For people who still can’t get the creepy Unsolved Mysteries theme song—and Robert Stack’s ominous voice—out of their minds, Friday brings great news: Netflix just announced it will revive the series, in association with the show’s original production company, Cosgrove/Meurer Productions. Stranger Things executive producer Shawn Levy and Salem executive producer Josh Barry are set to executive produce the series, which will follow the show’s original format.

Deadline reports that the new series will feature 12 installments, each following the old show’s style: re-enactments presented in a documentary format, focusing on subjects such as missing persons and apparent paranormal phenomena. In this version, however, each episode will focus on one mystery. (The original broadcast series included multiple cases in each episode.) It’s unclear for now whether the series will also feature interviews with family members, police, and other field experts, as the original did.

The original series, hosted by Robert Stack, premiered on NBC in 1987, where it aired for a decade before CBS picked it up for two seasons. Cable networks Lifetime and Spike also revived the series in the 2000s, with Dennis Farina stepping in to replace Stack as host after Stack’s death in 2003. But a lot has changed in the time Unsolved Mysteries has been off air, and when the series returns it will face more competition than it ever did before—including several series that live on Netflix itself. There are not only old licensed series like Forensic Files to contend with, but also new docuseries, including Making a Murderer and last year’s Wild Wild Country, as well as docudramas like Errol Morris’s mind-bending Wormwood (which also aired on Netflix). And that’s not even mentioning other investigative projects like BuzzFeed Unsolved, which has gained a following all its own.

That said, Netflix is certainly no stranger to competition, and the streaming service has had no problem selling its projects to viewers so far. Just this week, as the streaming giant raised its subscription prices, it also took the time to tout some staggering, self-reported viewership numbers. Plus, John Cosgrove and Terry Dunn Meurer have maintained a digital presence, even hosting a Reddit A.M.A. in 2017, where they claimed they’d pinpointed some cases that would make for great new episodes. So if Unsolved Mysteries is going to make a comeback anywhere, Netflix does seem like its best bet—and teaming up with an E.P. from Stranger Things certainly won’t hurt.

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