It’s much of the same at the top of the U.S. Prime Video charts. **Karl Urban’**s Billy Butcher, **Jack Quaid’**s Hughie Campbell, Antony Starr’s Homelander, and more continue to take the #1 spot, as Eric Kripke’s ***The Boys ***Season 5 proves one of the best options on all streaming platforms. Superheroes remain the order of the day on Prime, as the animated series ***Invincible ***holds strong in the charts, despite the fourth season finale having debuted over three weeks ago. However, a new rival has finally fought its way into the battle for supremacy, and it makes up one of three Prime Video shows you need to binge this weekend.

For more recommendations, check out our list of the best shows and movies on Prime Video.

Of course, the first and biggest recommendation for this weekend is Citadel, the pulse-pounding Prime Video favorite that has finally returned for a second mainline season, three years since the first. With that in mind, there is no better time to catch up on the entire series than now. Game of Thrones favorite Richard Madden and **Priyanka Chopra Jonas **star as two spies who must fight in the midst of the downfall of a global spy agency.

Citadel hasn’t exactly been quiet these past few years. Although the main series has taken years to return, international spin-offs, such as Diana and Honey Bunny, have emerged instead. However, neither has quite reached the heights of the original. Chopra Jonas and Madden return for Season 2 alongside Stanley Tucci’s Bernard for seven new episodes, all dropped at once on Wednesday, May 6.

The show that claimed the most of your answers is the world you were built for. If two tied, both are shown — you’re complicated enough to straddle two Sheridan universes.

You are a Dutton — or you might as well be. You understand that some things are worth protecting at any cost, and that the modern world’s indifference to history, to land, to legacy, is not something you’re willing to accept quietly. You lead from the front, you carry your family’s weight without complaint, and when someone threatens what’s yours, you don’t escalate — you finish it. You’re not cruel. But you are absolute. In Yellowstone’s world, that combination of ferocity and loyalty doesn’t make you a villain. It makes you the only thing standing between everything that matters and everyone who wants to take it.

You thrive in the chaos of high-stakes negotiation, where the money is enormous, the margins are thin, and the wrong word in the wrong room can cost everyone everything. You’re a fixer — the person called when a situation is already on fire and needs someone with the nerve to walk into it. West Texas oil country rewards exactly what you are: sharp, adaptable, unsentimental, and absolutely clear-eyed about what people want and what they’ll do to get it. You’re not naive enough to think this world is fair. You’re smart enough to be the one deciding who it’s fair to.

You are a Dwight Manfredi — someone who has served their time, paid their dues, and arrived somewhere unexpected with nothing but their reputation and their wits. You adapt without losing yourself. You build loyalty through respect rather than fear, though you’re not above reminding people that the two aren’t mutually exclusive. Tulsa King is for people who are still standing when everyone assumed they’d be finished — who find, in an unfamiliar place, that they’re more capable than the world gave them credit for. You don’t need a throne. You build one, wherever you happen to land.

You carry the weight of a system that is broken by design, and you do it anyway — because someone has to, and because you’re the only one positioned to do it without the whole thing collapsing. Mike McLusky’s world is for people who are comfortable operating where there are no good options, only less catastrophic ones. You speak every language: law enforcement, criminal, political, human. That fluency makes you invaluable and it makes you a target. You’ve made your peace with both. Mayor of Kingstown belongs to people who understand that keeping the peace is not the same as being at peace — and who do the job regardless.

Although it’s one of the most popular police procedurals on television, for those who have yet to watch Criminal Minds, its 18 seasons and counting could pose a daunting prospect to would-be viewers. Take this as your call to action, as you have the time to catch up on at least some of this iconic crime show before its return later this month.

Unit Chief Aaron Hotchner (Thomas Gibson) and his team of agents have faced an array of exciting, tense, and strange cases in the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit in Quantico across the years, with no episode of Criminal Minds proving dull. You can expect easy-to-watch procedural television that doesn’t sacrifice quality while achieving a huge quantity of episodes. Proof of the show’s popularity can be seen via the outcry of frustration when it was initially cancelled in 2019, leading to a fan demand-inspired revival in 2022.

Late last month, it was confirmed that The Summer I Turned Pretty’s feature-length next chapter had officially entered production. However, if it wasn’t for the popularity of the show’s third season last summer, perhaps the next installment wouldn’t exist at all. If you’re yet to experience this YA romance in all its twisting, endearing glory, why not dive headfirst into the best love triangle in modern television this weekend?

Belly Conklin’s (Lola Tung) love is caught between two brothers, Conrad (Christopher Briney) and Jeremiah Fisher (Gavin Casalengo), as the ups, downs, and in-betweens of teenage romance are explored against the gorgeous backdrop of the fictional Cousins Beach. Based on the books by Jenny Han, this indulgent drama perfectly transitions like young love from sweet in its first season to tense in its third, as a trio of teens on the cusp of adulthood discovers who they are.

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Erica Dunton, Jesse Peretz, Jeff Chan