Fans who had binged the original 22-episode seasons (Seasons 1–3) and the 24-episode Season 4 were eager to know just how much time they would be spending back in the world of intricate escape plans and conspiracy. The answer, however, was surprising.

For the network, the math worked. The 9-episode season drew solid ratings (the premiere had 3.8 million live viewers) and gave the series a definitive, albeit smaller-scale, ending. Prison Break Season 5 proved that sometimes less is more. While it lacks the sprawling, twist-filled marathons of the early seasons, its 9 episodes offer a complete, high-stakes story that resurrected Michael Scofield without overstaying its welcome. For new viewers binging the series, Season 5 feels less like a full season and more like a long, satisfying epilogue.

When Prison Break aired its fourth season in 2009, it ended with a television movie titled The Final Break , giving fans closure as Michael Scofield seemingly sacrificed himself to save his wife, Sara. For seven years, that was the end of the story.

By 2017, television had changed. The era of 22-episode seasons was fading for dramas, replaced by shorter, cinematic "prestige" seasons. Fox chose to treat the revival as a closed-ended story, akin to a long movie broken into parts. The goal was quality over quantity, avoiding the "filler" episodes that plagued the original run.