In the world of Landman, trust has always been more dangerous than oil.

Taylor Sheridan and Christian Wallaceโ€™s West Texas drama has officially been renewed for Season 3, and while Paramount+ has not yet released a full plot synopsis for the next chapter, the pieces left behind by Season 2 suggest one thing clearly: Tommy Norris may be walking into the most personal war of his life. The showโ€™s third season is currently one of Paramount+โ€™s most anticipated returns, especially after Season 2 delivered record-breaking numbers for the streamer.

Billy Bob Thorntonโ€™s Tommy has survived oil-field disasters, corporate pressure, family chaos, criminal shadows, and the kind of moral compromises that would break a cleaner man. But Season 3 could push him into a colder kind of danger โ€” not from enemies he can see coming, but from the people standing closest to him.

Because the chilling question now hanging over Landman is simple:

What happens when everyone Tommy trusts has a reason to betray him?

Tommy Norris Is Free โ€” But Freedom May Be the Most Dangerous Position Yet

Season 2 left Tommy in a changed position. After years of operating inside the machinery of M-Tex, Tommyโ€™s future now appears more open, more unstable, and far more dangerous. Reports on the Season 2 finale noted that Tommy is no longer tied to M-Tex in the same way and may be positioned to build something new with Cooper, his son, after Cooperโ€™s own legal troubles and oil ambitions took major turns.

That sounds like freedom.

But in Landman, freedom rarely arrives without enemies.

Tommy knows too much. He has fixed too many problems, seen too many dirty deals, and carried too many secrets for too many powerful people. If he steps outside the old system, he does not become safe. He becomes unpredictable. And unpredictable men are often the first ones people try to control โ€” or remove.

That is where Season 3 could become darker than anything before it.

Tommy may not just have to ask who wants to hurt him.

He may have to ask who benefits if he falls.

Cooper May Be Tommyโ€™s Greatest Hope โ€” Or His Most Painful Liability

Cooper Norris could become the emotional center of Tommyโ€™s Season 3 crisis.

On one hand, Cooper represents legacy. He is the son who may finally build something with Tommy instead of simply standing in his shadow. His growing ambition in the oil business gives Tommy a reason to think there might still be a future worth fighting for.

But Cooper is also young, hungry, and vulnerable to the exact kind of promises that destroy men in West Texas.

If Season 3 follows Tommy and Cooper into a new oil venture, that partnership could become one of the showโ€™s most compelling pressure points. A father and son working together sounds hopeful โ€” until money, pride, and outside influence start pulling them in different directions.

Cooper does not need to become Tommyโ€™s enemy to betray him.

He only needs to make one deal Tommy warned him not to make.

He only needs to trust one person Tommy knows is dangerous.

He only needs to believe, for one reckless moment, that he can win the oil game without becoming like his father.

Cami Miller May Have the Power Tommy Needs โ€” And the Leverage to Destroy Him

Cami Miller remains one of the most interesting figures in Tommyโ€™s orbit.

Demi Mooreโ€™s character entered the series through grief, inheritance, and corporate responsibility, but she has never been simply a widow standing beside the story. By Season 2, Cami had become a powerful decision-maker whose relationship with Tommy was loaded with tension, dependence, and mistrust.

That dynamic could explode in Season 3.

If Tommy is moving away from M-Tex or building something beyond its control, Cami may see him as a threat. Not because she hates him, but because she understands his value. Tommy knows the field. He knows the people. He understands how oil money really moves. A man like that is useful until he is independent.

And once he is independent, he becomes competition.

That is the kind of betrayal Landman does best. Not emotional betrayal for dramaโ€™s sake, but business betrayal born from survival. Cami may respect Tommy. She may even need him. But if protecting her company means cutting him loose again, Season 3 could force her to make the coldest decision yet.

Angela Could Become Tommyโ€™s Weakest Point

Tommyโ€™s personal life has always been chaotic, but Angela gives the show something more complicated than simple domestic drama.

Ali Larterโ€™s Angela is not just Tommyโ€™s romantic partner. She is part of the messy emotional world he keeps trying to manage while everything around him burns. Their relationship can be funny, volatile, intimate, and exhausting โ€” exactly the kind of relationship that makes Tommy feel human when the oil business tries to turn him into a machine.

That also makes Angela dangerous as a pressure point.

If Tommy is entering a new war in Season 3, anyone who wants to reach him may look first at the people he loves. Angela does not have to betray Tommy intentionally to become part of the danger. She could be manipulated. She could be offered information. She could make a decision meant to protect the family that ends up exposing him.

In Landman, love is not separate from business.

Love is where enemies find leverage.

Gallinoโ€™s Shadow Still Feels Too Big to Ignore

Andy Garciaโ€™s Gallino brought a different kind of threat into Landman: smooth, dangerous, and impossible to separate from the money surrounding the oil patch. His connection to Cooperโ€™s story added a darker criminal pressure to the series, reminding viewers that West Texas oil is not only shaped by executives and roughnecks.

It is also shaped by people who understand how money, fear, and protection work outside the clean lines of the law.

If Gallino remains part of Season 3โ€™s world, he could become one of the key figures pulling Tommy and Cooper apart. A man like Gallino does not always need open violence. Sometimes he only needs to offer opportunity.

That is what makes him so dangerous.

He can make a trap look like a favor.

He can make betrayal look like good business.

The Real Enemy May Be the System Tommy Helped Protect

The most brutal version of Season 3 would not reveal one single traitor.

It would reveal that everyone is trapped inside a system that makes betrayal inevitable.

That has always been the deeper power of Landman. The show is not only about bad people doing bad things. It is about an industry where loyalty lasts only as long as it is profitable, where families survive on money that also poisons them, and where every man who thinks he is in control eventually discovers he is just another replaceable part of the machine.

Tommy has spent his life understanding that machine better than anyone.

But Season 3 could finally ask whether understanding the machine is enough to escape it.

If he builds something new with Cooper, M-Tex may come for him. If he stays loyal to old allies, Cooper may feel betrayed. If he protects Angela and the family, he may make a business mistake. If he chases power, he may lose the people who made power matter in the first place.

No choice will be clean.

That is exactly why Season 3 feels so dangerous.

A Season About Betrayal Would Be the Perfect Next Step

Paramount+ has not yet confirmed the full Season 3 storyline, and reports indicate that the official premiere date has not been announced. Recent updates also suggest the production timeline has shifted, with filming reportedly delayed from earlier expectations, which could affect whether the season arrives in late 2026 or moves into 2027.

But narratively, a betrayal-driven season makes perfect sense.

Season 1 established the world. Season 2 expanded the power structure. Season 3 can now turn the knife inward.

The strongest drama for Tommy is no longer just another external enemy. It is the slow realization that the people around him are all carrying motives, wounds, debts, ambitions, and fears that could make them turn.

Cooper wants independence.

Cami wants control.

Angela wants security.

Gallino wants influence.

M-Tex wants survival.

And Tommy wants to believe he can still see betrayal coming before it reaches his front door.

That may be his biggest mistake.

Tommy Norris May Be Standing in the Center of a Trap

The genius of Landman is that it does not need to make everyone evil. It only needs to make everyone desperate.

Desperate people lie.

Desperate people take deals.

Desperate people protect themselves first and apologize later.

That is the world Tommy Norris knows better than anyone โ€” and the world Season 3 may finally turn against him.

When Landman returns, the next chapter may not be about whether Tommy can survive the oil business. He has already proved he can. The real question is whether he can survive the people who know exactly where he is vulnerable.

Because in West Texas, betrayal does not always begin with a gun, a threat, or a slammed door.

Sometimes it begins with someone Tommy trusts saying, โ€œI had no other choice.โ€