Don’t worry if you missed the Breaking Bad season premiere last night, or really the continuation of the previous season, because we’ve compiled plenty of recap and review details. The popular drug dealing show on AMC kicked off its sixth season last night but as noted by the show’s creators, the final season is technically broken up into two parts, the second of which graced the airwaves last night.

As expected, the series picked up right where it left off last night with meth cooking chemistry teacher Walter White’s (played by Bryan Cranston) brother in law Hank, a detective for the DEA, realizing that White goes by the dealer alias Heisenberg and needs to be investigated ASAP. So naturally Hank places a GPS tracker on White’s car which sets up for a very tense confrontation later in the episode. But the big question mark remains as to whether White can break free of the meth game or stay in now that his cancer may have come back.

Check out this 3 minute Breaking Bad recap from the Daily Beast:

But don’t take my short summary as reason enough to watch the season 6 premiere. Check out these reviews from the pros:

Tim GoodmanHollywood Reporter: “Who knows if the final eight episodes will be one heavyweight championship fight after another between Walt and Hank, but we all knew it was coming, and when there’s no longer any point for either man to deny the obvious, look the hell out…And give [Dean] Norris a ton of credit, because when he finally comes face to face with the truth, his fine acting goes off the chart, and, playing off of Cranston’s own brilliance, causes a million goose bumps to rise on the viewer.”

Michael Starr, New York Post: “Creator Vince Gilligan and the show’s cast have described these final eight episodes as a “freight train,” and, if Sunday night’s season premiere is any indication, the gloves are off — an apt metaphor for Walt (Bryan Cranston) and his brother-in-law, DEA agent Hank Schrader (Dean Norris), now circling each other like wary boxers after last summer’s stunning, season-ending revelation.”

Maureen Ryan, Huffington Post: “When a great show enters its home stretch, it’s impossible not to be nervous about the ending, but Breaking Bad reminds me of The Shield, in that it seems to work harder to satisfy and to earn every single moment and plot twist the closer it gets to the end.”