I had a dream where I was playing Multiversus, and they implemented a new system where the game had command inputs, but it was also like a card game - you fought in front of a deck of cards, and cards would unveil with inputs on them for you to enter and then use, but would disappear and take away your ability to do that input - it was really complicated but also really fun. I played as the Iron Giant and IIRC my opponent was Johnny Test's dad. That being said, the surrounding dream was quite nightmarish, since I was in a French Disneyland the size of a gas station, where all the rides are dangerously lumped next to one another.
I feel that the show (which mind you, was marketed as a direct sequel of the 80s He-Man cartoon) tried waaaaay too hard to be "Dark and mature" in a setting of the franchise which just doesn't work for It.
What got me the most was that they made Cringer (the Scooby-Doo stand-in of the original show, that being a cowardly speaking animal) make an attempt at a serious motivational speech... And I did ironically laugh because I found It too out of nowhere.
If they did market It as its own thing or a sequel to that 2003 Masters Of The Universe cartoon, then yeah, I would have been more on board with It. But the way they made It, I think they tried too much to Zack Sniderize an 80s cartoon which wasn't meant to be in that style.
Also, before anyone says anything. No, there's nothing wrong with them changing the main character role towards a new character. The show is called Masters Of The Universe Revelations, not He-Man and The Masters Of The Universe Revelations. And if your problem is that the new main character is a girl... Please grow up.