San Diego Comic-Con wraps up today, and it’s been a busy week for pop culture news. While big names like Marvel and HBO skipped the show this year, it still nevertheless showcased a number of big trailers from the films and shows that are slated to premiere in the next year.

Warner Bros. stole the show this year with its massive, two-hour Saturday morning panel, during which the studio revealed its slate of upcoming films: Aquaman, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, Godzilla: King of the Monsters, and Shazam. The clips and trailers served as the weekend’s high-profile reveals, but they also proved Warner Bros. is about to be more exciting than it has been in years.

Of course, there were plenty of other studios in town to hawk some serious forthcoming wares: the Syfy channel, Netflix, BBC America, and more released looks at projects we can’t wait to see. (The truly impressive array of musical covers used to pump up these trailers — Nirvana’s “Come as You Are,” David Bowie’s “Rebel, Rebel,” Lenny Kravitz’s “Fly Away,” and even a chill-inducing cut of Debussy’s “Clair de Lune” — does wonders for augmenting that excitement.) We’ve rounded up all the biggest and best trailers from this year’s show in one place for your viewing convenience. Check them out below.

Aquaman

Easily the most highly anticipated reveal of this year’s Comic-Con was DC’s Aquaman. It’s no secret that the DC Cinematic Universe has had a rocky start, with critics and fans largely panning films like Suicide Squad and Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. But especially in the wake of the overwhelming success of Wonder Woman last year, the studio has been shifting away from its overarching Expanded Universe strategy to focus on standalone stories, and Jason Momoa’s Aquaman will be the next star out of the gate. The film does look awesome. The action and story look solid, and it might even have something many of DC’s past films have lacked: a sense of humor.

Deadly Class

There are a lot of comic book properties out there, and the Syfy channel has dabbled in the field with shows like Krypton. Earlier this year, it picked up Deadly Class, the series produced by the Russo brothers that’s based on the early ‘90s comics about a lost kid who was recruited into a boarding school where the crime families of the world send their children. The result looks very Syfy-ish, but it’s intriguing nevertheless. On top of Benedict Wong steering the ship in the role of headmaster Master Lin, it looks like Black Flag’s Henry Rollins will be joining the faculty, too.

Disenchantment

Netflix has a new show coming from Futurama and Simpsons creator Matt Groening called Disenchantment, about a hard-drinking princess (voiced by Abbi Jacobson) and her two companions, an elf (Nat Faxon) and a demon (Eric André). This trailer looks downright delightful, mixing the sensibilities of Futurama with epic, distinctly more earnest fairy tale fantasy.

Doctor Who, season 11

Doctor Who will be back later this year with a new Doctor, played by a woman for the first time. This first trailer for the next season, while a bit on the short side, sees Jodie Whittaker’s character recruiting a couple of new companions, and it teases the new worlds and adventures that they’ll be embarking on.

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

We’ll get to return to the world of Harry Potter later this year in the next installment of the prequel franchise, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald. This film looks definitively darker than the first Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them as it traces the rise of the dark wizard Grindelwald (Johnny Depp) with a young Albus Dumbledore (Jude Law) and Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) working to stop him.

Glass

M. Night Shyamalan surprised everyone with his 2016 film Split by revealing that it was set in the same world as his comic book-inspired 2000 film Unbreakable. The trailer for his next film, Glass, takes that connection from a fleeting, Easter egg moment and makes it official by bringing the three main characters from both films — James McAvoy’s DID-afflicted Kevin Wendell Crumb, Bruce Willis’s super-strong vigilante security guard David Dunn, and Samuel L. Jackson’s Elijah Price, AKA the brilliant, physically fragile eponymous villain Mr. Glass — together in a high-security facility under the care of Sarah Paulson’s Dr. Ellie Staple, a psychiatrist who specializes in delusional patients who believe they have superpowers.

Godzilla: King of the Monsters

Gareth Edwards’ 2014 film Godzilla largely underwhelmed audiences, but a first look at its sequel, Godzilla: King of the Monsters, looks intriguing to say the least. Coupled with a haunting “Clair de Lune” synch, it teases humanity’s efforts to survive a world where giant monsters have arrived to curb their destructive effects on the planet — which will involve avoiding some epic battles between Godzilla and other kaiju like Mothra.

Star Trek: Discovery, season 2

CBS’s big Hall H panel on Friday was reserved for Star Trek: Discovery, the second season of which will premiere sometime in early 2019. In addition to an announcement-packed panel with newly installed showrunner Alex Kurtzman and the main cast, the first trailer for the new season previewed a few anticipated new developments, including the installment of Captain Christopher Pike as acting captain (poor Saru!), the appearance of Tig Notaro as a refreshing infusion of sarcastic comedy, and the coming of Spock. Also: alien sneezes.

The Man in the High Castle, season 3

Amazon’s The Man in the High Castle is coming back for its third season in October, and it was recently renewed for a fourth season. We got a look at the upcoming arc, which looks like it’ll feature new discontent in the alternate, conquered United States as the knowledge of the (rather 12 Monkeys-esque) multiverse spreads.

Nightflyers

Syfy’s next big space show will be an adaptation of George R.R. Martin’s space-horror novella Nightflyers, which he describes as “Psycho in space.” This first full trailer for the show certainly brings the horror as a crew embarks on a spaceship to save humanity from a dying Earth.

The Orville, season 2

Seth MacFarlane’s The Orville was a surprise delight when it premiered last year. It could have been a cheap mockery of Star Trek, but it turned out to be a delightful, earnest love letter to the classic franchise. The trailer for its second season teases new adventures to new planets and plenty more irreverent humor.

Shazam

A big surprise out of the Warner Bros. panel was the charming teaser for its upcoming DC film Shazam! The film looks as though it has just what we’ve mentioned the DC franchise has been desperately needing: humor. (The first time we hear the name of the titular hero, the teenaged Billy Batson reacts the way any of us would: snort-laugh and say, “Wait, really?”) The film, which stars Zachary Levi and It wunderkind Jack Dylan Grazer, looks like Tom Hanks’ Big meets superheroes — a far cry from the miserably grim Man of Steel.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Another of Comic-Con’s biggest surprises this year was the unexpected reveal that Disney was bringing its animated show The Clone Wars back for another 12-episode season. The new episodes will help bring the story, which was left hanging when the series was canceled in 2013, to a close when it premieres on Disney’s forthcoming streaming service.

The Walking Dead, season 9

The Walking Dead will return for its ninth season in October, and at its big Comic-Con panel, AMC released the first, extended look at what to expect. The season — which will be star Andrew Lincoln’s last — looks at the survivors’ continued efforts to survive in the aftermath of the Saviors war.

Young Justice: Outsiders

DC gave us our first look at its DC Universe streaming service over the weekend, including its aforementioned live-action show Titans, but it also showed off an extended trailer for the third season of the animated Young Justice: Outsiders, which teases the superhero team fending off a new threat to Earth.

Titans

DC’s upcoming streaming service DC Universe will debut later this fall, and when it does, it’ll include an original, live-action show based on Teen Titans. Like the CW did with Arrow, Titans — which features an extremely goth Teagan Croft as Raven, not to mention the Senegalese Anna Diop (Bosch, 24: Legacy) and Japanese Ryan Potter (Big Hero 6) shaking up the white-coded team as Starfire and Beast Boy, respectively — looks like it’ll be a far grittier (and far more mature, with a TV-MA rating) take on the once-goofy squad, with quite a bit of profanity — “Fuck Batman” — and bone-crunching.