4. "Kaguya-sama: Love is War" season 2 — Tokyo MX/Funimation, April 11
Description: "Known for being both brilliant and powerful, Miyuki Shirogane and Kaguya Shinomiya lead the illustrious Shuchiin Academy as near equals. And everyone thinks they'd make a great couple. Pride and arrogance are in ample supply, so the only logical move is to trick the other into instigating a date! Who will come out on top in this psychological war where the first move is the only one that matters?"
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A
What critics said: N/A
3. "My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU" season 3 — Tokyo Broadcasting System, April 10
Description: "When the loner Hachiman Hikigaya is coerced into joining the 'Services Club' run by the smart, attractive, and stuck up Yukino Yukinoshita, it's a recipe for disaster! But we haven't yet added the third caustic ingredient! Bright and cheery Yui Yuigahama needs the Service Club's help to bake cookies. It could be a recipe for romance. It could just as easily end in a nuclear meltdown! Get ready for romantic comedy gone totally wrong as the barrage À trois of the Service Club is unleashed!"
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A
What critics said: N/A
2. "After Life" season 3 — Netflix, April 24
Description: "Struggling to come to terms with his wife's death, a writer for a newspaper adopts a gruff new persona in an effort to push away those trying to help."
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 72% (season 1)
What critics said: "After Life does come across as Gervais' most autobiographical work to date, but the writer, director, and star actually tells a sweet, earnest story about learning when and why to shut the hell up." — Indiewire
1. "Killing Eve" season 3 — BBC America/AMC, April 12
Description: "Killing Eve is the story of two women, bound by a mutual obsession and one brutal act: Eve, an MI6 operative, and Villanelle, the beautiful, psychopathic assassin that she has been tasked to find."
Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 93% (season 2)
What critics said: "The new episodes reverberate with a sense of humor that's absurd, bleak, and distinctly British." — The Atlantic (season 2)