‘Peacemaker’ Still Tops HBO Max’s Most-Watched Shows List This Week: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows

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Max is buzzing with a mix of new docuseries, returning favorites, and comfort-watch reality hits. This week’s lineup spans superhero action, period drama, high-stakes football access, and franchise spinoffs that keep the tea flowing. Everything below is pulled from official credits and program info so you can jump in knowing what each show actually covers and who is behind it.

Per your list, we’re counting down from 10 to 1. Each entry includes straightforward plot context plus key cast and creator details. Titles are written exactly as they appear on screen so you can find them fast inside the app.

10. ‘Welcome to Plathville’ (2019–present)

10. 'Welcome to Plathville' (2019–present)
A. Smith & Co. Productions

This reality series follows the Plath family from Georgia as parents Barry and Kim and their children open up about faith, rules at home, and the growing pains of adult kids forging their own paths. Storylines track siblings Ethan, Micah, Moriah, Lydia and others through marriages, moves, and family rifts that play out on and off the farm.

The show airs under the TLC banner and streams on Max. It is produced by Sharp Entertainment, the nonfiction company behind the wider ‘90 Day Fiancé’ universe, and features a rotating ensemble of family members across seasons as relationships change and new chapters begin.

9. ’90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After?’ (2016–present)

9. '90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After?' (2016–present)
Sharp Entertainment

This spinoff revisits couples from ‘90 Day Fiancé’ after the wedding as they face work, family, immigration, and trust issues in everyday life. Recent seasons have checked back in with pairs such as Elizabeth and Andrei, Loren and Alexei, Jovi and Yara, and Angela and Michael while following milestones and setbacks at home.

The series is produced by Sharp Entertainment for TLC and streams on Max. Multi-episode Tell All reunions bring cast members together to discuss the season with a host, while the main episodes mix new footage with interviews to document where each marriage stands now.

8. ’90 Day: Hunt For Love’ (2025–present)

8. '90 Day: Hunt For Love' (2025–present)
Sharp Entertainment

Set at a singles retreat in Mexico, this series brings back eight alumni from the ‘90 Day Fiancé’ universe to meet a mix of new daters and see whether a fresh start works better the second time. Featured veterans include names like Chantel Everett, Colt Johnson, Usman Umar, Tim Malcolm, Tiffany Franco, Cortney Reardanz, Rob Warne, and Jeniffer Tarazona as they test new connections and revisit old history.

The show comes from Sharp Entertainment for TLC and streams on Max. Episodes track dates, group events, and ceremony-style reveals about who wants to continue a relationship, followed by Tell All installments that gather the cast to unpack what happened after filming.

7. ‘And Just Like That…’ (2021–2025)

7. 'And Just Like That…' (2021–2025)
Michael Patrick King Productions

This sequel to ‘Sex and the City’ follows Carrie Bradshaw, Miranda Hobbes, and Charlotte York in New York City as they navigate friendship, family, and romance in midlife. Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon, and Kristin Davis lead the ensemble with returning cast like David Eigenberg and Mario Cantone and newer additions including Sarita Choudhury, Nicole Ari Parker, and Karen Pittman.

The series was developed by Michael Patrick King from Darren Star’s original concept based on Candace Bushnell’s work and streamed as a Max Original. Across three seasons it blended serialized arcs and guest stars with fashion-forward set pieces while concluding the larger ‘Sex and the City’ saga in 2025.

6. ‘Falling Skies’ (2011–2015)

6. 'Falling Skies' (2011–2015)
DreamWorks Television

This science fiction drama follows history professor Tom Mason as he becomes a leader in the 2nd Massachusetts militia after an alien invasion devastates Earth. Noah Wyle stars as Tom alongside Moon Bloodgood, Drew Roy, Connor Jessup, Will Patton, Sarah Carter, and Colin Cunningham in a story about survival, insurgency, and family under occupation.

Created by Robert Rodat and executive produced by Steven Spielberg, the series originally aired on TNT and streams in full on Max. It ran for five seasons with a writers room that included genre veterans and directors such as Greg Beeman shaping large-scale battle episodes and character-driven chapters.

5. ‘The Gilded Age’ (2022–present)

5. 'The Gilded Age' (2022–present)
Universal Television

Set in 1880s New York City, this period drama traces the clash between entrenched old-money families and ambitious new fortunes. Carrie Coon and Morgan Spector play Bertha and George Russell while Christine Baranski and Cynthia Nixon appear as Agnes van Rhijn and Ada Brook, with Louisa Jacobson and Denée Benton among the central younger leads.

The series was created and written by Julian Fellowes with additional writing by Sonja Warfield. Episodes are directed by Michael Engler and Salli Richardson-Whitfield and produced by HBO with Universal Television. Lavish production design and location work in New York and Rhode Island help recreate the social and industrial boom that defines the era.

4. ‘Back to the Frontier’ (2025–present)

4. 'Back to the Frontier' (2025–present)
Wall to Wall

This unscripted series places three American families in an immersive 1880s homesteading environment where they cook on open fires, tend livestock, build and repair structures, and ration supplies without modern utilities. Season one follows the Halls, the Lopers, and the Hanna-Riggs families as they learn frontier skills from historical experts and work toward winter readiness.

Executive produced by Chip and Joanna Gaines, the eight-episode season streams on Max and also airs on Magnolia Network. Filming took place on expansive acreage with period-accurate cabins and tools, and episodes highlight food preservation, schooling, barter, and community rules that mirror nineteenth-century life.

3. ‘The Yogurt Shop Murders’ (2025)

3. 'The Yogurt Shop Murders' (2025)
Fruit Tree

This four-part documentary examines the 1991 Austin, Texas killings of four teenagers at a frozen yogurt shop and the decades of investigation that followed. The series revisits evidence and media coverage and includes interviews with investigators, journalists, families, and men once convicted in the case.

Directed and produced by Margaret Brown, the miniseries comes from HBO Documentary Films with partners including A24 and Fruit Tree and streams on Max. Episodes roll out in weekly parts and use archival footage and case records to explore how the tragedy shaped the city and why key questions remain unresolved.

2. ‘Hard Knocks’ (2001–present)

2. 'Hard Knocks' (2001–present)
HBO Sports

HBO and NFL Films take viewers behind the scenes with National Football League teams as players and coaches work through camp, preseason, and in-season storylines. The format follows draft picks and undrafted hopefuls through roster battles and also profiles veteran leadership and position meetings inside team facilities and homes.

Created by Marty Callner and produced by NFL Films for HBO, the series is long-running with narration primarily by Liev Schreiber. Recent cycles expanded the brand to cover offseason and in-season arcs, including an offseason look at the Buffalo Bills in 2025, while maintaining the fly-on-the-wall access that defines the franchise.

1. ‘Peacemaker’ (2022–present)

1. 'Peacemaker' (2022–present)
Warner Bros. Television

Set in the DC universe, this action series continues the story of Christopher Smith after the events of ‘The Suicide Squad’ as he joins a covert A.R.G.U.S. team on dangerous assignments that test his beliefs and allegiances. John Cena stars as Peacemaker with Danielle Brooks as Leota Adebayo, Freddie Stroma as Adrian Chase, Jennifer Holland as Emilia Harcourt, Steve Agee as John Economos, Robert Patrick as Auggie Smith, and Chukwudi Iwuji as Clemson Murn.

Created and written by James Gunn, the show is produced by DC Studios in association with Warner Bros. Television and The Safran Company. Season one featured episodes directed by James Gunn along with Jody Hill, Rosemary Rodriguez, and Brad Anderson, and season two continues the character’s arc within the new DC continuity after ‘Superman’.

Share which shows you’re watching on Max this week and what you want to see covered next in the comments.

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