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We recentlyaskedtheBuzzFeed Communityto tell us which TV shows with less than 40 episodes are the very best. From well-known ones to more underrated gems, here are some of their top responses:

1.“Gravity Falls. It’s a show aimed at kids, but I’d recommend it to everyone. It’s funny, has an actually good plot, and kept me on the edge of my seat at times.”

2.“Santa Clarita Diet. It was original and hilarious, with an awesome cast. It’s just too bad Netflix screwed us by canceling it on a cliffhanger.”

3.Mindhunteris so good, and it should’ve won multiple awards, including an Emmy for Jonathan Groff. It gets you hooked from literally Episode 1.

4.“Galavant. This show was just a happy, fun, fantasy musical. The humor was excellent, the cast clearly loved every minute of the show, and nearly all of them have been trying to get more seasons. They even referenced it in the last song of the show, ‘There’s not much left to tell; and hey, that’s just as well! Unless we get one more surprise renewal.'”

5.“Phoebe Waller-Bridge’sCrashing. It has only six episodes.”

6.“The original UKGhosts, which has 34 episodes and is a great comedy to watch.”

7.“Anatomy of a Scandalon Netflix. A British mini-series that’s smart, intelligent, and very well-written! It’s timely, has some twists, and will keep you going until the end. I’ve seen it a couple of times and picked up things I missed the first time around. Give it a shot. I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.”

8.“This Way Upwith Aisling Bea and Sharon Horgan. Bea plays Áine, who is restarting her life after completing rehab. Horgan plays her sister. Two seasons of heartfelt, hilarious perfection. I would kill for a third season.”

9.Arcaneis easily one of the most beautifully crafted animated series of all time. The soundtrack is a 10/10, too.

10.“The Patientfeaturing Steve Carrell had me hooked! The ending was shocking. I was floored and wish I could watch it again for the first time!”

11.“The IT Crowd. Unmatched humor and Matt Berry? Hell yes.”

12.“Mr Inbetween. Great dark comedy, great writing, and great direction.”

13.October Road. I will literally watch Bryan Greenberg in anything, and this was another great (and underrated) show he starred in during the 2000s.

14.“The Artful Dodger. The perfect mix of every genre in just 8 episodes. It’s so well-written and acted. You discover new things every time you watch it.”

15.“Timeless. It was such a good show and I’m still sad that it didn’t last longer. I can just imagine what it cost to produce, though, so I can see why it had a short run.”

16.“Two incredible John le Carré miniseries. First,The Little Drummer Girl. Florence Pugh falls for Alexander Skarsgård while spying for Mossad in the ’70s.”

17.“And second,The Night Manager. Tom Hiddleston infiltrates mobster Hugh Laurie’s inner circle at the request of MI5/Olivia Colman. I can watch both on repeat!”

18.“Hannibal. Absolutely phenomenal. Gorgeous cinematography, fantastic practical effects, and great writing. And it has Mads Mikkelsen and Hugh Dancy — what more could you want?”

19.“Dopesick. Not only is it brilliantly written and acted (Michael Keaton and Rosario Dawson — nuff said), but it’s timely and tells an important story. The reason we have an opioid crisis is because of corporate greed, and thousands upon thousands of lives have been ruined because of it. Everyone should watch it (and get furious and then do something about it).”

20.“Why Women Kill. Holy cow. The drama. The murder. The clever story telling. Three separate timelines in one house!”

21.“Derry Girls. The writing, the acting, and the casting were all perfection. Off the top of my head I can’t think of another show with so many characters I didn’t just like, but I genuinely loved.”

22.“Fleabag. Those 12 episodes changed me.”

23.“Firefly— in the proper episode order. And you can follow it up with the movieSerenity.”

24.“Freaks and Geeks. It lasted but a single season, but it was a rich, engrossing show featuring plenty of fine performances by young actors, many of whom later became major stars. It was set in a decade (the 1980s), which was part of my childhood, so it was especially relatable, but it could have been set in any era. A very good and special show!”

25.And finally, “The Queen’s Gambit. Everything about that show was amazing. I think it was responsible for a measurable uptick in interest in chess.”

Grunkle Stan holding a can and papers, talking to Mabel and Dipper in the Mystery Shack from Gravity Falls. Mabel wears a pink sweater; Dipper wears a cap

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Drew Barrymore and Timothy Olyphant, as Joel and Sheila, in "Santa Clarita Diet," while covered in blood. Joel jokes they are cleaning up a murder site

A scene from the TV show "Mindhunter" shows Ed Kemper in a prison meeting room, talking to FBI agent Holden Ford, seated across the table from him

Madalena in a scene from "Galavant," as she tells Galavant she prefers fame and fortune

Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Jonathan Bailey in a scene from "Crashing" where Phoebe as Lulu jokes she needs to find a job, a door, and an identity

A scene from "Ghosts" where Alison looks stunned, and a group of various different ghosts stand in a hallway

A scene from "Anatomy of a Scandal," featuring Sienna Miller and Ripert Friend as they talk with another person in a tense restaurant scene

A scene from "This Way Up" where Shona says on a website this place suggested they would have a Jacuzzi, and a woman tells her this is not a spa, it's a rehab facility

Animated characters Vi and Jinx from Arcane in two close-up scenes, both looking intense, depicting a dramatic interaction

Sam in a scene from "The Patient," telling Alan that he needs help

Roy from "The IT Crowd" picking up the phone and saying, "Hello, IT. Have you tried turning it on and off again?"

Two scenes from "Mr Inbetween." One where Ray is dimly lit in a club vs Ray walking with his daughter while eating ice cream

A scene from "October Road" featuring Bryan Greenberg and Laura Prepon's characters talking

Belle asking Dawkins if he still wants to run away with her, and Dawkins telling her it's all he wants and that he thinks about her right when he wakes up in the morning

Abigail Spencer, Matt Lanter, and Malcolm Barrett in a scene from "Timeless," as they look up at the Hindenberg

Florence Pugh in a scene from "The Little Drummer Girl," as she tells Alexander Skarsgård's character, "You got all those scars from women, didn't you?"

Tom Hiddleston and Olivia Colman in a scene from "The Night Manager," seated and engaged in conversation

Will Graham in a scene from "Hannibal," saying an intelligent psychopath is hard to catch vs. a scene of Hannibal Lecter holding a fork and eating

Michael Keaton and Kaitlyn Dever in a scene from "Dopesick," where Michael's character talks about a brand-new drug that's supposed to be a miracle

Three scenes featuring Ginnifer Goodwin, Lucy Liu, and Kirby Howell-Baptiste, all dress up, in "Why Women Kill"

Lisa McGee's Derry Girls characters Erin Quinn (top) and Clare Devlin (bottom) wear school uniforms in a library scene where Clare tells Erin she's not interested in her

Claire telling Fleabag that she looks like a pencil in a scene from "Fleabag"

Actors in a scene from the TV show "Firefly," featuring Gina Torres, Nathan Fillion, and Alan Tudyk in period-styled, casual space frontier attire

Split image from TV show "Freaks and Geeks": Top scene - James Franco, Jason Segel, and Linda Cardellini by bleachers. Bottom scene - John Daley, Martin Starr, and Samm Levine in cafeteria

Anya Taylor-Joy as Beth Harmon in "The Queen's Gambit" playing chess, focused on the board with a hand resting on her chin