Cobra Kai Series 1-6 (6-Disc Blu-ray Box Set ) New Sealed All Region
Summary
Six seasons. A complete arc. From a YouTube show nobody expected to survive, to a Netflix giant, to… this. The final box set. Cobra Kai somehow took a forty‑year‑old movie about a crane kick and turned it into a genuinely moving story about mentorship, revenge, and whether people can actually change. Season 1 feels almost small now—Johnny Lawrence redeeming himself one kid at a time. By Season 6, you’ve got dojo wars, overseas tournaments, and characters who’ve flipped sides so many times you lose count. Does it get ridiculous? Absolutely. There’s a moment in Season 5 where someone survives a fall that should have broken every bone. But here’s the thing: the show knows it’s ridiculous. It leans in. And somehow, it still makes you care about whether Miguel and Robby finally get along, or if Daniel can ever truly let go of Mr. Miyagi’s shadow. The final season wraps things up a little too neatly for my taste—I wanted one more unexpected betrayal—but it’s satisfying. You’ll cry at the last episode. I did. Don’t tell anyone.
Details
- Format: Blu-ray (Region Free)
- Stars: Ralph Macchio, William Zabka, Courtney Henggeler, Xolo Maridueña, Tanner Buchanan, Mary Mouser, Jacob Bertrand, Gianni DeCenzo, Peyton List
- Genre: Martial arts drama, coming‑of‑age, nostalgia bomb, sports comedy‑drama
- Run time: Approx. 2,100 minutes (65 episodes across 6 seasons)
Parents Guide
- Violence & Gore: Frequent martial arts fights. Punches, kicks, throws into walls. Some bloody noses and split lips. No gore or weapons (mostly fists and feet).
- Threat & Horror: Mild. Bullying, intimidation, dojo rivalries. No horror elements.
- Sexual Violence: None.
- Profanity: Moderate. “S**t,” “damn,” “hell,” occasional “bitch.” Very rare “f**k” (maybe once or twice across all seasons).
- Injury Detail: Bruises, bloody lips, a broken arm (offscreen), someone uses a wheelchair temporarily. Nothing graphic.
- Flashing Images: Tournament lights, some quick fight cuts. Nothing that should cause issues.
Who will like it
Anyone who grew up on The Karate Kid and isn’t afraid of feeling old. Also great for teenagers who like underdog stories and choreographed fights. If you’ve ever shouted “QUIET!” at a screen or practiced a kick in your living room, this is your show. Honestly, it’s for anyone who wants to believe that people—even the ones who were jerks in high school—can turn things around.






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