The series premiered on 10 October 2024. It was subsequently broadcast on
5 (British TV channel) in February 2026.
Reception Writing in the
Guardian,
Lucy Mangan gave the series three stars out of five, saying that it was "decent thriller fare" but its worldbuilding was "disappointingly sketchy" and left "far too many unanswered questions", including that of male violence committed during daytime hours or in a domestic setting.
The Daily Telegraph's Anita Singh gave the series two stars out of five, with much of the review being dedicated to what she saw as the series' issues with worldbuilding and thus with believability. Ed Power of the
Irish Times described the series as "a passable shoestring thriller hobbled by a lot of weird gender politics." Power queried the lack of any reference to daytime or domestic violence, and also noted the "superhuman levels of suspension of disbelief" needed to accept that all men were "such a danger to society that they have to be put under house arrest each sundown" while simultaneously "the patriarchy has apparently been subjugated to the point where legislators can force men to remain indoors". Ultimately, he found that it was "still refreshing to see a series use speculative fiction to explore issues around everyday misogyny" and the question of women's nighttime safety. Reviewing the series for the
i, Tilly Pearce gave the series three stars out of five, saying that it "seems somewhat aware of its faults and the barmy premise ends up working better than it should", but that while it had "huge potential to say something important about violence against women and girls [...], its determination to wedge in the male point of view
whataboutery" meant that "any feminist notions are killed off".
Digital Spy's Jess Bacon said that while the series offered "some contrived reflections and generalisations on femicide, murder and women's safety", it also offered "some of the boldest statements about the epidemic of violence against women." ==References==