Netflix is going heavy on nostalgia this June, and it’s the kind of drop that’s likely to catch both longtime fans and people who are just curious what the hype is about. A cult ’90s animated comedy series is landing on the platform in a pretty big way next month, bundling together classic episodes and newer revival seasons all in one release.
This is a clear sign Netflix is leaning further into older animated favorites, especially ones that still have a strong following, while also banking on newer seasons that bring those shows into the present day for a different generation of viewers.
Arriving on the platform on Tuesday, June 16, 2026, is Beavis and Butt-Head: The Mike Judge Collection Vol. 1–3. This is a curated multi-volume set that compiles standout episodes from the original MTV run of the series. These volumes are widely considered a “best-of” style collection, hand-selected under the supervision of creator Mike Judge. They also highlight some of the most recognizable moments from the show’s early years.
Alongside the classic compilation, Netflix is also adding Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head seasons 1 and 2 on June 16. It’s the modern revival era of the franchise. These newer seasons continue the story of the iconic duo as they navigate a world that has changed dramatically around them, while they themselves remain exactly as clueless and chaotic as ever. The revival brings the characters into the 2020s, where they encounter modern technology, social media culture, and viral internet content.
Putting both releases together basically turns Netflix into a one-stop spot for just about every era of the franchise. If you grew up watching it on MTV, The Mike Judge Collection is a straight throwback to those early ’90s episodes. On the other side, the modern revival shows what happens when you drop the same characters into a completely different world. Everything around them has changed, but Beavis and Butt-Head really haven’t. That’s kind of the joke. They’re still the same clueless duo, just dealing with a culture that looks nothing like it used to.
If you’ve never seen Beavis and Butt-Head before, it’s pretty easy to understand why it became so popular. The animated series is about two teenage boys, Beavis and Butt-Head, who are completely out of their depth in just about every situation. They don’t think things through, they don’t really learn from mistakes, and they almost always make things worse without even realizing it. A lot of the comedy comes from watching that pattern repeat over and over again.
What made the original run stand out, especially in the ’90s, was how tied it was to MTV’s identity at the time. The music video segments included in the show were part of the experience. Beavis and Butt-Head would watch real videos and comment on them in a way that felt both absurd and weirdly honest. It turned the show into something more than just a cartoon.
In the modern revival, that concept shifts to fit the internet age. Instead of music videos, the duo now reacts to whatever is trending online. It keeps the structure familiar but updates the content to match how people actually watch and share media now. The result is something that feels both new and familiar at the same time, which is probably why the show still works after all these years.
Putting both the classic collection and the revival seasons together in one Netflix drop is what makes this release really stand out. It gives viewers a chance to see how the series started, how it evolved, and how little its core actually changed in the process. The characters are still the same, the humor is still built around misunderstanding and chaos, and the world around them is still the thing doing most of the changing.
In a way, that’s why this show has lasted as long as it has. It doesn’t rely on reinvention. What it relies on is consistency. Everything else moves forward, but Beavis and Butt-Head stay exactly where they’ve always been. And somehow, that’s still enough.
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