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The longest season yet, and its first rematch.
Twenty-five episodes tops Nashville's record by two. Denver pushes the format further than any season before it — in runtime, in panel shape, and in a rematch mechanic the show had never tried.
A rhythm worth tracking.
Denver runs twenty-five episodes, breaking Nashville's record by two and stretching the season past six months. The panel narrows back to three — DeVon Franklin exits, leaving Schwartz, Roberson, and Holec at the table for the first time since San Diego. The season also introduces something the format has never tried: a mid-experiment rematch, after one bride's ceremony doesn't go as planned and production pairs her groom with a new participant partway through.
The #05 slot.
Slot #05 of 19 in the Married at First Sight Editor's Canon. Denver stacks three structural bets into one season, more than any entry ranked so far. Twenty-five episodes breaks Nashville's record by two, stretching the format's runtime bet even further. The panel narrows from four experts back to three — DeVon Franklin exits, leaving Schwartz, Roberson, and Holec at the table for the first time since San Diego. And partway through, the show tries something it never has before: a rematch, pairing a new participant with one groom after his original match's ceremony doesn't go as planned. No single one of these would be remarkable alone. Stacked together, they make Denver the most genuinely unpredictable season since the founding panel broke up.