Home TV Reviews Movie Reviews Book Reviews Frequently Asked Questions Articles About Us Support Doux

An Honest Fangirl's Best of 2025

As the year comes to the end, it is now time for us here at Doux Reviews to give our personal recaps and Best Of lists. I get to start us off! It was hard deciding what to spotlight, and two of my picks are going to be highly predictable, but here are the books, shows, movies, and games that I loved most in 2025.

Best Television Show: The Pitt
 

Any show that willingly gets me to wake up at 6:39 AM so that I can sit down and watch it for 15 hours straight, write 13,801 words over 44 pages while I watch it, edit that monstrosity, and then fling it out into the greater Internet is going to be my top show of the year. There just isn’t any other option.

The Pitt recaptured a feeling that I hadn’t felt since high school: waking up excited every Thursday morning because a new episode was going to air that night. And every Thursday, my excitement was validated. It’s just well made. I don’t know how many times I’ve rewatched it, but I catch something new almost every time.

It made me laugh. It made me sob. It made me sit up straight on my couch like I was about to be inundated with patients from a mass casualty event. Plus, it gave me my latest TV crush in Dr. Frank Langdon.

The best part? Season Two is less than a month away.

Runner-Up: Heated Rivalry

Best Movie: Sinners


Yep, still my movie of the decade. There really isn’t anything else to say beyond that. I love this movie. A lot. Sinners was definitely, by far, the best moviegoing experience that I had in 2025. I still get chills whenever I watch the “I Lied To You” scene, even if it’s just a clip on social media.

Michael B. Jordan’s performances as Smoke and Stack were incredible. My brain still insists that there were actually two people there as opposed to him pulling double duty. Obviously, a ton of credit here goes to behind the camera as well for making it so seamless. I still can’t get over the opening cigarette scene.

I love this movie.

Runner-Up: Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

Best Documentary: Titan: The Oceangate Disaster (Netflix) and Implosion: the Titanic Sub Disaster (HBO Max)


I’m double dipping here, but it’s impossible for me to elevate one over the other. They came out within a week of each other, and I watched them back to back. They complement each other very well.

Netflix focused a lot more on Stockton Rush as a person and Oceangate in the lead up to the disaster, whereas HBO Max went deeper into what actually happened and the investigation afterwards. Nothing felt repetitive, and it was fascinating to see the same Coast Guard hearing from (literally) different angles.

The most memorable moment from the Netflix documentary is definitely hearing the popping and snapping of the carbon fibers and how it changed overtime. It’s haunting. You’re listening to something that should be enough red flags to fill the ocean, but instead it’s a banshee’s cry.

For the HBO Max documentary, it’s everything involving Josh Gates. He scrapped an episode about the Titan submersible, and the footage from that is just as haunting as popping and snapping but in a very different way. You’re watching someone go from open and curious to scared and furious as he realizes not just how dangerous the Titan sub is, but also how blinded Stockton Rush is.

If you want a documentary that isn’t about serial killers or gruesome murders, then this is an excellent alternative.

Runner-Up: One Night in Idaho: The College Murders

Best Book: A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul G. Tremblay

When Merry was eight years old, she and her family were the subject of a reality TV show called The Possession, which as the name implies, centered around the idea that her fourteen year old sister, Marjorie, was possessed and followed the family as they tried to deal with this.

I read this book back in March, and I still can’t stop thinking about it. It tapped into my favorite subgenre: shows about ghosts and demons actually find them. Or did they? Was Marjorie possessed, or was she just a very sick girl who was exploited by everyone around her?

Merry is our narrator, but she’s just a little girl. Is she actually seeing evidence that her sister is possessed, or is that just how her brain is interpreting it because she’s eight. I don’t know if the book scared me as much as it made me deeply sad. Merry gets all dressed up and is excited to go to school the day after the first episode airs, only to be mocked and tormented. There are moments where the film crew seems to realize that they’re doing real harm to a very real family, but they don’t stop filming.

My favorite parts were the Last Final Girl blog posts. If “ghost hunters find real ghosts” is my favorite subgenre, then “meta analysis and discussion of in-universe media” is my favorite niche literary format. These blog posts are our only real knowledge of what the show actually was, and it presents a very different view from what Merry is experiencing. I would have loved more of them. (And if you know of any other books that have this kind of thing, let me know!)

Runner-Up: Night Film by Marisha Pessl

Best Superheroes: Dispatch


There was a lot of really good superhero stuff this year! I loved Superman, liked Fantastic Four: First Steps and Marvel Zombies, and am very excited for the second season of Daredevil: Born Again. But my favorite piece of superhero media is the video game Dispatch, made by Adhoc Studio.

You play as Robert Robertson III, a superhero called Mecha Man. When his mech gets destroyed, he agrees to become a dispatcher for other heroes. Unfortunately for him, he gets the Z-Team, a bunch of former villains who are an absolutely dysfunctional mess. He also has the fattest dog in the world. I love them all.

Adhoc is full of ex-Telltale developers, and most of the game will feel very similar to Telltale. There’s nothing groundbreaking here, but it is done very well. The animation is clean, the character designs are distinct, and the cast is stacked with talent. Like I said, I loved every character and I cared a lot about them. Especially Robert. He’s not always likable, and he’s frequently a mess, but I was incredibly protective over him by the end.

Every so often, though, Robert will clock into a dispatching shift, where he receives calls from the area and you have to assign which hero to send out in response. Each hero has their own strengths and weaknesses, and they can’t be everywhere at once. It frequently grows chaotic, and by the end of my last dispatch, I was breathless and shaking from adrenaline and incredibly proud of my team.

The only negative is the hacking minigames that you’re occasionally forced to do, but besides that? I was incredibly satisfied and emotionally fulfilled by the time the credits rolled.

Runner-Up: Superman

Best Video Game: Blue Prince


I have poured close to 200 hours into Blue Prince, and I haven’t solved half of its mysteries. And I think that I’ve finally reached the point where I am okay with that.

Blue Prince is a roguelike puzzle game. Your initial task is fairly straightforward: find the hidden 46th room of a 45 room mansion. The catch is that you must leave the mansion each night, and come morning, the layout must be constructed anew.

It’s a very addictive gameplay loop, and I found a lot of pleasure in simply building the house room by room, trying to leave myself paths forward without getting blocked or locked out. When it comes together, it’s exhilarating.

The frustration comes from the puzzle side. Every time you open an explored door, you’re given three, random rooms to choose from. There were times where I desperately needed one, specific room in order to progress a specific puzzle, and I never saw that room once over the course of a dozen runs. Or I would find the room, but not the item that I needed for the puzzle. Usually, I could just divert and pursue something else, but not always.

When you finally do solve that puzzle, though? When you stumble across an entirely new mystery? When you get the perfect sequence of rooms? Blue Prince is brilliant.

Runner-Up: The Seance of Blake Manor

I wish everyone health and peace as the calendar turns to 2026. As always, I’ve really loved the community here. It’s my favorite corner of the internet, and it’s an honor and a pleasure to write reviews for you all.

Happy New Year!

~~~~
An Honest Fangirl loves video games, horror movies, and superheroes, and occasionally manages to put words together in a coherent and pleasing manner.

13 comments:

  1. What a fun list, Fangirl. I haven't seen (or read) most of these but you always make me think maybe I could handle heavier horror. (And then I have second thoughts...)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I was about to say how A Head Full of Ghosts really wasn't that scary (like I said, I found it more sad than anything) but then I thought for a second and realized that there was a lot of stuff that didn't affect me that would probably freak out other people...

      But if you do dip your toe in, I will be cheering you on the whole time!

      Delete
  2. What a great post! I could not agree with you more on the documentaries. I also watched the two Titan pieces back to back and found myself literally shaking at the sounds of the creaking. Terrifying.

    I also agree with your number two. I became obsessed with the Idaho Four case, watching everything I could find about it. If you haven't yet, read Patterson's book about it. Fascinating discussions about the kids, their relationships, and how one troubled young man could wreak such havoc.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I followed the very beginning of the Idaho Four case because the initial details felt too bizarre to be real, like it was made for a true crime documentary. I stop following it fairly early on, but I read and listened to Alivea Goncalves' victim statement which was stunning. And the documentary made me cry several times.

      I haven't heard of the Patterson book. I'll check it out!

      Delete
  3. Sinners was absolutely incredible! I am not a gore guy, but I got into this movie and am still in wonder at the talent of the director.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ryan Coogler is insanely talented! I don't think there's a movie of his that I've disliked.

      Delete
  4. I've had a couple people recommend both Dispatch and Blue Prince, so it sounds like I need to at least put them on my wish list for future sales!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Definitely! If you only pick up one, Dispatch is the shorter, more self-contained game. I think my first playthrough was eight hours (including a restart an hour in).

      Blue Prince is literally one of those games you can play forever.

      And if you like detective games, I'll highlight my runner-up, Seance of Blake Manor, again! It's a very well done entry for the genre that I devoured over Halloween weekend.

      Delete
  5. Great recommendations; I haven't seen any of the shows mentioned, so I will add them to the list (may not expend the time to watch The Pitt, but we'll see).

    I can, however, testify that Blue Prince is brilliant. I've only put in 14 hours or so, so nothing like your investment (!), but it's addictive, frustrating, challenging, and fun. I have a Field Notes notebook I use for drawing the floor plan every 'day', and it's full of notes about dates, things, rooms, etc. My current strategy is to draught rooms for each available door before entering any of them, whenever possible; not sure whether that's making any difference, but there you go. Looking forward to making it to the antechamber one of these days!

    And another great thing is that it runs natively on my Mac!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. To be fair, probably at least 50 hours of that was me trying again and again to get the Day One achievement, where you reach Room 46 on the first day of a new save file. I got... a little obsessed with it, but it also leaned into the house building stuff that I loved and less into the puzzle stuff which frustrated me. But I got it! And it was magical!

      Delete
  6. Wonderfull to see a fellow adventure game fan here on Doux Reviews. Didn't expect the list to suddenly turn to Dispatch, Blue Prince and Seance at Blake Manor. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Games are honestly my first love out of all creative media. I like to spotlight them when I can! : )

      Delete
  7. Thank you again for the Sinners recommendation. That movie was amazing.

    I'm about to watch Dead Man's Part abd am so excited!

    ReplyDelete

We love comments! Just note that we always moderate because of spam and trolls. It's never too late to comment on an old show, but please don’t spoil future episodes for newbies.