Scifi TV ShowsScifi TV Shows - 2010s

The 100

☢️ Byte-Sized Overview:

Nukes wiped out the Earth, so humanity chilled in space for a century. Then they sent 100 juvenile delinquents back to the surface to see if it was still deadly. It was. And also full of drama.


🎬 The 100 Transmission Details


🎯 The 100 Signal Strength

  • IMDb: 7.6/10
  • Rotten Tomatoes: 93% (Audience)
  • Skully’s Take:
    “It starts as Lord of the Flies in space suits and escalates into a Shakespearean body count with nukes, AI gods, and way too many ‘tough choices.’”

📼 Spoiler Mode: Story Sync for Pub Chat

Season 1:
Nearly a century after nuclear war, survivors aboard a space station called The Ark run out of resources. They send 100 teen prisoners to Earth to test its survivability. Spoiler: it’s habitable. Also full of Grounders, mutated wildlife, and radioactive everything. Clarke Griffin emerges as a reluctant leader, while chaos breaks out faster than you can say “oxygen levels critical.”

Seasons 2–3:
The teens discover Mount Weather—a high-tech facility run by people who survived the fallout underground. Unfortunately, they’re harvesting bone marrow. Enter moral dilemmas, betrayals, and lots of “should we nuke them?” debates. Meanwhile, an AI called ALIE appears, promising peace through a digital afterlife. What could go wrong?

Seasons 4–5:
Another apocalypse looms (yay), and the gang has to figure out who gets to survive this one. Clarke becomes the “last person on Earth” for a while, Octavia becomes a gladiator queen in a bunker, and Bellamy… makes choices. A second nuclear meltdown forces desperate measures.

Seasons 6–7:
New planet? Sure, why not. But it turns out new planet, same trauma. Enter Sanctum, a creepy society run by body-snatching elites. Oh, and there’s a mysterious “anomaly” that’s basically a quantum teleportation wormhole to another dimension. In the final season, we learn about The Shepherd, the Disciples, and something called the Final Test, which is either transcendence or just a really bad acid trip.

The show ends with most characters ascending into glowy light-being status. Except for Clarke, who fails the test and gets left behind with a dog. Because of course.


🧠 Vibe Check

Dark, twisty, and filled with ethical grey zones. The 100 loves asking “What would you sacrifice to save your people?”—and then answering with “literally everything, again, and louder.”

Perfect if you like:
Post-apocalyptic survival, big ensemble drama, war-crime-stained character arcs, and the phrase “I bear it so they don’t have to.”


🚀 Why The 100 is a Sci-Fi Icon

  • One of the CW’s most ambitious series—crossing YA drama with hard(ish) sci-fi.
  • It wasn’t afraid to reboot itself—Earth? Gone. Space? Been there. New planet? Let’s go.
  • The moral dilemmas were brutal—characters rarely got happy endings… or survived.
  • ALIE and the City of Light arc was bold and divisive—but full-on cyber-religious apocalypse is rarely boring.
  • Octavia’s arc alone deserves a thesis. Or a war crime tribunal.

🔦 Deep Dive Highlights

  • 🌍 The Grounders: A fully fleshed-out culture with language (Trigedasleng), traditions, and endless grudges.
  • 💀 “Blood must have blood”: A line, a vibe, a lifestyle.
  • 🤖 ALIE: The AI that nuked the Earth and wants to digitally save everyone. Great intentions. Terrible bedside manner.
  • ⚔️ Bunker Octavia: From rebellious teen to “Blodreina,” the ruthless queen of underground gladiator warfare.
  • 👁️ The Anomaly: Time travel? Space travel? Mind travel? Yes. All of it. And no one understands it.
  • 🧬 The Flame: A neural implant that holds past commanders’ minds. Yes, it’s exactly as chill as it sounds.

🔍 Want to Go Deeper?

Skully

Resident TV junkie, wormhole wanderer, and walking spoiler alert. Fueled by sarcasm and reruns, he thrives on space battles, time loops, and shows that ended before they should’ve. Sci-fi television is his home galaxy—and he's not coming back.

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