Pop Culture

Every Marvel Cinematic Universe TV Series, Ranked

For 13 years, over 25 series, Marvel has attempted to expand the MCU on the small screen. Which superpowered series stands tall?

Daredevil: Born Again (2025)
Marvel Studios

What do we call the post-superhero fatigue era? As Marvel prepares the world for Avengers: Doomsday, fans should keep it locked on the TV series Marvel Studios has on deck, as they have historically introduced storylines and characters that go on to play bigger roles in the MCU. Think about how they prepped viewers for Daredevil: Born Again, which is back for its second season this month; Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio made appearances as Matt Murdock/Daredevil and Wilson Fisk (respectively) in other Marvel properties, from Hawkeye and Echo to 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home. It wasn’t always that easy, though.

For years, Marvel worked with ABC, a successful relationship that began in 2013 with Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., a franchise that bridged the gap between the two or three MCU film releases per year, introducing storylines and characters that would then make the leap into films. It was a dope pipeline that has given us characters like Wonder Man and Moon Knight…but also resulted in series no one wanted to see, like Inhumans. As we take it back to Hell’s Kitchen for Season 2 of Daredevil: Born Again, here’s a look at every Marvel Cinematic Universe TV series, ranked.

[Ed note: This list does not include animated MCU TV series.]

25.Inhumans

Starring: Anson Mount, Serinda Swan, Ken Leung, Eme Ikwuakor, Isabelle Cornish, Ellen Woglom, Iwan Rheon

Network: ABC

Series Premiere Date: September 29, 2017

One thing about Marvel, they have always been willing to try. How else do you explain a series where the main character is unable to talk because even the smallest utterance could topple a nation? That was their conundrum with Inhumans, which started out as a movie (shot on IMAX) and ended up an eight-episode series (that premiered on IMAX before hitting TV). Everything that could go wrong did, from uninspired writing to drab sets; the best thing to come from Inhumans is the giant bulldog known as Lockjaw, the escort and protector for the Inhuman Royal Family.

24.Helstrom

Starring: Tom Austen, Sydney Lemmon, Elizabeth Marvel, Robert Wisdom, Ariana Guerra, June Carryl, Alain Uy

Network: Hulu

Series Premiere Date: October 16, 2020

After Marvel and Netflix parted ways, Marvel and Hulu (both under the Disney umbrella) started to up the ante, coming up with “Adventure into Fear,” a collection of Marvel series that were to air on Hulu, and share the same universe, but never to be featured in the MCU films or TV shows. Think of it as an alternative to what Netflix and Marvel were doing, but worse? Ghost Rider (who was previously featured on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) was to get a standalone series along with the Helstrom twins, but you can “big VFX budget” your way into a compelling series. It’s as if Hulu saw the success of comic book-to-small screen series like Riverdale and figured they could do the same.

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23.The Defenders

Starring: Charlie Cox, Krysten Ritter, Mike Colter, Finn Jones, Eka Darville, Elden Henson, Jessica Henwick, Simone Missick, Ramón Rodríguez, Rachael Taylor, Deborah Ann Woll, Élodie Yung, Rosario Dawson, Scott Glenn, Sigourney Weaver

Network: Netflix

Series Premiere Date: August 18, 2017

Before Hulu’s “Adventure into Fear,” Netflix held the title of “platform most likely to sink millions into a Marvel property that will never be seen in a Marvel film.” Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. would do heavy lifting, at times introducing characters or entire plot points that would then become major parts of the next MCU film. Netflix’s band of Marvel heroes held down New York City, with Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, and the Iron Fist combining their powers to take on…Sigourney Weaver and the Hand? Shout out the Hand; they are featured in the next Spider-Man film, but for this long-awaited team-up (four years in the making), cultivated across multiple seasons of four different television shows, amounted to an overlong, underwhelming eight-episode snooze. The series only shined when the quartet was together, being themselves. Maybe it they just made a Defenders Netflix film instead of drawing out the story for eight episodes.

22.Iron Fist

Starring: Finn Jones, Jessica Henwick, Tom Pelphrey, Jessica Stroup, Ramón Rodríguez, Sacha Dhawan, Rosario Dawson, David Wenham, Simone Missick, Alice Eve

Network: Netflix

Series Premiere Date: March 17, 2017

The worst of Netflix’s Defenders, the Iron Fist was reportedly stuck in development hell over at Marvel Studios before being developed into a Netflix series. The series is about Danny Rand, a mega-rich martial arts expert who can call on the power of a mystical dragon known as the Iron Fist to help dismantle his foes. What we got was a Buddhist who loved hip-hop and wasn’t fighting the way we wanted him to. Somewhere in the skeleton of this series is the Iron Fist Finn Jones is itching to portray; at some point, it was decided that the Iron Fist couldn’t afford to be anything more.

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21.Ironheart

Starring: Dominique Thorne, Lyric Ross, Manny Montana, Matthew Elam, Anji White, Jim Rash, Eric André, Cree Summer, Sonia Denis, Shea Couleé, Zoe Terakes, Shakira Barrera, Anthony Ramos, Alden Ehrenreich, Regan Aliyah, Paul Calderón, Sacha Baron Cohen

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: June 24, 2025

After a solid showing in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Riri Williams (aka Ironheart) returns to MIT to deal with the repercussions of stealing a bunch of tech and creating your own Iron Man suit. The problem? No one else can quite handle crime lord The Hood, who’s notorious for wreaking havoc without leaving a trace (due to the abilities his hood affords him). (Yes, we know that sounds crazy.) It was always hard to tell how confident Marvel felt in Ironheart; for everything she has going for her (including being produced by Marvel and Ryan Coogler’s Proximity Media), there is no word on when we’ll see Riri again.

20.Cloak & Dagger

Starring: Olivia Holt, Aubrey Joseph, Gloria Reuben, Andrea Roth, J. D. Evermore, Miles Mussenden, Carl Lundstedt, Emma Lahana, Jaime Zevallos

Network: Freeform

Series Premiere Date: June 7, 2018

As the MCU grew, Marvel Studios decided to take some interesting swings, including releasing more teen-centered melodramas like Cloak & Dagger on Freeform. The series, set in New Orleans, follows two teens—one who can control light, the other darkness—who form a bond after being exposed to life-changing chemicals at a Roxxon facility. The show went long, revealing the nature of their connection, but they were doing something right; Cloak & Dagger’s launch was Freeform’s most-watched drama since the series finale of Pretty Little Liars.

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19.She-Hulk: Attorney At Law

Starring: Tatiana Maslany, Jameela Jamil, Ginger Gonzaga, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Segarra, Mark Linn-Baker, Tess Malis Kincaid, Tim Roth, Megan Thee Stallion, Benedict Wong, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Jon Bass, Rhys Coiro, Griffin Matthews, Patti Harrison, Steve Coulter, Charlie Cox, Brandon Stanley, Drew Matthews

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: August 18, 2022

You know a Marvel Comics character is popping when there is a slightly different version of the character also roaming Earth-616. While the Incredible Hulk has had grey and red versions in the past, you knew he was popping when his cousin was exposed to his gamma-fied DNA and turned into her own superpowered being. The flip was that Bruce Banner’s cousin, Jennifer, is an attorney, specializing in representing superpowered individuals. As Marvel Studios grew, they began experimenting with series like this, adding loads of humor while exploring the rest of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

18.Secret Invasion

Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Ben Mendelsohn, Kingsley Ben-Adir, Killian Scott, Samuel Adewunmi, Dermot Mulroney, Richard Dormer, Emilia Clarke, Olivia Colman, Don Cheadle, Charlayne Woodard, Christopher McDonald, Katie Finneran

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: June 21, 2023

The miniseries that /checks notes fans of Nick Fury and/or the Skrulls had been waiting for, Secret Invasion was another one of those limited series that could have been a two-hour film. After being framed for a murder and losing all of his jobs, Fury’s investigation into his framing revealed that Skrulls had been living amongst the MCU characters for a lot longer than we realized. Not only has Colonel James Rhodes (unknowingly) been a Skrull, but Fury was (knowingly) married to a Skrull for years! Honestly, the series could have been saved if they hadn’t botched that confusing CGI mess of a boss battle. (Another constant of this era of Marvel series was a tightening of the budget, meaning that a lot of dope action and Skrull transformations happened off-screen.)

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17.Runaways

Starring: Rhenzy Feliz, Lyrica Okano, Virginia Gardner, Ariela Barer, Gregg Sulkin, Allegra Acosta, Angel Parker, Ryan Sands, Annie Wersching, Kip Pardue, Ever Carradine, James Marsters, Brigid Brannagh, Kevin Weisman, Brittany Ishibashi, James Yaegashi, Julian McMahon, Clarissa Thibeaux

Network: Hulu

Series Premiere Date: November 21, 2017

After the success of Guardians of the Galaxy, Marvel has repeatedly taken chances on lesser-known characters in its series. Although Runaways is a cult classic for comic lovers, this team of superpowered teens trying to get to the bottom of their situation had no cultural cache, leaving this show out there clinging to the Marvel’s in its official title. That may have been to its detriment, as Runaways had a lot of heart and wit buried within multiple coming-of-age superhero tales. Oddly enough, there’s a timeline where Marvel Studios develops a Runaways movie first, and the Avengers ended up being relegated to a two-season Hulu show for teens.

16.Echo

Starring: Alaqua Cox, Chaske Spencer, Tantoo Cardinal, Charlie Cox, Devery Jacobs, Zahn McClarnon, Cody Lightning, Graham Greene, Vincent D'Onofrio

Network: Disney+ / Hulu

Series Premiere Date: January 9, 2024

More than a decade after beginning their TV takeover, Marvel established “Marvel Spotlight,” a distinction given to their releases that were closer to the ground than others. In a spinoff from the Disney+ series Hawkeye, Echo was a smaller tale focused on the titular character as she makes her way home, trying to figure out what home even means. Similar to the smaller comic series based on intriguing side characters, Echo opened the door for Daredevil and Wilson Fisk to return to the MCU after Marvel’s deal with Netflix ended. You hate for a project to feel like a Trojan horse for an even bigger project, but that’s why it’s dope that Echo still got to tell her story.

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15.The Falcon and the Winter Soldier

Starring: Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Wyatt Russell, Erin Kellyman, Danny Ramirez, Georges St-Pierre, Adepero Oduye, Don Cheadle, Daniel Brühl, Emily VanCamp, Florence Kasumba, Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: March 19, 2021

The unfortunate thing about Captain America: Brave New World is that much of the ground it covered felt like a retread of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, which is arguably one of the few Marvel series that felt like it was trying to be a Marvel film, or at least bring the topline MCU stakes into a TV franchise like never before. This was the first time we’d seen Sam Wilson since he became Captain America in Endgame, and he spent this series coping with that, Bucky Barnes by his side. One just wishes that they’d either made the movie or made the series.

14.Ms. Marvel

Starring: Iman Vellani, Matt Lintz, Yasmeen Fletcher, Zenobia Shroff, Mohan Kapur, Saagar Shaikh, Laurel Marsden, Azhar Usman, Rish Shah, Arian Moayed, Alysia Reiner, Laith Nakli, Nimra Bucha, Travina Springer, Adaku Ononogbo, Samina Ahmad, Fawad Khan, Mehwish Hayat, Farhan Akhtar, Aramis Knight

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: June 8, 2022

Iman Vellani is living the dream: she’s a Marvel Comics fan who became a Marvel superhero, totally embodying Jersey’s own Kamala Khan, aka Ms. Marvel. Vellani is Ms. Marvel, bringing Kamala’s awkward nature to life with nervous chatter and a massive obsession with superheroes. The series lives on Vellani’s enthusiasm, making fangirls of the audience by the time they’re done watching her embiggen and knock out evil-doers while giving Pakistani comic book fans a hero with a familiar face.

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13.Hawkeye

Starring: Jeremy Renner, Hailee Steinfeld, Tony Dalton, Fra Fee, Brian d'Arcy James, Aleks Paunovic, Piotr Adamczyk, Linda Cardellini, Simon Callow, Vera Farmiga, Alaqua Cox, Zahn McClarnon, Florence Pugh, Vincent D'Onofrio

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: November 24, 2021

Taking inspiration from Matt Fraction and David Aja’s excellent 2012 Hawkeye series, Hawkeye finally lets viewers see what happens when Hawkeye isn’t battling evil with the Avengers. That meant learning how to live with Kate Bishop, a budding Hawkeye all her own, while facing his past head-on while also doing battle with the Tracksuit Mafia. Renner and Steinfeld’s chemistry shines in the series, although it’s hard to feel like this series was doing more than setting Kate Bishop up for the Young Avengers at some point.

12.Luke Cage

Starring: Mike Colter, Mahershala Ali, Simone Missick, Theo Rossi, Erik LaRay Harvey, Rosario Dawson, Alfre Woodard, Gabrielle Dennis, Mustafa Shakir, Jessica Henwick, Finn Jones, Stephen Rider

Network: Netflix

Series Premiere Date: September 30, 2016

For many, Luke Cage was an important moment in the MCU’s TV series. Harlem’s protector, Luke Cage was involved in an incident while wrongfully imprisoned that turned him indestructible. During a time when Black Lives Matter was the movement, this superpower lent itself to powerful visuals, and with foils like Mahershala Ali portraying the crimelord known as Cottonmouth, the series felt like the comic books Luke Cage sprang from. No guns, just fists and determination to keep the streets clean, turning him into the eventual heavy in Netflix’s growing Defenders squad.

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11.Agent Carter

Starring: Hayley Atwell, James D'Arcy, Chad Michael Murray, Enver Gjokaj, Shea Whigham

Network: ABC

Series Premiere Date: January 6, 2015

Agent Carter is likely how many thought the MCU TV series would work. After being featured in a One-Shot (a short film Marvel produced about a singular character or short story) and in MCU films, Marvel produced the often underestimated Agent Peggy Carter’s story of life in 1940s America. Inspired by Steve Rogers' death, Agent Carter used her ability to go unnoticed to her advantage, working with the Strategic Scientific Reserve to help prevent the world from going ka-boom. A strong series that picked up the slack when Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. was on hiatus, Agent Carter was an early example of the Marvel formula translating to quality storytelling.

10.Jessica Jones

Starring: Krysten Ritter, Mike Colter, Rachael Taylor, Wil Traval, Erin Moriarty, Eka Darville, Carrie-Anne Moss, David Tennant, J. R. Ramirez, Terry Chen, Leah Gibson, Janet McTeer, Benjamin Walker, Sarita Choudhury, Jeremy Bobb, Tiffany Mack

Network: Netflix

Series Premiere Date: November 20, 2015

Hands down, Jessica Jones being a thing is a triumph in and of itself. The original Marvel series ran under their MAX imprint, primarily due to the heavier adult themes, from sexual assault to other forms of violence. Jessica Jones is a superpowered private investigator who attempts to hide her abilities (and her emotions) while solving crimes. The series became one of Marvel’s most mature shows, stretching the limits of what viewers might think of as a “Marvel show.”

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9.Moon Knight

Starring: Oscar Isaac, May Calamawy, Karim El Hakim, F. Murray Abraham, Ethan Hawke, Ann Akinjirin, David Ganly, Khalid Abdalla, Gaspard Ulliel, Antonia Salib, Fernanda Andrade, Rey Lucas, Sofia Danu, Saba Mubarak

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: March 30, 2022

The opening of Moon Knight highlights the medium's power to beautifully recreate comic book characters that may be difficult to produce. Marc Spector (Isaac) has dissociative identity disorder; he’s also a mercenary and the avatar for an Egyptian moon god, Khonshu. That means that he may suddenly wake up in the middle of a battle, speeding down the highway. Falls out of consciousness, only to wake up with a room full of downed foes. Over the course of this miniseries, fans are thrown into the dizzying world that Spector inhabits with his four(!) alters. Like other series in the MCU, it can at times feel like an extended introduction to a character that will be a part of the films in the future, but if that means we can get command performances from talent like Oscar Isaac for eight episodes? We’ve seen way worse!

8.Daredevil: Born Again

Starring: Charlie Cox, Vincent D'Onofrio, Margarita Levieva, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Wilson Bethel, Zabryna Guevara, Nikki M. James, Genneya Walton, Arty Froushan, Clark Johnson, Michael Gandolfini, Ayelet Zurer, Kamar de los Reyes, Jon Bernthal, Mohan Kapur, Tony Dalton, Krysten Ritter

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: March 4, 2025

As Marvel Studios took a bigger hand in developing the MCU TV series after parting ways with Netflix, diehards wondered if The Defenders of Netflix would ever reunite with the MCU, and Charlie Cox’s Daredevil seems to be that lynchpin. After making appearances in 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home and in the Disney+/Hulu series Echo, fans were elated when Marvel announced a brand new series, Born Again, which would take us back to Hell’s Kitchen, only the stakes have risen. Wilson Fisk has gone from Kingpin to Mayor, consolidating power under his massive thumb. Murdock doesn’t stop fighting the good fight in the courtroom, but Daredevil: Born Again finds him once again conflicted: he doesn’t want to tap into his mania and personal demons, but there may not be anyone more equipped to protect the city. Daredevil: Born Again once again proved why Marvel led with Daredevil from the beginning.

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7.Agatha All Along

Starring: Kathryn Hahn, Joe Locke, Debra Jo Rupp, Aubrey Plaza, Sasheer Zamata, Ali Ahn, Okwui Okpokwasili, Patti LuPone, Evan Peters, Maria Dizzia, Paul Adelstein, Miles Gutierrez-Riley

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: September 18, 2024

While no WandaVision, Agatha All Along is the kind of fan service viewers love. In WandaVision, fans immediately took to Kathryn Hahn’s Agatha, a witch who lived amongst the townspeople in Westview, mostly due to Hahn’s hilarious performance. It truly was a twist when we found out it was Agatha all along, and instead of just living with that awesome moment, Marvel turned Agatha’s quest for a coven into an intriguing miniseries that also allowed Billy Maximoff to continue his story. One can only hope that Hahn’s game is for whatever Marvel could have in store for her in the future.

6.Wonder Man

Starring: Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, X Mayo, Zlatko Burić, Ben Kingsley, Arian Moayed, Joe Pantoliano, Byron Bowers, Josh Gad

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: January 27, 2026

To be real, with the way Marvel Studios has been using these miniseries to introduce you to potentially major characters in the MCU, we were fine with how Wonder Man initially ended. The series was about Simon Williams, an enhanced being trying to make his way in Hollywood. But he’s no vigilante; hell, Simon spends most of the series hiding his abilities, bringing out the Department of Damage Control to assess his threat level. Bringing in Ben Kingley to reprise Trevor Slattery was a genius move, as Simon and Trevor spent much of the series just being film nerds, loving the world of acting. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II masterfully bounces between the hyper-intense focus of an actor and the quiet rage Simon holds inside. By series end, as he is officially Wonder Man, the question becomes: will he succumb to the rage or develop his skills as a force of good?

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5.Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Starring: Clark Gregg, Ming-Na Wen, Brett Dalton, Chloe Bennet, Iain De Caestecker, Elizabeth Henstridge, Nick Blood, Adrianne Palicki, Henry Simmons, Luke Mitchell, John Hannah, Natalia Cordova-Buckley, Jeff Ward

Network: ABC

Series Premiere Date: September 24, 2013

The blueprint of what the MCU was trying to do with its TV properties, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. worked wonders in expanding the universe Marvel was building. It starred Clark Gregg as fan favorite Agent Phil Coulson, expanding his role from the movies in helping combat forces that were steps below bringing in The Avengers, although that meant that when you would end up seeing Hydra or the Inhumans on a grander scale in the MCU, it was a safe bet that they’d had a story arc or two within Agents on ABC. It helped that Joss Whedon, the architect of 2012’s The Avengers, was on as producer; there was a beautiful dance that played between Agents and Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which would help turn characters like Peggy Carter into TV series of their own. The MCU benefited greatly from having an always-on franchise like Agents tying things together.

4.The Punisher

Starring: Jon Bernthal, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ben Barnes, Amber Rose Revah, Daniel Webber, Paul Schulze, Jason R. Moore, Michael Nathanson, Jaime Ray Newman, Deborah Ann Woll, Josh Stewart, Floriana Lima, Giorgia Whigham

Network: Netflix

Series Premiere Date: November 17, 2017

Jon Bernthal began his portrayal of the deadly vigilante Frank Castle during Season 2 of Daredevil, with his brand of forever revenge colliding head-on with Matt Murdock’s modus operandi, even if they both had a penchant for darkness and ultraviolence. As popular as Frank got, it was only a matter of time before Marvel would give him his own series, fleshing out Frank’s horrific tale. After losing his entire family to mob violence, Castle becomes the Punisher, declaring war on the evil-doers in the city. To his credit, Bernthal, a father, perfectly channeled the rage that drives Frank Castle, giving fans one of the most comic-accurate depictions of a Marvel character we’d ever seen in the MCU.

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3.Loki

Starring: Tom Hiddleston, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Wunmi Mosaku, Eugene Cordero, Tara Strong, Owen Wilson, Sophia Di Martino, Sasha Lane, Jack Veal, DeObia Oparei, Richard E. Grant, Jonathan Majors, Rafael Casal, Kate Dickie, Liz Carr, Neil Ellice, Ke Huy Quan, Richard Dixon

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: June 9, 2021

The beauty of the MCU is that dead doesn’t always mean dead. That means that while we totally saw Thanos kill Loki in Avengers: Infinity War, the timeline shenanigans in Avengers: Endgame meant that a loose Loki was roaming in the multiverse, wreaking havoc on the timelines overall. That Loki became the focus of an entire series, which itself pulled back the curtain on the multiverse that Marvel had been introducing. It was a fascinating time: you had tentpole MCU films confronting issues arising from multiversal mayhem, and then you had a dedicated MCU TV series to nerd out on all things multiversal. It’s the kind of property that Marvel Studios should work on more often, bridging the gap between the bigger brain ideas of the MCU films and the ramifications of those events for the rest of the multiverse.

2.WandaVision

Starring: Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Debra Jo Rupp, Fred Melamed, Kathryn Hahn, Teyonah Parris, Randall Park, Kat Dennings, Evan Peters

Network: Disney+

Series Premiere Date: January 15, 2021

For the first series set in the MCU that was produced by Marvel Studios, they truly swung for the fences, hitting it out of the park the majority of the time. Wanda Maximoff, aka the Scarlet Witch, found an intriguing way to deal with the loss of The Vision: she took an entire town in New Jersey hostage, forcing them to live as sitcom families that comforted her as a child. It was magnificently delivered, with the first few episodes forcing viewers to stick with the confusion as the mask Wanda threw over Westview started to fade, revealing the ugly truth underneath. It did all of the things a good Marvel series should: adding layers to these superpowered beings in unique, serialized ways. Fashioning their first MCU TV production as a low-key homage to classic TV was a great touch.

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1.Daredevil

Starring: Charlie Cox, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Toby Leonard Moore, Vondie Curtis-Hall, Bob Gunton, Ayelet Zurer, Rosario Dawson, Vincent D'Onofrio, Jon Bernthal, Élodie Yung, Stephen Rider, Joanne Whalley, Jay Ali, Wilson Bethel

Network: Netflix

Series Premiere Date: April 10, 2015

Where Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. helped flesh out the MCU on a smaller scale, Netflix’s first Marvel series, Daredevil, was the anchor to their eventual Defenders miniseries. Dark and brooding, blind lawyer Matt Murdock’s life is on full display. He’s battling his own inner demons, which leaves him conflicted as a vigilante. He wants to go full bore and eradicate the disease infecting Hell’s Kitchen, but knows that he’s here for a bigger purpose (and he has an identity to hide). Instead of focusing on mystical powers, Daredevil kept it bare bones, delivering mesmerising fight scenes while staying true to the comic’s rich history. There’s a reason why fans had been clamoring for Charlie Cox to return to the character after the Netflix Marvel series hit Disney+; he’d struck that deep of a chord with the fanbase, mostly due to the dedication that Daredevil paid in getting the series right.

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