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Having grown increasingly strong and involving through 2014, The 100 entered 2015 (and the second half of Season 2) firing on all cylinders. The characters found themselves in one gripping, intense scenario after another, on a show that never went for the easy way out and proved willing to go to surprisingly dark and unsettling places. By the end of the season, Clarke Griffin had to make more than one unthinkable choice, while the stage was set for a bold new scenario in Season 3. Read IGN's Full Review

The 100

Let the will of the people be known. The People's Choice winner for Best Sci-Fi Series 2015 is The 100. Thanks for voting!

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Deftly overcoming the cynicism any TV show daring to adapt a beloved (and Oscar-nominated) Terry Gilliam movie would naturally face, 12 Monkeys turned out to be a clever and cool series and the most impressive example yet of Syfy attempting to get back to its roots. Fully embracing the possibilities inherent in its time travel scenario, the series took more than one surprising turn, and never felt like it was being dumbed down for the audience. Read IGN's Full Review

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Peter Capaldi’s second season as the Doctor was also quite possibly the best year of the modern run of the show. It saw Capaldi truly become comfortable in the role and find his own rhythm as the Doctor, while also offering a very fitting end to Jenna Coleman’s run. Filled with intriguing ideas and twists, great performances, humor and pathos, and plenty of scary monsters, modern Doctor Who doesn’t get much better than this. Read IGN's Full Review

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Syfy went for something fun with this story of a trio of space traveling bounty hunters and more often than not, Killjoys delivered what it promised. A likable cast guided the audience through standalone adventures, as the “Killjoys” took on new jobs, while ongoing storylines built through the season and the show became increasingly engaging in the process.

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Season 3 of this story about a group of clones (or two groups, as turned out to be the case) answered a lot of questions that were left hanging at the end of Season 2, but, true to form, also opened up a new can of worms for next year. And while Season 3 didn't hit quite the same highs as the first two years, it also didn't hit the same lows, delivering a consistently strong run of episodes, once more anchored by the remarkable Tatiana Maslany. Read IGN's Full Review