‘Gen V’ Is Amazon Prime’s Most-Watched Show of the Week: Here Is the Rest of the Top 10
There’s a lot to watch on Prime Video right now, from superpowered campus chaos and sun-soaked YA drama to military thrillers and sprawling faith-based storytelling. This week’s chart mixes returning hits with brand-new premieres, giving you plenty of options whether you want edge-of-your-seat suspense or a slow-burn character journey.
Below you’ll find the lineup counted down from 10 to 1. Each entry includes a quick rundown of what the show covers plus who’s involved on-screen and behind the camera, so you can decide fast what deserves a spot in your queue tonight.
10. ‘We Were Liars’ (2025– )

Adapted from E. Lockhart’s acclaimed YA novel, ‘We Were Liars’ follows Cadence Sinclair and her cousins on a private island where one summer’s events fracture a privileged family. The story unfolds through memory gaps and revelations that reframe relationships, wealth, and responsibility as Cadence pieces together what truly happened.
Developed for Prime Video, the series structures its mystery through nonlinear storytelling, using flashbacks and present-day investigation to connect character beats with the underlying secret. Production design contrasts idyllic coastal visuals with the brittle dynamics of an old-money clan, while the writers’ room adapts major plot turns from the novel for episodic television.
9. ‘The Chosen’ (2019– )

‘The Chosen’ is a multi-season drama that portrays the life and ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, with storylines that follow Jesus and his disciples across Galilee and beyond. The series explores encounters, parables, and miracles, presenting familiar accounts through character-driven arcs that expand on historical and cultural context.
Created by Dallas Jenkins, the show stars Jonathan Roumie as Jesus, with Shahar Isaac, Paras Patel, Elizabeth Tabish, and others as the core group of disciples and figures they meet. The production prioritizes period detail in sets and costumes, shooting across diverse locations to depict first-century settings, and building multi-season continuity as the narrative progresses.
8. ‘Countdown’ (2025– )

Created and showrun by Derek Haas, ‘Countdown’ stars Jensen Ackles, Jessica Camacho, Violett Beane, Elliot Knight, Uli Latukefu, and Eric Dane. It premiered June 25, 2025, on Prime Video.
The series follows an LAPD detective drafted onto a covert multi-agency task force after a brazen killing, unraveling a wider threat across its 13-episode first season. Full credits and early reviews frame it as a brisk, procedural-leaning action drama.
7. ‘The Terminal List’ (2022– )

Adapted from Jack Carr’s novel, ‘The Terminal List’ follows Navy SEAL James Reece after a covert mission goes wrong, sending him on a hunt for answers and accountability that stretches from military command to powerful private interests. The series interweaves psychological trauma with action-driven setpieces as Reece reconstructs what happened and why.
The show stars Chris Pratt as James Reece, with performances by Constance Wu, Taylor Kitsch, Riley Keough, and Jai Courtney across key arcs. David DiGilio developed the series for television, with Antoine Fuqua executive-producing and directing the pilot, and production emphasizing grounded tactics, practical stunt work, and procedural detail in its investigative threads.
6. ‘Cocaine Quarterback: Signal-Caller for the Cartel’ (2025– )

This true-crime-inflected drama follows an American football prodigy who becomes entangled with a transnational cartel, using playbook precision and on-field discipline to move product and launder money. The show traces how a promising career collides with organized crime, from recruitment and logistics to the inevitable fallout.
Framed as a serialized crime saga for Prime Video, the series maps its arc across training camps, border corridors, and financial fronts. Creative leads structure each episode around a tactical problem—supply routes, communications, or counter-surveillance—while supporting characters include coaches, handlers, rivals inside the organization, and law-enforcement units tightening the net.
5. ‘The Girlfriend’ (2025– )

‘The Girlfriend’ is a contemporary relationship thriller that starts with a seemingly ordinary romance and escalates into a mystery where identity, trust, and digital footprints are central to the plot. The story unfolds through multiple perspectives, revealing how a private relationship becomes a high-stakes investigation.
Developed as a Prime Video original, the series blends character drama with procedural elements, using episode-by-episode reveals to reframe earlier events. The production emphasizes modern settings—workspaces, messaging apps, and surveillance touchpoints—while a core ensemble portrays partners, friends, and investigators whose motivations are gradually unmasked.
4. ‘Hotel Costiera’ (2025– )

Set on Italy’s stunning coastline, ‘Hotel Costiera’ is a drama that follows the staff and owners of a boutique seaside property as they juggle high-end hospitality, family legacies, and the secrets of their well-heeled guests. Each episode mixes guest-of-the-week storylines with a serialized thread about the hotel’s future and the personal stakes behind the reception desk.
The show is produced for Prime Video with an Italian creative team, using on-location photography to anchor the series in real coastal settings and seasonal rhythms. Across its ensemble, characters include management fighting to keep the property solvent, chefs and concierge staff navigating crises in real time, and visitors whose backstories drive conflicts that ripple through the hotel.
3. ‘The Terminal List: Dark Wolf’ (2025– )

‘The Terminal List: Dark Wolf’ expands the universe of the military-thriller ‘The Terminal List’, focusing on the covert past of Navy SEAL Ben Edwards in a story that tracks espionage, black-ops missions, and the blurred lines of loyalty. The narrative digs into shadow networks and operations that shaped characters and conflicts seen in the flagship series.
The series continues the collaboration between Amazon MGM Studios and the creative team behind the original adaptation of Jack Carr’s novels. Executive producers include franchise mainstays, with production designed to mirror the grounded tactical detail, weaponscraft, and mission planning that defined the parent series’ style.
2. ‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ (2022– )

Based on Jenny Han’s bestselling novels, ‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ centers on Isabel “Belly” Conklin, her family, and the Fisher brothers across multiple beach-house summers as relationships shift and coming-of-age choices get messier. The show weaves teen romance with family dynamics and grief, tracking how one fateful season changes everything.
Jenny Han developed the series and serves as showrunner and executive producer. The cast features Lola Tung as Belly, Christopher Briney as Conrad Fisher, Gavin Casalegno as Jeremiah Fisher, and Jackie Chung, Sean Kaufman, and Rain Spencer in key supporting roles, with scripts adapting major arcs from Han’s trilogy across the seasons.
1. ‘Gen V’ (2023– )

Set in the same universe as ‘The Boys’, ‘Gen V’ follows superpowered students at Godolkin University, where aspiring heroes push through dangerous campus competitions and dark corporate secrets while trying to land lucrative spots with Vought’s elite teams. The ensemble centers on Marie Moreau, a blood-manipulating freshman, alongside classmates whose abilities and motives collide in unpredictable ways.
The series is developed by Michele Fazekas and Tara Butters, with franchise figures Eric Kripke, Evan Goldberg, and Seth Rogen among the executive producers. Cast members include Jaz Sinclair as Marie Moreau, Lizze Broadway as Emma Meyer, Chance Perdomo as Andre Anderson, Maddie Phillips as Cate Dunlap, and Patrick Schwarzenegger as Luke Riordan, with recurring crossovers and cameos tying back to ‘The Boys’.
Share your thoughts below—what did you watch this week, and what should everyone press play on next?


