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However, all those shows also have one thing in common. They have fantastic Monster of the Week episodes that have little to do with the mythos, but remain some of the most entertaining episodes in the show’s runs. Here are the 10 best Buffy the Vampire Slayer non-mythos episodes.
10) Go Fish

“Go Fish” is an episode from the second season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. This episode sees Xander join the Sunnydale High School’s Razorbacks swim team to help Buffy investigate what is killing the best team members. As the title might suggest, it is, in fact, a Gill-Man-style monster. There are a lot of fans who dislike this episode for various reasons, but this remains one of the scariest episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer because it leans hard into horror over fantasy. The gore effects are some of the best body horror in Buffy history. The final moments, where these teens, whose only sin was being on the swim team, end up cursed forever, are terrifying.
9) Ted

In what might be the most surprising casting moment on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Joss Whedon cast the beloved John Ritter to play Ted, a new guy that Buffy’s mom Joyce is dating. While Angel convinces Buffy to give Ted a chance, the man starts to show an aggressive nature toward Buffy, but no one else sees it. Of course, thisd is a Monster of the Week episode, so Ted isn’t what he seems. Instead of being a monster, though, Ted is shockingly an android. This was almost a throwaway episode when it aired, but seeing Ritter playing against type made this an early underappreciated gem.
8) Normal Again

“Normal Again” was an episode from Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 6 that had one of the most shockingly disturbing moments of any episode in the series. This is the season that the Trio is trying to destroy Buffy nd her friends, and they summon a demon that uses hallucinogenic venom, which gets Buffy with. What happens next is disturbing, as Buffy is in a mental hospital, her parents are both alive, and the doctors tell her she has been hallucinating her entire life as a slayer. The episode even ends with Buffy back in the hospital, and it leaves the door open that nothing on Buffy the Vampire Slayer really happened. This is the most meta the show ever was, and it was a brilliant storyline.
7) I Only Have Eyes for You

“I Only Have Eyes for You” was an episode from the second season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and it is a ghost story. The episode sees Sunnydale High School haunted by the ghosts of a teacher and a student who fell in love with each other years earlier. The two ghosts begin to possess the bodies of students and staff members, planning to recreate their tragic demise. When the ghosts possess Buffy and Angel, it results in one of the best acting performances from Sarah Michelle Gellar and David Boroneaz in the show’s history.
6) Killed by Death

“Killed by Death” is a terrifying episode because it involves a demon who kills children who are already sick and in the hospital. In this episode, Buffy gets the flu so bad that she ends up hospitalized. While there, she can’t get out of bed, but she sees a demonic creature wandering the halls, with a hat and terrifying teeth. The twist is that she has seen this demon before, and it had killed Buffy’s cousin, Celia. This Buffy the Vampire Slayer demon feeds off children, and it stayed alive this long by stealing the life force from severely ill children, so no one knows any better. It is terrifying; the death of Celia is especially disturbing, and this hits on several levels for a standalone filler episode.













