The biggest shows coming to HBO, Disney+, Netflix and more
There’s now a truly dizzying number of TV networks and streaming services vying for your hard-earned subscription money. And as a result, there are loads of upcoming TV shows arriving in the remaining months of 2025.
Last year, telly addicts were treated to some truly wonderful series, from the epic historical drama of Shogun to the retro-futuristic, ultra-violence hijinks of Fallout. Not to mention the soaring heroism of Masters of the Air and Larry David’s last grouchy outing in the final season of long-running comedy Curb Your Enthusiasm.
We’re now halfway into 2025, but there are still loads more on the way – from fresh seasons of beloved dramas to miniseries to all-new shows. In this article, we look forward to the best upcoming TV shows of 2025 – our pick of the stuff that streaming services and traditional channels have planned for release on the small screen this year.
Alien: Earth (Hulu/Disney+)
It’s fair to say that recent additions to the Alien franchise have been hit and miss, but we hold high hopes for this – the series’ first ever TV show. Set in 2120 (which is two years before the events of the original movie), it concerns a mysterious spacecraft that crashes on Earth. And, needless to say, its deadly contents. Aside from that, we know very little about the plot, but with months to go before its release we expect more revealing trailers to appear soon.
The series, which is being executive produced by Ridley Scott and Noah Hawley (best known for the excellent Fargo TV show), apparently follows the style and mythology of the early films much more than the likes of Prometheus and Romulus.
Release date: Summer 2025
Task – Season 1 (Sky/Now/HBO Max)
We’re still suckers for an HBO prestige crime drama, and the fact that Task comes from Brad Ingelsby, the writer of the excellent Mare of Easttown, only makes us more excited for its arrival.
A seven-part miniseries starring Ozark’s Tom Pelphrey as a working-class Philadelphia family man who has turned to violent robbery as a means of making a living, and Mark Ruffalo as the FBI agent leading the task force ordered to stop him. Oh, and both men have complex and troubled inner lives, in case you were wondering!
Release date: September 2025
The Morning Show – Season 4 (Apple TV+)

Apple TV+’s flagship show has netted a ton of awards for its previous three seasons, and we fully expect this fourth tranche of episodes (of which there’ll be ten in total) to grab armfuls more.
With a star-studded cast led by Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon, the series gives viewers a glimpse behind the cameras of a top network broadcast morning news show, and all the backstabbing, jostling, misbehaviour and more that goes on when powerful people push up against each other.
It’s premium drama at its best, really – and this fourth season will add yet more star power to the cast with the additions of Marion Cotillard, Jeremy Irons, Aaron Pierre and Boyd Holbrook.
Release date: 17 September 2025
Slow Horses – Season 5 (Apple TV+)

Gary Oldman is an actor with incredible range. From Count Dracula to Sid Vicious to Beethoven to Léon’s deranged cop Norman Stansfield, he’s inhabited dozens of iconic roles over the years. But we suspect future entertainment historians will regard Slow Horses’ Jackson Lamb as one of his best-regarded acting turns ever.
The dishevelled, alcoholic Lamb, who oversees MI5’s misfits and write-offs in the shabby office building of Slough House (the ‘Slow Horses’ to which the title refers), is a fascinating character. Rude, caustic and outwardly cynical, there’s far more to him than meets the eye, and Oldman’s performance goes a long way towards conveying that depth and complexity with a subtlety few actors could pull off.
As yet we know very little about the fifth season’s plot, but expect more espionage shenanigans from Lamb and his team as they strive to counter a new threat against Great Britain.
Release date: 24 September 2025
King and Conqueror – Season 1 (BBC)

Ah, 1066 and all that. The story of William of Normandy, Harold Godwinson and the Battle of Hastings is generally among the first bits of history British schoolkids learn about, and it’s absolutely packed with drama on both the grand and human scale.
Odd then, that we’ve rarely seen it represented on the screen. This BBC-produced series is changing all that, with James Norton playing King Harold and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as William of Normandy – and while we don’t know a whole lot about it the initial round of shots suggest a grim and gritty look reminiscent of Game of Thrones or The Last Kingdom.
Release date: 2025
Welcome to Derry – Season 1 (Sky/Now/Max)

Serving as a prequel to the 2017 It movie, this supernatural series takes place in Stephen King’s fictional town of Derry, Maine – the setting for many of the horror maestro’s best-known novels and short stories.
Set in the 1960s, this nine-part show will tell the origin story of the demonic Pennywise (played once more by Bill Skarsgård) through a series of catastrophic events that take place in the town whenever the killer clown emerges from hibernation. The plan is to make two more seasons, set in later time periods – but we suppose we’ll have to see how the first season performs before that’s confirmed.
Release date: Late 2025
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms – Season 1 (Sky/Now/Max)

This prequel to Game of Thrones, based on George R.R. Martin’s three Tales of Dunk and Egg novellas, promises to be much smaller in scope than HBO’s other Martin adaptations.
Following the adventures of Ser Duncan the Tall, a hedge knight, and Egg, a Targaryen prince and Ser Duncan’s squire, it’s set around 90 years before the events of Game of Thrones. We’re excited for it mainly because it’s based on Martin’s real, finished stories and its tighter focus means it should be relatively simple to adapt without creating the sort of major plot holes and issues that beset the latter seasons of GOT. This first season will have only six episodes, so we’re hoping for a nice brisk fantasy story without excessive padding. Too much to ask, perhaps…
Release date: Late 2025
Read the full article here