Everyhing We Know About ‘The Boys: Mexico’ Spin-Off So Far: A Promising Pilot Update and a Stacked Creative Team

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The Boys universe has never been content staying in one place, and now it is heading somewhere that could shift the entire franchise in a genuinely exciting direction. ‘The Boys: Mexico’ was officially announced in late November 2023, following the overwhelming success of the first live-action spin-off ‘Gen V’. Since then, the project has quietly been building momentum with a creative team that reads more like a dream lineup than a development slate.

Reports confirm the series will be a Spanish-language program, marking a bold swing for Prime Video, which has explored that kind of international spin-off approach before with its spy series ‘Citadel’. As the main series wraps its final chapter, all eyes are turning to what comes next for this universe, and ‘The Boys: Mexico’ is making a very loud case for itself.

The Boys Mexico Spin-Off Has Been Quietly Taking Shape Behind the Scenes

First announced to be in development at Amazon Prime Video in November 2023, ‘The Boys: Mexico’ is set to take the franchise’s universe outside the United States for the very first time. The road from announcement to screen has been a slow one, but recent updates suggest the project is gaining real traction.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, showrunner Eric Kripke shared that a draft of ‘The Boys: Mexico’ pilot episode has been delivered to Amazon, whose reaction was positive, with notes now being incorporated for revisions. That is a meaningful step forward for a project that has spent considerable time in the development trenches.

Kripke reiterated to Collider in April 2026 that scripts for the Mexico City-set series have been sent to Amazon, which is making the right noises. Fan communities have responded to the news with obvious enthusiasm, with many arguing the Mexico setting could open storytelling doors the main series was never able to walk through.

The concept offers a lot of potential, since ‘The Boys’ is mostly set in the United States and focuses on how Vought controls the country through financial and political means, leaving the international scope of Supe culture largely unexplored. That unexplored territory is exactly what makes this spin-off feel so fresh even at the development stage.

Diego Luna and Gael García Bernal Bring Major Star Power to the Project

Diego Luna and Gael García Bernal are set to produce and star in the series, with the two longtime friends having previously appeared together in Alfonso Cuarón’s ‘Y Tu Mamá También’ back in 2001. Their involvement immediately elevated the project from a simple franchise extension to something with genuine cultural weight behind it.

The noted Mexican actors will not only be representing their home nation behind the camera, but are also currently contemplating taking on small on-screen roles in the spin-off. The idea of Luna and Bernal appearing on screen together in the universe of ‘The Boys’ is the kind of prospect that gets fan forums moving at full speed.

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Kripke described the duo as amazing to work with, noting that they are genuinely engaged with the project as executive producers. That level of hands-on investment from talent of their caliber signals this is not simply a prestige name-drop situation but a collaboration with real creative stakes.

For continuity with the mothership show, ‘The Boys: Mexico’ will also see Eric Kripke and Seth Rogen working in a creative capacity, which helps guarantee the spin-off will carry the same vulgar and violently satirical flavor as the original. The combination of franchise veterans and fresh Latin American voices is the kind of creative pairing that rarely goes wrong.

Gareth Dunnet-Alcocer and the Writing Direction Point to Something Fresh

‘The Boys: Mexico’ is created by Gareth Dunnet-Alcocer, the writer behind ‘Blue Beetle’ and ‘Miss Bala’, who brings a specific lens to Latin American storytelling within genre fiction. Casting a writer with that background is a deliberate creative choice, and it says a great deal about what kind of show Amazon and Kripke are actually trying to make here.

Kripke told Collider that the world of ‘The Boys: Mexico’ meets the standard of all the franchise’s spin-offs, calling it their world but with a totally different tone, describing it as super fun. That phrase, a totally different tone, is doing a lot of work and has been one of the most-discussed details among fans tracking the project.

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Speculation has suggested that ‘The Boys: Mexico’ could explore the concept of superpowered cartels smuggling Compound V across the border, an idea floated shortly after the death of Translucent in the original series. That kind of premise would root the show in a distinctly Mexican political and social reality while keeping it tethered to the franchise’s wider mythology.

Kripke has also confirmed that the series takes place after the events of ‘The Boys’ season 5, making it the franchise’s next evolutionary step, and he has expressed hopes that certain characters from the main show could cross over into the Mexico series. The timeline placement means the show will inherit whatever fallout the final season leaves behind, adding a layer of narrative weight that pure prequels like ‘Vought Rising’ simply cannot have.

Where ‘The Boys: Mexico’ Stands in the Wider Franchise Timeline

If ‘Gen V’ does not continue with a third season, ‘The Boys: Mexico’ could become the franchise’s sole exploration of the universe after the series finale of ‘The Boys‘, since ‘Vought Rising’ is a prequel. That gives the Mexico-set series a potentially pivotal role in keeping the wider story alive and evolving post-finale.

A ‘Gen V’ Easter egg revealed that Thomas Godolkin, in his Cipher guise, had spent some time working at Vought’s Mexico City office, perhaps laying the foundations for ‘The Boys: Mexico’ and suggesting that Vought has already been extending its influence around the world. Those kinds of planted seeds are rarely accidental in a franchise this deliberately constructed.

As for a release date, the spin-off is likely still years away, given that the pilot episode is still being refined and the franchise has historically maintained a two-year gap between releases. Patience will be required, but the pieces being assembled suggest the wait could absolutely be worth it.

If ‘The Boys: Mexico’ is a success, it is easy to imagine it becoming the blueprint for other spin-offs focusing on how different Supe culture is in other countries. The franchise may have started as a pointed American satire, but its sharpest future chapter could be written entirely in Spanish, and now that the pilot is in Amazon’s hands and generating positive signals, the question fans are dying to debate is which direction Gareth Dunnet-Alcocer should take the Compound V cartel storyline when ‘The Boys: Mexico’ finally makes it to screen.

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