Netflix

Everywhere you look, it seems like there's another '90s classic being re-imagined and rebooted for our continued enjoyment. Television's nostalgia boom is nothing new. After all, this past year saw the return of The Muppets, The X-Files, Minority Report, Twin Peaks, and Heroes, and now, Netflix is bringing back Full House.

MTV News has screened the first six episodes of the multi-cam revival, and TL;DR: Fuller House should make fans of the original very happy. It's wholesome, lighthearted, and filled with plenty of '90s references and wink-wink nods to our collective obsession with nostalgia. At times, the show leans a little too heavily on knowledge of Full House's past life as a prototypical '90s family sitcom, but that's what it's there for. Let's be clear, here: Fuller House was created solely for the purpose of mining nostalgia from the streaming service's millennial users -- and it does its job very well, complete with friendly faces, a familiar laugh track, and catchphrases you've heard a million times. It's predictable, just as its catchy theme song suggests.

The cheesy family sitcom follows D.J. Fuller, née Tanner (Candace Cameron Bure), now an uptight, recently widowed veterinarian and mother of three young boys, as she fills the role originally taken on by her father, Danny (Bob Saget). Her wacky friend Kimmy (Andrea Barber), now an eccentric event planner, is a divorcee and mother of one herself. Kimmy, who still looks like the walking embodiment of a Lisa Frank folder, is a natural stand-in for Danny's best friend, comedian Joey Gladstone (Dave Coulier). And then there's D.J.'s younger sister Stephanie (Jodie Sweetin), who easily steps in as John Stamos's Uncle Jesse -- a young, reckless musician who isn't so good at all of this family stuff. Now, she's an internationally famous deejay who spins under the name DJ Tanner and sometimes has a British accent.

With a premise as identical to its predecessor, it seems only fitting that Fuller House would be as cookie-cutter as they come, which isn't necessarily a bad thing if '90s sitcoms are your golden standard for comedy. So, without further ado, here are 13 things you need to know before binging Fuller House on February 26. [Consider this your BIG FAT SPOILER WARNING.]