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From the best Star Trek series of all time to cult favorites and huge franchise favorites, here are seven sci-fi series that are better than 90% of anything released this decade.
7) Lost

Some people don’t consider Lost a sci-fi television series, but they would be wrong. With time travel, temporal anomalies, the machines that caused the plane to crash, the scientific experiments that created things like the Smoke Monster, and the Dharma Initiative, it fits easily into the sci-fi genre. There are also fantasy elements, but it is this combination of scientific and spiritual ideas that made the show so intriguing.
The debut episode of Lost was one of the most-watched in television history, and it remains a gripping and exciting episode to this day. There wasn’t much better on television than the first few seasons of Lost. The show started to lose steam when it began exploring the flash-forwards, and the finale remains polarizing: some call it one of the worst in history, while others call it a brilliant end to the story. However, when taken as a whole series, there wasn’t much that was as engrossing and exploratory as Lost.
6) Fringe

Looking back, Fringe is the perfect exploration of the sci-fi genre following the end of The X-Files. The title of the show refers to the idea that the team explores theories on the fringe edges of science. It is the commitment to this premise that helps set it apart from sci-fi shows this decade, as it really goes to the deep end with its mythology, especially with the parallel-universe concept.
It also helps that, while not shying away from the case-of-the-week format, it has a grounded center in the team’s family dynamic as they fight together through the different scientific discoveries they make along the way. What really makes Fringe stand out from other sci-fi shows, past and present, is that the series had a planned beginning, middle, and end, and told its whole story in five seasons without padding the runtime or rushing to an early end. More networks should treat their sci-fi shows with such respect.
5) Firefly

Unlike Fringe, which was treated with respect and was allowed to tell its story, Firefly was treated horribly and was doomed from the start. When FOX began airing Firefly, from Buffy the Vampire Slayer creator Joss Whedon, the network started airing the episodes out of order. This confused viewers, since it was episodic storytelling, and many tuned out, leading FOX to cancel the show. However, when Firefly hit home video, fans fell in love since they finally saw the series in the correct order.
What really made Firefly shine was a smart story with a fantastic cast, and the Western setting in a sci-fi space opera was just different enough to set it apart. Nathan Fillion was incredible in the lead role, and his entire supporting cast was perfect around him, making this a show that should have seen success for multiple seasons. However, it ended after one season, while lesser shows got long lives they didn’t deserve.












