Euphoria season 3 trailer reactions are feral right now because the final trailer dropped and immediately reminded everyone of the show’s core brand promise: glossy cinematography, emotional violence, and dialogue that makes you whisper “Sam Levinson…” like you’re scolding a cat.
The timeline split into two camps within minutes. Camp A: “this looks incredible, I hate that it looks incredible.” Camp B: “this looks like a different show, and I’m still watching every Sunday like it’s my job.”

What The Trailer Actually Set Up
The big headline is the Cassie–Maddy–Nate triangle is not only back, it’s been upgraded to full wedding-level catastrophe. The trailer teased Nate in bed saying “My Maddy?” like he’s trying to start a fight in two syllables, plus Cassie pleading her case like a person who has never met consequences.
Maddy, meanwhile, is walking around with “I’m about to change the plot” energy. There’s a wedding aisle moment that’s already being called iconic. People aren’t even debating if she’s crashing a wedding; they’re debating whether she’s doing it for revenge, comedy, or sport.





And Rue is still Rue: intense close-ups, menace in the background, and enough chaos implied that one meme already summarized it as “the city after Rue got done” with a street full of flipped cars. It’s exaggeration, sure, but also… tell me you didn’t feel it.


Euphoria Season 3 Trailer Memes And The OnlyFans Discourse
A lot of Euphoria season 3 trailer memes are circling one recurring talking point: the show’s apparent obsession with sex work storylines now that the characters are older.
The trailer hints at a plot where Maddy is involved in helping Cassie with an OnlyFans venture, which set off two immediate reactions online:
1. “This is so Euphoria it hurts.”
2. “Oh my god, is every young woman in this show about to get written into a sex work subplot?”
That second reaction is where the most critical memes live. People are posting jokes about Levinson “cooking” the script like it’s a pot of something unholy, and others are doing the tired-but-loyal “generational anger” posts: furious about the writing choices, seated for the episode anyway.


The Tone Whiplash: Beautiful, Unhinged, And Somehow Addictive
The trailer also sparked a bunch of “me in high school vs them in high school” memes, because Euphoria has never pretended to be realistic and the internet loves to pretend it expects realism anyway. The show’s version of teenage life is basically fashion editorials staged inside emotional emergencies.
That’s why “poke the ass up” became an instant caption. It’s simultaneously hilarious, bizarrely specific, and completely on-brand for a show that treats the camera like an accomplice.
And then there’s the heavy layer: fans grieving the absence of Fez and Lexi. The trailer can be as wild as it wants, but the audience is still carrying real sadness, and you can see it in the crying reaction posts that cut through the jokes.






The Real Reason Everyone’s Still Watching
Even the people who are mad admitted the trailer looks good. That’s the trap.
Euphoria sells the chaos so well that viewers become loyal to the mess. The cast is electric, the scenes look expensive, and the show keeps dangling unresolved stakes like Rue’s debt to Laurie in front of the audience like a hook they can’t wiggle off.
So yes, the memes are roasting. The reactions are split. People are skeptical. People are excited. People are annoyed. People are obsessed.
Which is, unfortunately for all of us, exactly the point.
If you want to keep the post-trailer chaos going on Thunder Dungeon, enjoy Reality TV-Level Show Memes That Started Fights, Moana Trailer Reactions That Were Better Than The Trailer, and Binge-Watch Memes For People Who Can’t Quit.
Alex Thompson writes about internet culture like it’s a competitive sport, then watches Euphoria anyway and calls it “research.”