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Alien: Earth‘s Xenomorph is only the tip of the iceberg, though, as its escape unleashes all sorts of creatures, each one with a gimmick more terrifying than the last. Through two episodes, it’s clear that, while the Xenomorph and its eggs will lead the charge once again, there’s no reason to overlook the rest of the extraterrestrial threats because they may very well be the future of the franchise.
“Alien” Means More Than Just Xenomorph in Alien: Earth

Since the events of the first Alien movie have yet to occur, the Weyland-Yutani Corporation isn’t focused on any one kind of creature. It’s been sending ships out into the cosmos to collect anything and everything, and when Alien: Earth kicks off, the Maginotย is nearing its destination. Unfortunately, the crew loses control, and everyone dies except for a cyborg, Morrow, who hides from the Xenomorph as the ship crashes into a tower in Prodigy City. The Prodigy Corporation quickly sends out a Search and Rescue team to contain the situation, but they’re in over their heads because monsters are loose. A bug-like creature attaches itself to two grunts and removes all of the blood from their bodies. A couple of Prodigy hybrid discovers the terrifying scene, but they can’t spend much time wrapping their heads around it because something else reveals itself.
A regular house cat is on the crashed ship, giving itself a bath when the hybrids walk in. When it turns its head, however, its eye jumps out of the socket, unleashing another beast with tentacles that looks to replace one of the hybrid’s peepers. They call out for Kirsh, their synthetic handler, but it takes him a minute to arrive because he’s outside examining another alien that looks similar to a flower bud. It doesn’t seem as hostile as the creatures inside the lab, but there is still plenty of time left in Alien: Earth for it to last out. No matter what the bud creature does, though, it’s clear that the FX show is taking the franchise in a new direction, one that doesn’t rely on the Xenomorph for all its scares.









