TV

10 Prime Video Series With Zero Weak Seasons

10 Prime Video Series With Zero Weak Seasons
Image credit: Legion-Media

Stop scrolling and start bingeing: these 10 Prime Video series are perfect from pilot to finale—and every episode in between.

Prime Video is stacked. Seriously, their originals run the gamut: wild comedies, intense sci-fi epics, dramas with actual emotional depth. Sure, not every show keeps its momentum the whole way through—some start strong and then nosedive, others need a warmup lap. But, every once in a while, a series comes along that nails it every season, no fillers, no duds. Here are ten Prime Video shows that actually kept their quality game impressive the whole way through (and yes, a few of these are one-season wonders, but that counts too).

Binge Without Worry: 10 Prime Video Shows with Zero Bad Seasons

  • Overcompensating (1 Season, 2025–Present): This one's brand new but already a knockout. Created by Benito Skinner, Overcompensating follows Benny, a high school jock who’s closeted and trying to survive his first year of college. It's smart, bitingly funny, and basically skewers toxic masculinity and the mess of internal/external homophobia—not exactly the usual college comedy fodder. But the cast is hilarious across the board (keep an eye out for Holmes as Hailee Matthews, who absolutely steals scenes). I’m already ready for Season 2.
  • The Expanse (6 Seasons, 2015–2022): If you like science fiction even a little, you need to watch The Expanse. I can't overstate this. The show had the advantage of deep, detailed book material, plus its writers (James S.A. Corey) were involved with the series, which is rare and always a huge plus. The plot is smart, the worldbuilding is phenomenal, and the political drama feels way too realistic for comfort—this is one sci-fi vision of humanity’s future that’s disturbingly possible. No season lets you down.
  • Reacher (3 Seasons, 2022–Present): Yes, it’s another adaptation. But if all you want is an ex-military hero beating up criminals and unraveling mysteries across the U.S., Reacher delivers exactly that. Alan Ritchson’s Jack Reacher is huge, brooding, and genuinely intimidating—those T-shirts barely hang on. It's pulpy, satisfying, and knows exactly what it is. Sometimes turning off your brain is a feature, not a bug.
  • Fallout (2 Seasons, 2024–Present): Video game adaptations usually go off the rails. Not this time. Fallout leans hard into the absurdity and charm of its nuclear wasteland setting—there are jokes, gore, and a surprising amount of heart. Ella Purnell nails the bright-eyed energy of Lucy, and Aaron Moten (especially in Season 1) brings perfect comedic backup as Maximus. This show is weird—gloriously so.
  • A League of Their Own (1 Season, 2022): This one's a heartbreaker—not because of the plot, but because it’s already done. The show takes the 1992 film and turns it into a genuinely joyful queer love story set in women’s baseball in the 1940s. There’s surprisingly little sports TV this open about LGBTQ+ lives (at least, before this, not so much). Carson Shaw’s arc is moving, and Maxine Chapman faces racism, sexism, and all the period’s nastiness while fighting for her place on the field. It’s warm, charming, and deserved way more love than it got.
  • Undone (2 Seasons, 2019–2022): Mind-bending time travel plus raw family drama equals Undone. Rosa Salazar is fantastic as Alma, who can manipulate time after her car accident and is racing to figure out the truth about her dad’s death. The rotoscoped animation style is unlike anything else out there—it’s both surreal and deeply real, which absolutely fits the story’s looping, reality-bending twists. If ‘trippy, but emotional’ is your thing, you’re in for a treat.
  • Cross (2 Seasons, 2024–Present): James Patterson’s Alex Cross books have been adapted before, but this is the version worth talking about. Aldis Hodge fully commands the screen as Cross, a forensic psychologist/detective tracking some genuinely unnerving killers while trying to keep his family safe. The writing is smart, the tension is high, and Hodge delivers what might be his best performance so far. Season 2 doubles down on the darkness—bring on more.
  • Good Omens (2 Seasons, 2019–Present): Plot: An angel and a demon try to stop the apocalypse. Vibe: Very British, very clever, and weirdly cozy for a show about doomsday. David Tennant and Michael Sheen have off-the-charts chemistry as Crowley and Aziraphale, and the series adapts the quirky humor of the Neil Gaiman/Terry Pratchett novel almost perfectly. It’s escapist in the best way—sometimes, you just want something gentle that still makes you laugh.
  • Fleabag (2 Seasons, 2016–2019): If you’ve ever heard 'It'll pass' and felt a pang, you’re not alone. Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Fleabag is a razor-sharp, painfully funny, and weirdly sexy look at grief, family, and the messiness of being human. The writing cuts deep, and yes, the Hot Priest is worth the hype. It's built for anyone who appreciates dry, brutally honest comedy with a hefty dose of heartbreak.
  • Mozart in the Jungle (4 Seasons, 2014–2018): You would not expect backstage classical music to be this entertaining. Based on the tell-all memoir by Blair Tindall, Mozart in the Jungle dives into the wild, competitive world of NYC orchestras, full of ego, romance, and a lot of late-night drama. Gael García Bernal is hilarious and riveting as the eccentric conductor (modelled on Gustavo Dudamel), and Lola Kirke is equally good as the struggling oboist caught in the chaos. This is not your grandma’s classical music.

Whether it’s sci-fi futures, emotionally honest dramedies, or stories about messy musicians and messy lives, these are Prime Video’s series with nothing but good seasons—no clunkers in sight. Did your personal favorite make the cut? Let’s hear it (and yes, I know everyone thinks their personal fave never had a bad season, even when it clearly did). Drop your best picks below and tell me which one you’d risk rewatching all the way through.