The 10 best Psych episodes, ranked

EW combed through the 120 episodes of this popular buddy/crime-solving series to bring you the top 10 episodes to watch again and again.

Dule Hill and James Roday on 'Psych'
Dule Hill and James Roday on 'Psych'. Photo:

Williams & Hirakawa/USA/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal/Getty

Psych ended in 2014, but its witty crime-solving remains as delightful as ever. Shawn Spencer (James Roday) may have lied about having actual psychic powers, but thanks to endless pop culture knowledge, unstoppable charm, and his trusty friend Gus (Dulé Hill), he was still able to solve the wackiest murders in Santa Barbara, a.k.a. the murder capital of the country. With the cast returning for multiple movies based on the series — Psych: The Movie (2017), Psych 2: Lassie Come Home (2020), and Psych 3: This Is Gus (2021), EW rounded up 10 of our favorite episodes that are always worth revisiting.

10. "And Down the Stretch Comes Murder" (season 2, episode 5)

James Roday, Maggie Lawson, and Dulé Hill on 'Psych'
James Roday, Maggie Lawson, and Dulé Hill on 'Psych'. Alan Zenuk/USA Network

Season 2 was Psych at its best. Where later seasons relied on pop culture homages or serious character development to keep the juices flowing, early episodes like this could pop off from the simplest ideas. Solving a murder at a racetrack brought Shawn and Gus face-to-face with a childhood bully (Ben Giroux), requiring them to figure out an unsolved mystery from their childhood at the same time they're untangling delightful racing drama. Also, Shawn got ample chances to roast his dad (Corbin Bernsen) for wearing a too-colorful shirt at the track: "Wow, Dad, tell me you're wearing that shirt because someone has to spot you from space." —Christian Holub

9. "The Greatest Adventure in the History of Basic Cable" (season 3, episode 4)

James Roday, Dulé Hill, and Steven Weber on 'Psych'
James Roday, Dulé Hill, and Steven Weber on 'Psych'. Everett Collection

Shawn, Gus, and the search for buried treasure are a match made in…well, what's Santa Barbara's version of heaven? Red Robin? When Shawn's adventuresome uncle Jack (Steven Weber) returned to town to ask for his help in finding a pirate's gold, the guys were pulled into a high-stakes scavenger hunt: They were interrogated, tied up in a cabin, and nearly killed, and Gus lost a Puma. It's a rollicking hour that helped explain where our fake psychic inherited his rebellious streak, and when the experience winded up poking holes in his hero-worship of his uncle, Shawn gets the last word as only he can. —Kelly Connolly

8. "Last Night Gus" (season 6, episode 2)

Kurt Fuller and Timothy Omundson on 'Psych'
Kurt Fuller and Timothy Omundson on 'Psych'. Alan Zenuk/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

In this hilarious spoof of The Hangover, Shawn, Gus, Lassiter (Timothy Omundson), and Woody (Kurt Fuller) woke up after a night of partying with no memory of what happened the night before because someone spiked their drinks. Did they kill someone? Maybe! The boys — because, let's be real, that's what they are — raced against the clock to figure out what happened and hopefully prove they weren't murderers. Shawn and Gus are funny messes when they solve crimes sober, so needless to say, watching them investigate a case hopelessly hungover is even funnier. Shawn's frustrated monologue about his super memory failing him kills me every time I watch this episode:

"I'm not having any psychic visions, flashbacks, or recreation flashbacks, or recreation flashbacks with new psychic visions. Imagine you weren't just a bland, gangly average human; that you could wink at someone and light up their world; that you could make a child think you have given them an ice cream cone without giving them the cone, and then watch them skip off into a beautiful meadow licking nothing but air!" —Chancellor Agard

7. "Extradition: British Columbia" (season 4, episode 1)

Cary Elwes, Dulé Hill, and James Roday on 'Psych'
Cary Elwes, Dulé Hill, and James Roday on 'Psych'. Alan Zenuk/USA Network

There is no such thing as the perfect crime, but there may be such a thing as the perfect foil for Shawn Spencer. International art thief Pierre Despereaux (Cary Elwes, obviously having a ball) is so irresistibly charming it's hard to root against him, and he's clever enough to keep the guys (and the audience) on their toes. When Shawn and Gus spotted the criminal on a ski trip in British Columbia, it kicked off a cat-and-mouse game that spans multiple episodes, all delightful, but we've given the edge to Despereaux's debut for the sheer Canadian fun of it all. Psych, which was set in California but filmed in Vancouver, finally got to put on a coat. —K.C.

6. "Heeeeere's Lassie" (season 6, episode 11)

Timothy Omundson, Dulé Hill, James Roday, and Louis Gossett Jr. on 'Psych'
Timothy Omundson, Dulé Hill, James Roday, and Louis Gossett Jr. on 'Psych'. Everett Collection

As you will see, there are several extended homages on this list. Psych was adept not only at constantly dropping pop culture references in its dialogue, but also at making those references real with episode-length tributes. Best of all, the show never let such homages get in the way of its own storytelling. This episode, for instance, made several visual references to The Shining after Lassie moved into a possibly haunted condo, but also told its own story using the eccentric neighbors without relying too much on what exactly happened at the Overlook Hotel. —C.H.

5. "Scary Sherry: Bianca's Toast" (season 1, episode 15)

James Roday and Chelan Simmons on 'Psych'
James Roday and Chelan Simmons on 'Psych'. USA Network

An ambitious send-up of sorority-slasher films, the season 1 finale was the series' first great episode and made it clear this show wasn't going to be your typical case-of-the-week series. Directed by John Landis (Thriller) and co-written by Roday and Franks, "Scary Sherry" was the first time we saw many of the show's recurring bits: Shawn and Gus running away screaming from a crime scene, people confusing Gus for Bud (Deon Richmond) on The Cosby Show, and Juliet (Maggie Lawson) getting lost in her undercover role. —C.A.

4. "Dual Spires" (season 5, episode 12)

Dulé Hill, James Roday, and Maggie Lawson on 'Psych'
Dulé Hill, James Roday, and Maggie Lawson on 'Psych'. Alan Zenuk/USA Network

In an interview with EW, Steve Franks said he wanted every episode to be wish fulfillment for the writer. It's because of that rule that we got this moody and slavishly detailed homage to Twin Peaks, co-written by Roday, who is a Twin Peaks superfan. While the hour is filled with too many Lynchian references to count and guest appearances from the Twin Peaks cast, you can still enjoy the episode if you aren't familiar with the '90s series. As the show would prove time and time again, there's nothing better than simply watching the writers and cast have fun with the things they love. —C.A.

3. "100 Clues" (season 7, episode 5)

Dulé Hill, Garrett Morris, James Roday, Timothy Omundson, Maggie Lawson, Lesley Ann Warren, and Christopher Lloyd on 'Psych'
Dulé Hill, Garrett Morris, James Roday, Timothy Omundson, Maggie Lawson, Lesley Ann Warren, and Christopher Lloyd on 'Psych'. Everett Collection

In a way, wasn't Psych always doing a Clue homage? For its 100th episode, the show went all in on the '80s cult classic that already shares its sense of humor, from its love of wordplay and loud screaming to that one guy who just can't help but run around a mansion while solving a murder. "100 Clues" brought together three Clue alums — Lesley Ann Warren, Martin Mull, and Christopher Lloyd — for a dark, posh affair that riffed on the original movie, from its score to its multiple endings, without just remaking it. We'd bring a plus one (plus one plus two plus one) to this party any day. —K.C.

2. "An Evening With Mr. Yang"/"Mr. Yin Presents..."/"Yang 3 in 2D" (season 3/4/5 finales)

James Roday and Dulé Hill on 'Psych'
James Roday and Dulé Hill on 'Psych'. Alan Zenuk/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Psych was so delightful mostly because of its low stakes. Shawn and Gus' witty repartee was never offset by more than one or two deaths to people per episode. But three different times, throughout several seasons, things got real. Shawn got actual archenemies, and they threatened the people closest to him! Because Psych saved such stakes for when it mattered, these episodes felt huge. The particular highlight was the second act, an ode to Hitchcock films that had a lasting impact on Shawn and Jules — but all three together tell the full saga. —C.H.

1. "American Duos" (season 2, episode 1)

James Roday and Dulé Hill on 'Psych'
James Roday and Dulé Hill on 'Psych'. Alan Zenuk/USA Network/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

The second season premiere remains the best example of everything that made fans go, well, psych-o. Written by Roday and Franks and directed by Landis, this American Idol spoof sees Shawn and Gus go undercover at a singing competition to protect a curmudgeonly, Simon Cowell-esque judge Nigel St. Nigel (Tim Curry). Basically, it has everything that makes a great episode: sharp pop culture commentary; ridiculous high jinks, like Juliet going into hardass choreographer mode to teach the guys how to dance; and, of course, music. The absurd Tears for Fears/Michael Jackson showstopper that concludes the episode is pure gold and more than confirmed that this series refused to be tamed. —C.A.

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Updated by
Christian Holub
Christian Holub

Christian Holub is a writer covering comics and other geeky pop culture. He's still mad about 'Firefly' getting canceled.

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