After watching “1883” and “1923,” you’ll find yourself reinterpreting every conflict in “Yellowstone.”
The Significance of Viewing Order: Placing a Cowboy Hat in Sheridan’s Universe
If we imagine the “Yellowstone Universe” as a wide, dusty road, then “1883,” “1923,” and “Yellowstone” are the signposts standing along the way: each tells you where you’ve come from, where you’re headed, and why you might be caught in the rain halfway. People often ask me: Where should I start watching? I always think of that unshaded lamp in Edward Hopper’s paintings; from near to far, the light gradually pushes back the darkness, illuminating the fate of each character before your eyes. For anyone stepping onto this road for the first time, my advice is simple—start from the beginning and move forward in time: watch “1883” first, then “1923,” and finally return to “Yellowstone.”
This isn’t about some academic obsession with chronology; it’s about giving those hard-won choices made in the Montana wind enough “echo time.” One practical benefit of this order is that, in the US, you can watch “Yellowstone” in its entirety on Peacock, while “1883,” “1923,” and “Landman” are concentrated on Paramount+ (availability varies by country/region, so check your local platforms before watching). Of course, you could also watch by release order: start with “Yellowstone,” meet that cowboy in the flashbacks (yes, Tim McGraw’s cameo), and then go back to fill in “1883” and “1923.” Many fans prefer this approach, calling it “fall in love with the present, then trace back to the beginning”—like a romance that walks backward through time.
But I still favor the chronological order, because what truly fascinates in Sheridan’s universe isn’t the triumphs of today, but the debts of the past—the old vows and obligations that cast shadows across the family tree.
The First Lamp: “1883” is like a letter sent to the future.
Wagons, dust, valleys, and graves—the camera seems to archive every footprint along the way. You witness the origins of the Dutton family; they did not arrive in Montana as owners, but as migrants, burying loved ones as they journeyed through a landscape of love and loss. After finishing these ten episodes, you may find yourself reflecting:
why does the question of “who owns the land” carry such a stubborn intensity in later stories? The answer lies in every crease of that slow letter.
If Paramount+ is available in your region, “1883” is an exclusive streaming series, and you can watch the entire season once subscribed.
I always remember those choices made without alternatives. In “1883,” death comes slowly, the wind is harsh, love arrives late but never leaves. This isn’t the exhilarating Western we’re used to; it’s a hard-edged frontier, fully embodying the quiet resilience spoken of by ancestors. Afterward, listen again to those seemingly simple conversations in “Yellowstone,” and you’ll suddenly realize:
in this universe, silence is a language.

The Second Lamp: “1923”—The Threshold of the Modern World
Mining districts and capital. In “1923,” what the Dutton family strives to protect is not only their own ranch, but also a way of life that industrialization and the law are trying to redraw. You will witness Jacob and Cara’s steadfastness, and Spencer and Alexandra’s love drifting between oceans and continents—a romance both passionate and cruel, like a horse that will never reach shore. Why must you watch “1923” before returning to “Yellowstone”? Because many of the family decisions that later seem inevitable were already laid out in the 1920s: the loopholes in the law, the cost of violence, the ambiguities and certainties of bloodline. In 2025, the second season of “1923” will air and conclude on Paramount+, so you can now watch both seasons in one go. Without giving away spoilers, all I can say is that at the end of season two, love and bloodline are set on the same table—amid the wreckage, no one leaves unscathed. When you return to “Yellowstone” and witness the confrontations, silences, and revenge of adulthood, you’ll understand that ancestral debts are not settled at the gravestone. Paramount+ remains the primary streaming platform (with possible local partnerships in different regions).

The Third Lamp: “Yellowstone”—The Frontier of Modern Times
At last, we return to the present. In “Yellowstone,” the landscape is no longer just a backdrop; it is imbued with the force of law: easements, mineral rights, trusts, tribal lands, development plans—each term has the potential to ignite a war. What Sheridan excels at most is still character: Beth’s sharpness, Jamie’s self-destruction, John’s silence, Kayce’s dilemma between family and tribe. Here, you witness a complete cross-section of the modern frontier—not at customs, not at borders, but between every deed and ancestral grave. For American viewers, the entire series of “Yellowstone” is now available to stream on Peacock. If you have journeyed from “1883” and “1923” to this point, in a sense, you have completed a long march from myth to institution: at first you saw wind and horses; in the end, you see contracts and consequences.

Side Light Extra: “Landman”—Oil and Salt, Power and Desire
Why place “Landman” at the edge of this universe? Because it acts as a sidelight, illuminating the industrialized arena where resources and power collide: West Texas, shale oil, mergers, negotiations, accidents, family. It doesn’t share the same geographic coordinates as the Duttons’ ranch, but when it comes to the core question of how land is consumed, they are of the same species. For those looking to expand their exploration of Sheridan’s world, “Landman” is available on Paramount+; the second season is officially set to return on November 16, 2025. Treat it as a supplementary lesson in contemporary resource politics—it will deepen your understanding of certain positions and obsessions in “Yellowstone.”
Why recommend watching in chronological order?
The answer is simple: it’s about emotional progression and the unfolding of causality. On the timeline, “1883” turns the acquisition of land into an adventure; “1923” transforms holding onto land into an institutionalized struggle; by the time we reach “Yellowstone,” land as identity escalates into a confrontation with modernity. You could also think of it as three colors: brown, iron gray, and jet black—each shade deepening the last. If you care more about dramatic tension, you can start with “Yellowstone,” and once you’re familiar with the characters, circle back to the two prequels to fill in the emotional gaps. In any case, these viewing paths have been discussed repeatedly in the media and by fans, so you can choose whichever suits your taste.
Friendly Reminder for Platforms and Regions
- China region: As of 2025, all seasons of “Yellowstone” are available on Peacock; “1883,” “1923,” and “Landman” are on Paramount+. Rights and release dates vary by region, so please refer to your local platforms for accurate information.
- If you’re planning a companion rewatch, consider treating the second season of “1923” as an echo chamber—listen to it again. In those years, the sounds of love and violence were strikingly similar; both could push a person over the edge.
Ending: When you turn off the TV, remember to hang that hat back on the wall.
The most captivating aspect of Sheridan’s stories has never been the guns, but the silence.
The older generation upholds their home through unspoken words, while the younger generation learns to survive without forgiveness. When you follow this journey in order and look back on the first time you saw Darby’s snow, the dust of Fort Worth, and the waves on the African sea, you’ll realize: the West isn’t just to the west—it exists in every moment you make a choice.
Program note: Streaming information mentioned in this article is based on official platform pages; availability may vary by country or region.