Alien: Earth has introduced fans to a terrifying new alien lifeform — Species 64 — a creature that takes body horror to an entirely new level. The mysterious, parasitic “eye creature” known as T.
"Star Trek" is home to countless alien species, many of whom offer beloved characters. Some are not. We rank the 10 most ...
The Alien franchise has always focused on just one titular alien — the Xenomorph. Yes, over the years, we got extrapolations of the Xenomorph, like the Queen, and the facehuggers. Yet they all still ...
Warning! This article contains SPOILERS for Alien: Earth season 1.Alien: Earth centers around five alien lifeforms that crash-landed on Earth, and we have a wealth of information about the new creepy ...
Alien: Earth series will debut at least four new Alien species, including a flying and potentially eight-legged variety. The series may feature an apex Alien, expanding the Alien universe. Speculation ...
CJ (he/him) is an Evergreen Editor at DualShockers. He has a passion for both modern and retro games and enjoys RPGs, strategy games, and anything Marvel-related. Aliens and video games go together ...
"Alien: Earth" has released multiple teasers over the past few months, seemingly having fun making fans wait for any kind of full trailer. Its most recent teaser, however, does reveal something ...
We see these nasty little bloaters in in episode 1 burrowing into a dead rat in the Maginot's onboard laboratory. It turns out to be a fairly gruesome foreshadowing of what they're capable of later in ...
In just two episodes, Alien: Earth expands the franchise’s terror beyond the Xenomorphs, introducing Species 64, aka the eye creature. With its horrifying hijacking ...
The Alien franchise has always focused on just one titular alien — the Xenomorph. Yes, over the years, we got extrapolations of the Xenomorph, like the Queen, and the facehuggers. Yet they all still ...
The so-called ticks are not the only extraterrestrial bugs appearing on Alien: Earth. We’ve also got a nest of flies, which seems to live inside a hornet’s nest from our own world. We don’t know much ...