Reaction-diffusion equations appear in biology and chemistry, and combine linear diffusion with different kind of reaction terms. Some of them are remarkable from the mathematical point of view, since they admit families of travelling waves that describe the asymptotic behaviour of a larger class of solutions 0 ≤ u(x, t) ≤ 1 of the problem posed in the real line. We investigate here the existence of waves with constant propagation speed, when the linear diffusion is replaced by the "slow" doubly nonlinear diffusion. In the present setting we consider bistable reaction terms, which present interesting differences w.r.t. the Fisher-KPP framework recently studied in [7]. We find different families of travelling waves that are employed to describe the wave propagation of more general solutions and to study the stability/instability of the steady states, even when we extend the study to several space dimensions. A similar study is performed in the critical case that we call "pseudo-linear", i.e., when the operator is still nonlinear but has homogeneity one. With respect to the classical model and the "pseudo-linear" case, the travelling waves of the "slow" diffusion setting exhibit free boundaries. Finally, as a complement of [7], we study the asymptotic behaviour of more general solutions in the presence of a "heterozygote superior" reaction function and doubly nonlinear diffusion ("slow" and "pseudo-linear").We anticipate that significant differences from the Fisher-KPP setting can be found in both the ODEs analysis (see Theorem 1.1) and in the asymptotic behaviour of the solutions (see Theorem 1.2 and 1.3), where "threshold effects" and "non-saturation" phenomena appear.We recall that the p-Laplacian is a nonlinear operator defined for all 1 ≤ p < ∞ by the formulaand we consider the more general diffusion term ∆ p u m := ∆ p (u m ) = ∇ · (|∇(u m )| p−2 ∇(u m )), that we call "doubly nonlinear" operator since it presents a double power-like nonlinearity. Here, ∇ is the spatial gradient while ∇· is the spatial divergence. The doubly nonlinear operator (which can be thought as the composition of the m-th power and the p-Laplacian) is much used in the elliptic and parabolic literature (see the interesting applications presented in [17,26,39]) and allows to recover the Porous Medium operator choosing p = 2 or the p-Laplacian operator choosing m = 1. Of course, choosing m = 1 and p = 2 we obtain the classical Laplacian. W.r.t. the Porous Medium setting or the p-Laplacian one, problem (1.1) with doubly nonlinear diffusion is less studied. However, the basic theory of existence, uniqueness and regularity is known. Results about existence of weak solutions of the pure diffusive problem and its generalizations, can be found in the survey [35] and the large number of references therein. The problem of uniqueness was studied later, see for instance [22,23,40,54,56]). For what concerns the regularity, we refer to [53,54] for the Porous Medium setting, while for the p-Laplacian case we suggest [21,41] and the references therein....