: save a royal brat or protect Lissa. The action is genuinely tense—fast cuts, practical blood, and real consequences (a fan-favorite side character dies). The show also introduces its smartest change: the "Death Watch," a real-time leaderboard of guardian kills, turning trauma into spectacle. Rose screaming at the Moroi council, "You treat us like dogs, then cry when we bite back." Worst moment: The CGI strigoi still look a bit rubbery. Verdict: This is the episode that hooks you. Episode 4: "Mold and Sick" Rating: 6/10 vampire academy tv series episodes

The halfway point delivers a gut-punch. Rose disobeys orders to track a strigoi nest and finds evidence that the queen herself is hiding a dark secret (a major book divergence that works). The episode also gives us the long-awaited Rose/Dimitri kiss—messy, passionate, and immediately followed by him pushing her away. Ouch. The final shot—Rose covered in blood, smiling defiantly at the camera. Worst moment: A subplot about Mia (the mean girl) feels like filler. Verdict: Peak YA angst done right. Series Finale (Episode 10): "Ascension" Rating: 7.5/10 Now we’re cooking

The pilot throws you into the deep end without a stake to hold onto. We meet best friends Rose (sarcastic, fierce, half-human guardian-in-training) and Lissa (sad, powerful, last of the royal Dragomir line) post–a mysterious car crash that killed their families. The show immediately diverges from the books: the Moroi court is now a brutalist, concrete-and-neon hellscape, and the hierarchy feels more Hunger Games than high school. Rose’s fight training—brutal, sweaty, and real. Worst moment: The rapid-fire exposition dumps (spirit, strigoi, bonds—it’s a lot). Verdict: Overwhelming but intriguing. Stick with it. Episode 2: "Earth. Air. Fire. Water. Spirit." Rating: 8/10 Meanwhile, Rose begins her guardian training with the

The Vampire Academy TV series is a bold, messy, adrenaline-fueled reboot that ditches the movie’s teen-soap tone for a CW-on-steroids meets Riverdale meets The Magicians vibe. It’s darker, funnier, more violent, and far more serialized than the books. It doesn’t work for every purist, but for those who wanted a grown-up, queer-normative, politically messy St. Vladimir’s, it’s a cult hit in waiting. Episode 1: "Welcome to St. Vladimir's" Rating: 7/10