Warning: This article contains major spoilers forSuccessionSeason 4.Successionjust aired its penultimate episode and is set to complete its run with an epic final episode on July 30, 2025. The series follows the Roy family, a fictional wealthy family that controls a major conglomerate that encompasses news, movie studios, theme parks, and cruises. As themega-hit HBO showhas evolved, viewers have seen characters go from malicious imps to ill-rehearsed samaritans right back to demanding Hell expand dig operations. Often, that fluctuating morality rests less in a given moment’s manufactured conscience and more in negligent lack of backstabbing.

Updated June 04, 2025: If you loveSuccession, you’ll be happy to know that this article has been updated byKelly Swiftwith additional content and entries about the Roy family.

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This list tries to award the Best Roy trophy to whichever member of the family would be last up to the guillotine: the Roy who has done the least harm (through choice, not availability), who pays any attention to leaving soil as salt-less as they found it, and who would even head the company without firebombing a tent city immediately. For the sake of cohesion and succinctness, Kendall’s children are not included — we don’t know enough about their morals and likely don’t want to. Here is every member of the Roy family, ranked from the worst to the best.

13Logan Roy

Logan Roy’s greatest talent is that he’s ludicrously successful without having actual talent. Every time Logan wants something, it routinely explodes: from buying Pierce to pressuring the Raisin out of the DOJ investigation to offering Kendall as a very different kind of jailbait, Logan accuses his children of failing him before ever addressing that he’s an awful businessman. His every win — from being purchased by GoJo to securing Caroline’s board powers to defeating the proxy war via Kendall’s resignation — comes at the behest of somebody else approaching him while he takes full credit.

Ultimately, Logan’s evil, his abusive tirades, and his flailing stream of lies are so powerful that he’s gotten his children, his employees, and even the viewers to believe he’s competent when in reality, he’s just grouchy. Even after his death, he’s still responsible for causing a divide between his children, ranking him as the least favorable Roy.

Kieran Culkin as Roman Roy in season 3 of HBO’s Succession (2018)

12Roman Roy

The apple doesn’t fall far from the forest fire.Roman Royis a spare child away from abusive fatherhood, his main obstacles being the timeline of Gerri’s uterus and a lack of paternal absence required to be directly abusive — Logan’s main benefactor in that area being sole custody. Roman will hold an impossible million dollars in a child’s nose, sexually harass the CEO, and maim an astronaut here and there.

He can gather incredible empathy for his naivety, his monumental phobia for his father, and even for his impoverishing Oedipal complex, but to claim that evil can’t derive from fear is a dismissal of the reality that every evil ever has derived from fear. Roman is willing to let democracy burn and is so disconnected from it as just good television. While he makes for an enjoyable and humorous character to watch, his traits are too close to his father’s, and there seems to be no limit to his immoral actions.

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11Caroline Collingwood

ShouldCarolinehave been burdened with motherhood after the divorce, the show would be centered around her abuse, not Logan’s. She shot down Kendall’s desperate and painful attempt at coming clean about Shiv’s wedding, she told Shiv that she wished she had dogs instead of children — at every possible opportunity, Caroline spews acid so caked in powdered sugar that it takes a moment to realize skin is dissolving. Ultimately, Caroline’s seeming lack of true evil comes from a lack of opportunity, but viewers have to admit that she does an incredible job with what resources she does have.

10Connor Roy

When every other child is caked in coal, it’s a feat to be the black sheep. Much ofConnor Roy’s desire to do wrong or right comes from what’s available to him, and even then, his inability to backstab provokes confusion as to whom Connor would ever have to backstab and why. Connor is Schrödinger’s Roy — he hasn’t yet emerged from his box—though there are more and more hints that that may happen soon: he’s attempting to build a libertarian cult, he accessorizes Willa as a beloved blankie, he has all the tools to become a Logan but seemingly none of the genetic venom.

Related:Succession: Who Will Run Waystar RoyCo at the End of the Series?

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His (for the most part) lack of evil isn’t because he’s good but because his only conscious decision in his life was to go for the only position a toddler would know: the U.S. Presidency. His true negligence as a Roy child comes from his indecisiveness and inability to take sides. With no moral compass,Connor is left to aimlessly blow away his father’s legacy.

9Tom Wambsgans

Tomcan get plenty of empathy for how much he has to take, from the company making him the fall guy for every crime to Shiv dissecting his emotional borders like a child with a click pen. But with every beating Tom gets, he passes the memo down to Greg — physically assaulting him, moving his office to a cupboard under the stairs, and even throwing the destruction of the cruise papers at Greg.

However, Tom has shown some redemptive actions, as when Greg asked if Tom would take on Greg’s prison sentence as well, and Tom agreed at no penalty (maybe the only act of true altruism in the entire series). While Tom did terrible things for Waystar and terrible things to Greg, his self-described Nero-esque desire to have Greg thrive gives him more empathy than most Roys. His betrayal of the Roy children was responsive to Shiv’s attacks, and rather than continuing that stream of abuse down, Tom took a risk to have it be inclusive for the Egg.

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8Kendall Roy

Sometimes,Kendallhas clear remorse, like when having to visit the family of the waiter that Kendall inadvertently killed. Other times, Kendall appropriates empathy for individualist ascension, like claiming neoliberal advocacy for women’s rights movements in order to accurately paint his family as misogynistic (while simultaneously demeaning Shiv’s value to solely her femininity himself). Kendall will manipulate and threaten Greg to maintain leverage against the family, he’ll promote Aaronson’s perception of Logan’s health over Logan’s literal health, and he’ll be undeniably absent in his children’s lives.

It’s hard to call Kendall morally superior to the others for the instances where he advocates for familial treaties — it’s like calling a losing warlord morally superior for not wanting to lose anymore — but his fleeting instances of legitimate guilt for what he’s done give him the slightest of advantages over many of his siblings. Though we have no reason to trust any of his actions, he’s quickly becoming a Season 4fan favorite.

7Siobhan Roy

Siobhan “Shiv” Royhas two major problems: 1) she has more brains than the people around her and knows it, and 2) that is like celebrating having legs among snakes. As Shiv tries to play a manipulation game, her successes and failures largely rest upon her trying to play chess against players who don’t know the rules. If she’s technically won, but the other player thinks they have, the best she can ever earn at Waystar is a stalemate.

By finally throwing herself in as a fellow snake, she’s become a repeated punching bag of misogynist dismissal, forwarding all of that toTom in their bloated and rotting relationship. Shiv has proven she’d be cruel with more power, as she’s proven she’s vicious when denied it. Shiv seems the most complex of Logan Roy’s children, as she can acknowledge the horror of letting a right-wing hate-monger win an election while also quickly adapting to what a new world will be.

6Greg Hirsch

Gregis the character whosemorality has changed the most through the season, with a big jump in seasons 3 and 4. While Greg originally was the naive outsider, often being taken advantage of by the rest of the Roy family, he has quickly grown quite adaptable. Greg originally had the desire to do the right thing but has slowly been infected by the Roy family to become more self-serving.

Season 4 has shown him talking back to Tom, who, for most of the series, has bullied him. Greg has played every side he can in order to make it. Greg also has an inability to take responsibility for his own actions. He says he is just the messenger when they call the election results early, but the episodes prior have shown when he wants to, he can speak for himself and could have made the decision to wait on revealing the election results. There still might be some of the old Greg left in there, but currently, what remains is a man who only sees himself as an instrument instead of someone with power.

5Marianne Hirsch

An outsider to the Roy drama,Marianneencourages her son, “cousin Greg,” to make a good impression on the extended family and align himself with whoever has the best chance of becoming Logan’s successor. Greg, of course, shows up on the very day Logan has a stroke. Marianne’s father, Ewan (James Cromwell), Greg’s grandfather, cut her off long before he decided to donate Greg’s inheritance to Greenpeace.

Related:How Succession Combines the Murdoch Family with King Lear

She has since racked up a fortune in credit-card debt, according to her son. For a while, Marianne’s lone scene in the series was the pilot episode, but she did make an appearance at Logan Roy’s funeral. While we have a limited understanding of who she is as a person, her advocacy for Greg says enough about her character to ensure that she’s at least better than most of the nuclear Roy family.

It seems that we learn more about the interesting culmination ofEwan’s politics and familial preferences with his every appearance, but one thing we know for sure is that Ewan would never become Logan, given that Ewan had the chance to and didn’t. A few plusses about him are his clear recognition of ATN’s poisoning of public discourse, leaving his fortune to Greenpeace, and enlisting to “fight communism” (which, while being a seemingly uninformed and machismo-driven perspective, from Ewan’s perspective, demands some version of honor), refusing to break from his loyalty to his brother at the vote of no confidence, and attempting to help Greg escape Waystar before it devours him.

There are random minuses, such as demanding Greg drive him twelve hours in silence or the occasional paleoconservative rant, but in a buffet built on insatiable greed, Ewan’s acceptance of his one plate (albeit a 250 million-dollar one) gives him a lack of dependency.