One Chicago Still Hits Hard: Ranking the Best Fire, Med & P.D. Episodes of Fall 2025

This fall, all three One Chicago shows quietly dropped an episode that reminded fans why this universe still hits harder than almost

anything else on network TV. Chicago Med leaned into messy personal fallout, Chicago Fire burned down a cornerstone of 51, and Chicago PD delivered a slow-burn horror story that might haunt Voight for the rest of the season.

 

How to watch new episodes of 'Chicago Med,' 'Chicago Fire' and 'Chicago P.D.'  for free | Oct. 9 - mlive.com

 

If you like your medical drama with a side of soap, “A Game of Inches” is your kind of hour. On paper, it’s about a cosmetic leg-lengthening surgery gone sideways. In reality, it’s about the emotional fallout of Dr. Asher’s surprise pregnancy and the very complicated triangle she’s now orbiting.

Asher walks into work carrying two secrets at once: she’s pregnant, and the father is Dean Archer, not Dr. Ripley, the man she just broke up with. Med being Med, the gossip spreads faster than a trauma page. Archer has everyone cracking “older dad” jokes. Ripley’s trying to act okay while clearly not okay. Even Dr. Frost ends up serving as a sounding board for Ripley’s bruised ego.

Their main case is a guy who used his life savings to surgically get taller so he could impress the woman he met online. I mean, that feels absurd until it doesn’t. When an infection threatens his legs, Archer just wants to save his life and pull the rods. Ripley sees the terror behind the bravado: a man convinced his height is the only thing that’s ever made him visible. Their clash in the OR isn’t just about medicine; it’s about Asher, resentment and who gets to decide what “quality of life” means.

Meanwhile, Will Halstead pops back into town for a Bears trip with his stepson, Owen, and immediately stumbles into another crisis: a teenager named Jasper being used as a drug mule. The storyline escalates into a gun-toting attempt to recover the swallowed balloons and ends with Owen being shot, forcing Sharon Goodwin to call Natalie as Will refuses to leave his son’s side.

By the end of the hour, Asher and Ripley are forced to operate together, Archer gets a genuinely sweet moment of support from his ex, and the episode quietly resets a bunch of relationships without ever feeling like pure melodrama. It’s busy, it’s messy, and it’s exactly the kind of ensemble chaos that makes Med work when it’s humming.

The episode opens with Cindy taking a job now that the kids are older, Annabelle conveniently “sick” on a test day, and Herrmann heading into what he thinks will be a normal shift. Then a house fire call comes in, and the address knocks the wind out of him. It’s his.

What follows is a nightmare any firefighter parent has imagined. Herrmann is in full panic, trying to get his daughter on the phone while 51 barrels toward the blaze. Severide ignores district lines to take the call, the whole house converges on the scene, and for a few agonizing minutes, no one knows where Annabelle is. Cindy finally arrives with the best possible news: Annabelle went to school after all. She’s safe. The house is not.

Herrmann throws himself into the burning structure anyway, desperately grabbing photo frames and keepsakes until Vasquez physically drags him out. Moments later, an explosion finishes off what was left. The rest of the hour tracks Herrmann as he ricochets between shock, guilt, and that hollow feeling of realizing your home is now a pile of ash and twisted beams.