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14 votes
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Project Hail Mary | Official trailer
40 votes -
Fatal Run 2089 | Official gameplay trailer
2 votes -
Bugonia | Official teaser trailer
4 votes -
Alien: Earth | Official trailer
22 votes -
‘Doctor Who’ ratings dive, supercharging uncertainty about future of sci-fi series
33 votes -
In 1978, Arthur C. Clarke predicted the rise of AI and wondered what would happen to humanity
18 votes -
Predator: Killer of Killers | Official trailer
9 votes -
Andor discussion thread
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Haven't seen a whole lot of discussion about this show on tildes. Not in weekly threads nor a main thread - so here is one!
It's a 9/10 for me.
I waited until all of season 2 was out before starting it. Realized I had forgotten almost everything since season 1 though, so rewatched that first. It turned into a binge of both seasons - I just could not stop! It has been probably 3 years since I was so glued to the screen and this engaged in a tv show (Euphoria season 1),
I will skip an analysis or further review but every character was good. Every actor delivered. Just great all around. Season 2 (9.5/10) even better than season 1 (8.5/10).
So anyways, discuss! More than happy to have my feelings about it validated lol, and also see other takes on it.
47 votes -
How would rings realistically affect living on a planet? [worldbuilding]
Ever since I was a kid, I thought planetary rings were cool, and whenever I scribbled a non-specific alien planet I would give it rings. Lately I have been worldbuilding for a story, and naturally...
Ever since I was a kid, I thought planetary rings were cool, and whenever I scribbled a non-specific alien planet I would give it rings. Lately I have been worldbuilding for a story, and naturally I gave the world rings. But since I made that decision, I've paid more attention to rings in other sci-fi I watch.
There's a lot of sci-fi planets out there with their own Saturn-esque rings. Very often it's just there for the vibes. In the opening to Rogue One, for instance, Galen Erso's farm is on a planet with rings, but this doesn't really come up or affect the plot in any way. I forgot this until I recently rewatched the movie. Similarly in the Foundation series on Apple TV+, even though the protagonist is from an ocean planet with rings (that are beautifully rendered), the rings never really come up. The endless ocean ends up driving both plot points in the show and the superstitious culture of the people who live there, but the ring does not. Maybe this is discussed more in the Foundation books but I'm not familiar with those.
Sometimes rings end up being plot relevant, like in Alien Romulus, where instead of being set dressing, the rings are an obstacle that can cause the space station to crash. Still, the rings don't directly impact the planet or the people who live there. The thing that more directly affects the colonists' lives is the atmosphere blocking the sunlight instead.
What really got me thinking was when I saw this Sci-Show video a few months ago about research that Earth possibly had rings about 450 million years ago. The rings lowered the overall global temperature and caused more extreme summers and winters due to light reflecting off of them. This made me realize rings can add quite a lot to the actual worldbuilding, since besides from the obvious cultural impact on any humanoid life, it can cause big environmental changes as well. This is pretty obvious when you consider how The Moon can do many things that affect life on Earth such as the tides.
Of course there's nothing wrong with stories hand waving away these types of questions, but it's interesting when stories like Three Body Problem take these tropes like living in a multi-star system and consider how that would mess with the people living there.
Astronomy nerds and sci-fi fans of Tildes, are there any other interesting ways rings would affect life on a planet?
34 votes -
What happened to 'The Invaders', the 1960s alien invasion TV show?
7 votes -
I captained a £4,000,000 starship filled with actors
21 votes -
Andor | Season 2 trailer | Streaming April 22 on Disney+
33 votes -
Star Wars intro creator
15 votes -
Moadra | Console announcement trailer
6 votes -
Is Anarchy Online the worst MMO ever?
12 votes -
What kind of game is FBC: Firebreak? Preview for the first-person co-op sci-fi horror shooter from Remedy Entertainment.
17 votes -
Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith to have a limited theatrical re-release beginning April 25th
15 votes -
Predator: Badlands | Teaser trailer
9 votes -
The Life of Chuck | Official teaser trailer
7 votes -
Murderbot | Official trailer
30 votes -
Peter Watts on ‘Blindsight’, ‘Armored Core’ and working with Neill Blomkamp
23 votes -
Tron: Ares | Official trailer
30 votes -
Predator: Killer of Killers | First look
11 votes -
The final episode of Chief O'Brien at Work, twelve years in the making
24 votes -
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | Season 3 teaser trailer
20 votes -
Live-action League of Legends series reportedly underway; Vietnam considered as a filming location
6 votes -
Hello Sunshine | Official teaser trailer
4 votes -
First three Andor episodes now streaming on YouTube
S01E01 - Kassa S01E02 - That Would Be Me S01E03 - Reckoning
25 votes -
'Consider Phlebas' series set at Amazon from Charles Yu and Chloé Zhao
22 votes -
[SOLVED] What's the scifi book?
I'm looking for a book I read in middle school where people are factory farmed for their parts before they hit puberty by organic mech of some sort, but the protagonist escapes and is hunted but...
I'm looking for a book I read in middle school where people are factory farmed for their parts before they hit puberty by organic mech of some sort, but the protagonist escapes and is hunted but is able to hide in an abandoned (ship?) with some others and starts to fight back? For the life of me, my search skills are failing.
10 votes -
Astropulse: Reincarnation | Reveal trailer
5 votes -
‘Murderbot’ premiers May 16 on Apple TV+
15 votes -
The BBC’s library of classic sci-fi sounds is now available to sample
27 votes -
A science fiction workshop lexicon
11 votes -
Speculative fiction that speaks to our current moment(s)
I'm looking for your short stories, novelettes and novellas, and to a lesser extent novels too, that directly speak to the politics and social realities of today....
I'm looking for your short stories, novelettes and novellas, and to a lesser extent novels too, that directly speak to the politics and social realities of today.
https://www.uncannymagazine.com/article/rabbit-test/ was a short story I shared here about 18 months ago that directly dealt with abortion restrictions and the future created from them.
Another user shared Better Living through Algorithms for a more optimistic sort of take on "AI"
And recently I was reminded of Mur Lafferty's The Ophelia Network, a novella which features a dystopian society where one of the changes from today was the Heritage Law. People of color needed to prove ancestory at least three generations, "preferably" descended from slaves. This plot point runs mostly in the background through the story but pops up occasionally.
From The Ophelia Network
Agent Frank looked up from Saxon’s tablet. “Your file says you’re half Black, half white. Your father’s people can be traced to sale at a South Carolina auction—wow, in 1619!” She looked at Saxon. “Is that correct?”
Saxon nodded. “Our records say he’s descended from the first slaves to set foot in this country. His father’s people have been here longer than most American families.”
Frank smiled. “You’re really lucky that those slaves had a kind master who kept good notes on his inventory.”
Bailey didn’t let his TV persona slip one notch. He had always been calm in the face of racist bait. He met Frank’s eyes and simply nodded; his father’s genealogy was not news to him. After the president signed the Heritage Law, all people of color had scrambled to do genealogical research to justify their place in a country their ancestors built but was suddenly not theirs. They needed proof of at least three generations of forebears in America, preferably descended from slaves.
The sponsors of the Heritage Law presented it as a step toward thanking slaves for building the country. America would thusly reward the slaves’ descendants with citizenship and the right to stay. What the sponsors failed to point out is that millions of other people of color would be deported.
The Heritage Law meant the first-generation Haitian family across the street from Bailey’s parents had been deported just last week. His parents were still trying to clean out their neighbors’ home and put their things in storage before the government claimed the house and everything inside.
It was with relief, not pride or gratitude, that his parents found the information about his many-great grandmother and her sale in Charleston, South Carolina.
“Yes, I’m a legal citizen of America,” Bailey said. His voice was slurred as his swollen lips rallied their troops to muster forth a communication.I can think of a bunch of novels that say big things. The Handmaids Tale, 1984, Fahrenheit 451 etc. But I find shorter works tend to be more responsive to current events and often more cutting for their shorter length. I'd also suggest trying to avoid really common novel recs and focus on niche novels or shorter (also typically more niche I guess) works. But I'm not the boss of you.
Share your recs? Link them here if they're free to read online?
25 votes -
Comparing the two versions of Robert A. Heinlein’s “Stranger in a Strange Land”
13 votes -
The Wandering Earth and the ugly American
7 votes -
Saros | Cinematic announce trailer
8 votes -
A retrospective of 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'
12 votes -
Star Wars recommendations for a six year old
Kid has just started getting into Star Wars, which is great because I could buy a set of light sabres for Christmas and no what do you mean that was for the kid it absolutely wasn't a present for...
Kid has just started getting into Star Wars, which is great because I could buy a set of light sabres for Christmas and no what do you mean that was for the kid it absolutely wasn't a present for myself as well. Anyway, countless hours of duelling later...
We have watched the "first" two films (ep 4 and 5) and plan to watch the remaining movies at some points. A few grabbing-my-arm scary moments but it's OK because "the good guys always win, right Daddy?"
We're playing Lego Star Wars together on the Playstation, which is brilliant fun. Their face when they blew up the Death Star all by themselves was fantastic. Everyone was excited for the rest of the day.
We are hitting the phonics books, of which there is plenty. Kid loves books and stories but isn't such a fan of reading for themselves as yet - but will ask me to let them read to me if there are Star Wars books on the pile, which is great.
However, that's where my Star Wars knowledge ends. I know there's a whole boatload of EU stuff out there, but I have no idea what it is, or what of it is suitable (or not) for a six year old. Any suggestions? We have a rotating selection of streaming services live at any given time, but I'm ok with the occasional venture into choppier waters if needed.
21 votes -
A review of 'Spock's World', a Star Trek novel
5 votes -
Recent Star Trek literature reading order flow chart
14 votes -
Denis Villeneuve eyes a new hard sci-fi epic adaptation, ‘Rendezvous with Rama’
43 votes -
Star Trek: Section 31 | re:View
15 votes -
Mickey 17 | Official trailer 2
24 votes -
Recommend your social/softer science fiction books
Ok so I'm enjoying the hard SF thread but what I really enjoy about SF is the sociology, anthropology and psychology more than the tech and whether or not the wormhole is sciency enough. Here's a...
Ok so I'm enjoying the hard SF thread but what I really enjoy about SF is the sociology, anthropology and psychology more than the tech and whether or not the wormhole is sciency enough.
Here's a wiki article on "social science fiction" for more context. There's definitely some overlap with both hard and soft SF, but I'm not looking for a rec just because it happens to be more space opera. I'm interested because of the themes of the work. Ursula Le Guin, Sherri Tepper, Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood are some of the key classic authors I've read in this arena but I'm looking for who I've overlooked. Plenty of YA work fits here especially post Hunger Games but I'd mostly request adult works unless it's a very strong YA novel (Hunger Games itself holds up very well IMO actually). I'd say Becky Chambers - who's also put into the solar punk/hope punk subgenres - is a good example of more anthropological feeling modern work.
Some things don't age well - I really enjoy Tepper's Gate to Women's Country for its exploration of a post apocalyptic world where most men live outside the city in barracks, women live inside the city with the few men that choose to return to their mothers' homes, and only during festivals do the men and women get together with a chance for procreating. But it's an anti-sex worker world and one where homosexuality was "fixed" with a wave of a historical genetic hand.
I'd love to know your recs and maybe what perspectives it gave you or that it exemplifies well. If there's stuff that doesn't age well due to science changing or cultural values changing maybe just note that, sometimes they're still quite good reads with that context.
43 votes -
I need some help with the sciency bit of my short story
I am writing this short story. It is part of the overall book that I am writing, but it is also a story that can be enjoyed completely on its own. In that story, a planet-sized ship approaches our...
I am writing this short story. It is part of the overall book that I am writing, but it is also a story that can be enjoyed completely on its own. In that story, a planet-sized ship approaches our Solar System, and,
ultimatelymaybe, Earth. For dimensions, let's say it is equal to 1.5 of Earth's diameter. According to Google, that's25,51219,134 kilometers. The Planet-Ship is probably less dense than Earth, as it is largely occupied by biomass and weird alien electronics. You may think of it as a round Borg cube, from Star Trek.My "Round Borg Cube" is completely black and spherical, with a smooth surface without any visible features.
What I wanna know is...
- Assuming that the object is on a very slow path towards Earth, at what proximity will its effects be known?
- At which point will scientists observe its effects, view it, or detect it with instruments?
- If that is at all possible, what would be a threshold in which the "Round Borgs" would have to interrupt their movement in order to remain undetected?
- At which distance will it be visible to the naked eye (if at all)?
- And if they chose to get dangerously close to Earth, what would be the impact on our environment?
I understand that is a lot to ask, but I just can't trust GPT for that kind of stuff, even if their answers sound plausible. Perhaps someone with astronomical knowledge as well as an interest in science fiction will find my questions enticing. I don't expect precise answers because I am not providing precise information. So feel free to speculate on that scenario. In any case, I am grateful for any answer I can get.
Thanks!
22 votes -
What hard scifi books could you recommend?
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Hello! Could you please recommend some hard science fiction books? I am struggling to find a good one. My favorites are Blindsight and Echopraxia by Peter Watts, but I have failed to find anything similar.
I also enjoyed The Martian by Andy Weir and The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells, though in my opinion, these aren't quite what I would call hard science fiction.
Additionally, I enjoyed books that blend fiction and non-fiction, like Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality by Eliezer Yudkowsky and Gödel, Escher, Bach by Douglas Hofstadter.
What are your favorite hard science fiction books?
49 votes -
A note on Worm - A review of John McCrae's Worm
22 votes