Cyberpunk may be predominantly known for its distinctive tech-heavy dystopian aesthetic, but the genre is far more than that. For many, the appeal of cyberpunk isn’t what it looks like but what it has to say, and few franchises capture this quite like Ghost in the Shell and Blade Runner.
Both Blade Runner and Ghost in the Shell use cyberpunk’s fascination with the merging of humanity and technology to explore some of sci-fi’s most thought-provoking philosophical ideas. Questions about consciousness, memory, identity, and the nature of the soul sit at the heart of both franchises. They’re not just stylish stories about dystopian corporate hellscapes; they’re explorations of what it means to be human. That’s also exactly why fans of either franchise should make time for Netflix’s Altered Carbon.
Based on the novel by Richard K. Morgan, Altered Carbon is a two-season Netflix show set in a future where human consciousness can be digitally stored and transferred between bodies. The show follows Takeshi Kovacs (Joel Kinnaman in season 1, Anthony Mackie in season 2), a man revived centuries after his death to solve a murder. For viewers who love the philosophical exploration that defines Ghost in the Shell and Blade Runner, few cyberpunk series scratch the same itch quite as effectively.
Altered Carbon Picks Up The Conversation Where Blade Runner And GitS Left Off
At first glance, the similarities Altered Carbon shares with Blade Runner and Ghost in the Shell seem obvious. All three are cyberpunk stories set in technologically advanced yet morally decaying futures. What isn’t immediately obvious is how closely Altered Carbon aligns with the deeper thematic concepts that have made both Blade Runner and Ghost in the Shell so iconic.
Across multiple movies and shows, both Ghost in the Shell and Blade Runner repeatedly return to questions about consciousness and identity. If memories can be altered, bodies replaced, or minds replicated, what actually makes someone a person? Altered Carbon takes those questions and pushes them further than either franchise.
Altered Carbon’s central concept revolves around cortical stacks, devices implanted in the spine that digitally store an individual’s consciousness. As long as the stack survives, a person’s mind can be transferred into a new body, known as a sleeve. Death effectively becomes optional for those who can afford replacement bodies.
This idea creates a fascinating framework for exploring personhood and, just like Ghost in the Shell and Blade Runner, Altered Carbon refuses to provide simple answers. Instead, it examines how technological advancement reshapes human existence and long-held assumptions about individuality and mortality. For cyberpunk fans who appreciate the philosophical exploration of Blade Runner and/or GitS, Altered Carbon is a satisfying continuation of a conversation that those franchises began decades earlier.
Altered Carbon Has A Lot To Offer Cyberpunk Fans
The philosophical overlap Altered Carbon has with Blade Runner and Ghost in the Shell is certainly one of the show’s biggest strengths, but it isn’t the only reason cyberpunk fans should watch it. After all, neither Blade Runner nor Ghost in the Shell became iconic solely because of their ideas. Their visuals and sense of style are just as important to their success.
Fortunately, Altered Carbon excels in those areas as well. The series presents a future that feels visually familiar to cyberpunk enthusiasts. Massive cityscapes glow beneath neon lights. Rain-soaked streets stretch beneath towering skyscrapers. Advanced cyberware technology is driving widespread social decay. The narrative of Altered Carbon also embraces many of cyberpunk’s most beloved elements. There are conspiracies involving powerful elites uncovered by a man operating on the fringes of society. In other words, a classic cyberpunk narrative.
For fans of Ghost in the Shell, Blade Runner, or cyberpunk in general, Altered Carbon offers the complete package. It delivers the visual spectacle and intellectual depth that define the genre while adding compelling ideas of its own. As a result, it stands as one of Netflix’s strongest sci-fi TV shows and one of the most rewarding cyberpunk series currently available to stream.
This story originally appeared on Screenrant
