It is safe to say that Marvel Studios has been doing a splendid job in its series division. With the conclusion of the “Infinity Saga,” a culmination of 23 movies starting from Iron Man to Avengers: Endgame, many thought this would be the end of the studios. But “Every end is a new beginning,” isn’t it?
Following the events of the “Infinity Saga,” the Marvel Cinematic Universe kick-started its “Multiverse Saga,” with the Studios’ first-ever series, WandaVision. And the rest is history! Marvel Studios has so far released eight television series (including the currently running She-Hulk: Attorney at Law) whose events tie to the original timeline.
It wasn’t the case with the Marvel shows like Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., etc., whose events do not tie up with the MCU timeline, but the latter’s actions had a great effect on the series’ plot.
With She-Hulk on the run (with most fans waiting for Daredevil’s return), here are the highest-ranking MCU television shows:
IMDB Rating – 5
US attorney Jennifer Walters’ life gets more complicated when she becomes the Hulk, just like her cousin Bruce.
IMDB Rating – 6.2
New Jersey-raised Kamala Khan, a huge fan of Captain Marvel learns she has polymorphous powers.
IMDB Rating – 7.2
Sam Wilson, a.k.a. Falcon, and Bucky Barnes, a.k.a. The Winter Soldier teams up to stop the Flag Smashers, as Sam grows to accept the responsibility passed on to him by Steve Rogers.
IMDB Rating – 7.3
Steven Grant, an employee in a Gift Shop of the British Museum suffers from Dissociative Identity Disorder, sharing another personality Marc Spector, a mercenary and the Avatar of the Egyptian God of Moon, Khonshu.
IMDB Rating – 7.4
The nine-episode animated series introduces The Watcher, who observes how a little change from various ground-breaking MCU moments leads to a very different outcome.
IMDB Rating – 7.5
A regretful Clint Barton partners with Kate Bishop to confront enemies from his past he earned as the Ronin and get back to his family for Christmas.
IMDB Rating – 7.9
Following the events of Avengers: Endgame, Wanda Maximoff tries to move on after all she went through, especially losing Vision… but she just couldn’t.
IMDB Rating – 8.2
After stealing the Tesseract during the events of the 2012 Avengers (Well, in Avengers: Endgame), Loki is brought to the Time Variance Authority (TVA), a bureaucratic organization that runs outside time and space, monitoring the timeline.