Apple TV has been firing on all cylinders when it comes to science fiction adaptations on TV, and the streamer’s crown jewel hasn’t even debuted yet. Apple ordered a 10-episode adaptation of ***Neuromancer ***by William Gibson back in 2024, and it has been filming for over a year now. The series was created for TV by **Graham Roland **and J.D. Dillard, and by now we know all the big talent in front of the camera and behind it. Considering Neuromancer’s stature in the sci-fi genre, it’s hard to imagine this show being anything less than a blockbuster hit. However, when it comes time to renew the series, there will be some major issues no matter how it moves forward.
*Neuromancer *is credited with kicking off the cyberpunk subgenre as we know it — though Gibson himself has disputed this claim. Regardless, it’s one of the most influential sci-fi books of all time, and it’s the first installment of Gibson’s *Sprawl *trilogy. That’s where the issues with TV continuity come in. *Neuromancer *will make for an excellent 10-episode series, and when it does, fans and studio execs will be clamoring for more. However, Gibson’s two sequel novels — *Count Zero *and Mona Lisa Overdrive — have completely different characters and set pieces from Neuromancer, which means TV adaptations would not be able to carry over the most beloved cast members or iconic scenery.
While we don’t have a trailer or a release date for *Neuromancer *yet, we’ve already learned quite a bit about the series, and fans can infer even more from the information we’ve been given. The main cast of the series includes Callum Turner as the hacker Case, Briana Middleton as his mercenary partner in crime Molly, Dane DeHaan as their loose canon associate Peter Riviera, and Mark Strong as the orchestrator of their heist, Mr. Armitage. Other colorful characters include the wealthy heiress Marie-France Tessier (Clémence Poésy) and her bodyguard Hideo (Joseph Lee), along with Case’s ex-girlfriend Linda Lee (Emma Laird).
Mild spoiler warning here — a major problem with the TV adaptation is that only one of the characters mentioned above ever appears in the second and third novels of Gibson’s *Sprawl *trilogy. *Neuromancer *even introduces readers to some non-corporeal artificial intelligence characters in cyberspace, but they take on completely different forms when they show up again in the later books, making them unrecognizable. The second and third books DO have more shared characters between them, but even then they’ll need to be aged up and likely recast.
In Gibson’s books, these tenuous connections work perfectly. Readers can take immense satisfaction in recognizing a veiled allusion to the previous novel, and they can take the time to get attached to new characters and locations as well. It’s not that simple on the screen, where fans will be heartbroken when their favorite character doesn’t show up at all in future seasons. Even if audiences were ready to invest their time in this unique approach, studios would be unlikely to greenlight it. From their perspective, it would be like starting from scratch with little to no brand recognition and a whole new marketing campaign. They wouldn’t be able to rely on popular actors from the first season to help promote the next one.
There are a handful of solutions to Neuromancer’s continuity issue, though all of them require some alteration to Gibson’s work. That’s not necessarily a bad thing for an adaptation — it’s practically inevitable — by as it is, one strategy already seems to be off the table. Roland and Dillard could have found ways to organically include the key characters from *Count Zero *and Mona Lisa Overdrive into this first season, priming fans for them to take center stage later. This would have shown confidence in the series and put a little pressure on the studio to renew it. To be fair, this could still be the case, but so far none of those characters have been announced by Apple TV.
Another option would be to change or expand the sequel stories so that they include some *Neuromancer *characters more actively. This could work, though the scope of changes required would inevitably put some fans off the adaptation at that point. It would also risk overshadowing the new characters introduced in the later stories. All in all, it’s not the best option, but it seems the most likely based on what we know so far.
Your answers point to the world your instincts were built for. This is the universe your temperament, your survival instincts, and your particular brand of stubbornness were made for.
You took the red pill a long time ago — probably before anyone offered it to you. You’re a systems thinker who can’t help but notice the seams in things.
The wasteland doesn’t reward the clever or the well-connected — it rewards those who are hard to kill and harder to break. That’s you.
You’d survive here because you know how to exist in moral grey areas without losing yourself completely.
Arrakis is the most hostile environment in the known universe — and you are precisely the kind of person it rewards.
The galaxy far, far away is vast, loud, and in a constant state of violent political upheaval — and you wouldn’t have it any other way.
Finally, Apple TV *could *decide to leave *Neuromancer *as a miniseries, standing alone with no epic sci-fi timeline to follow. It wouldn’t be the worst fate for the show, but it would be disappointing to fans who know what comes next for this cyberpunk dystopia. Some of Gibson’s best writing comes in the latter two books, and his near-future setting just begs to be explored to the fullest. If the show attains the success its source material deserves, it’s hard to imagine it will be left without a sequel for long. Perhaps *Count Zero *and Mona Lisa Overdrive could follow as a related-but-separate miniseries. That would do the *Sprawl *justice and push the TV sci-fi genre forward at the same time, but it would be a surprising move for a TV studio.
The fact that fans can’t guess exactly what’s coming or how *Neuromancer *will be adapted is ultimately a testament to the strength of the work. Gibson’s book is more than a checklist of one-liners and visual spectacles to check off on TV — it’s an essential fixture in the sci-fi genre and in our culture at large. You can find Gibson’s *Sprawl *trilogy and other writing now in print, digital, and audiobook formats if you want to get ahead. *Neuromancer *is coming soon to Apple TV, but it has no release date yet.