Ranking every season of Survivor
After 49 seasons, which installment comes out on top (and bottom)?
Ranking every season of* Survivor*
After 49 seasons, which installment comes out on top (and bottom)?
By Dalton Ross
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Dalton Ross is a writer and editor with over 25 years experience covering TV and the entertainment industry. *Survivor* is kind of his thing.
EW's editorial guidelines
on December 19, 2025 8:11 a.m. ET
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Sophi Balerdi, Sage Ahrens-Nichols, Savannah Louie, Kristina Mills and Rizo Velovic on 'Survivor 49'. Credit:
All 49 seasons of Survivor, ranked
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There's the good, the bad, and the ugly. *Survivor* has seen it all over 49 seasons. We rank every single installment of the reality franchise, from first to worst.
1. (Tie) Survivor: Borneo and Survivor: Micronesia â Fans vs. Favorites
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Monty Brinton/CBS; Monty Brinton/CBS
I've gone back and forth with these two over the years. After *Micronesia* aired, I named it the best *Survivor* season ever. Upon reflection, while I still considered it the most enjoyable, I also worried I was understating the impact of the first season, which became a national phenomenon. (Yes, *Borneo* now seems dated and tame by comparison, but it's the biggest game-changer in the past 30 years of television.) So then I returned that to the No. 1 spot. If I wanted to watch one season again, it would be *Micronesia*. If you ask me which is the most important season, well, obviously it's *Borneo*. So instead of constantly flipping them, they can simply share the top spot...until I change my mind again.
3. Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains
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Robert Voets/CBS
The Russell vs. Boston Rob feud made for the best pre-merge run of episodes ever, and the greatness just kept on coming. The season was filled with huge memorable moments like Tyson voting himself off, J.T. giving Russell his immunity idol, and Parvati handing out two immunity idols at one Tribal Council. It loses a few points for having so many three-timers, though, including a few we simply didn't need to see again. I know many people would consider this No. 1, but it's all returnees. For me, the fresh blood of *Micronesia* keeps that season higher.
4. Survivor: Cagayan
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Michael Yarish/CBS
Quite simply, the best *Survivor* season ever with all new players since the very first one (which is only better by the fact that it was the very first one). It was an intoxicating mix of terrific and terrible gameplay, in which the big personalities (Tony, Spencer, Kass) weren't just personalitiesâthey actually were there to *play the game*. (Maybe not well at all times, but at least they were playing.) The casting was killer, the challenges were solid, the boot order was completely unpredictable, and the creative twists worked (although I was not a fan of the return of the post-votes-read idol; thankfully that never came into play). The fact that Woo inexplicably brought Tony to the end with him added one last great "WHAT THE HELL?!?" moment to a truly exhilarating season.
5. Survivor: David vs. Goliath
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The cast of 'Survivor: David vs. Goliath'. CBS
The theme was goofy, and the challenges weren't particularly mind-blowing, so how does this season sneak all the way into the top 5? Casting. Casting. Casting. That's what it all comes down to. And it's not just Christian, who is one of the most universally loved contestants of all time. Just look at this slew of other players and personalities that created great TV: Angelina, Nick, Davie, Gabby, Mike, Elizabeth, Natalie Napalm, and even wacky Jeremy. That is an amazing nine out of 20 that I would easily welcome back on another season.
Often, that's all a season needs. And that really is first and foremost the reason *David vs. Goliath* became an all-time great. But there are other trophies to hand out as well. The editing job done by the producers was perhaps the show's best ever. They experimented with new techniques which served to freshen up the franchise in its 37th season. They added comedic flourishes that were totally unnecessary, yet improved the episodes nonetheless. They cut back and forth between players and stories in ways they never had before. They had a contestant (Dan) talk about the idol he found and *then* showed how it happened instead of the other way around. This wasn't reinventing the wheel by any means, but it presented the story in ways we hadn't seen previouslyâand it worked. We always talk about the show taking risks in terms of creating the story via twists, but now it was taking risks in how it presented that story as well. The result? A top 5 finish.
6. Survivor: Cambodia â Second Chance
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The first thing to note about *Cambodia* is how well all the production twists turned out. Letting fans vote in the cast? Brilliant. Hiding idols at challenges? I think you all know how I feel about that. Tempting people to quit an immunity challenge for a mystery vote steal advantage? Loved it. All the tribe switcheroos? They played out to perfection. The *Survivor* producers always throw a bunch of twists out there. Usually, some work and some don't. This season, they all paid dividends.
I also appreciated how hard the bulk of the cast was playing. Usually, you get a small handful of big-time gamers. This season you only had a handful that weren't going hard (which, granted, is somewhat a function of returning player seasons in general). Another plus: The votes were completely unpredictable from week to week, leading to some truly crazy Tribals. Sure, the challenges were a bit blah, but, still, a rousing and triumphant success.
7. Survivor: Pearl Islands
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'Survivor: Pearl Islands'. Monty Brinton/CBS
What's so great about *Pearl Islands* is the way the entire season embraces the pirate theme, especially the way it is incorporated into all the challengesâsomething that never happens anymore. (Maybe *Pirate Master* is to blame for that?) Obviously, there was a stellar cast with big personalities. Rupert stealing shoes. Fairplay getting drunk at Tribal Council. Osten becoming the first person to lay down his torch. Savage willing his tribe to win. Lil frustrating everyone. And Sandra getting in faces. It was all delicious. Loses points, though, for the awful Outcasts twist, even though it did give us Skinny Ryan's brilliant "Die, Jerks" bandana.
8. Survivor: Winners at War
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Robert Voets/CBS
A season filled with pure joy, and that feeling of joy and celebration permeated the entire season, starting with a collection of incredible players and personalities. Some people, like Ben and Michele, had something to prove. Others, like Yul and Kim, were revered folks who hoped to show their first dominant runs were not a fluke. There were the legendsâParvati, Boston Rob, and Sandraâwho were essentially taking a nostalgia-fueled victory lap, their place secure in the *Survivor* pantheon. And there was the return of the ultimate Survivor, Ethan Zohnâa guy who used his winnings on *Survivor: Africa* to help fight AIDS on the continent, and then had to survive not one, but *two* life-threatening bouts of a rare blood cancer. His return alone was one of the best reality TV stories ever.
There were also unforgettable moments like the log-carrying contest, whichâfrom a television production standpointâis one of the best produced segments in the show's history. Go back and watch it. It's amazing on both a technical and an emotional level. The Fire Tokens needed some tweaking, but adding a currency to the game is an example of a bold idea that can actually expand strategic decision-making in an exciting way moving forward. And Tony Vlachos cemented his reputation as the most entertaining and dominant player of all time. I can't tell you how satisfying it is to have a great winner on such an important season.
Yes, there were demerits for the season, the most obvious one being the existence of Edge of Extinction, and not just because people that are voted out should stay voted out, and how it's not fair that the earlier you are voted out the easier it is to get back in, and how people that are voted out always bond together against the people that voted them out. The other problem is there were several times where viewers were completely lost as to who was aligned with whom in the game and why, and that is something that might have been cleared up had we had more time on the actual tribe beaches and less time watching people talk about how much the Edge sucks.
The editing was also choppy at times, and there seemed to be no real flow to the season in terms of tribe dynamics. Often we had only a vague understanding of who was aligned with whom heading into Tribal Council, which made the votes more confusing than dramatic. The lack of a consistent narrative flow was also partly due to the overabundance of various advantages and twists at play. But the producers also made one key excellent decision: to not just treat this season as regular competition, but also act as a celebration of the entire franchise and its epic 20-year run. They leaned into making the season feel special, starting with a champagne toast and the announcement that they were doubling the winner's prize to $2 million. And it *did* feel special, even with its flaws.
9. Survivor: Palau
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Bill Inoshita/CBS
*Palau* is a season that proves you can still have a truly great outing even without twisty bells and whistles, and with a super predictable boot order and winner.
I love the way the players started the game completely clueless on an island together, with no instructions and no tribes. I wish the show would shake things up like that more at the outset to keep contestants off-balance. (A lot of viewers and players felt it was really unfair to vote out two people on day 2 before tribes were even formed. I totally disagree. If you didn't work hard enough to create early bonds to get picked, that's on you.) One of the best creative decisions *Survivor* ever made was not panicking and reshuffling the tribes once Koror started dominating. Watching Ulong get decimated all the way down to a tribe of one was must-see TV, and the challenges are arguably the franchise's best. Also, I'd bring back Jolanda, Coby, Katie, and Ian in a heartbeat.
What's interesting about Palau is that we basically all knew Tom would win from episode 1, but it was still gripping nonetheless.
10. Survivor: China
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Monty Brinton/CBS
*China* has such a great, deep castâeven beyond the obvious returnees of Amanda, James, Peih-Gee, and a positively hilarious Courtney. Every single person added something. Todd's final Tribal Council performance still holds up as masterful in the way he completely played Jean-Robert and owned his own duplicitous gameplay while also using flattery to win over the jury. That's how you win a million dollars. My one big gripe with this season has always been the location of the tribe camps, which were basically mud pits. Possibly the least scenic camps in *Survivor* history. It just looked absolutely miserable. But as bad as the camps were, the season otherwise did a great job of incorporating Chinese culture into the theme of the challenges and rewardsâincluding an overnight on the Great Wall and a kick-ass trip to the Shaolin Temple. And I still jump when Chicken gets voted out. Every. Single. Time.
11. Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X
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Monty Brinton/CBS Entertainment
With the exception of *Caramoan*, I've never had a season rise so much through the rankings from week to week. When *Millennials vs. Gen X* started, most of us were like, "Yeah, it's fine. Not amazing, but not terrible either." But then things kept happening. And everyone kept flipping on one another. And everyone kept getting blindsided. And everyone kept futilely using their idols for other people.
It was madness and chaos in the best way possible. And what was so fascinating was thatâexcept Michaelaânobody took their ouster personally. This was a season remarkably free of any sort of fighting whatsoever. None of the ugliness of *World's Apart* or* KaĂ´h RĹng *permeated the proceedings, even amongst all the lying and backstabbing. Everyone seemed to legitimately appreciate and respect the competition they were going up against, and, as a result, so did we.
What seemed like a so-so cast at first ended up giving us a fair number of breakouts: Michaela, Zeke, David, Adam, and Jay. Even Hannah was entertaining with her neurosis. Ken was entertaining with his late-game cluelessness. Bret gave us a touching moment where he came out as gay to Zeke. Sunday outsmarted Adam and Hannah with a ruse at Tribal Council. Everyone contributed something.
12. Survivor: Blood vs. Water
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Monty Brinton/CBS
The returning contestants playing with/against their loved ones added new dimensions and forced playersâand usâto think about the strategic elements of the game in an entirely new way. And for strategy nerds like myself, it was like opening a brand new Christmas present each and every week as new layers were revealed.
And although I am certainly no fan of the Redemption Island twist, due to the fact that it neuters the show's most dramatic moment (the vote-off), it is undeniable that the RI element is what led to many of the intriguing strategic decisions of whom to vote out and why. (However, I still can't figure out why they went with three-person duelsâa.k.a. truelsâand they definitely should have stopped RI at the merge.) Yes, the challenges were a letdown and there was a bit of a lull just after the merge, but, all in all, this was a super solid season from top to bottom, and a nice change of pace.
13. Survivor: Philippines
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When you look back on *Survivor: Philippines**,*** there were a lot of shake-ups with the voting, but not many jaw-on-the-floor shocking moments. So why is it so high? Because the casting and story lines that developed gave us people to root for and againstâsomething every great *Survivor* season needs.
14. Survivor: Marquesas
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An underrated season that saw the first totem pole shake-up: where people on the bottom got together to overthrow those on the top. And that's not all. This season gave us Kathy peeing on John's hand, the appearance of the dreaded Purple Rock, and the most entertaining player in *Survivor* history to only play once in Sean Rector. Seriously, that guy was straight gold in every episode. BRING HIM BACK!!!! Also, if you are endlessly amused by cheesy over-the-top product placement, this is the season for youâright down to the giant Reebok logo on the buffs. Oh, and fun fact: Due to the Reebok NFL sponsorship at the time, Boston Rob wore a Patriots, *not* a Red Sox, hat.
15. Survivor: Cook Islands
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Bill Inoshita/CBS
Let's start by acknowledging that the race war concept of pitting different ethnicities against each other was SUPER problematic. There were some other problems early on as well, but what a difference a mutiny makes. While the show was a bit listless at first, everything changed in that fateful moment when Candice and Penner stepped off the mat. Then, we had clearly defined people to root for and against. There are other things to love as well. The challenges were super solid, the Tribal Council ship set was incredible, and the fire-making tiebreaker between Sundra and Becky may be the funniest thing I've ever seen in my life. Plus, just look at all the great first-time contestants (Parvati, Penner, Ozzy, Yul). I love you, Billy.
16. Survivor: The Amazon
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Monty Brinton/ CBS
I originally LOVED *The Amazon* when it first aired because it was the first season where votes were crazy unpredictable from week to week. Plus, it was funny watching the guys brag about how superior they were and then getting lit up by the women. However, it simply does not hold up very well on a rewatch. It is pretty painful how much of the season is based around dudes being horny AF. The edit basically shows all the men repeatedly salivating over Heidi, Jenna, and Shawna. And the producers clearly encouraged this horndoggery as much as possible, even in a high-stakes immunity challenge with questions like "Who would you most like to see pose nude in a magazine?" I also forgot how mediocre the challenges were, like the one where they had to walk around a fake Amazonian home, or the time they actually played a game of Go Fish. Not to say there aren't some things to still love here, including a batch of epic vote-off comments, a lot of unintended fire, Christy's "evil stepsisters" final words, Jeff Probst wearing sunglasses, and the most epic final vote delivery sequence ever.
17. Survivor: Caramoan â Fans vs. Favorites
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Monty Brinton/CBS
A tale of two seasons this was, and I can already hear people yelling that I am putting it too high. But hear me out first before you ruffle any feathers. If I was grading this solely on pre-merge episodes, this would be waaaay down the list due to the emphasis on big personalities (Shamar, Brandon, Phillip), as opposed to big gameplay. It was flat-out grating. But everything post-merge was spectacular. I can't remember a time when there were so many moves and countermoves so late in the season. In the same way it is more important for a sports team to play well in the second half of a game as opposed to the first, a great season needs to build momentum, and *Caramoan* definitely did that with six fantastic episodes in a row.
It's much more important to finish strong than to start strong. So, I definitely put more weight and emphasis on post-merge episodes when doing the rankings, and this season made a remarkable comeback. Also, don't overlook how great the bevy of water challenges were. Should I push it down in the rankings due to the lackluster Reunion show that followed? Perhaps. Kind of not sure how much I should consider that live show when ranking what happened out on the island.
18. Survivor: Samoa
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Monty Brinton/CBS
I like this season a lot more than most people, but Russell's controlling of the gameâespecially post-merge when his side was down 8â4âwas truly a work of art. Evil genius art. He was denied in the end, though, in the most controversial jury decision ever.
19. Survivor: Tocantins
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Monty Brinton/CBS
Okay, you may roll your eyes at Coach 1.0. But imagine for a second this season without him. His unintentional comedy single-handedly lifts this into middle-of-the-pack territory for me. Seriously, other than Tyson getting blindsided, were there any super memorable moments that didn't involve the Dragon Slayer? However, the unlikely alliance between bookish northerner Fishbach and country boy J.T. definitely made for a compelling thread throughout the season.
20. Survivor 45
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Dee Valladares and Austin Li Coon on 'Survivor 45'.
Let me say this first: This is the best produced season in the ânew eraâ of *Survivor*. Yes, some of that is simply a function of the 90-minute runtime, which allowed the episodes to breathe and gave us more personal moments outside of game mechanics that allowed us to settle in with the players more than ever before. But it wasnât *just* the extra runtime. Producers presented the story in exciting new ways while also not cluttering the game with too many idols, advantages, bells, and whistles. Other creative flourishes, like the return of the new and improved auction, were home runs. And some of the editing techniques were flat-out brilliant (the âPlaying with the Boysâ montage was an all-time great, as was the Katurah time-lapse while talking about all the ways in which Bruce annoyed her). The editors and producers really leaned into juxtaposition this season, and it worked. *Survivor 45* also featured one of the most deliciously devastating blindsides ever in Kellieâs ouster.
Still, in my original penultimate episode rankings, this came in just below *Survivor 44*, for while season 45 has a solid cast with breakouts like Kellie, Emily, Kaleb, and Dee, it didnât have a Carolyn or Yam Yam â two of the franchiseâs most popular players ever. But then the finale dropped, and when you add in that crazy final five vote, Deeâs baller final Tribal Council move of revealing to Austin her big lie about Julie, and the epic roller coaster ride of Jake (who truly won the finale, if not the game), it vaults this outing into the best of the new era seasons. At least for now.**
21. Survivor 46**
Kenzie Petty and Maria Shrime Gonzalez on 'Survivor 46'.
*Survivor 46 *was not a perfect season, by any means. (Obviously, if it was, it would be ranked a lot higher). While there were plenty of blindsides, there were few (if any) pick-your-jaw-up-off-the-floor shockers. If there was true next-level gameplay, it did not translate to the screen. And I know a lot of people *really* did not dig the Yanu-heavy pre-merge portion of the season, even if I did personally enjoy the absolute messiness of the Jelinksy, Jess, Bhanu trifecta. But *Survivor 46* gave us something that has been sorely lacking in the new kinder, gentler era of the show â some actual spice. Contestants actually started coming at each other again, whether it was Tiffany and Q battling it out at Tribal Council, Liz having an absolute #ApplebeesMeltdown, or Venus creating havoc wherever she went.
Confrontation is a good thing. It shows that people deeply care and are both engaged and enraged with the process â just the way we like it. And we needed that drama, seeing as how every single idol was never played and went out in someoneâs pocket, meaning the game never really got shaken up in a completely unexpected way. Probst also did his part, getting some of his bite back in interactions with the cast, and we got a true finale shocker in the form of Maria turning on Charlie with her jury vote. Down the line, we may look back at *Survivor 46* as an important franchise course correction â bringing back some of that old-school *Survivor* spice into a new-school game. Time will tell.
22. Survivor 44**
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The cast of 'Survivor 44'. CBS
And here we are. You're going to notice a recurring theme in the rankings of "new era" *Survivor* seasons, and that theme is stellar casting â perhaps no more so than here. Carolyn? An all-time great character. Yam Yam? One of the most delightfully funny narrators in the show's history. Frannie and Matt? Arguably the most adorkable showmance couple ever. Throw in Jaime, Danny, Matthew, and others, and you have a lot of personality bursting through the screen.
As far as the creative elements, I thought the Birdcage idea was truly inspired and a good way to take a familiar concept (immunity idols) and apply it in a fun new way. The episodes also breathed well and did not get bogged down in too many advantages and idol hunts. There was also more diversity in post-merge challenges, which was a plus.
So, with all that said, then why does *Survivor 44* just miss the top 20? Unfortunately, we were deprived of all those fake idols getting played because players kept leaving the game with fakes in their pockets, socks, and bags. That's just bad luck. Just one or two fake idol plays would have been delicious, and I can only imagine how bummed producers were to see them constantly and consistently ushered out of the game. I know I was. And as steady and enjoyable as the season was, there were simply no jaw-dropping moves or moments along the way that stood out. Yam Yam turning on Carolyn at the final six could have been that⌠but it didn't happen and it wasn't.
I have no big complaints about this season at all. It was a totally solid entry for the best reality TV franchise on the planet⌠just not transcendent.
23. Survivor: Panama â Exile Island
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Jeffrey R. Staab/CBS
Ah, just writing the word Panama gets me daydreaming about Survivor Sally and her intoxicating knee socks. Exile Island was a cool twist when it was first introduced, and I say that as someone that actually spent the night there. Aras and Terry battled so hard in every challenge, and while they clearly didn't like each other out there, the mutual respect was always evidentâwith Terry finally going out on a final challenge that may or may not have been completely fair. Shane Powers should have been brought back for *Heroes vs. Villains*. And the *Second Chance *season, for that matter. Or ANY season! Seriously, what the hell?!? Get that guy back on TV. But I still can't figure out how/why Bob Dawg didn't get a bigger and better edit. That guy is an absolute gas, whether in or outside of Casa de Charmin.
24. Survivor 47
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Sue Smey, Teeny Chirichillo, Rachel LaMont, Sam Phalen on 'Survivor 47'.
When I think about *Survivor 47 *a decade from now, what will probably come to mind first are all those emotional exits. Tears, anger, confusion â all in abundance. And it was wonderful to see. Not just because there were blindsides, but because so many players were so emotionally invested in the game and outcome. The early and mid-game parade of tears and jeers out of Tribal Council truly felt like old school *Survivor*. Emotions cooled after that, but season 47 then gave us the signature moment of Operation: Italy, followed by a stellar penultimate episode in which separating fact from fiction never appeared harder thanks to Genevieve's fake idol.
We also bore witness to the almost unthinkable arc of Andy putting his absolutely disastrous start behind him to become a true chaotic force in the game. I could see some people naming this as their favorite new-era season. It's not quite there for me, as it lacks the superstar gameplay of a Dee, as well as the comedic brilliance of a Carolyn or Q. The decision to add an extra episode and therefore split the finale into two parts also backfired a bit dramatically in that Rachel's victory was almost guaranteed before the final installment even began. But it was a fun ride nonetheless.
25. Survivor 42
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The 'Survivor 42' final five. Robert Voets/CBS
For most of the season, while it was airing, I went back and forth on whether to rank this above or below *Survivor 41.* The argument for ranking it lower would be the pure repetition factor. Because *Survivor 42* followed the same format with all the exact same twists from* Survivor 41*âPrisoner's Dilemma, goofy phrases, Hourglass twist, Shot in the Dark, Do or Dieâalong with many of the same challenges, the entire season often felt like a rerun. Anytime you have a perpetual "been there, done that" feelingâŚthat's bad. Especially when most of those twists and challenges were not great to begin with.
However, the producers did a much better job of editing and presenting that content. Unlike season 41, which featured a few episodes that almost entirely revolved around twists, the producers put the focus back on the players themselves, showing them reacting to each other for a change, rather than reacting to a bevy of artificial objects and obstacles put in their way to disrupt the game. And while the Hourglass twist is still the worst creative decision in the history of the game (sorry, Medallion of Power), itâat leastâwas marginally less terrible this time since players were informed that the person sent to Exile would be given a power and the winners of the challenge would have the opportunity to send one of their own instead.
Like season 41, *Survivor 42* had a stellar cast with folks such as Omar, Lindsay, Hai, Drea, Daniel, Tori, Mike, Jonathan, and others, all creating a great story. But the best story of all was Maryanne, and watching this delightful goofball evolve into a cutthroat champion was truly thrilling, lifting *Survivor 42* into the mid-twenties.
26. Survivor 48
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Joe Hunter and Eva Erickson on 'Survivor 48'.
Robert Voets/CBS
By this point, you're probably noticing a lot of these new era seasons are all bunched together in the rankings, and I don't think that's an accident. Because with the lack of themes and changing locations, there is a definite sameness about them. And they also all generally follow the same basic structure â three tribes, some sort of fight for supplies, lots of journeys leading to extra votes and lost votes, etc⌠Even the boring numbered titles make it hard sometimes to tell them apart. That said, some of you also may be surprised to not find season 48 at the very bottom the new era pack. (A poll I did after episode 11 had 68 percent of fans labeling it "one of the worst" new era seasons. Of course, that was before episode 12, which was considerably stronger.)**
While I definitely agree with the complaints that there were too many episodes where nobody made moves and nothing happened, I did find many of the individual players and stories compelling. I, for one, enjoyed the chaos Sai brought pre-merge. Thomas and Star were insanely entertaining, Mary's successful Shot in the Dark play was epic, David had hilarious Chris Noble vibes at times, and I do believe the Eva and Joe challenge moment that made Jeff Probst cry was as emotionally impactful a scene as any we've ever seen on this show. (That entire sequence was extraordinarily edited. Just a masterclass.) Plus, Kyle and Kamilla's secret alliance was a flavor we have rarely ever tasted on this show.
Yes, there were lulls, to be sure. No question about it. And they were all the more noticeable because players kept *talking* about making moves and then not actually making them, which was super frustrating to watch. The finale was also not propulsive, even if Kyle did play an impressive all-around game. But, hey, at least there was no Hourglass!
27. Survivor 41
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The Yase tribe on 'Survivor 41'. Robert Voets/CBS
This may be the hardest *Survivor* season ever to rank. Let's get to the bad before the good. First off, it's a lot less fun to watch Tribal Council when you need a scorecard to keep track of who has zero votes, who has one vote, and who has two votes to cast. As you can imagine, I hear from a *lot* of *Survivor* fans, and I have never had more people tell me how confused they were watching this show in those early episodes. That's not good.
Speaking of advantages, do we even need to discuss the Hourglass twist, which was more a lie than a twist, and punished people for winning for no discernible reason whatsoever? That was the nadir of the first half of the season stretch that placed *waaaaaaay* too much emphasis on manufactured twists at the expense of showing us a naturally evolving social game. Which was a shame because when allowed to, this cast delivered in a huge way. Early boots like Brad and J.D. made for fantastic TV, and look at the exits from the (fake) merge to the finale: Sydney, Tiffany, Naseer, Evvie, Shan, Liana, and Danny. That's a hell of a lineup right there. And, fortunately, a lot of the bells and whistles never came into play since people kept getting voted out with idols in their pockets, or were unable to find idols and advantages that were hidden (literally) right underneath them.
Not that I thought all of the changes were bad. The goofy phrases players had to say to win an idol were super fun, I didn't mind the Do or Die since it was a level-playing-field twist, in which everyone had the same opportunity to make a decision, and I actually dug little flourishes like Probst sharing secrets with the audience before the players would walk into a challenge. It's just that the sheer volume of twists was overwhelming, which was too bad when we had an overwhelmingly good cast capable of carrying the action and intrigue on their own.
28. Survivor: Ghost Island
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Robert Voets/CBS
This was such a hard season to rank. Overall, I really liked this cast â but I do feel all the early tribe swaps made it difficult for viewers to connect with many of them. I also enjoyed the Ghost Island concept, but felt there could have been more drama surrounding how someone was sent to GI and the games they played once they got there. ("Guess that Bamboo" was about as riveting as watching an Adam Sandler movie as part of a *South Pacific* reward. My suggestion, at the time, was to have contestants have to win mini-challengesâlike, say, solving a puzzle before all the sand poured out of a bottle rather than just picking right or left. This idea was used a few years later on *Survivor South Africa: Immunity Island.)*
And then there is the ending, which also has plusses and minuses. I still do not like the fire-making final four twist because it is an arbitrary out-of-format rule change, specifically designed to get perceived better players to the end. But without it, we don't get that epic showdown between Dom and Wendell, which resulted in the first-ever tie vote for the million dollarsâwith third-place finisher Laurel breaking it for Wendell. So, again, both good and bad. Like I said, a hard season to rank.
But the ending was fantastic, and I was engaged throughout, even with the noted weaknesses. I was fascinated with the Laurel and Donathan strategic push-and-pull. Wendell and Domenick were as great as we in the press thought they would be when we met them pre-game, and that merge war between Dom and Chris Noble made for one of my favorite *Survivor* episodes ever. Throw that all together and you end up in the middle of the pack.
29. Survivor: Game Changers
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Zeke Smith on 'Survivor: Game Changers'. CBS
What a weird season this was. On one hand, there was a bevy of huge, crazy Tribal Councils with last-second whispering and maneuvering, leading to jaw-dropping exits. We were treated to two titans of the game (Tony and Sandra) going toe to toe. We saw one of the ugliest moments ever (Jeff Varner outing Zeke) turn into a shining instructive example of how to handle insensitive bullying via the reactions from Zeke and his tribemates. But something was missing. It's hard to put your finger right on it, but it felt like this season lacked a consistent flow. Instead of a gradually building arc, we were instead presented with what could be best described as a random series of events. Said events were all exciting, but they failed to form a cohesive unit.
It didn't help that most of the big players and personalities went out so early: Tony, Malcolm, Sandra, and J.T.âall gone before the merge. Then Ozzy went home in the merge double episode and we hardly saw Cirie *until* the merge because she never went to Tribal Council. That means we did not get a lot of bang for our buck when it came to the biggest players in the cast.
That was always my big fear about this seasonâthat as exciting as the early episodes were, those high-profile exits were diluting the cast and leaving us with players that we, as viewers, were not fully invested in. And despite the gameplay and unpredictability down the stretch, that is kind of what happened. And then there is what happened to Cirie in the finale. Some may have loved the insane drama of having five out of six people immune due to idols and advantages, but I found watching someone be "voted out"âeven when zero votes were cast against herâto be a case of a season run amok by simply too many bells and whistles. (The fact that it happened to a true legend in Cirie made it even harder to swallow.)
And while I was prepared to drop the season ranking down a spot or two due to that Tribal, it held steady thanks to the new final Tribal Council format in which there was more of a conversation than regimented Q&A, which had grown predictable and stale over the years. That's a great example of natural show evolution that worked, and the producers deserve to be commended for it.
30. Survivor: South Pacific
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Monty Brinton/CBS
Here's another one that I like more than most people, and it's surprising considering how much it has in common with the seasonâwhich I *didn't* likeâthat aired directly before it: the same twist of two returning players, Redemption Island, the predictable vote-offs, no real water challenges, etc....But there is one thing I really did dig about this season, and that is the cast. I was invested in the players and their fatesâthe ones I wanted to do well and not so well. Plus, this season gave us three signature moments: Ozzy volunteering to go to Redemption, Cochran flipping, and Brandon giving away his immunity.
31. Survivor 43
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The 'Survivor 43' final five. CBS
Seasons 41 and 42 featured really dynamic casts and some really wonky production wrinkles. *Survivor 43* flipped the script completely. For the most part, the game flow â either by design or sheer luck â worked out really well. There were no devastatingly terrible twists a la the dreaded Hourglass (although Cody's Choose Your Champion reveal should have been *before* the votes were cast, and it would have worked better to have different idol missions on each pre-merge beach, but those are minor quibbles). And because many of the idols and advantages ended up in the hands of those in power (or at least those who *thought* they were in power), we did not have to endure gadget-heavy Tribals where people just kept pulling out trinkets upon trinkets.
But the cast, while extremely likable, were not super propulsive. Or entertainingly messy. Where were the fireworks? I'm not talking about ugly personal attacks, but rather people aggressively going at each other in the game and taking the *game* personally. Outside of a mild argument between Owen and James and later one between Karla and Cassidy, we didn't see a whole lot of spark. As a result, even with better production wrinkles, some exciting challenge tweaks, and some brilliantly diabolical moves by Jesse, the season itself felt a bit snoozy and lacking in huge, iconic moments (outside of the Cody blindside, of course). Instead, we got a lot more gauzy, reach-for-the-Kleenex backstory photo montages, but little sizzle. The best seasons of *Survivor* always have a little edge to them, and when you can't point to any instantly memorable contestant interactions, that's a sign you have not reached that rarified air.
32. Survivor: Vanuatu
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Ami Cusack on 'Survivor: Vanuatu'. Monty Brinton/CBS
Okay, Eliza Orlins basically started a public campaign to get me to rewatch Vanuatu and reconsider my low ranking of the show, and her efforts worked⌠although not as much as she may have liked. Vanuatu definitely plays better on a modern-day viewing when contrasted against how kumbaya new-school seasons have been (at least until *Survivor 46*). I think this season sets a land speed record for number of times women call each other âbitch.â Like, there is a staggering amount of bitch-related talk. Itâs undeniably entertaining to watch so much open animosity.
The LeAnn blindside episode remains an all-time great installment. I remember watching that at my momâs house when it first aired on Thanksgiving night of 2004, and it still delights two decades later. Plus, the women on this battle-of-the-sexes season are strong: Ami, Twila, Eliza, and Julie are especially great. But that stellar casting does not extend to the other sex. Chris certainly did his part in turning the tide and somehow, someway making it all the way to the end and winning the money, and you have to love it when a certifiable oddball like Rory waltzes onto your screen. But I have watched this season multiple times and still could not pick J.D. out of a lineup from John and Brady. Why they cast three clones of each other who all fit the exact same bill (two of which even have the same name!) is beyond me. And the whole âI canât believe weâre losing to a bunch of girls!â angle feels a bit stale considering we had the same storyline three seasons earlier on *The Amazon*.
But you were right, Eliza. Itâs better than I remembered, and the new ranking reflects that.
33. Survivor: The Australian Outback
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Monty Brinton/CBS
An overrated season in my book. Probst loves it. I didn't. Solid, but unspectacular. Pretty predictable boot order as well. Dude did burn his hands off, though.
34. Survivor: Heroes vs. Healers vs. Hustlers
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Robert Voets/CBS
The good news is the season built momentum as it went, with a strong run of post-merge episodes after a truly underwhelming start to the season. Of course, I struggle with the fact that much of the drama came out of there being an overabundance of idols and advantages, but producers did something very smart with those advantages to make sure nobody else got Cirie'd: They limited most of them to a specific single Tribal Council. They also forced contestants to make decisions on those advantagesâlike whom to help or hurt from another tribeâthat paid dramatic dividends. And, outside of one mind-bogglingly boring loved ones reward contest, the challenges were strong.
But now comes the bad news. Like the majority of *Survivor* nation, I was not a fan of the new final four fire-making twist. While I do not believe it was a cheat put in place to specifically get Ben to the finals, Probst has openly admitted it was engineered to get a strong player *like* Ben there. To me, even though there was not any funny business at play to help Ben out, it still was not in the spirit of a game, in which players are supposedly given the power to vote each other out. That was a bummer. Although, in the producers' defense, we can't ignore that it did pay huge dramatic dividends later on *Ghost Island*.
35. Survivor: 49
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Rizo Velovic, Savannah Louie, and Sophi Balerdi on 'Survivor 49'.
In some ways, it feels weird ranking this as the worst new era season. *Survivor 49* had a winner in Savannah who was both deserving and entertaining in a spicy old-school way. It had a player in Rizo who single-handedly did his best to inject flash and sizzle at every opportunity. It had the quirky delight that was Sage. And, of course, Knowledge Is Power embarrassment is *always* fun. But the season got off to an absolutely brutal start, in which every vote-off could be seen coming from a mile away. Not even *two* tribe swaps really helped.
Things picked up after the merge, but even still, viewers couldnât help but be frustrated watching people let the person almost universally named as the biggest threat in Savannah march seemingly unopposed to victory. (The fact that Savannah's and Rizoâs names had leaked widely as being on *Survivor 50*, ensuring they had a deep run here, did not help matters. Perhaps thatâs not the showâs fault, but they could have just not cast anyone from *49* to keep the season 50 unspoiled.) Plus, outside of Kristina asking her island nemesis to name a loved one for every juror, the final Tribal Council lacked any sort of spark from the jury. Kind of mirroring the entire season, unfortunately.
36. Survivor: KaĂ´h RĹng
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Screen Grab/CBS
Not one of the best seasons ever; not one of the worst. Working in this season's favor was the sheer unpredictability from week to week in terms of who was aligned with whom and what would happen at Tribal Council. That's always exciting. Working against this season is the fact there simply were not enough transcendent players in the cast. Talking to fellow fans of the show, I did not find a lot of passion or hardcore rooting interest for any of the folks who made it far in the game (especially after Tai sabotaged the tribe by putting out the fire). That's a problem. Another problemâfor meâwas the unsurprisingly bitter jury, whose egos simply couldn't handle being bested by Aubry.
While the reward challenge that caused three players to collapse was certainly riveting (and scary as hell) to watch, it also robbed us of Beast Mode Cowboy, which was a shame. The other medical evacuations (Neal and Joe) meant we were denied chances to see how those pivotal votes would have gone down, and the challenges, in general, were at times too heavily reliant on balancing.
All that said, there were legitimate moments of gloryâlike when Tai turned on Scot and Jasonâthat elevated the proceedings and turned this season into a solid, if unspectacular, entry.
37. Survivor: All-Stars
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Amber Brkich and Rob Mariano on 'Survivor: All-Stars'. Monty Brinton/CBS
It was a huge thrill to see the biggest titans of the game return to play, but the results were a letdown. That said, man, were there some hate-fueled fireworks at those final few Tribal Councils. And the Reunion Show was about as tense as I've ever seen, leading to Jerri Manthey literally getting up and walking out during a commercial break.
38. Survivor: Gabon
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Monty Brinton/CBS
It definitely got better near the end, but it was still a case of too little, too late. The fact that so many unworthy players went so far is simply too damning.
39. Survivor: Worlds Apart
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The main problem, of course, was that there were not enough people to root for. *Worlds Apart* got somewhat hijacked by an assault of offensive comments to and about women by some of the male characters. It's too bad because there was actually some interesting gameplayâmostly thanks to Mike. And there were some big moments at the last few Tribal Councils as well. This season moved around a bunch for me while it was airing. It started off middle-of-the-pack, went WAY down during all that Dan and Will ugliness, but slowly crept back up after that.
40. Survivor: Redemption Island
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Monty Brinton/CBS
The first three episodes were dynamite, but then the fuse blew out. It certainly was entertaining at times watching Rob strategize (the most dominant showing ever) and Phillip philosophize (the wackiest showing ever), just not very dramatic. Most of the vote-offs were clearly telegraphed, and the Redemption Island twist sucked the life out of *Survivor*'s signature momentâthe vote-off.
41. *Survivor: Africa *
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Kevork Djansezian/AP
Some great challenges. Not that much else was great.
42. Survivor: Edge of Extinction
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Timothy Kuratek/CBS
Flat. That's the best word I can think of to describe the season. Rick Devens was the only true breakout from the cast (unless you include Reem bitching everyone out at Extinction Island...and you probably should), but that may also be because so much of the early attention was spent on the four returning players. I'm not a fan of folks sticking around after being voted out, so clearly, the Edge of Extinction twist was not up my alley, especially since it mostly consisted of people just kind of staring off into the distance pensively for no apparent reason. And while the producers who make the show may consider having someone voted out on day 8 winning the game as proof of concept, it left a sour taste with viewers, who could not help but overlook the massive advantages associated with befriending the jury in a non-game setting.
43. Survivor: Guatemala
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The cast of 'Survivor: Guatemala'. Bill Inoshita/CBS
When you stick a cast in a miserably hot location and they are having a miserable time, miserable things can happen. At least give them a place where they can go in the water! Rafe was good for a few laughs, though. Especially on rope obstacles.
44. Survivor: San Juan del Sur
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Monty Brinton/CBS
My most controversial ranking these days, which is fascinating because *SJDS* was pretty much universally not loved when it first aired. No less an authority that Stephen Fishbach dubbed it "humdrum" and dubbed the final Tribal Council "one of the worst in the show's history." A 2015 *Rob Has a Podcast* poll ranked it 22nd out of 30 seasons at the time. Yet newer fans that came to the show after it originally aired insist it deserves another look, and others say a rewatch does it wonders. I have not had a chance to do that yet, but promise to do so before the next rankings update, and we will see if it indeed climbs up this list as others believe it will. ( I can't believe you all are going to make me watch John Rocker all over again.)
45. Survivor: One World
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Monty Brinton/CBS
Look, I have total respect for Kim's game. Like Tom in *Palau* and Rob in *Redemption Island*, she excelled strategically, socially, and physically. Unfortunately, that is really the only good thing I can say about this season. And that's too bad, because I do think the "One World" concept was a solid one. But, man, what a thoroughly uninspiring cast. Colton was more a horrible human being than a classic villain, and the rest of the players were mostly either completely forgettable or people you wish you *could* forget. I worry I am being generous by putting it even this high, but out of respect for Kim, it goes here.
46. Survivor: Thailand
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Monty Brinton/CBS
The fake merge and brutal last challengeâwhere the final three had to hold coins between their fingers in a crazy painful poseâkeep this dud out of the bottom spot. Barely.
47. Survivor: Fiji
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Monty Brinton/CBS
Yau-Man and Earl were great, but this entire season was sabotaged by the terrible "Haves vs. Have-Nots" twist, which has to go down as one of the worst creative decisions in *Survivor *history. Speaking of awful creative decisions....
48. Survivor: Nicaragua
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Monty Brinton/CBS
It's way down here for a few reasons. 1.) Splitting the tribes up by age and the Medallion of Power were both enormous flops. 2.) Like *One World*, *Thailand *and *Fiji*, *Nicaragua* had just too many unlikable players. 3.) Two people quitting with only 11 days left. 4.) No big memorable moments. Even *Thailand* had the fake merge and *Fiji* had the big Yau-Man/Dreamz free car deal gone bad, but what was *Nicaragua*'s signature moment? Unfortunately, it was people quitting, and that was memorable for all the wrong reasons. Interestingly enough, *Survivor* viewers picked Fabio as the worst *Survivor* winner ever in our fan poll*, *so I'm apparently not alone in my lack of enthusiasm.
49. Survivor: Island of the Idols
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Robert Voets/CBS
I'm a guy who tends to be pretty analytical. But even I recognize that when it comes to ranking *Survivor* seasons, it ultimately comes down to a feeling. You can make pros and cons lists (as I have even done in a few of the entries above), but in the end, it all boils down to how a season makes you *feel*. And, unfortunately, due to the events surrounding the inappropriate touchingâand the way it was handled by both production and the other contestantsâthe ultimate feeling when it comes to this season is sadness. Watching *Survivor* should be fun! But nothing seemed fun in light of the far more serious issue that clearly outweighed the final game result. Quite simply: It made the rest of the season impossible to enjoy. And so even though there were several things and people worth celebrating at various points in the show's 39th installment, the end result is that this felt like the least entertaining outing in the franchise's history. And so here it sits.
- Survivor Fandom
Source: âEW Survivorâ