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With how many seasons of the show out there, it can be daunting to decipher which to start with. Fortunately, there are five clear favorites within the franchise. These five are not necessarily the best in the entire franchise, but these are the best place to begin if you’re new to the series. With the franchise put on temporary hiatus, it’s the perfect time to catch up and watch some great seasons of Power Rangers.
5) Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue

The first six seasons of Power Rangers followed a singular storyline that centered on Zordon, ending with Power Rangers In Space. Although seasons like Power Rangers Zeo and In Space are great, particularly In Space, they are not good seasons to begin with. The seventh season, Lost Galaxy, continues certain plot beats from the original six, making it also not an ideal season to start with.
Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue was the first Power Rangers season independent of the previous seven, serving as a fresh start for the franchise. Lightspeed Rescue was also the first season to focus on much older Rangers, adults with careers and professions. The show does feel very dated at this point, having first premiered 25 years ago. The acting is pretty wooden, and the villains are forgettable. Nonetheless, the action is fun, and the original footage used for the Titanium Ranger remains one of the franchise’s most impressive achievements. If only we got to see the Titanium Ranger more often.
4) Power Rangers RPM

The then-recent Power Ranger seasons hadn’t been doing well under Disney ownership, with the series constantly on the verge of cancellation. Power Rangers RPM was Disney’s last shot to right the ship and deliver a darker and more mature season of Power Rangers. Unfortunately, RPM was stuck with arguably the most goofy Super Sentai footage, which included talking Zords and silly comedy.
Nonetheless, the crew was about to make Power Rangers RPM work as a more serious yet tongue-in-cheek season of Power Rangers. The season’s approach to meta-humor has led to several genuinely funny moments, including the infamous meme line “I’m Scottish!” The swift in producers and showrunners halfway through the show adds a tonal dissonance to the season, but it works nevertheless. Power Rangers RPM didn’t save the brand for Disney, which then sold the rights back to Saban, yet it has developed a strong cult following.











