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3 Netflix shows so addictive you'll lose track of time

Yoon Chan-young as Lee Cheong-san in All of Us Are Dead season 1
Yoon Chan-young as Lee Cheong-san in All of Us Are Dead season 1 | Yang Hae-sung/Netflix

Some Netflix series are designed for casual viewing. You know, the kind of shows you can dip in and out of. Then there are the other kind. We're talking about the shows that quietly take over your entire evening, and somehow leave you wondering where your day went.

All of Us Are Dead, You, and Emily in Paris fall firmly into that second category. They are completely different in genre and tone, yet they all share the same addictive quality. Once you start watching, stopping feels surprisingly difficult!

All of Us Are Dead season 1
All of Us Are Dead season 1 Production Still | Netflix

All of Us Are Dead

All of Us Are Dead is a South Korean zombie thriller series. At first, you'll think it's like your typical zombie show. A virus breaks out at a high school, people start turning, and chaos follows. But the way it plays out is what makes it so hard to stop watching. Everything happens fast. Like, really fast!

One moment, students are worrying about school life. The next, they’re running for their lives through hallways that have turned into total disaster zones. The students barely have any time to breathe, let alone pause. What really hooks you is how personal it all feels. You’re not watching trained soldiers or professionals. You’re watching teenagers trying to survive something they never asked for.

And just when you think things might calm down for a second, they don’t. The show keeps shifting, breaking safety, and pulling characters into worse and worse situations. It’s basically designed to make you say, “Okay, I need to see what happens next,” about ten times an episode. Before you know it, you’re in way deeper than you planned!

You season 3
(L to R) PENN BADGLEY as JOE GOLDBERG in episode 307 of YOU | John P. Fleenor/Netflix

You

Then there’s You, which is addictive in a completely different way. There’s no zombie chaos here. It's just one guy, Joe Goldberg, who seems charming, smart, and maybe even a little romantic at first. But the twist is that you’re inside his head the whole time. And that changes everything.

Joe talks directly to the audience through his thoughts, explaining what he’s doing and why. At first, it almost feels like you’re being let in on secrets. But pretty quickly, you realize those “secrets” are just him justifying things that are deeply not okay.

That’s what makes it so difficult to stop watching. You’re constantly stuck between two feelings. You understand what he’s saying, but you also know something is very wrong. Each season follows a similar pattern. Joe becomes obsessed with someone new, gets involved in their life in unhealthy ways, and everything slowly spirals.

Even though you can see the pattern, it still pulls you in every time because the emotional tension keeps shifting. And every episode ends with something that complicates everything you just watched. A new twist, a new reveal, a new “wait, what just happened?” moment.

You isn't loud or chaotic like All of Us Are Dead. It’s slow, psychological, and weirdly absorbing. That’s what makes it so bingeable. You don’t even realize how much you’ve watched until you’ve watched way too much!

Emily in Paris season 5
(L to R) Lucas Bravo as Gabriel and Lily Collins as Emily in episode 509 of Emily in Paris | Netflix

Emily in Paris

At the other end of the spectrum is Emily in Paris, a show that feels light, fun, and almost effortless to watch. That’s exactly why it becomes so addictive.

The series follows Emily Cooper, an American marketing executive who moves to Paris for work and suddenly finds herself dealing with a completely new culture, a complicated job, and a very unpredictable romantic life. Nothing ever stays still for long. One episode brings a workplace problem, the next brings a romantic misunderstanding, and the next brings a social event that somehow turns into a bigger situation than expected.

The series moves quickly, but never in a stressful way. That’s part of the appeal. You don’t feel like you’re being emotionally drained, so it’s easy to keep going without thinking too much about it. The setting also plays a big role. Paris is shown in a very polished, almost fantasy-like way. With the beautiful streets, stylish outfits, and perfect cafés, it all creates a visual comfort that makes watching feel relaxing even when the drama is building.

And then there’s the romance. Emily’s love life is constantly shifting, with relationships starting, stopping, overlapping, and complicating each other in ways that always leave something unresolved. That ongoing tension keeps you watching episode after episode.

Overall, Emily in Paris is the kind of show where you think you’ve only watched a couple of episodes, and then suddenly you’ve gone through half a season!

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