Amazon plans to film its Mass Effect TV series at the end of 2026, according to a new update on the project’s production plans.

The detail, published by Production Weekly, lists a “Q4 2026” schedule for the Amazon Prime series to go in front of cameras. Jessica Jones executive producer Karim Zreik, BioWare’s Mass Effect boss Mike Gamble and legendary former Marvel Studios producer Ari Arad are overseeing production.

As previously announced, Fast & Furious 9 scribe Daniel Casey is attached as a writer, while Star Trek Beyond and Mindhunter writer Doug Jung is set to serve as showrunner.

Currently, the series’ synopsis reads like a description of Mass Effect 1’s plot, though fans aren’t certain if this is simply a placeholder. For now, here’s how the show is being described:

“In Mass Effect, Commander Shepard, an elite human soldier, must stop a rogue Spectre agent, Saren, who has allied with a deadly race of synthetic-organic machines known as the Reapers. As Shepard uncovers a vast galactic conspiracy, they assemble a diverse team of aliens and humans aboard the starship Normandy. Together, they race against time to prevent Saren from unleashing the Reapers and wiping out all advanced civilizations.”

Despite this description, fans agreed that a straight adaptation of the Mass Effect trilogy would likely cause a number of headaches. As a video game series based around player choice — even down to whether you play as Male or Female Shepard — the show would naturally have to pick a canon path to follow, overruling other story options.

11 Mass Effect Characters and Moments the TV Show Needs to Be a Hit

It’s hard to imagine the series picking a definitive decision for some of the game’s big moments — saving Ashley or Kaiden, or to save or sacrifice the Council. At the same time, so much of Mass Effect’s appeal remains its characters. Should this end up being an original story, fans would likely feel shortchanged if Liara, Garrus, Wrex and the gang didn’t show up from time to time.

But perhaps Amazon’s own adaptation of Fallout holds the answer. A series woven into the franchise’s existing lore and featuring a handful of existing characters, the well-received Fallout adaptation is still free to tell its own story, without simply adapting a specific game.

Back in 2021, The Witcher star Henry Cavill teased his involvement in an earlier incarnation of the Mass Effect TV series — though it’s not believed the former Superman is still attached.

Tom Phillips is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social

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