Netflix’s ‘Oasis’ Just Dropped and Fans Are Already Demanding a Season 2
The arrival of a new Spanish mystery thriller is never a quiet event on Netflix, and ‘Oasis’ has been no exception. The series premiered globally on Netflix on June 19, 2026, offering viewers a Spanish drama set inside a super-elite holiday resort where paradise turns into a nightmare at a very fast pace.
The show wasted no time generating chatter across social media, with audiences bingeing all eight episodes in a single sitting and immediately turning to the internet with one burning question: is ‘Oasis’ coming back for more? Netflix has not officially renewed ‘Oasis’ for a second season, though discussion around a continuation continues among viewers, and some narrative threads remain open enough to support another chapter.
What the Spanish Mystery Thriller Is Actually About
‘Oasis’ is the most luxurious vacation resort in the country, a paradise for the wealthiest families. Everything falls apart when police storm in to investigate a mysterious disappearance and, until it is solved, no one is allowed to leave the resort. The lockdown setup is what transforms a glossy vacation backdrop into genuine psychological tension.
Dani, played by Tomy Aguilera, attends the resort for the first time, alongside his mother, who recently remarried, and his step-sister Sofia, played by Ada Molina, a scheming and seductive figure. The ensemble deepens considerably from there.
The series also features special appearances by Unax Ugalde, Alicia Borrachero, Mercedes Sampietro, Paco Tous, and Verónica Sánchez. Alongside Aguilera, Kantch, and Garcés, ‘Oasis’ stars Manel Duarte, Berta Castañé, Ada Molina, Alex Mola, Jan Buxaderas, Laura Simón, Candela Méndez, Amanda Palomino, and Blas Polidori.
The series thrives on the contrast between paradise and panic. What initially appears to be a dream holiday destination gradually transforms into a pressure cooker where every guest, employee, and family member becomes a suspect. Behind the expensive villas, private beaches, and endless parties lies a world built on privilege, influence, and carefully hidden secrets.
The Powerhouse Studio Behind the Resort Drama
The series hails from Bambú Producciones, the powerhouse studio behind hits like ‘Cable Girls’, ‘High Seas’, and ‘The Asunta Case’. That pedigree matters when discussing renewal prospects, because Netflix has a well-established relationship with the production house and a strong appetite for Spanish-language content.
The series was created by a robust writing team consisting of Ramón Campos, Jon de la Cuesta Olaizola, Javier Chacártegui Horrach, David Orea Arribas, and Ricardo Jornet Gallego, with Bambú Producciones producing and Ramón Campos, Gema R. Neira, Jon de la Cuesta, and David Pinillos serving as executive producers.
What makes the creative intentions behind ‘Oasis’ particularly interesting is the personal motivation driving the project. Showrunner Ramón Campos told Netflix, “The mystery is just a vehicle. I wanted to make a series for my daughters, who are 14.
A story that speaks about what they’re living through right now: friendship, secrets, doubts, and those first decisions that begin to define you.” That focus on youth identity and coming-of-age themes underneath the thriller surface could give the show a compelling angle for future storytelling.
How ‘Oasis’ Stacks Up Against ‘The White Lotus’ Comparisons
The resort drama genre is practically its own subgenre now, and comparisons to ‘The White Lotus’ followed ‘Oasis’ from the moment its trailer dropped. Many viewers and media outlets drew comparisons because of the show’s setting, tone, and focus on rich guests with hidden secrets, with the timing of a summer release adding to the intrigue.

According to a review in Variety, the obvious comparison is not entirely wrong, as ‘Oasis’ even includes frequent B-roll of waves crashing on the beach, the same visual device ‘White Lotus’ creator Mike White uses to suggest the turmoil beneath the hotel’s glittering surface. But ‘Oasis’ hails from Spain, the same country that supplied Netflix with eight seasons of the teen soap ‘Elite’.
Fans taking to X drew their own conclusions, with one writing, “It’s basically ‘The White Lotus’ but with all young people, or does it just seem that way to me?” while another joked, “Close enough, welcome back ‘The White Lotus.'” The comparison is a double-edged sword, raising expectations while simultaneously setting up a bar that is extremely difficult to clear.
Will Netflix Renew ‘Oasis’ for Season 2
The honest answer right now is that nobody outside Netflix knows for certain. Since ‘Oasis’ is a closed-ended mystery show, it will most likely not be renewed for another season unless there is massive demand for it, and the show creator comes up with another resort-related mystery series. The anthology path, similar to how ‘The White Lotus’ operates with a fresh location and largely new cast each season, is arguably the most realistic version of a continuation.
The ending of ‘Oasis’ offers justice, but not happiness. At its core, the show is not simply a mystery about a missing person. It is a story about power, and the disappearance serves as a vehicle for exploring who gets believed, who gets blamed, and who controls the truth. Nobody truly wins, and the powerful suffer reputational damage while relationships collapse and friendships break.
That thematic richness is precisely what could sustain a second chapter set in a new location with a new crisis, keeping the DNA of the show intact while giving writers a clean slate. The series has so much of what other hit series have offered, including hot young people, a scary mystery, and bad guys lurking in the background, and audiences should expect it to make plenty of subscribers happy. Netflix renewal decisions hinge heavily on viewership numbers in the first few weeks, so where ‘Oasis’ lands on the global charts over the coming month will likely be the deciding factor.
Whether you think ‘Oasis’ deserves the full anthology treatment like ‘The White Lotus’ or feel the story wrapped itself up neatly enough on its own terms, share your take below, because this is exactly the kind of show where the debate over what should come next is half the fun.

