Superman hit digital platforms on Friday, and fans quickly took to X (formerly Twitter) to share their thoughts.
The response has been split — similar to the theatrical release — some praising it as the Superman movie they’ve been waiting for, while others used the release to double down on criticism.
Positive Reactions: “The Hero We’ve Been Waiting For”
We asked Grok to summarize the reactions on X to the Superman 2025 digital release since Friday.
According to Grok, approximately 40% of the sampled posts leaned positively. Fans celebrated the chance to rewatch at home, highlighting the film’s comic book style, bright visuals, and emotional story.
Highlights:
- David Corenswet’s Superman and Nicholas Hoult’s Lex Luthor drew strong praise.
- Krypto stole the spotlight for many viewers.
- Some users said the film felt like the Superman we needed right now and bought it digitally to watch multiple times.
For these fans, the early release made the movie more accessible and gave them more chances to share edits and clips online.
Superman 2025 was as good as people said it was.
— bint ♨️🐧 (@NBinted) August 17, 2025
To the extent a blockbuster superhero movie can be, it's the exact kind of hopecore that hits during bleak times like these. It's hopeful and positive in spite of knowing it's hard to be that right now. And that's powerful.
Negative Reactions: “A 5/10 Stinker”
Roughly 35% of posts were critical, with detractors calling Superman overrated or even a flop.
- Grok specifically pointed out that one user dismissed it as a “5/10 stinker.”
- Others accused Warner Bros. of rushing it to digital as proof of weak box office legs ($588.7M worldwide total as of Friday, well under Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel).
- Some argued “hate watchers” were overanalyzing every scene, mocking standout moments as “garbage.”
For these fans, the digital release added fuel to ongoing skepticism about James Gunn’s new DCU.
Nahhhh the reviews for this movie were bought. Superman 2025 is a 5/10 STINKER!!!!
— Exclusive Banks🤴🏾 (@bandile_banks) August 16, 2025
Superman drops on digital and the hate watchers go through the entire movie front to back just to quote one of the coolest scenes in the movie as garbage. https://t.co/UHmZ9gMfqA
— Dripsoup (@Choco_Jello) August 16, 2025
Neutral Takes: Industry Norm
About 15% of posts took a neutral stance, pointing out that blockbuster movies now move to digital quickly (Jurassic World Rebirth also hit digital in 35 days).
To them, the shift wasn’t a signal of failure, just standard in today’s fast-paced release cycle. A few users said it shows how films get consumed and forgotten faster than ever.
Mixed and Polarized Reactions
The remaining 10% were mixed. Some enjoyed rewatching but were frustrated by the toxic discourse. Others focused less on Superman itself and more on what its release means for the upcoming Peacemaker Season 2 and the larger DCU rollout.
It’s something I just responded to, that after watching that first trailer, I knew going in the flick would be less of a “Superman” movie and more of a DCU film. I’m okay with that.
I knew that from watching the first trailer. It was more of DCU movie than 'Superman.' I'm okay with that.
— Cosmic Book News (@cosmicbooknews) August 17, 2025

The Controversy
What’s being debated is whether Superman can really be called a commercial and critical success.
The film’s $588.7M box office is well below The Batman ($772M) and won’t touch Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel ($670.1M, unadjusted for inflation).
Gunn is also taking heat for claiming the early digital release was part of a strategy to tie directly into Peacemaker Season 2 (August 21) — a reason most fans aren’t buying.
Comparisons to Batman Begins or Iron Man only work if Gunn’s Supergirl somehow crosses a billion, which is unlikely, and let’s be honest, it’s even less likely to match Superman’s haul.
On top of that, Gunn is already developing another DCU movie — not Superman 2. The question is whether this next project has any shot at approaching the billion-dollar mark, as well.