Black Mirror, the Brit anthology sci-fi horror series that’s notorious for pegging technology as a culprit for all our woes is back for a fifth season on Netflix, announced the streaming service on Monday.

There’s no indication when the series will return or how many episodes will constitute a full season. The fourth installment that rolled out in December enthralled fans with six episodes. The first season, when it debuted in 2011 on UK’s Channel Four and was eventually picked up by Netflix four years later, had only three.

But what the show lacked in quantity, it more than made up for in quality, particularly when it explored the dark side of people’s obsession with technology. The most recent season included an episode called U.S.S. Callister, a campy send-up of the original Star Trek series that turns out to be a fantasy sideline project for a video games developer whose manipulations of the venture went south once the video characters rebelled against him. A Jodie Foster-directed episode called Arkangel explored the hazards of "helicopter parenting," in which parents could monitor their children's whereabouts via chip implants.

The show, created by Charlie Brooker, who previously created a series for UK audiences called How To Ruin Your Life, was indirectly influenced by The Twilight Zone, a suspense-oriented CBS show that ran during the '50s and '60s. But while The Twilight Zone used science fiction and the supernatural to shock its audiences, Brooker found that the whole idea of man versus machine, especially with the advances of technology and social media, would serve as an ideal premise to hold an audience in rapt fascination.

It worked. Black Mirror debuted with The National Anthem, a risque episode that saw YouTube audiences watching the lengths a British Prime Minister would go towards saving the life of an abducted princess, including having sex with a live pig.

When the show was finally streamed to U.S. audiences, reaction went through the roof, with the series since winning two Emmys and attracting high-profile actors like Mad Men hunk John Hamm, Get Out star Daniel Kaluuya, and Breaking Bad's Jesse Plemons.