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@nyrath

I hoped to find a full list of genuinely early stuff (pre-1980s, or at least me <10), but those memories have faded too much.

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@nyrath here's my #SciFiDNA
a woman is laying in a hospital bed with a monitor behind her that says ' emergency room '
a cartoon of a man and woman holding hands
a man in a blue shirt with a black collar
a few planes are flying in the night sky near a planet

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@nyrath There are so many different ways to tackle answering this question. Movies? TV Shows? Comic books? Formative books? IPs? Versions I owned or consumed? Current versions of those things? Here is one way for me to answer what my #scifiDNA is -- these are the editions I first encountered of these products, although in three cases I was already familiar with the source material from other media ;):
The box cover of the 2nd edition of FASA's Doctor Who roleplaying game -- A painting of a rocky arch with vague mist coming out of it frames the figures of the 4th Doctor, turned slightly away and looking back at the viewer, and his companion Romana, in a cautious crouched pose with a prominent knife.  Above them, a red and yellow rendition of one of the classic Doctor Who logos (I think the 5th Doctor, but I'm not sure).  Above the logo is yellow text just saying 'The' and below more yellow text saying 'Role Playing Game'.  Along the bottom of the box is more yellow text reading 'A game for 3 or more players, age 12 and up'.  In the lower right corner is a yellow FASA logo.
The box cover of the 2nd edition of FASA's Doctor Who roleplaying game -- A painting of a rocky arch with vague mist coming out of it frames the figures of the 4th Doctor, turned slightly away and looking back at the viewer, and his companion Romana, in a cautious crouched pose with a prominent knife. Above them, a red and yellow rendition of one of the classic Doctor Who logos (I think the 5th Doctor, but I'm not sure). Above the logo is yellow text just saying 'The' and below more yellow text saying 'Role Playing Game'. Along the bottom of the box is more yellow text reading 'A game for 3 or more players, age 12 and up'. In the lower right corner is a yellow FASA logo.
A photo of the three well-used rulebooks of classic traveller on a table, fanned out in a spread, partially on top of one another, on a dark surface, with a ruler or meter stick under them to the left showing scale. The books are flat black, with a red line partially across the cover at about 1/3 up from the bottom, with the word 'Traveller' in large red text right justified with that line. Immediately below the word 'Traveller', in smaller white text, are the words 'Science-Fiction Adventure in the Far Future'.  Above the red line, left justified, is medium-sized white text which identifies each volume:  'Book 1 Characters and Combat', 'Book 2 Starships', and 'Book 3 Worlds and Adventures'.
A photo of the three well-used rulebooks of classic traveller on a table, fanned out in a spread, partially on top of one another, on a dark surface, with a ruler or meter stick under them to the left showing scale. The books are flat black, with a red line partially across the cover at about 1/3 up from the bottom, with the word 'Traveller' in large red text right justified with that line. Immediately below the word 'Traveller', in smaller white text, are the words 'Science-Fiction Adventure in the Far Future'. Above the red line, left justified, is medium-sized white text which identifies each volume: 'Book 1 Characters and Combat', 'Book 2 Starships', and 'Book 3 Worlds and Adventures'.
The cover to the first edition of West End Games Star Wars role playing game. The picture is a painting with Luke centered, holding a blaster pointed directly at the viewer, at whom he is also looking directly.  To his left (our right) and slightly behind is Leia, shooting a blaster off to the right of the picture.  To Luke's right, our left, and also behind and a little lower is Han, likewise shooting a blaster off to our left.  Below Han's blaster are the heads of Kenobi and Grand Moff Tarkin.  Below Leia is Chewbacca.  Behind the central figures are primarily blue and red images of X-Wings, Tie Fighters, the Death Star, and other familiar ships fighting.  Above and behind Luke and Leia is a dim image of Darth Vader, holding up a red lightsaber, his gripping hand between Luke and Han, and the blade extending up and do our left, off the top of the image.  Across the top of the image is a solid red band interrupted. with the Star Wars logo in solid white. In the right hand portion of the red band is yellow text saying 'The Roleplaying Game'.  At the bottom left is a flat yellow version of the West End Games logo.
The cover to the first edition of West End Games Star Wars role playing game. The picture is a painting with Luke centered, holding a blaster pointed directly at the viewer, at whom he is also looking directly. To his left (our right) and slightly behind is Leia, shooting a blaster off to the right of the picture. To Luke's right, our left, and also behind and a little lower is Han, likewise shooting a blaster off to our left. Below Han's blaster are the heads of Kenobi and Grand Moff Tarkin. Below Leia is Chewbacca. Behind the central figures are primarily blue and red images of X-Wings, Tie Fighters, the Death Star, and other familiar ships fighting. Above and behind Luke and Leia is a dim image of Darth Vader, holding up a red lightsaber, his gripping hand between Luke and Han, and the blade extending up and do our left, off the top of the image. Across the top of the image is a solid red band interrupted. with the Star Wars logo in solid white. In the right hand portion of the red band is yellow text saying 'The Roleplaying Game'. At the bottom left is a flat yellow version of the West End Games logo.
The cover of the box of the FASA Star Trek RPG from the mid-90s -- specifically the 2nd edition cover. It's a color painting of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy with phasers drawn, cut off at the knees by the bottom of the cover. Behind them is a colorful nebula in reds and blues, and over their heads and far behind them is the class TV show Enterprise flying up and to the right, with trails of light coming off it's nacelles and lower hull.  At the top, in bold white text in the same font as the show, are the words 'Star Trek', with the sub-heading in smaller type saying 'The Role Playing Game'.  In the lower left corner is a small white FASA logo.
The cover of the box of the FASA Star Trek RPG from the mid-90s -- specifically the 2nd edition cover. It's a color painting of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy with phasers drawn, cut off at the knees by the bottom of the cover. Behind them is a colorful nebula in reds and blues, and over their heads and far behind them is the class TV show Enterprise flying up and to the right, with trails of light coming off it's nacelles and lower hull. At the top, in bold white text in the same font as the show, are the words 'Star Trek', with the sub-heading in smaller type saying 'The Role Playing Game'. In the lower left corner is a small white FASA logo.

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@nyrath Here’s mine. Neuromancer comes in there too, along with Blakes7 and Star Wars. The covers are the ones I first encountered.
The cover of CJ Cherryh’s “Downbelow Station” with the name and title set in silver. The image shows a shuttle powering into the open mouth of a space station docking port with a cloudy planet below. Across the bottom right is a  red ribbon with white text that says “Winner of the HUGO AWARD”.
The cover of CJ Cherryh’s “Downbelow Station” with the name and title set in silver. The image shows a shuttle powering into the open mouth of a space station docking port with a cloudy planet below. Across the bottom right is a red ribbon with white text that says “Winner of the HUGO AWARD”.
Cover of the Pan paperback edition of Arthur C Clarke’s “Rendezvous with Rama”. There’s a tag line of “His first SF masterpiece since 2001: A Space Odyssey”. His name is in strong white capitalised text, with the title below it the same but in orange. A silver yellow swirl is set below against a black background, an abstract image of Rama.
Cover of the Pan paperback edition of Arthur C Clarke’s “Rendezvous with Rama”. There’s a tag line of “His first SF masterpiece since 2001: A Space Odyssey”. His name is in strong white capitalised text, with the title below it the same but in orange. A silver yellow swirl is set below against a black background, an abstract image of Rama.
The cover of the Magnet paperback of Andre Norton’s “Postmarked the Stars”. The image shows a frozen tracker crawler with bird-like creatures circling above while an environment suited person examines the vehicle. Above, another planet shows.
The cover of the Magnet paperback of Andre Norton’s “Postmarked the Stars”. The image shows a frozen tracker crawler with bird-like creatures circling above while an environment suited person examines the vehicle. Above, another planet shows.
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@johnhattan

Oh, that was not Toth's fault. The director was using the magic of Synchro-vox™ to drastically cut production costs. The only things that moved were static cut out drawings moved over the background, and the character's lips. Looked like crap but boy was it cheap!

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@nyrath @johnhattan Nice!

I'm randomly reminded of a possibly obscure SF movie that I saw part of on TV and have never been able to identify. The main characters were walking around in a desert; I think the Earth was moving toward the sun. Anyway, they found an underground human settlement ruled by an evil overlord who castrated all the other male inhabitants, including his own sons, and was going to do that to the main male character.

The other inhabitants gave him a gun to fight with ...

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@nyrath mine is:

* Star Trek
* Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica and Buck Rogers (all one and the same to my preteen mind)
* The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (radio)
* Traveller and Ogre
* But most importantly, the novels by Frank Herbert, Arthur C. Clarke and Poul Anderson

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@isaackuo

Interesting!

illustration by Franz Altschuler for Ray Bradbury's "A Sound of Thunder" which was featured in the June 1956 edition of Playboy. I'll have to look up Mr. Altschuler, I like his style.

I of course instantly recognized "A Sound of Thunder". It has been in a zillion magazines, and *all* of them have illos containing

[1] a magic levitating walk way
[2] a T-rex

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@nyrath The specific version of "A Sound of Thunder" I first experienced was from the radio adaption in Bradbury 13 in 1983.

But I wasn't satisfied with the Bradbury 13 cover art, so I went with a random illustration of that story (the one which featured time travel).

The levitating metal walk way, of course, is the feature which positively identifies which story the illustration is about.

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@nyrath By my time, some illustrations were only of the smashed butterfly.

Seems like a pretty insignificant detail of the story, though. I mean, it's pretty implausible for the result of a POTUS election going the other way could be THAT bad, could it? What a quaint and utterly irrelevant fantastical thought.

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@nyrath

As I got older, I got into Alien Nation, Babylon-5, Dark Skies, Doctor Who, Earth 2, Earth Final Conflict, Farscape, First Wave, Andromeda, MANTIS, SeaQuest, Sliders, Space Precinct, Stargate SG-1 & Atlantis, The Sentinel, The X-Files & Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, Quantum Leap, Red Dwarf, and many more to include any horror/supernatural shows.

However, my #SciFiDNA is...

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Cover of "Red Planet" by Robert A. Heinlein 

"A Colonial Boy On Mars" at the bottom.

All in shades of red. At left, a human wearing a bulbous mask and wearing a pistol holds a spherical animal with three eyes in a triangle. Leafy planets surround them on the top, right, and bottom.
Cover of "Red Planet" by Robert A. Heinlein "A Colonial Boy On Mars" at the bottom. All in shades of red. At left, a human wearing a bulbous mask and wearing a pistol holds a spherical animal with three eyes in a triangle. Leafy planets surround them on the top, right, and bottom.
Cover of "Islands In The Sky" by Arthur C. Clarke
"A Science Fiction Novel" at the bottom.

A circular space station at the upper left with a small space capsule in the background. An arc of Earth in the lower left corner.

In the right bottom foreground a man wears a headset in a space suit with a tubular bottom instead of legs. He holds a red line connecting him to someone in a similar space suit between the station and the Earth.
Cover of "Islands In The Sky" by Arthur C. Clarke "A Science Fiction Novel" at the bottom. A circular space station at the upper left with a small space capsule in the background. An arc of Earth in the lower left corner. In the right bottom foreground a man wears a headset in a space suit with a tubular bottom instead of legs. He holds a red line connecting him to someone in a similar space suit between the station and the Earth.

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@nyrath

If we stick to radio/TV.

BBC WORD FOR WORD cover art 

COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED
DOUGLAS ADAMS

THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY

Cover art has clips of the covers from books in the series with a purple arrow pointing at it. An old ring pull tab, a picture of the earth from space, the cover of the first edition of the book, a walrus, and the neon sign from the cover of The Restaurant at the End of the Universe.
BBC WORD FOR WORD cover art COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED DOUGLAS ADAMS THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY Cover art has clips of the covers from books in the series with a purple arrow pointing at it. An old ring pull tab, a picture of the earth from space, the cover of the first edition of the book, a walrus, and the neon sign from the cover of The Restaurant at the End of the Universe.
Star Trek The original series crew picture against a blue background that fades from dark black on the left to light blue on the right. 

Uhuru and Bones are standing behind Spock and Kirk who appear to be sitting in the foreground on the right of the picture.
Star Trek The original series crew picture against a blue background that fades from dark black on the left to light blue on the right. Uhuru and Bones are standing behind Spock and Kirk who appear to be sitting in the foreground on the right of the picture.

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@nyrath id have to add Traveller as well, but that just kinda cemented me in place. :)

#scifidna

Live Long And Prosper Star Trek GIF
spaceship battleship yamato GIF
star wars GIF
surprised doctor who GIF

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@nyrath Mine skews weird because my formative years were spent in an English-speaking part of Montreal and options in my language were few: one bookstore, two libraries, three TV channels, and whatever we'd find at garage sales.

A garish very late-70s, early 80s styled cover for Jeff Rovin's The Transgalactic Guide to Solar System M-17. A prism-shaped chrome space shuttle is above an orange planet, headed for a space liner shaped like a swan. 100% sure this obscure item launched my to-this-day obsession with world-building. Read it until it literally fell apart.
A garish very late-70s, early 80s styled cover for Jeff Rovin's The Transgalactic Guide to Solar System M-17. A prism-shaped chrome space shuttle is above an orange planet, headed for a space liner shaped like a swan. 100% sure this obscure item launched my to-this-day obsession with world-building. Read it until it literally fell apart.
The classic 1958 cover to Have Space Suit -- Will Travel with the protagonist traipsing across a yellow lunar plain in a (would you look at that) red and black tomato worm spacesuit, as drawn by Ed Emshwiller. I never noticed before how similar it is to the Space Cat cover....
The classic 1958 cover to Have Space Suit -- Will Travel with the protagonist traipsing across a yellow lunar plain in a (would you look at that) red and black tomato worm spacesuit, as drawn by Ed Emshwiller. I never noticed before how similar it is to the Space Cat cover....
Spooky stylized cover of the 1970 edition of John Christopher's The White Mountains my school library had when I discovered it about 10 years later. I've long forgotten if this or the contemporary Boys Life serialized comic of the trilogy started me on this one.
Spooky stylized cover of the 1970 edition of John Christopher's The White Mountains my school library had when I discovered it about 10 years later. I've long forgotten if this or the contemporary Boys Life serialized comic of the trilogy started me on this one.

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@nyrath
I didn't have TV past when I was very young but on ABC radio as part of the Argonauts kids show had a serial that involved a Scottish kid being picked up by aliens and returned several centuries later in the then current time (1960's).
Look and Learn ran the Trigan Empire comic strip .
Mike Steele, Desert Rider had SF elements including a story line where aliens transformed them into "diskmen".
Biggles had at least one SFesque adventure.
Simon Black had Simon Black in Space.
And of course I followed the space race and watched the moon landing on a TV at school.
When I was very young (before grade 4) I remember Supercar and The Jetsons on TV.
Dad had some Argosy magazines where I read A Slight Case of Sunstroke by A.C.Clarke.
In high school, having read Run Silent, Run Deep, I went looking for more submarine stories and found The Dragon In the Sea.
Finally in about 1971 or 1972 I read The X Factor by Andre Norton and SF was revealed to me.
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