Futurama: Every Time Travel Story Ranked From Worst To Best

Futurama wasn't always just set in the future.

Futurama Meanwhile

It’s easy to see from little more than the reaction to Futurama’s upcoming revival that the show has earned itself an army of fans, loyal still even after all these years. The show made a name for itself in the world of animation and is still to this day one of the most beloved in the entire genre.

Not only can it boast a whole universe worth of lovable characters, genuine emotional gut punches, and stories few other shows could even fathom, it is one of the smartest TV series around. Thanks to a writers' room full of nerds, Futurama leans heavily on its science-fiction aspect and with great success.

Thanks to being set in the 31st century, Futurama had license to go where no show had gone before, and there were numerous occasions that Fry, Bender, Leela, and the rest of the crew found themselves dealing with time travel.

This came in a variety of different ways, and of course some were far better than others. It’s a dangerous topic to base a story around, and while Futurama often hit the nail on the head, there were other times it left a bit too much to be desired.

9. All The Presidents' Heads

Futurama Meanwhile

There can be no denying that the quality of Futurama drastically dipped once it moved to Comedy Central. While most of the episodes on this list are strong, All the Presidents' Heads is much closer to the other end of the spectrum.

Inexplicably, the writers just seemed to forget that career chips were a thing in the show's later seasons, allowing Fry to get a night job at the Head Museum to cover the costs of the coffee he needed to stay awake at his night job.

A flimsy pretext at best for the crew to go back in time by licking the heads of several US Presidents, to protect the Farnsworth name that the Professor randomly now seemed to care so much about. This may have at least been a different and unique method of time travel, but it was also by far the stupidest.

The episode centered around a classic story of the ripple effect time traveling can have, how something seemingly so small as Fry moving a candle can result in the USA never winning its independence. Another consequence was that we had to listen to the truly awful English accents of the usually stellar Futurama cast.

This standard nerd combines the looks of Shaggy with the brains of Scooby, has an unhealthy obsession with the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and is a firm believer that Alter Bridge are the greatest band in the world.

  • Time travel

Despite Groening and Cohen 's intentions, time travel has become quite common in the Futurama universe. Unfortunately the manner in which time is travelled varies between occurrences. This article examines all manners of time travel used and paradoxes that may or may not have been caused by them. Except in the case of time spheres, travelling backwards produces a new timeline if something is changed or leads to the current timeline if nothing changes.

  • 1.1 Chronological
  • 1.2 Linear Time vs. Cyclical Time
  • 1.3 Time Skip
  • 1.4 Forward Travelling
  • 1.5 Time Tunnels and Wormholes
  • 1.6 Nexus Point
  • 1.7 Time Sphere
  • 1.8 Time Rifle
  • 1.9 Time Vortex
  • 1.10 Time Warp
  • 1.11 Farnsworth Effect
  • 1.12 Singularity
  • 1.13 Unseen time machine
  • 2 Paradoxes and oddities
  • 3.2 Appearances

Types of time travel in Futurama

Chronological.

Chronological time travel is the simplest form, as it requires no technological involvement, everyone everywhere already travels through time at a rate of one second per second. Spending your time in a hole in the ground may provide the illusion of non-chronological travel to others. Technology for this has been invented however, such as the Cryo-Tubes that allowed Fry to reach the 30th century and Farnsworth 's attempted time machine from " The Continuum Less Travelled ". In a non-canon segment , Bender waits underground for 500 million years. Disputed canon In " Simpsorama ", Bender must wait 1000 years to return to the future . Disputed canon

Linear Time vs. Cyclical Time

There is a debate whether time is linear or cyclical. Most scientists today believe it is linear and that when the universe cease to exist, it will remain that way. However, in " The Late Philip J. Fry ", we are shown that travelling far enough forward in time will eventually send you back to the big bang into an identical universe, which indicates that time is cyclical in Futurama 's universe and speculates that it could also be cyclical in ours.

A time skip is a variation on chronological travel, wherein the time traveler continues moving forward through time at an uncertain rate but then forgets whatever happened before the skip began, no matter how mundane or life changing the event was. An unbalance in the level of Chronitons is known to cause time skips. The skips can affect everywhere or just isolated spots.

Forward Travelling

Many scientists believe that while it is impossible to travel backwards in time, due to paradoxes and whatnot, it should be possible to travel forward in time. Farnsworth's forward time machine does just that, though Farnsworth fails to explain how exactly his time machine works, though the machine seems to subtly reappear every now and then in the real world so they can see what happens outside the machine, which means that the machine should travel forward in time by actually jumping through it.

Time Tunnels and Wormholes

A time tunnel is a tunnel to another location in space-time. On rare occasion, a tunnel can form naturally, when microwave radiation combines with the gravitons and graviolis from a supernova. Tunnels can also be formed by time machines, such as Adoy 's Time Tunneller . Unfortunately, travel through these tunnels can cause paradoxes. It is possible that the tunnels are actually a variety of wormhole, although their openings do look different. Furthermore it isn't completely certain that wormholes in the Futurama universe allow for time travel under normal conditions, which admittedly the time tunnels are not examples of. The ball return wormhole seen in Into the Wild Green Yonder may have only taken the ship to another location in space, with the Nimbus having been repaired rapidly. It would also appear that the other wormhole seen in the movie will not take the crew to another time period.

Nexus Point

Seen only once and poorly explained, a nexus point is a space-time location that can be visited by certain persons from any originating space-time location. Nexus Point travel apparently limits the traveller to visiting only the Nexus Point and after the time period of the Nexus, the traveller returns to the originating space-time. The word "point" is misleading in this case, as there is a starting time and ending time, it is likely there are limits to how far along the x, y and z axes the traveller can move as well. While the Fry of one timeline visited Nibbler, luckily he gave him enough information by the end of the available time to prevent the new timeline's Fry from being trapped in the Infosphere .

Time Sphere

A time sphere, despite being "paradox-free", actually produces far more paradoxes than any other type of time travel. While some of it makes sense, most doesn't. Travelling back in time doesn't produce a new timeline when something different has happened if it weren't being controlled by a god , this would be a serious mistake on the writer's part. However, apparently this particular god can only handle a certain number of these issues. It also seems to vary in it's determination of which being or object is a time paradox duplicate .

A time rifle somehow causes future and past incarnations of a person or object to be swapped. A broken rifle is able to bring multiple versions of a person into the time period in which the gun was fired. Anything that happens to the younger version will also have happened to the older versions.

Time Vortex

Time vortices are vortices that randomly transport living creatures and objects through time, and are created by Chronitons . They can range in size and power, and are able to transport an entire planet's population.

In " Brannigan, Begin Again ", Leela shouts "Hurry, I don't wanna die at the age of 25!" when she fears that the ship will crash into the Neutral Planet , to which Bender replies with "Honey, unless we hit a time warp, I wouldn't worry about it.". A time warp may be similar to a Panama Wormhole , but instead of appearing at a different location, you appear at a different time. Another theory is that the age of the things that pass through it are altered. A time warp has never actually been seen in the Futurama universe, yet.

Farnsworth Effect

Farnsworth has discovered that the fluid keeping heads alive in jars is composed of crystalline opal that traps that head in a temporal bubble, and if it is ingested, the person will travel back to the head's era for a limited time. A brief lick lasts for several seconds while a large amount can go up to 24 hours. Interestingly, it also transforms the persons clothes, so they fit with the era, and changes them back when they return to the present.

Singularity

In "Simpsorama", Farnsworth, Fry and Leela are able to travel to present-day Springfield by teleporting through a singularity that is quantum entangled to Bender. The user will appear in the past by falling out of Bender's chest cavity. Disputed canon

Unseen time machine

In "Simpsorama", Bender is able to travel to the past and arrive in Springfield with a time machine that is never shown. It is possible that this machine is powered by or has an effect on the weather, as an electrical storm hits Springfield just before Bender's arrival. Bender also claims he killed someone with the name "Isaac" (possibly Isaac Asimov ) when traveling back in time, suggesting the user of the machine can select which time period they go to, or perhaps the user "drifts" through different time periods until arriving at the desired destination. Disputed canon

Paradoxes and oddities

A paradox is when something that has happened appears to contradict another. This section attempts to solve identify and explain away paradoxes. While the solutions here may make sense, we can't confirm that these solutions are canon .

  • Nibbler pushes Fry into the tube believing that he, or another version of him, will save the universe, it is possible that Fry-X, and any others who had a delta brain wave, convinced the crew to leave the planet and they wandered space until they eventually went through the time hole. These universes were later destroyed by the Brainspawn .
  • The Futurama game has a duplicate Planet Express ship without origin, when the crew go on their journey on board a ship that is initially damaged, then later return to Earth before they left. The ship is damaged so they leave the damaged ship and take the good one. Each loop has Farnsworth repair or replace components of the ship, with the dark matter engine always being replaced. It is possible that each time a different set of components is replaced, putting them into a different universe each loop and giving each component of the ship different origins. In order to explain the overall origin, the first timeline would have had the ship undamaged at the start, but the crew still taking the good ship to go to Mom 's office.
  • Fry's tattoo in Bender's Big Score has no origin and because there are no timelines created by time sphere travel it can't be explained as having been done originally in another timeline. However each tattoo meets it's doom on Fry's buttock, while the one on Lars is sent back, is duplicated and one is destroyed while the other goes back...

Additional Info

  • There is an episode featuring actual time travel in every production season and broadcast season since "Roswell that Ends Well" (as well as in two of the special episodes ).

Appearances

Episode

  • Articles in need of update

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Futurama Wiki

Forwards Time Machine

The Forwards Time Machine was a temporal navigation device invented by Professor Farnsworth in 3010 . The machine is only capable of traveling into the future, specifically in order to avoid creating temporal paradoxes such as accidentally having sex with one's grandmother . However, this purpose finally failed, as a consequence that, in the series, the time is cyclic, what means that the universe can start again, allowing make changes in any moment of history in which machine stops.

Bender , Fry and Professor Farnsworth initially intended to test the machine by traveling one minute into the future. The Professor slipped while manning the control panel however and inadvertently transported to the year 10,000 . Because the machine had no reverse-time-traveling function, the three were marooned in the future until they decided to continue further down the timeline, hoping that a Reverse Time Machine would eventually be invented.

Bender, Farnsworth and Fry then proceeded to use the machine to travel to several points in the future, including the years 105105 , 252525 , 351120 , 1000000½ , 5000000 and 5000005 , 10000000 , and 50000000 . The three eventually reached the year 1000000000 , at which point the Earth had become a desert wasteland devoid of any trace of life.

Realizing that a Reverse Time Machine would therefore never be invented, Farnsworth, Bender and Fry decided to travel forward to the end of time, watching the death of the universe in the process. They eventually reached the last moment of time at 10 E 50 and witnessed the expiration of the universe, after which they were stunned to see the Big Bang occur again.

They then watched the universe form anew and traveled forward through history toward the moment in 3010 when they left the original timeline. The Professor slipped again as the machine neared the correct moment and the three were forced to continue into the future again, to the end of the universe, through another Big Bang and back to the year 3010.

Appearances [ ]

  • " The Late Philip J. Fry "
  • " I Know What You Did Next Xmas "
  • 1 Philip J. Fry
  • 2 Turanga Leela
  • 3 Seymour Asses

The 100 Greatest Time-Travel Episodes

Futurama (1999)

1. Futurama

Roswell that ends well.

Tress MacNeille, Kath Soucie, and Billy West in Futurama (1999)

2. Futurama

The late philip j. fry.

Katey Sagal and Billy West in Futurama (1999)

3. Futurama

Futurama (1999)

4. Futurama

The why of fry.

South Park (1997)

5. South Park

Go god go xii.

Katey Sagal, John DiMaggio, Phil LaMarr, Lauren Tom, and Billy West in Futurama: Bender's Big Score (2007)

6. Futurama: Bender's Big Score

Dan Castellaneta in The Simpsons (1989)

7. The Simpsons

Treehouse of horror v.

Bender (L) tries out his basketball skills when he attempts to join the Harlem Globetrotters in the FUTURAMA episode "Time Keeps On Slipping" Sunday,May 6

8. Futurama

Time keeps on slipping.

Red Dwarf (1988)

9. Red Dwarf

The inquisitor, 10. futurama: bender's big score.

South Park (1997)

11. South Park

Justin Roiland in Rick and Morty (2013)

12. Rick and Morty

A rickle in time.

Rattlestar Ricklactica (2019)

13. Rick and Morty

Rattlestar ricklactica.

South Park (1997)

14. South Park

My future self n' me.

South Park (1997)

15. South Park

Trapper keeper.

Channel Chasers (2003)

16. The Fairly OddParents

Channel chasers.

South Park (1997)

17. South Park

Katey Sagal, John DiMaggio, and Billy West in Futurama (1999)

18. Futurama

All the presidents' heads.

Brent Spiner and Patrick Stewart in Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)

19. Star Trek: The Next Generation

All good things....

Seth MacFarlane and Wendy Schaal in American Dad! (2005)

20. American Dad!

May the best stan win.

Seth Green, Mila Kunis, Alex Borstein, and Seth MacFarlane in Family Guy (1999)

21. Family Guy

Back to the pilot.

Backwards (1989)

22. Red Dwarf

Craig Charles in Timeslides (1989)

23. Red Dwarf

Alex Borstein and Seth MacFarlane in Family Guy (1999)

24. Family Guy

Meet the quagmires.

Seth MacFarlane and Wendy Schaal in American Dad! (2005)

25. American Dad!

The best christmas story never told, more to explore, recently viewed.

IMAGES

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  2. 10 Best Time Travel TV Episodes

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  3. Futurama Time Travel Song

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  4. Futurama: Every Time Travel Story Ranked From Worst To Best

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  5. Futurama's History of Time Travel (SO FAR, apparently)

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  6. What Episode Of Futurama Do They Time Travel?

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VIDEO

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  2. Futurama-You can't possibly understand what it feels like to be so alone

  3. The Professor Time Travels

  4. Best Episode in 10 Years (Futurama 1106)

  5. Time Travel

  6. Imagine Streaming Your Dreams! #futurama #shorts

COMMENTS

  1. The Late Philip J. Fry - Wikipedia

    Depictions of the past also include several callbacks to events in previous Futurama episodes. Farnsworth takes advantage of the time travel to kill Adolf Hitler, a classic temporal paradox, but misses and kills Eleanor Roosevelt instead.

  2. "Futurama" The Late Philip J. Fry (TV Episode 2010) - IMDb

    With Billy West, Katey Sagal, John DiMaggio, Tress MacNeille. Fry agrees to travel one minute into the future in Farnsworth's new time machine right before a big date with Leela, but they wind up going far into the future with no way to go back in time.

  3. The Late Philip J. Fry | Futurama Wiki | Fandom

    Time Travel Metaphysics [] After ending the lives of Bender, Fry and Professor Farnsworth from the final universe they travel to, Professor Farnsworth mentions that they have inadvertently settled a time travel paradox. This is because the original trio skipped over one universe.

  4. The Late Philip J. Fry - The Infosphere, the Futurama Wiki

    Time travel Further information: Time travel. In this episode, Futurama deals with a different kind of time travel than episodes such as "Roswell that Ends Well" and Bender's Big Score. The crew travel forwards, and "only" forwards.

  5. Futurama: Every Time Travel Story Ranked From Worst To Best

    The episode centered around a classic story of the ripple effect time traveling can have, how something seemingly so small as Fry moving a candle can result in the USA never winning...

  6. Time travel - The Infosphere, the Futurama Wiki

    Despite Groening and Cohen's intentions, time travel has become quite common in the Futurama universe. Unfortunately the manner in which time is travelled varies between occurrences. This article examines all manners of time travel used and paradoxes that may or may not have been caused by them.

  7. Forwards Time Machine | Futurama Wiki | Fandom

    The Forwards Time Machine was a temporal navigation device invented by Professor Farnsworth in 3010. The machine is only capable of traveling into the future, specifically in order to avoid creating temporal paradoxes such as accidentally having sex with one's grandmother.

  8. Roswell That Ends Well - Wikipedia

    The plot centers on an accidental time travel event that results in the main characters participating in the Roswell Incident in 1947. The episode was written by J. Stewart Burns and directed by Rich Moore.

  9. FUTURAMA | Season 10, Episode 13: Mini Time Travel | SYFY

    FUTURAMA | Season 10, Episode 13: Mini Time Travel | SYFY. SYFY. 637K subscribers. 99K views 5 years ago. ...more. Professor introduces the crew to his latest invention: the time travel...

  10. The 100 Greatest Time-Travel Episodes - IMDb

    The 100 Greatest Time-Travel Episodes. by solmaquina | created - 14 Jul 2015 | updated - 01 Oct 2021 | Public. Refine See titles to watch instantly, titles you haven't rated, etc. 100 titles. 1. Futurama (1999– ) Episode: Roswell That Ends Well (2001) TV-14 | 23 min | Animation, Adventure, Comedy. 9.1. Rate.