Matthew McConaughey in "True Detective" Season 1
HBO

Every Season of 'True Detective,' Ranked

Ten years and a handful of Emmys later, here's the best season of HBO's 'True Detective.'

HBO's "True Detective" Season 4, which stars Jodie Foster and premieres Jan. 14 on HBO and Max, is the best-reviewed installment in the show's 10-year history. It currently has a perfect Rotten Tomatoes score, making it the most critically-acclaimed season since the show's Emmy-winning debut in 2014.

That's saying a lot. "True Detective" Season 1 elevated the modern true crime genre and ushered in the McConaissance. Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey, who still serve as executive producers on the series, brought their Texan cool and movie-star charisma to the small screen and made TV a worthy playground for serious actors. Series creator Nic Pizzolato became known for his existentialist, if sometimes unwieldy, dialogue. And Cary Fukunaga, who directed every episode of Season 1, made a meal out of every sickly bayou and heart-pounding action sequence.

But, overall, "True Detective" has been a mixed bag. It's an anthology series, so each installment is animated by an all-new cast and story. Season 2 starred Colin Farrell and Rachel McAdams as a couple of hard-boiled detectives in a crime-ridden cesspool of a city. In Season 3, Mahershala Ali investigated an unsolved case into his old age. Now, Jodie Foster takes the reigns in a chilly Alaskan mystery—dubbed "True Detective: Night Country"—with tantalizing connections to Season 1.

Below, we run it back on the last decade of "True Detective," ranking the first three seasons from worst to best. A general rule for this show: When it's good, it's amazing. When it's bad, it's aggressively so. No half measures here!

"True Detective: Night Country" premieres Sunday, Jan. 14 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and Max. The first three seasons are currently streaming on Max.

READ MORE: What Are Those Crooked Spirals That Keep Popping Up in 'True Detective'?