First the prison, then the Governor, now Alexandria. What is Rick Grimes to do this time around?

​Cable’s biggest show about zombies (which also happens to be cable’s biggest show) returns Sunday, Oct. 11, along with its popular after-show, Talking Dead.

As everyone catches up on previous seasons this week on Netflix, re-live The Walking Dead’s effective key art and moving main titles throughout the years.

Season 1: Prologue created The Walking Dead’s first two seasons’ opening title sequences, offering small hints about the story and even more about where each character came from. Key art featured a desolated Atlanta after the outbreak, introducing Rick Grimes as a lone warrior.

Season 2: Grimes runs away from the second season key art, toward the mysterious house that will serve as the setting for awhile before the group takes off once again.

Season 3: The Walking Dead updated its title sequence for season three, this time by yU+co. Season three also offered new key art featuring a deadly Grimes at the prison.

Season 4: An angry Grimes stars in the fourth season’s key art, this time at the prison that has seen its share of disaster and tragedy.

Season 5: The fifth season got another show open update, cleverly playing off the theme of the show’s main titles, adding a few hints about dangers to come while reminding viewers where the group has been (and the terrors they have seen). The season’s key art played on the cannibal theme, with the tagline “Hunt or Be Hunted.”

Season 6: The upcoming sixth season, premiering Oct. 11, is back at Alexandria, with Grimes and his group struggling with issues of violence and leadership.

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