'The Boys' Season 5 Ratings vs. Some of the Most Iconic TV Shows: Where Does It Stand?

Credits: Jasper Savage/Prime Video
Credits: Jasper Savage/Prime Video
Amazon Prime Video’s The Boys ended its five-season run with Blood and Bone, a finale soaked in betrayal, exploding bodies, and one last devastating Butcher-Homelander collision. Nearly seven years after debuting as a foul-mouthed corporate-superhero satire, Eric Kripke’s chaos machine evolved into television’s most brutal political circus. Hughie killing Butcher after Homelander’s defeat felt less like victory and more like the world’s grimmest mic drop.
Now comes the harder question: after almost seven years of Supes, scandals, and Compound V-fueled carnage, where does The Boys stand in television’s ruthless ratings arena beside its untouchable giants?
The Boys’ ratings and whether Vought won in the end
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The Boys ended its final season with a towering 97% Rotten Tomatoes score, instantly placing Eric Kripke’s savage superhero circus beside prestige monsters like Breaking Bad and Game of Thrones. Critics celebrated the finale’s violent payoffs and emotional collapses, particularly Billy Butcher’s tragic downfall. Audiences, however, proved far less forgiving, dragging the Popcornmeter to 73% after complaints about pacing and unresolved arcs.
That divide is precisely what makes The Boys such a fascinating television anomaly. Critics treated the final season with the same reverence once reserved for Walter White’s final empire-building spiral in Breaking Bad. Yet viewers responded more like exhausted Vought shareholders, applauding the spectacle while questioning whether the chaos machine had finally become too bloated for its own good.
The ratings war has also taken an unexpected turn. Stranger Things originally overshadowed The Boys with its near-perfect 97% launch, yet the Supes saga now finishes stronger, crushing past Hawkins’ modest 82% finale-era reception with its own explosive 97%. Compared with Game of Thrones, the Prime Video phenomenon lands in a peculiar middle ground. It never suffered the catastrophic critical collapse that haunted Westeros after Season 8, but it also never achieved the almost sacred audience loyalty attached to Walter White’s legacy. Instead, it exists in television history as a critically adored grenade that left viewers both thrilled and slightly singed.
The legacy conversation becomes sharper once the ratings are lined up together. Breaking Bad still dominates with near-perfect averages of 96% from critics and 97% from audiences, while Game of Thrones holds an impressive 89% critic score despite its infamous final-season collapse. The Boys sits at 93% with critics but drops dramatically to 73% with viewers, making it television’s most critically adored yet audience-divisive modern blockbuster.
Looking at the numbers alone and the fact that people are curious about a sixth season, The Boys clearly enjoys certain advantages over its streaming rivals, raising an even bigger question about where its final verdict truly lands.
Can The Boys truly stand with the supes of TV
The Boys may not occupy the sacred television penthouse reserved for Breaking Bad, but Eric Kripke’s Supes saga absolutely punches within striking distance of the medium’s modern giants. Vince Gilligan’s crime masterpiece still reigns supreme in narrative precision and character construction, while the Prime Video chaos machine occasionally stumbled into repetitive Homelander hunting loops. Even so, few contemporary dramas matched its willingness to brutalize core characters and torch audience expectations without apology.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Where The Boys truly earns its seat beside Game of Thrones, and Stranger Things is cultural domination. Like the Hawkins phenomenon and Westeros at its peak, the Supes satire became appointment television fueled by memes, discourse, and billion-minute streaming weeks. Antony Starr’s Homelander evolved into an internet-era monster on the level of Walter White, giving the series a legacy built less on perfection and more on unforgettable chaos.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Do you think The Boys can be placed amongst TV's legends? Let us know in the comments!
ADVERTISEMENT
Edited By: Adiba Nizami
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT




