PHOTOGRAPH BY EZRA SHAW / GETTY

After a historically dominant 2014-15 season that saw the Golden State Warriors secure the N.B.A. title and become only the tenth team in N.B.A. history to win sixty-seven or more games, it's not entirely surprising that, this year, the squad has bolted out to a historic 15-0 record while outscoring opponents by 14.4 points per game. What is surprising is the landmark agreement the team has reached with Netflix: it will be releasing its entire season next weekend to better facilitate binge-watching.

"We try to stay abreast of current trends in media consumption," N.B.A. commissioner Adam Silver said, at a press conference announcing the deal. "In this day and age, N.B.A. fans want to watch games when and how they like, so it just makes sense to release all sixty-seven of the Golden State Warriors' remaining games at once."

"At first, I wasn't too sure about it," the reigning M.V.P. and the N.B.A.'s current leading scorer, Steph Curry, said. "The path of a defending champ is a difficult one, beset on all sides by the demons of doubt and complacency, plus the ever-looming specter of injury. Why ruin the suspense? But the games are all scripted anyway."

Although Warriors owners Joe Lacob and Peter Guber remain tight-lipped about specific plot developments, a trailer was released in conjunction with the announcement that showcases some highlights. These include a sixty-eight-point drubbing of the Sacramento Kings at Sleep Train Arena, on January 9th; Andre Iguodala's heroic triple-double against the Oklahoma City Thunder, on March 3rd, with sixteen points, twelve rebounds, and ten assists, following Harrison Barnes's A.C.L. strain (an injury that sidelines him for a month and spins off into a side plot in which he briefly joins a cult); and the moment Curry becomes a being of pure light, in the season finale, against the Memphis Grizzlies, on April 13th.

"I think it's great," Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, who is currently recovering from back surgery while interim coach Luke Walton helms the team, said. "I can lie on the couch and catch up on the whole thing this weekend."

Netflix has recently expanded from television dramas like "House of Cards" and "Orange Is the New Black" into film production. "It's natural for us now to move into sports entertainment," Netflix's chief marketing officer, Kelly Bennett, said. "Network television was built on keeping viewers hooked by releasing content on a regular schedule, and we proved that we could upend that model. Sports are no different, and we're pleased to make the Golden State Warriors' 2015-16 season the flagship release of Netflix's new basketball-entertainment division, Netsflix."

The Warriors' fate in the playoffs is being held back, although rampant Internet speculation posits that one or more of the main characters may not be returning for the next season, after a dramatic finale that is said to involve the death of at least one beloved cast member.

"Is it me?" forward James Michael McAdoo said. "It's me, isn't it?"

The other twenty-nine N.B.A. teams refused to comment, beyond asking for no spoilers.