‘Marvel Zombies’ Tops Disney+’s Most-Watched Shows List This Week Again: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows of the Week
It’s been a busy week on Disney+, with fresh premieres, returning favorites, and global hits sharing the spotlight. From animated apocalypse mayhem to prestige Korean dramas and long-running comfort watches, viewers had plenty to queue up and binge.
Below, we’re spotlighting the ten titles people kept pressing play on—covering what each show is about, who’s behind it, and where it sits in its broader franchise or TV lineage. Dive in and find your next watch.
10. ‘The Murky Stream’ (2025– )

Set in a lawless Joseon era where the Gyeonggang River has turned “murky,” this historical drama follows Siyul, Choi Eun, and Jung Chun as their fates intertwine amid ambition and survival. The series stars Rowoon, Shin Ye-eun and Park Seo-ham and is streaming on Disney+, with a rollout that began in late September 2025 after its ‘On Screen’ festival bow at Busan.
Directed by Choo Chang-min and written by Chun Sung-il, the show is produced by NPIO Entertainment and Anew. Disney+ Korea lists the title’s synopsis, cast, and rating, with weekly episode drops planned following its three-episode streaming start.
9. ‘Modern Family’ (2009–2020)

The mockumentary sitcom created by Christopher Lloyd and Steven Levitan chronicles the interconnected Pritchett-Dunphy-Tucker clan in Los Angeles. The ensemble includes Ed O’Neill, Sofía Vergara, Julie Bowen, Ty Burrell, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Eric Stonestreet across 11 seasons and 250 episodes.
Produced by 20th Century Fox Television (now 20th Television) with single-camera style and 20–24 minute episodes, the series concluded April 8, 2020, and remains a streaming staple on Disney+ via the Hulu hub in many regions. Full cast and crew details are extensive due to its long run and rotating guest stars.
8. ‘Bluey’ (2018– )

The Australian animated phenomenon from creator Joe Brumm follows Bluey, a Heeler pup, and her family in seven-minute stories emphasizing imaginative play. Produced by Ludo Studio for ABC Kids and distributed globally by BBC Studios, the series streams on Disney+ worldwide and has become a cross-generational hit. Voice leads include David McCormack and Melanie Zanetti, with music by Joff Bush.
Development draws on Brisbane settings and Australian culture, with the show collecting major awards including an International Emmy Kids Award and a 2024 Peabody. Its global footprint spans broadcast on Disney Junior in the U.S. and full catalog availability on Disney+.
7. ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ (2005– )

Shonda Rhimes’ long-running medical drama centers on the personal and professional lives of surgical staff at Seattle’s (now Grey Sloan) hospital. The series features an extensive ensemble over 21 seasons, with Ellen Pompeo anchoring much of its run; showrunners have included Rhimes, Krista Vernoff and, most recently, Meg Marinis.
Produced by Shondaland and 20th Television, the show uses a single-camera format and 40–52 minute runtimes. It remains a fixture in Disney’s streaming ecosystem via Hulu/Disney+, with hundreds of episodes available for longform viewing.
6. ‘Only Murders in the Building’ (2021– )

Co-created by Steve Martin and John Hoffman, the mystery-comedy follows neighbors Charles, Oliver and Mabel—played by Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez—who investigate deaths connected to their Upper West Side building while making a true-crime podcast. The series streams on Hulu in the U.S. and on Disney+ internationally; Season 5 premiered September 9, 2025, with weekly episodes.
The production hails from 20th Television with executive producers including Martin, Short, Hoffman and Dan Fogelman, music by Siddhartha Khosla, and a revolving door of guest stars across seasons. Recent reporting highlighted new Season 5 roles and returns, including Keegan-Michael Key and a creative voice cameo from Paul Rudd.
5. ‘Tempest’ (2025)

Disney+’s Korean tentpole—written by Jeong Seo-kyeong and directed by Kim Hee-won and Heo Myeong-haeng—stars Jun Ji-hyun as diplomat Seo Mun-ju opposite Gang Dong-won as bodyguard Paik San-ho, with supporting roles for John Cho, Lee Mi-sook, Park Hae-joon, Kim Hae-sook and others. It streamed September 10–October 1, 2025, with a nine-episode schedule internationally on Disney+ and on Hulu in the U.S.
The political action-romance tracks Mun-ju’s entry into the presidential race after her husband’s assassination, threading themes of power, reunification and espionage. Coverage of the finale spotlighted high-stakes nuclear-threat plot turns and left certain character fates deliberately ambiguous.
4. ‘Alien: Earth’ (2025– )

Noah Hawley’s entry in the ‘Alien’ franchise is set two years before Ridley Scott’s 1979 film and stars Sydney Chandler, Alex Lawther, Essie Davis, Samuel Blenkin, Babou Ceesay, Adarsh Gourav, and Timothy Olyphant. The series premiered August 12, 2025 on FX/FX on Hulu and internationally on Disney+, following a production pause during the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike and completion of filming in 2024.
Executive producers include Hawley and Ridley Scott, with Jeff Russo composing the score. The story begins when the vessel Maginot crash-lands on Earth, intertwining cyborgs, synthetics, and human-consciousness hybrids in a survival narrative; early viewership tallies included 9.2 million global views in the first six days across platforms.
3. ‘High Potential’ (2024– )

The ABC procedural—streaming on Hulu/Disney+ after broadcast—centers on single mom and genius sleuth Morgan (Kaitlin Olson) who consults for LAPD Major Crimes. Developed by Drew Goddard from the French hit ‘HPI’, Season 1 launched September 17, 2024; Todd Harthan later took over as showrunner, and the series was renewed for Season 2 (premiered September 16, 2025). The ensemble includes Daniel Sunjata, Javicia Leslie, Deniz Akdeniz and Judy Reyes; Alethea Jones directed the pilot.
Production comes from Goddard Textiles, Spondoolie Productions, Itinéraire/Septembre Productions, and ABC Signature (folded into 20th Television in October 2024). The show posted strong multiplatform lifts in early ratings and maintains weekly streaming availability after its network airings.
2. ‘Chad Powers’ (2025– )

Created by Glen Powell and Michael Waldron and inspired by Eli Manning’s viral undercover quarterback bit, the sports comedy stars Powell as disgraced college QB Russ Holliday, who reinvents himself—prosthetics, wig, mustache and all—as “Chad Powers” to walk on at a struggling program. The series premieres with two episodes on September 30, 2025, on Hulu in the U.S. (via the Hulu hub on Disney+ in some regions) and rolls out weekly. Executive producers include Powell, Waldron, Eli and Peyton Manning, with Natalie Holt composing the score. Main cast also features Perry Mattfeld, Quentin Plair, Wynn Everett and Steve Zahn.
Publicity around launch included appearances from Powell and Eli Manning and coverage of Powell’s physical prep to perform football sequences while wearing heavy prosthetics. Initial episodes and weekly release cadence were highlighted across talk shows and entertainment press.
1. ‘Marvel Zombies’ (2025)

Marvel Studios Animation’s four-episode event follows surviving heroes and villains navigating a zombie-plagued MCU, led by voices including Iman Vellani, Hailee Steinfeld, Florence Pugh, David Harbour, Simu Liu, Wyatt Russell, and Elizabeth Olsen. The miniseries is directed by Bryan Andrews with writing by Zeb Wells, runs roughly 31–37 minutes per episode, and is positioned within Phase Six of the MCU on Disney+. It premiered on September 24, 2025, after shifting from an initially planned October date.
Behind the scenes, Kevin Feige and Brad Winderbaum executive-produce alongside Andrews and Wells, with music by Laura Karpman and Nora Kroll-Rosenbaum. The series had a protracted scheduling journey—first teased for 2024—before Disney dated it for 2025 and ultimately moved it up to late September. Early performance indicators noted strong placement among Disney+ viewership charts in multiple countries following launch.
Share what you watched first—and what you’re cueing up next—in the comments.


