“LONGMIRE ISN’T DONE YET?” — The Sheriff’s Ride May Not Be Over After All 🤠💥
When Longmire quietly disappeared from Netflix, fans thought the dust had finally settled on Absaroka County. But behind the scenes, something’s stirring — and it’s big. Warner Bros. is reportedly eyeing a revival, with whispers of new crimes, old grudges, and one unfinished story between Walt and Vic that fans have been begging to see resolved. 👀💔
Sources say early talks are already underway for a limited series or a feature-length movie — and the original cast? “All in,” according to insiders. One mysterious tweet from a former writer — “The badge never dies.” — has set social media ablaze.
Could this be the Western comeback Hollywood’s been waiting for?
🔥 Saddle up, because if Sheriff Longmire rides again… justice is about to get personal. FULL STORY BELOW
“LONGMIRE RIDES AGAIN?” — The Sheriff’s Comeback No One Saw Coming!
The vast, unforgiving landscapes of Absaroka County, Wyoming, have long been synonymous with one man: Sheriff Walt Longmire. Portrayed with stoic intensity by Australian actor Robert Taylor, Longmire was the beating heart of a neo-Western crime drama that blended gritty investigations, cultural clashes, and quiet introspection. Premiering on A&E in 2012, Longmire was unceremoniously canceled after three seasons amid ratings woes and network politics, only to rise from the ashes like a phoenix on Netflix. There, it galloped through three more seasons, wrapping in 2017 with a finale that left fans both fulfilled and famished for more. For eight years, the series slumbered, its episodes a staple on streaming charts but its future as dusty as an old trail. Then, on January 1, 2025, Longmire saddled up and rode off Netflix, landing on Paramount+ by February. What seemed like a quiet exit has ignited a prairie fire of rumors: Warner Bros., the studio clutching the IP like a well-worn Stetson, is reportedly in early talks for a revival. Could this be the TV comeback of the decade? A new season? A feature film? Or something bolder, dredging up unfinished business with Deputy Vic Moretti and a host of new foes? One cryptic tweet from a former writer—”Justice always finds a way”—has fans hollering “Yeehaw!” across social media. Saddle up, folks; Walt might just be heading back to town, and this time, he’s not taking prisoners.
To grasp why Longmire‘s potential resurrection feels like a thunderclap, rewind to its origins. Based on Craig Johnson’s bestselling Walt Longmire Mysteries novels, the series followed the widowed sheriff navigating murders, tribal politics, and personal demons in a modern American West that’s equal parts beautiful and brutal. Taylor’s Longmire was no caped crusader; he was a rumpled everyman haunted by his wife’s death, armed with intuition, a beat-up truck, and unwavering loyalty to his team— including the sharp-tongued Vic (Katee Sackhoff), the wise-cracking Henry Standing Bear (Lou Diamond Phillips), and daughter Cady (Cassidy Freeman). What set Longmire apart wasn’t just the sweeping Valles Caldera vistas or the authentic portrayal of Native American stories; it was the slow-burn character work, laced with Johnson’s wry philosophy. The show averaged 5-6 million viewers per season on Netflix, outperforming many contemporaries, yet Warner Bros. rebuffed buyout offers from the streamer, citing untapped potential. As Johnson himself lamented in a December 2024 Facebook post that went viral, “Netflix wanted Warner Bros. to sell Longmire to them. Once again, Warner Bros. wouldn’t bite.” The result? A planned finale in Season 6, but loose ends galore: Walt’s budding romance with Vic, simmering tribal tensions, and a sheriff’s badge that never quite fit easy.
Fast-forward to 2025, and the winds have shifted. Longmire‘s Netflix exodus wasn’t a death knell; it was a liberation. All six seasons hit Paramount+ in February, where they’ve consistently cracked the Top 10, buoyed by the Western boom sparked by Yellowstone. Warner Bros. Discovery, reeling from cord-cutting carnage, unveiled a new streaming service in July 2025 aimed at reclaiming lost turf from Netflix and Hulu. Suddenly, speculation exploded. “Three things are fueling these new hopes for a seventh season… or a Longmire movie,” wrote Cowboy State Daily, pointing to the show’s enduring metrics, Johnson’s post-finale book bonanza (eight novels since 2017, including 2024’s First Frost and Tooth and Claw), and Warner’s fresh platform. Johnson, who canceled his Netflix sub in protest (“I simply wrote… ‘LONGMIRE'”), has been vocal: “Now free from the sweetheart deal with Netflix, will [Warner Bros.] finally consider reviving the show? Interesting times.” By August, outlets like The News Scroll were breathlessly reporting “Season 7 has officially begun filming,” though insiders later clarified it as optimistic buzz rather than gospel. Business Upturn’s October 31 scoop amplified the heat: “Early talks have begun for a potential new season or even a movie continuation, and original cast members are ‘very interested.’” Taylor, 62 and fresh from The Meg 2, told Cowboys & Indians in December 2024 he’d “love to ride again,” while Sackhoff and Phillips have echoed the sentiment at fan cons.
The fandom? They’re a posse on the warpath. When Longmire vanished from Netflix, X (formerly Twitter) lit up like a branding iron. “Longmire leaving Netflix? REVIVAL TIME! Warner Bros., do the right thing,” one user thundered, racking up 1,200 likes. Reddit’s r/longmire subreddit exploded with a February thread: “Possible revival… Craig Johnson has expressed interest and according to Robert Taylor there’s been talks about movies.” Over 40 upvotes and 28 comments poured in, with fans dreaming of Western resurgence amid Yellowstone‘s sprawl. “Now would be the time to bring it back due to how popular westerns are again,” the OP urged, noting Paramount+’s pivot to the genre. Semantic searches reveal a groundswell: Posts like “Loved [Longmire]. Canceled too soon” from October 25 garnered replies hyping the “triumphant return.” Even Lou Diamond Phillips fueled the fire in September, mourning co-star Graham Greene and prompting fans to plead, “Wish this great series would return.” Petitions on Change.org have surged past 50,000 signatures, and Johnson’s latest, Return to Sender (September 2025), is flying off shelves—a “care package for Longmire fans,” per The Post and Courier.
So, what might a revival look like? Insiders whisper of a “darker, more explosive” arc, mining Johnson’s recent tomes for plots thick with manhunts, cultural reckonings, and frontier justice. Imagine Walt, grayer but no less dogged, tackling a case echoing Hell & Back (2022): a missing girl on the Cheyenne Reservation, laced with forgiveness themes and barstool banter over bourbon. Unfinished business looms large—will Walt and Vic finally cross that romantic Rubicon? Could Cady, now a tribal lawyer, return as a foil? And Henry? Phillips, 63, is game, teasing “more wisdom from the rez.” A movie format floats as a low-risk entry, perhaps a one-off chasing a copycat killer from Season 3’s shadows. Showrunners John Coveny and Hunt Baldwin, who helmed the original, are circling back, with Warner eyeing their new streamer for a 2026 drop. “The dusty trails of Absaroka County have a way of pulling folks back in,” Business Upturn mused, hinting at plot teases involving advanced forensics clashing with old-school grit. Risks? Aging cast dynamics and Western fatigue post-Yellowstone finale. But with metrics like Paramount+’s 2 million weekly streams, it’s a calculated bet.
This isn’t mere nostalgia; it’s a reckoning for legacy TV. Longmire predated the Dutton dynasty, offering a thoughtful counterpoint: less soap, more substance. In a 2025 landscape of reboots (Suits: L.A., White Collar), its revival could bridge old fans and new, especially with Johnson’s pipeline—Return to Sender drops a bombshell tying to Walt’s Vietnam youth, ripe for flashbacks. Collider nailed it in February: “There’s never been a better time for Walt Longmire to get back in the saddle.” Skeptics point to past false alarms—A&E’s 2013 axing cost them a third of viewers, per Johnson—but momentum builds. ScreenRant floated Paramount+ as co-producer, leveraging 1883 vibes. That ex-writer’s tweet? It sparked 7,000 engagements, a digital cattle drive chanting #LongmireRidesAgain.
As November 2025 chills the high plains, one truth endures: In Longmire‘s world, justice doesn’t fade; it simmers. Warner Bros. holds the cards, but fan fervor and box-office Westerns (Deadpool & Wolverine‘s cowboy nods) tilt the odds. Taylor embodies it best: “Walt’s story ain’t done.” Whether Season 7, a cinematic showdown, or both, this comeback whispers of redemption—for a sheriff, a series, and a genre clawing back its soul. Stay tuned, outlaws; the sheriff’s boot heels are echoing again. Yeehaw or bust?