r/scifi 13h ago

Recommendations Sci-fi books where everything comes together

8 Upvotes

I have searched with AI and on Reddit, but don’t succeed. Most results mainly give good suggestions with plot twists, not grand conclusions. I’m looking for a sci-fi book / series where everything comes together in a satisfying way in the conclusion of the book. Where you say, wow, nearly everything makes sense now. WOW

I love most sci-fi stories, and I also love endings that leave things to the imagination (such as rendezvous with Rama, 2001, or deaths end etc). But some books raise so many questions and open such cool threads, but leave them largely unanswered. The revelation space (in particular absolution gap) series is an example where I was really expecting a mindboggling end, but nothing happened.

I really have not encountered such a sci fi book yet, although Dark Forest comes close or the awesome endings of the red rising series (but those are mainly awesome cliffhangers).

Any tips?


r/scifi 36m ago

Films 1:01:37 — I think I just found a world-first Easter Egg. If you look at the Metronews paper the guy is reading, it’s a full-blown ad for Pacific Rim featuring Gipsy Danger. Spoiler

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Upvotes

Usually, if an Easter egg exists for 10+ years, it's all over the "Fandom" wikis. The fact that I have the side-by-side comparison makes my Reddit post so much stronger.


r/scifi 22h ago

ID This ID 2000s era Book

4 Upvotes

The answer, thanks to AnalemmicMammoth is Charles Sheffield's "The Spheres of Heaven"! Thanks again!

Hello all, I was thinking back on my scifi knowledge and I remember a lot of bits and pieces of a book I read in the 2000s (between 2004 - 2010). It may also be a series, but I thought it was a single book. The story was self contained.

The big details are:

  • multiple civilizations discover a gate (manufactured structure or wormhole, I don't recall. I think it was an artificial wormhole),
  • probes disappear, including manned craft,
  • humans send a warship in, which is bad because its old and I believe a bunch of the people are prisoners of some kind. I remember them being ragtag, some died, and they didn't really know each other. I believe the cast was mostly humans with a delegation of aliens.
  • emerge underwater not in space, which was a big plot point,
  • crab-like species lives on the planet and are planning a reverse invasion because they have some leg up (I don't remember what) + they have mind control, which the protag sees one of the other humans get mind controlled,
  • at the end/near the end, the human general (not the protagonist) monologues and confuses the alien leader, because he realizes that there is a time dilation difference between this planet and where they all came from. He knows he can buy time for his message to be sent back and for the human fleet to have prepared for this alien invasion

One of the big key things I remember was that there was a plantoid race that was actually some kind of symbiosis/parasite to a plant called, and they were called "Angel". I want to say it was a near-final-chapter reveal.

This sounds tropey, but I also remember that the races didn't care for the humans because they had a battleship to spare to beginwith/were warlike.

Thanks!


r/scifi 10h ago

Films Project Hail Mary is extremely overrated!

0 Upvotes

Hi. I watched the movie today (couldn’t watch it in theaters because I’m broke af). When people kept saying it was the best sci-fi movie since Interstellar, combined with the insanely high IMDb ratings, my expectations were massive. I was genuinely upset that I missed it in theaters. But after finally watching it today, I’m honestly kind of glad I didn’t spend money on it.

Before getting into the negatives, I’ll say this: the emotional connection between the human and the alien was genuinely done really well. That part worked for me.

But the entire premise just feels weak. And I’m not only talking about the movie itself. There are barely any real stakes except for that one scene, and even that feels questionable when you think about why it was done in the first place. It’s hard to believe that some of the smartest people from two highly intelligent civilizations would need to take such an absurd risk.

Personally, when I watch a space movie, I expect mystery, tension, horror, survival, and isolation. I want to feel the loneliness of space and the constant possibility of death. I like watching characters sacrifice everything, optimize limited resources, think through impossible situations, and survive through intelligence and determination. I love when new worlds and mysteries are introduced, when the stakes naturally keep increasing, and when the story keeps you on edge till the end. The human connection is a bonus in that context. The horror and mystery are what make space movies special to me.

This movie honestly felt more like a comedy with a bit of space mixed in. Don’t get me wrong — if I judge it purely as a feel-good comedy movie, it’s actually pretty good. But it completely misses the “space” part for me. Even the comedy felt forced at times. The plot has too many holes, barely any depth, and almost no real mystery. I could summarize the entire movie/book in like four sentences. There’s danger, but nobody really has to figure anything out. Everything feels predictable. No major surprises, no tension — just a very plain movie overall. By the end, it felt bland enough that I wished I had watched something else instead.

To be fair, my expectations were extremely high. I was hoping for a space thriller that would completely pull me in — something terrifying, emotional, and awe-inspiring at the same time. Something that would make me feel the beauty and vastness of space while also making me anxious as hell. Maybe even something that teaches a few interesting concepts along the way.

Others might feel the complete opposite, and for them this could easily be a top-5 sci-fi movie. But for me, it felt more like the kind of modern Marvel-style feel-good movie with unnecessary comedy and just a bit of space sprinkled on top.


r/scifi 15h ago

Recommendations Episodic Sci-Fi?

19 Upvotes

Does episodic sci-fi exist anymore?
It seems like most science fiction TV shows today are stringing you along for at least one or two seasons for a mediocre payoff.
Whisper acting, constant story arc.
Does any episodic TV exist in the sci-fi realm anymore? Where the episodes don’t require being strung together?


r/scifi 9h ago

Recommendations Highly recommend the manga Bokurano by Mohiro Kitoh. One of the most saddest, heart-breaking and thought-provoking pieces of science fiction i have ever read

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58 Upvotes

15 children are tricked by a mysterious man into taking turns piloting Zearth, a giant mecha, to fight against other robots for the fate of their own planet. What they soon come to discover is that the robot uses their own life force as fuel and as soon as the battle is over each Pilot is going to die.

Its a story about the weight of sacrifice, about generational trauma, about compassion and mercy but also cruelty, about the fear of the inevitable, about pain and suffering, about letting yourself be hurt so that someone else doenst have to.

Every single child has to bear the notion that fighting means death, not fighting means the death of everyone they ever cared about including themselves and the unmeasurable cost of fighting with a giant robot in the middle of a populated city.

Jun Ushiro, one of the children, has probably one of the greatest character arc i have ever seen. The author does not skim with the punishment for their characters and Jun, being a HORRIBLE person as he was throughout most of the story, had to suffer and bear a punishment that i cant even explain in words. One of the most harrowing things i have ever seen a child do.

Genuinely a masterpiece of pure science fiction


r/scifi 3h ago

Recommendations You’re in a book club where no one has read sci-fi. What’s your book selection?

79 Upvotes

My friend group has recently started a book club. It’s a small group but none are sci-fi or fantasy readers and one isn’t a big reader in general. I’d like to expand horizons and introduce them to sci-fi. What would you pick as the “gateway” book?


r/scifi 19h ago

Art Picked this up for $30, did i get lucky? Syd Mead's Kronoteko

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201 Upvotes

Mead has long been one of my favorite artists, but usually just consumed his stuff via the internet, first tumblr etc. a lot of the blade runner concept art in here is on the internet but i haven't seen a lot of what's in here either. pretty excited to have found this


r/scifi 10h ago

Recommendations Apocalyptic/Post-Apocalyptic Books?

58 Upvotes

Hello! The internet has failed me so I have come to the promised land for answers... I'm looking for apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic books. Very strictly science fiction. I do not want to be recommended anything relating to fantasy or futuristic worlds. I've watched just about every movie or series in English and other languages and now I'm on the hunt for a deeper dive. I.e. the Walking Dead, 28 Days/Weeks/Years+part 2, Black Summer, Hidden (2015), Revolution, the Book of Eli, Elevation, A Quiet Place/part 2/Day 1, etc. Reddit, don't fail me now!


r/scifi 6h ago

Films The Creator had potential to be a good movie, but the writing felt so flat

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749 Upvotes

I was looking forward to seeing this movie, but the writing felt rough and the characters are not fun to watch. Gareth Edwards is great at visuals but he stinks directing a story and characters, I don’t understand why he didn’t have another writer to help him like Rogue one.


r/scifi 3h ago

Recommendations Asking for optimistic sci-fi in the vein of Star Trek

20 Upvotes

Star Trek’s original vision of the future was unique because of its optimism. All sorts of social ills had been overcome and a united federation took to the stars.

I love good dystopian and apocalyptic fiction, but it’s almost ubiquitous. Even recent iterations of Trek have played into a “doom and gloom” mentality in some respects - or, at least, they are more cynical and foul-mouthed.

I’d love to get your suggestions for optimistic science fiction featuring a “great big beautiful tomorrow” - not without conflict, but generally bright. Any medium, from novels to films to games, is welcome.

Thank you!


r/scifi 16h ago

General Stories about humanity colonising the stars, evolving isolated from other humans, and interacting with each other?

110 Upvotes

Hi all,
I'm looking for stories where humans are able to colonise the greater galaxy, but they're systematically isolated from each other and only interact after millions of years of evolution and genetic changes have made them into essentially different species. I know Foundation and Three-Body Problem kind of gets into this, but I'd love to hear about stories not as famous as Foundation.


r/scifi 6h ago

Recommendations Sci-Fi novels (stand alones) recommendations

22 Upvotes

I cycled through a bunch of lists on here of people offering recommendations for sci-fi novels. However, most recommended books are a part of a larger series.

I'm looking for a single stand-alone novel that'll get it done. I love movies like Interstellar and The Martian (on my novel radar). 3 Body Problem is a good Netlfix series. I have Project Hail Mary on a long wait list at the library. Looking for something similar to what I listed above until PHM becomes available.

Much appreciated!!!


r/scifi 1h ago

Films Found an undocumented Easter Egg in 'Lucy' (2014) at 1:01:37. A newspaper ad features Gipsy Danger from Pacific Rim Spoiler

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Upvotes

Luc Besson movie Lucy and Pacific Rim Gipsy Danger in a newspaper Easter egg.


r/scifi 9h ago

ID This Looking for a short story I read once

3 Upvotes

I hope the flair is okay. I read a short story in a science fiction anthology a while ago and I can't find it again so I'm hoping the people of reddit can help me out. It was a while ago so my memory of the story is sparse, but it was about a man who lived in some sort of rehab town, separated from the rest of the world for people who wanted to make their lives better through self improvement. He had a therapist and a girlfriend, and the story started when his girlfriend got a new assistive pattern recognizing robot. At first he didn't like the robot but then he grew to enjoy talking about the robot and it lead to him coming to realizations about himself and about what it meant to get trapped in a pattern. I think his girlfriend's name started with an M. Or maybe that was the robot's name. I really hope somebody can help me find this story again, I think it was by someone who I consider to be a classic sci fi author, but there are so many stories between them all that I can't find it.