R.L. Stine's Fear Street has made the jump to televisions everywhere thanks to Netflix's new trilogy of terrorFear Street. However, for many fans of Stine's horror work, Fear Street was the series aging fans of Goosebumps visited when they wanted headier, bleaker material.

Of course, the books themselves remain classics, with their iconic covers and pulpy horror narratives and modern fans remember the two Goosebumps films, which are fun in their own right, but Goosebumps back in the old days of television offered tons of young audiences their first doses of horror content. So, if you're nostalgic for the old R.L. Stine universe after Fear Street, consider revisiting these episodes of the Goosebumps television series.

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The Haunted Mask

One of the most iconic Goosebumps stories ever written and the first episode of the series, The Haunted Mask was one of the best-realized episodes of the original series. Its premise is simple: a scared girl gets a mask that grafts itself to her face while overtaking her personality. The episode ends up being a demonic possession story with a self-affirming moral, but its strength comes in that it tells a simple horror story for kids that, until the end, feels grounded by Goosebumps standards.

Night of the Living Dummy II & III

Strangely, the original story Night of the Living Dummy was never adapted into Goosebumps, but its follow-up stories were. Both are worth revisiting, if not only for one of Goosebumps' most iconic adversaries, Slappy. Slappy's a sentient doll who torments those unlucky enough to realize he's alive, which makes these entries like child-friendly versions of Child's Play, with Slappy coming off as a much more tame version of Chuecky.

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One Day at Horrorland

The Horrors rank among the most iconic monsters to appear in the Goosebumps series, even if their entry point in the Goosebumps series strikes that great balance between corny and fun. The story of "One Night at Horrorland" centers on a family who stumbles upon a theme park that showcases monstrosities and wickedness, and it's a ghoulish fun time featuring some of the show's strangest costumes and silliest monsters.

The Werewolf of Fever Swamp

Werewolf stories are iconic pieces of horror that always hold a place in the hearts of those who love them. The Werewolf of Fever Swamp is a fairly solid story for kids, one centered on a family that moves to a house nearby the titular fever swamp, where strange occurrences transpire involving an animal that might actually be a werewolf. Of all the stories in Goosebumps that centers on kids turning into dogs -- of which there are a surprisingly large amount -- this is easily the best one.

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Stay Out of the Basement

One of the few botany-themed horror stories around, this two-part story centers on a dad whose experiments with plants lead his young children to suspect something terrible has transpired. Their suspicions are made all the worse by the father's insistence that they stay out of his lab in the basement. "Stay Out of the Basement" is a simple mad scientist story that, despite some strange twists toward the later half, feels strangely grounded.

A Night in Terror Tower

"A Night in Terror Tower" feels more like something out of The Twilight Zone than Goosebumps. Two siblings go to an old castle on a day trip, which stumbles into a surreal series of encounters. But what feels almost like a haunted monster story turns into something different halfway through when the audience realizes the story essentially changes genres. It's a pretty great episode that might not scratch that horror itch many kids had when watching Goosebumps, but it does offer something unexpected and surreal.

Welcome to Dead House

Based on the first Goosebumps book ever written, Welcome to Dead House's plot is genuinely pretty unsettling. A new family moves into a town where it turns out their neighbors are not only dead but were killed in a grotesque chemical accident. To survive, they need to consume the blood of the living. This ghoulish story is easily one of the darker, more disturbing Goosebumps stories. And while it isn't necessarily as grim as anything you'd see in Fear Street, it feels just a step removed from the horrors of R.L. Stine's work geared toward older readers.

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