Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains was met with universal acclaim, and is generally considered to be one of the show's best seasons.
Entertainment Weekly's
Survivor columnist Dalton Ross ranked
Heroes vs. Villains as the third-best season of the series, only behind
Survivor: Borneo and
Survivor: Micronesia (both tied for first); he cited such memorable aspects as "the Russell vs. Boston Rob feud...Tyson voting himself off, J.T. giving Russell his immunity idol, and Parvati handing out
two immunity idols at one Tribal Council." Ever since 2012,
Survivor fan site "
Survivor Oz" has consistently ranked
Heroes vs. Villains at or near the #1 spot of its annual poll ranking all seasons of the series – it was #1 in 2012, 2013, and 2015, while it was #2 in 2014 (behind
Survivor: Cagayan).
The Wire and "The Purple Rock Podcast" both also rank
Heroes vs. Villains as the greatest season of the series, while
Examiner.com ranks it as the second best season behind
Survivor: Borneo, and
Zap2it ranks it as the 7th-best season. In 2015, former
Survivor contestant and podcast host
Rob Cesternino's website saw
Heroes vs. Villains ranked as the #1 greatest season of the series, both by Cesternino himself and by the website's fan poll. The season was still ranked #1 in 2021 during Cesternino's podcast,
Survivor All-Time Top 40 Rankings. In 2020,
Inside Survivor ranked this season as the show's second-best out of the first 40 saying that "
Heroes vs. Villains works so well despite the theme's silliness because of how so many cast members fully lean into their designated roles, regardless of how accurate they are. It is
Survivor at its most theatrical, and everyone comes to Samoa ready to play their parts." In 2021, Kristen Kranz of
Collider also ranked
Heroes vs. Villains as the second-best season of the series writing, "labeling one group heroes and the other villains was a brilliant strategy for this season of all-star returning players. Not only did we get to watch the villains try to out-villain each other, but we also watched as the heroes considered their methods and play around with the villain role a bit this time around," while also adding that season's players "were the cream of the crop," and that, "Usually, contestants get to decide for themselves which side they belong on, but this season was a chance to prove whether these players were worth the title of hero or villain and if they would change sides if the opportunity presented itself." In 2024, Nick Caruso of
TVLine ranked this season 2nd out of 47. Critics considered the season to be a strong contender for the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Reality-Competition Program at the
62nd Primetime Emmy Awards, but it was not nominated.
Newsweek,
IGN,
The Hollywood Reporter, and
Entertainment Weekly all listed this pass up as one of the biggest Emmy snubs for the year. In the official
CBS Watch issue commemorating the 15th anniversary of
Survivor,
Heroes vs. Villains performed extremely well across all six major polls that were held: It was voted by viewers as the #1 greatest season of the series; Sandra's burning of Russell's hat in the final episode was voted as the #1 most memorable moment, and Parvati handing out two immunity idols in the 10th episode was #8 on the same list (thus making this the only season to have more than one entry in that particular list); five of the top ten contestants voted by viewers as the greatest were in this season (Mariano, Hantz, Shallow, Diaz-Twine, and Fields); the final immunity challenge of the season was voted as the #5 most unforgettable challenge; In a 2015 interview, Jeff Probst admitted that, if
Borneo is not taken into consideration, then
Heroes vs. Villains ties with
Cagayan as his personal favorite
Survivor season. ==References==