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Rating: 8.4/10 | Genre: Animation, Comedy, Sci-Fi & Fantasy | Seasons: 11 | Episodes: 164 | Status: Returning Series

Starring: Billy West, Katey Sagal, John DiMaggio, Tress MacNeille, Maurice LaMarche

I just finished binging all 11 seasons of Futurama and I’m honestly blown away. This show has no right being as good as it is. It’s a goofy cartoon about a pizza guy who gets frozen and wakes up in the future, but it somehow manages to be hilarious, heartfelt, and genuinely clever all at the same time. If you’ve been sleeping on this show, stop. Just go watch it.

Season 1

The first season is short but it’s perfect. Nine episodes and the show knows exactly what it wants to be from episode one. Fry gets thawed out on New Year’s Eve 1999 and lands a job at Planet Express delivering packages across the galaxy. The setup is simple but it works. You’ve got Fry, the fish-out-of-water everyman. You’ve got Leela, the tough one-eyed captain who doesn’t take crap from anyone. And you’ve got Bender, the robot who steals and drinks and is basically a terrible influence but impossible not to love.

The show finds its groove right away. “Space Pilot 3000” introduces everyone and the tone. “The Series Has Landed” goes to the moon. “I, Roommate” is genuinely funny. By the end of season one you’re hooked. The writing is sharp and the voice acting is perfect. Billy West as Fry has this dopey sincerity that makes you care about him even when he’s being dumb. John DiMaggio as Bender is just the right amount of obnoxious. Katey Sagal as Leela has this dry delivery that kills every time.

Season 2

Season two expands things. We get more episodes, more world building, and the show starts taking bigger swings. “A Flight to Remember” is basically Titanic but funny. “Mars University” is where the show starts showing that it can do real character stuff alongside the jokes. And “When Aliens Attack” is peak silly Futurama energy.

This is also where you start seeing the show’s range. It can do pure comedy. It can do action. It can do sci-fi concepts that actually make you think a little. Twenty episodes is a good amount. The show doesn’t overstay its welcome but you get enough to really feel attached to these characters.

Season 3

By season three the show is firing on all cylinders. “The Cryonic Woman” brings in Fry’s old girlfriend and explores his whole thing about being stuck between two worlds. “War Is the H-Word” is dumb fun. But the show is starting to hint at deeper stuff too. There’s this underlying sadness to Fry being 1000 years away from everything he knew, and the show doesn’t let you forget it even when it’s making you laugh.

Fifteen episodes is the sweet spot for this season. It feels complete without being exhausting.

Season 4

Season four is shorter, only twelve episodes, but it’s solid. “Roswell That Ends Well” is one of my favorite episodes of the whole series. It’s got time travel, Fry accidentally being his own grandfather, and actual emotional weight beneath the comedy. “A Tale of Two Santas” is hilariously dark. The show is really good at balancing absurd humor with moments that hit you in the feels.

Season 5

This is where things get really good. Sixteen episodes and the show is doing some of its best work. “Jurassic Bark” is the one everyone talks about and for good reason. Without spoiling it, it’s a perfect example of how Futurama can make you laugh and then absolutely destroy you emotionally in the same episode. I’m not ashamed to say I cried.

The season also develops the side characters more. Hermes becomes more than just the bureaucrat. Zoidberg gets actual character moments. Even Professor Farnsworth, who could just be the old crazy guy, shows real depth.

Season 6

Season six is huge. Twenty-six episodes. This is a turning point where you can feel the show settling into what it really is. It’s not just a comedy anymore. It’s a show about these people and their relationships. Fry is still in love with Leela. That tension runs through everything. The jokes are still great but they matter more because you care about these characters.

There are some weaker episodes here, I’m not gonna lie. When you make twenty-six episodes in a season, not all of them are going to hit. But even the medium episodes are entertaining.

Season 7

Season seven also has twenty-six episodes and honestly this is where I started to feel it a little. Not that the show got bad, but there’s definitely some filler. “The Bots and the Bees” is funny. “Decision 3012” is solid. But there’s a stretch in the middle where you can feel the show running out of new ideas a bit. Still worth watching, but this is where my attention would wander sometimes.

That said, the show never completely loses it. The core characters are still great and there are still plenty of laughs.

Season 8

After a ten-year break the show comes back and honestly it feels fresh. Only ten episodes but they’re tight. The show remembered what made it good. The characters are all there. The voice acting is still perfect. It feels like no time has passed at all.

The new episodes deal with modern stuff like streaming and NFTs, which could have been cringe, but the show handles it with the same satirical edge it always had. “The Impossible Stream” is a great comeback episode.

Season 9

Ten more episodes. The show is still firing. You can tell the writers are having fun bringing the show back. The episodes feel shorter and snappier than some of the bloated seasons from before. “Quids Game” is genuinely great. “The One Amigo” has Bender dealing with an identity crisis after selling an NFT, which sounds dumb but it works.

At this point I was just happy to have more Futurama. The show isn’t trying to be something it’s not. It’s just doing its thing.

Season 10

Another ten episodes and we’re cruising. This season leans into the relationship stuff between Fry and Leela which is where the show’s heart really is. There are some big moments here. Actual stakes. The show proves it can still do emotional storytelling even after all these years.

“Destroy Tall Monsters” has Bender becoming giant which is ridiculous and perfect. “Fifty Shades of Green” hits hard with the Fry and Leela stuff. The show knows its audience and it’s not afraid to go there.

Season 11

Season eleven is still rolling. Ten episodes again and they feel fresh. The show continues to update its satire and you can tell it’s aware of what’s happening in the world. The writing is sharp. The characters are still compelling even though we’ve known them for so long.

I can’t speak to all the episodes since the season is still new but what I’ve seen is solid Futurama. The show hasn’t lost its touch.

Overall this show is absolutely worth the time investment. It’s funny, it’s smart, and it actually makes you care about these ridiculous characters. Some seasons are stronger than others, sure. Seasons 5 through 7 are probably the peak. And yeah, some episodes are weaker than others. But even at its worst Futurama is entertaining and at its best it’s genuinely great.

If you haven’t watched this yet, what are you waiting for? Are you holding out for something better or do you just not like animated comedies?

Episode Guide

Season 1 (9 Episodes)

Episode 1: Space Pilot 3000 (8/10)
On New Year's Eve 1999, Pizza Delivery boy Philip J. Fry accidentally falls into a cryogenic chamber and is frozen for 1,000 years. Finally unfrozen, he explores New New York, meets his new best friend (a kleptomaniacal robot named Bender) and goes to work for his great-great-great-great-grand-nephew's space delivery business.

Episode 2: The Series Has Landed (7.6/10)
For the crew's first mission, they must deliver a crate full of toys for an arcade game to the moon. Fry is very excited, while it is not really a big deal in the year 3000. Fry tries to persuade Leela to go exploring on the moon, while Amy tries to recover the keys to the Planet Express Ship.

Episode 3: I, Roommate (7.9/10)
When it is discovered that Philip has been living in the Planet Express office, he is forced to move out. Trying to sleep standing up in Bender's closet-sized apartment doesn't work, so they go looking for a place both can be comfortable. Unfortunately, Bender is incompatible with the ideal apartment they do find until he has a radical… modification which makes him less than happy.

Episode 4: Love's Labours Lost in Space (7.6/10)
On a mission intended to save endangered animals on a collapsing planet, Leela and the crew run into legendary starship captain Zapp Brannigan. A self-proclaimed ladies man, Zapp sees Leela as a potential new conquest. When the captain refuses to aid the animal rescue, Leela and her crew try to leave Zapp's starship. But Zapp throws Fry and Bender in jail, and summons Leela to his "Lovenasium". They ultimately escape and arrive on the doomed planet, where Leela finally finds love – with a cute, and very useful, creature named Nibbler.

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Episode 5: Fear of a Bot Planet (7.5/10)
Fry and Leela disguise themselves as robots to find Bender after he fails to return from a delivery to a robot planet, only to learn that he has become a celebrity in a culture which fears humans.

Episode 6: A Fishful of Dollars (7.6/10)
Fry discovers his bank account interest has made him a billionaire and buys the one thing the year 3000 doesn't have, anchovies.

Episode 7: My Three Suns (7.5/10)
Delivery Boy Philip J. Fry is promoted to Emperor after accidentally drinking his fluid-based predecessor.

Episode 8: A Big Piece of Garbage (7.5/10)
A big piece of garbage that was released a thousand years ago is now on the way to Earth to destroy it. After Fry, Leela and Bender fail on placing a bomb on it, the city has to build another big piece of garbage, yet that may be a problem since trash doesn't exist in year 3000.

Episode 9: Hell Is Other Robots (7.8/10)
During a Beastie Boys concert, Bender runs into a high school buddy, Fender. He invites him to a party, which turns out to be robots getting high off of electricity, or "jacking on". After one try, Bender is hooked.

Season 2 (20 Episodes)

Episode 1: A Flight to Remember (7.4/10)
The Planet Express crew take a space cruise vacation. Leela tells Captain Zapp Brannigan that Fry is her boyfriend and Amy tells the same thing to her parents. Bender falls in love with a rich female robot. Problems start when the spaceship approaches a black hole.

Episode 2: Mars University (7.3/10)
Fry, Leela, Bender and Farnsworth have to go to Mars University where Fry has to share a room with a talking monkey, Farnsworth's last invention. The monkey becomes a real headache when he starts beating Fry in all areas. Meanwhile, Bender is hanging out with nerd robots.

Episode 3: When Aliens Attack (7.5/10)
The Omicronians invade Earth, demanding to see the lost final episode of the 1999 TV show Single Female Lawyer. The Planet Express crew must re-enact the episode to appease the invading aliens.

Episode 4: Fry & the Slurm Factory (7.7/10)
When Fry wins a free tour of the Slurm soda factory, he and his friends split off from the tour group and make a horrifying discovery concerning the "secret ingredient" that makes Slurm so addictive.

Episode 5: I Second That Emotion (7.3/10)
Professor Farnsworth installs an empathy chip in Bender after the inconsiderate robot flushes Nibbler down the toilet. With his newfound emotions, a concerned Bender ventures into the mutant-infested sewers to rescue Leela's beloved pet.

Episode 6: Brannigan, Begin Again (7.3/10)
Upon destroying the new DOOP headquarters, Zapp Brannigan and Kif find themselves court-martialed and dishonorably discharged. They take up jobs at Planet Express, where Kif learns what respect feels like and Zapp incites a mutiny against Leela.

Episode 7: A Head in the Polls (7.4/10)
When the price of titanium skyrockets, Bender pawns his titanium-rich body and lives the high life as just a head. But when the head-in-a-jar of Richard M. Nixon uses Bender's body to run for election for President of Earth, Bender vows to get his rightful property back.

Episode 8: Xmas Story (7.5/10)
To apologize for an inconsiderate remark, Fry searches for the perfect Xmas gift for Leela, all the while trying to avoid the murderous SantaBot, whose standards for niceness are astronomically high.

Episode 9: Why Must I Be a Crustacean in Love? (7.1/10)
When Dr. Zoidberg runs amok during the Decapodian mating season, Fry sets out to teach him how to woo a mate. Things backfire when Zoidberg's desired mate falls for Fry instead, and Zoidberg challenges Fry to a battle to the death.

Episode 10: Put Your Head on My Shoulders (7.4/10)
Fry's brief relationship with Amy is forcibly prolonged when a near-fatal car crash leaves Fry's head grafted to Amy's left shoulder. Meanwhile, Bender cashes in on Valentine's Day by starting a dating service.

Episode 11: Lesser of Two Evils (7.3/10)
Fry suspects Bender's new buddy, a bending unit named Flexo who looks almost exactly like Bender, of being pure evil. When a valuable atom of Jumbonium goes missing, Fry suspects Flexo, but can't tell which robot is which.

Episode 12: Raging Bender (7.2/10)
Bender is the featured attraction in the Ultimate Robot Fighting League, but his glory is short-lived when he is instructed to intentionally lose his next match. Leela vows to lead Bender to victory, in an effort to show up her unsupportive martial arts teacher.

Episode 13: A Bicyclops Built For Two (7.4/10)
Leela meets Alkazar, who claims to be the only other remaining cyclops in the universe. But when Alkazar invites Leela back to his home planet and treats her like a slave, Fry suspects that something is amiss.

Episode 14: How Hermes Requisitioned His Groove Back (7.4/10)
When Hermes takes a stress-relieving vacation, replacement bureaucrat Morgan Proctor becomes infatuated with Fry. Bender threatens to publicize their affair, but Morgan removes Bender's memory and hides it within the cavernous Central Bureaucracy.

Episode 15: A Clone of My Own (7.2/10)
Professor Farnsworth unveils his clone, Cubert Farnsworth, whom he plans to leave everything to upon his retirement. But Cubert wants no part of Farnsworth's lifestyle, prompting the professor into a premature retirement on the Near-Death Star.

Episode 16: The Deep South (7.3/10)
A fishing trip over the ocean takes a turn for the worse when a colossal mouth bass pulls the Planet Express ship to the bottom of the sea. There, Fry falls in love with a mermaid named Umbriel, and the crew discovers the sunken city of Atlanta, Georgia.

Episode 17: Bender Gets Made (7.5/10)
Bender takes a new job in the Robot Mafia, but his loyalty is tested when he goes along on the robotic gangster's efforts to rob the Planet Express ship.

Episode 18: The Problem with Popplers (7.8/10)
The crew discovers an irresistible source of food on a distant planet, and brings it back to Earth to be sold at the Fishy Joe's restaurant chain. But when it's discovered that the so-called "Popplers" are actually Omicronian babies, the Omicronians demand recompense.

Episode 19: Mother's Day (7.3/10)
Mom reprograms the world's robots to rebel against humanity. The only hope of salvation is Mom's old flame – Professor Farnsworth, who must rekindle his romance with Mom in order to save mankind.

Episode 20: Anthology of Interest I (8/10)
The Professor's "What-If" machine simulates Bender, Leela and Fry's wishes. Bender discovers what it would be like if he were 500 feet tall, Leela discovers what it would be like if she were more impulsive, and Fry discovers what would happen if he never came to the future.

Season 3 (15 Episodes)

Episode 1: The Honking (7.5/10)
When the inheritance Bender claims in the Old Country isn't quite what he expected, the Planet Express crew has to find the source of an age-old curse.

Episode 2: War Is the H-Word (7.8/10)
Fry and Bender enlist in the army to get a soldiers discount for bubblegum. When they are called to fight a war on a planet of bouncing ball aliens, Leela disguises herself as man to enlist with them. Bender is eventually sent to parley with the enemy, but this turns out to be a ploy.

Episode 3: The Cryonic Woman (7.3/10)
Fry is reunited with his old girlfriend from the 20th Century, but she doesn't adapt to the 31st century as well as he has. Convincing Fry to return to the cryogenic chamber, they awaken in a barren wasteland and struggle to make a place for themselves.

Episode 4: Parasites Lost (8.3/10)
When Fry becomes infested with parasitic worms that make him stronger and smarter, he finally finds the perfect way to profess his feelings to Leela. Meanwhile, the rest of the crew goes on a journey into Fry's body to eradicate the worms.

Episode 5: Amazon Women in the Mood (7.8/10)
A double-date for Kif, Amy, Zapp, and Leela ends in disaster when their orbiting restaurant crashes on planet Amazonia. The hulking female inhabitants of the planet take their male captives to the omniscient Femputer, who orders Fry, Zapp, and Kif to death by "snu-snu".

Episode 6: Bendless Love (7.3/10)
Bender's urge to bend prompts Professor Farnsworth to send him on a rehabilitation visit to a steel factory, where he falls in love with a shapely fem-bot named Angleyne. But Bender's old rival Flexo and the intrusion of the Robot Mafia threaten to throw a wrench into the proceedings.

Episode 7: The Day the Earth Stood Stupid (7.9/10)
Earth is invaded by super-intelligent flying brains, who sap the Earth's populace of their intelligence. Leela is taken to Nibbler's home planet Eternia, where the Nibblonians explain that only one human is immune to the brains' powers – Fry.

Episode 8: That's Lobstertainment! (7.1/10)
Dr. Zoidberg reunites with his uncle, silent hologram star Harold Zoid, and the two of them set out to make a movie together. They cast the temperamental Calculon in the lead role, who demands an Oscar for his performance, but the movie doesn't go over well with audiences.

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Episode 9: The Birdbot of Ice-Catraz (7.4/10)
A sober Bender crashes a dark matter tanker on Pluto, threatening the penguin reserve nearby. Leela helps out in the clean-up, but when the penguins begin mating out of control, drastic action must be taken to thin the herd.

Episode 10: The Luck of the Fryrish (8.6/10)
After a string of bad luck, Fry ventures into the decaying ruins of Old New York to regain his lucky seven-leaf clover from his childhood, only to find that his brother Yancy Fry had stolen not only the clover, but Fry's identity as well. Fry sets out to exhume his brother's body, but discovers the startling truth about Yancy instead.

Episode 11: The Cyber House Rules (7.5/10)
Leela meets up with her former orphanarium playmate Adlai Atkins, now a plastic surgeon, who offers to grant Leela surgery that will give her two eyes. Meanwhile, Bender adopts twelve orphans in order to collect $1200 in government stipends.

Episode 12: Insane in the Mainframe (7.6/10)
Accused of robbing a bank, Fry and Bender plead insanity and are both sent to a robot insane asylum. While Bender and his buddy Roberto plan an escape, Fry is brainwashed into thinking that he is a robot.

Episode 13: Bendin' in the Wind (7.2/10)
When Bender is paralyzed in a tragic can opener accident, he discovers his musical washboard skills and goes on tour as a member of Beck's folk-rock band, acting as a voice for broken robots everywhere. Fry, Leela, Amy, and Zoidberg tag along in Fry's antique 1960s VW Van.

Episode 14: Time Keeps On Slippin' (7.4/10)
While creating a team of mutants to play the Harlem Globetrotters, the Professor accidentally causes a disruption in time that threatens the existence of the universe. Meanwhile, Fry tries to win an unreceptive Leela's heart.

Episode 15: I Dated a Robot (7.2/10)
Fry discovers the ability to download any celebrity onto a blank robot, and chooses to download Lucy Liu, with whom he falls madly in love. Repulsed by this disgusting display of human/robot love, Leela, Bender, and Zoidberg set out to shut down Nappster.com and put an end to illegal celebrity downloads forever.

Season 4 (12 Episodes)

Episode 1: Roswell That Ends Well (8.4/10)
A spacetime accident leaves the Planet Express crew stranded in Roswell, New Mexico in the year 1947, where a shattered Bender is mistaken for UFO debris and Zoidberg is captured as an alien specimen. Leela and the professor work to get everybody home, while Fry tries to keep his accident-prone grandfather alive.

Episode 2: A Tale of Two Santas (7.2/10)
A Planet Express mission to Robot Santa's colony on Neptune leaves the murderous robot trapped in the frozen sea, and Bender takes over as Santa, vowing to bring peace and goodwill to Xmas again. But when Bender is mistaken for the real Robot Santa, he is arrested and sentenced to death.

Episode 3: Anthology of Interest II (7.7/10)
When the Professor fine tunes his "What-If" machine, Bender discovers what it would be like if he were human, Fry discovers what it would be like if life were more like a video game, and Leela discovers what it would be like if she found her true home.

Episode 4: Love and Rocket (7.5/10)
As Valentine's Day approaches, Bender's romance with the Planet Express ship puts the crew in jeopardy.

Episode 5: Leela's Homeworld (8.1/10)
Leela finally learns the truth about her parents and her own identity.

Episode 6: Where the Buggalo Roam (7/10)
When Amy's parents' ranch is hit by a dust storm that blows away their herd of buggalo, Kif sets out to prove his masculinity by rounding up the herd, only to become entangled with the native Martians.

Episode 7: A Pharaoh to Remember (7.3/10)
Bender fears that nobody will remember him after he dies, and sees his chance for immortality when the crew is enslaved on the planet Osiris 4. Posing as the planet's new pharaoh, Bender orders a humongous statue built in his honor, and quickly goes mad with power.

Episode 8: Godfellas (8.4/10)
Bender is accidentally shot out of the ship's torpedo tube and becomes lost in space. Floating through the ethereal darkness, Bender becomes inhabited with tiny alien life forms, but has trouble playing God to their unyielding prayers.

Episode 9: Future Stock (7.5/10)
With Planet Express in financial trouble, Fry nominates a flashy businessman from the 1980s to replace Professor Farnsworth as CEO of the company.

Episode 10: A Leela of Her Own (7/10)
Leela endeavors to become the first female blernsball player, but her lack of depth perception hinders her skills. Nevertheless, she becomes the pitcher for the New New York Mets, purely for her novelty value.

Episode 11: 30% Iron Chef (7.4/10)
Bender, insulted by the reception his terrible cooking receives, runs away and joins a space hobo camp, where he apprentices with a legendary former TV chef. Meanwhile, Dr. Zoidberg accidentally destroys Professor Farnsworth's prized ship-in-a-bottle and frames Fry.

Episode 12: Where No Fan Has Gone Before (7.8/10)
The crew is pitted against the original Star Trek cast to win the devotion of an energy creature.

Season 5 (16 Episodes)

Episode 1: Crimes of the Hot (7.4/10)
When Earth is jeopardized by global warming, the crew attends a conference in Kyoto hosted by Al Gore's head.

Episode 2: Jurassic Bark (8.7/10)
Bender grows jealous when Fry attempts to clone Seymour, his beloved fossilized dog.

Episode 3: The Route of All Evil (7.3/10)
Farnsworth's clone Cubert teams up with Hermes' son Dwight to launch a newspaper delivery business. Farnsworth and Hermes scoff at the kids' efforts – until the delivery boys accumulate enough capital to buy out Planet Express. Meanwhile, Fry and Leela use Bender to brew their own homemade beer.

Episode 4: A Taste of Freedom (7.5/10)
Zoidberg becomes the center of a Supreme Court case after he celebrates Freedom Day by publicly eating the Earth flag.

Episode 5: Kif Gets Knocked Up a Notch (7.4/10)
When Kif gets pregnant, Amy questions her readiness to become a parent.

Episode 6: Less Than Hero (7.5/10)
When Fry and Leela discover a cream that gives them unusual powers, they form a superhero team along with Bender.

Episode 7: Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles (7.9/10)
The Planet Express crew is exposed to a substance that causes everyone to age backwards.

Episode 8: The Why of Fry (8.1/10)
Nibbler enlists Fry in a mission to blow up evil brains bent on destroying the universe.

Episode 9: The Sting (8.5/10)
The Planet Express crew attempt the mission that killed the last crew: raiding a massive alien beehive for its honey.

Episode 10: The Farnsworth Parabox (8.4/10)
The Planet Express crew goes to a parallel universe made accessible by the Professor's latest experiment.

Episode 11: Three Hundred Big Boys (8/10)
With the help of a $300 government refund, the Planet Express crew pursue their dreams and desires.

Episode 12: Spanish Fry (7.5/10)
Fry's nose is stolen by alien poachers to sell as a black market aphrodesiac.

Episode 13: Bend Her (7.4/10)
Bender's scam to win Olympic gold sets him on the road to becoming a celebrity wife.

Episode 14: Obsoletely Fabulous (7.5/10)
A new model of robot threatens Bender, forcing him to run away after he avoids upgrading his own technology.

Episode 15: Bender Should Not Be Allowed on TV (7.6/10)
Bender becomes a television star as well as a terrible role model for children.

Episode 16: The Devil's Hands Are Idle Playthings (8.4/10)
Fry makes a deal with the Robot Devil so he can become a skillful musician and win Leela's heart.

Season 6 (26 Episodes)

Episode 1: Rebirth (7.1/10)
After a devastating spaceship crash, Professor Farnsworth attempts to resuscitate the crew with his birth machine.

Episode 2: In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela (6.8/10)
Leela and Zapp Brannigan find themselves stranded on an Eden-like planet.

Episode 3: Attack of the Killer App (7.4/10)
The latest trend in social networking and having no life takes over Earth; and Fry posts an embarrassing video of Leela on-line.

Episode 4: Proposition Infinity (6.8/10)
Bender leads a campaign to make robosexual marriage between humans and robots legal on Earth.

Episode 5: The Duh-Vinci Code (7.3/10)
The Planet Express crew races to future Rome to unearth the shocking secret of Leonardo da Vinci.

Episode 6: Lethal Inspection (7.8/10)
Bender learns that he suffers from a mortal manufacturing defect.

Episode 7: The Late Philip J. Fry (8.4/10)
The Professor invents a one-way time machine that takes the crew ever further into the future with no hope of returning.

Episode 8: That Darn Katz! (7.3/10)
Earth is invaded by a race of intelligent cats.

Episode 9: A Clockwork Origin (7.5/10)
The theory of evolution is put to the test on a planet inhabited by robots.

Episode 10: The Prisoner of Benda (7.8/10)
A revolutionary invention allows the crew members to exchange minds.

Episode 11: Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences (7.4/10)
After a bungled Earth invasion, alien leader Lrrr faces a midlife crisis.

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Episode 12: The Mutants Are Revolting (7.3/10)
Leela leads an army of underground mutants in a rebellion against the surface people.

Episode 13: The Futurama Holiday Spectacular (6.8/10)
The Planet Express crew learns the true meaning of Xmas, Robanukah and Kwanzaa.

Episode 14: Neutopia (7.1/10)
The crew members encounter a bizarre alien with the power to change their sexual characteristics.

Episode 15: Benderama (7.4/10)
Bender creates duplicates of himself, who in turn create duplicates of themselves, until they threaten to consume all of the matter on Earth.

Episode 16: Ghost in the Machines (7.3/10)
Fed up with the crew, Bender decides to kill himself using a suicide booth. After he dies, his software takes on a ghostly existence.

Episode 17: Law and Oracle (7.4/10)
Fry quits his job and becomes a police officer assigned to the Future Crimes Division.

Episode 18: The Silence of the Clamps (7.3/10)
After testifying against the Robot Mafia, Bender goes into hiding in the witness relocation program.

Episode 19: Yo Leela Leela (6.5/10)
Leela becomes a Hollywood Big Shot after creating a hit children's television series.

Episode 20: All the Presidents' Heads (7.3/10)
The crew members alter history when they travel back in time to the American Revolution.

Episode 21: Mobius Dick (7.2/10)
Leela becomes obsessed with hunting down a mysterious four-dimensional space whale.

Episode 22: Fry Am the Egg Man (7/10)
Fry nurtures an alien egg that hatches into a horrific monster.

Episode 23: The Tip of the Zoidberg (7.3/10)
The crew uncovers a dark secret concerning a covert mission undertaken by the Professor and Dr. Zoidberg many years earlier.

Episode 24: Cold Warriors (7.3/10)
Fry's sneezing reintroduces the common cold to the world of the future, with devastating consequences.

Episode 25: Overclockwise (7.6/10)
Bender evolves into a godlike being after vastly increasing his processing power.

Episode 26: Reincarnation (7.4/10)
Futurama is reconceived in three alternate animation styles: classic black-and-white, old-school videogame, and Japanese anime.

Season 7 (26 Episodes)

Episode 1: The Bots and the Bees (7.4/10)
Bender fathers a child with the office soda machine.

Episode 2: A Farewell to Arms (7.2/10)
An ancient prophecy predicts the world will end in the year 3012.

Episode 3: Decision 3012 (7.4/10)
Leela becomes campaign manager for a presidential candidate whose birth certificate is mysteriously missing.

Episode 4: The Thief of Baghead (7.2/10)
Bender joins the paparazzi and attempts to photograph a famous actor whose face has never been seen.

Episode 5: Zapp Dingbat (7.1/10)
Zapp Brannigan loses interest in Leela and instead turns his attentions towards her mother, Turanga Munda.

Episode 6: The Butterjunk Effect (6.7/10)
Leela and Amy become addicted to the performance enhancing drug known as "Nectar" to increase their chances of winning at the epic sport of Butterfly Derby.

Episode 7: The Six Million Dollar Mon (7.2/10)
Hermes replaces parts of his body with robotic counterparts so as to increase his productivity.

Episode 8: Fun on a Bun (7.3/10)
Fry is the victim of a sausage-making accident during the crew's visit to Oktoberfest.

Episode 9: Free Will Hunting (7.3/10)
Bender searches for the meaning of life after learning that robots lack free will.

Episode 10: Near-Death Wish (7.6/10)
The Professor is deeply disturbed when his parents return from virtual retirement aboard the Near-Death Star.

Episode 11: Viva Mars Vegas (7.1/10)
The crew stages a casino heist to recover stolen property from the Robot Mafia.

Episode 12: 31st Century Fox (6.8/10)
After saving a robotic fox from hunters, Bender becomes the hunted.

Episode 13: Naturama (6.5/10)
Bender and the crew are reimagined as wild animals in a nature documentary.

Episode 14: 2-D Blacktop (7/10)
Professor Farnsworth joins a gang of street-racing punks.

Episode 15: Fry and Leela's Big Fling (7.2/10)
Fry and Leela's romantic vacation goes disturbingly wrong.

Episode 16: T.: The Terrestrial (7.3/10)
After being marooned on a distant planet, Fry is befriended by a young monster.

Episode 17: Forty Percent Leadbelly (6.8/10)
At a maximum security prison, Bender meets a famous folk singer and attempts to make a copy of his precious guitar.

Episode 18: The Inhuman Torch (7.1/10)
Bender becomes a famous firefighter, but the crew suspects him of arson.

Episode 19: Saturday Morning Fun Pit (6.5/10)
The Futurama gang stars in a trio of craptastic morning cartoons.

Episode 20: Calculon 2.0 (7.2/10)
Bender goes grave robbing to bring his favorite actor back to life.

Episode 21: Assie Come Home (7.1/10)
Bender searches the universe for his missing shiny metal rear end.

Episode 22: Leela and the Genestalk (7/10)
After a rare condition causes Leela to grow tentacles, she stumbles upon a secret genetic engineering facility.

Episode 23: Game of Tones (7.4/10)
The crew journeys into Fry's dreams to seek the meaning of a mysterious alien melody.

Episode 24: Murder on the Planet Express (7.8/10)
The crew becomes trapped aboard a ship with a horrific alien creature.

Episode 25: Stench and Stenchibility (7.7/10)
Dr. Zoidberg meets the love of his life while Bender squares off in a deadly tap dancing competition.

Episode 26: Meanwhile (8.8/10)
Fry asks Leela to marry him, and they face their destiny together as the Professor's latest invention alters the fabric of time.

Season 8 (10 Episodes)

Episode 1: The Impossible Stream (7.3/10)
Fry risks permanent insanity when he attempts to binge-watch every TV show ever made.

Episode 2: Children of a Lesser Bog (6.7/10)
Amy and Kif’s children emerge from an alien swamp.

Episode 3: How the West Was 1010001 (6.3/10)
Bender and the crew head west to join the bitcoin mining rush.

Episode 4: Parasites Regained (6.6/10)
After Nibbler falls ill, the crew shrinks down for a dangerous mission into a desert world contained within his litter box.

Episode 5: Related to Items You've Viewed (7/10)
Bender uncovers the mysteries of the vast Momazon corporation.

Episode 6: I Know What You Did Next Xmas (6.7/10)
Bender and Zoidberg travel through time to attack Robot Santa.

Episode 7: Rage Against the Vaccine (6.1/10)
A pandemic ravages future Earth.

Episode 8: Zapp Gets Canceled (6.1/10)
When Zapp Brannigan is canceled for crude behavior, Leela takes over as captain of the Nimbus on a critical mission.

Episode 9: The Prince and the Product (5/10)
The crew members are reborn as toys.

Episode 10: All the Way Down (7.3/10)
The crew investigates whether the universe is a simulation.

Season 9 (10 Episodes)

Episode 1: The One Amigo (6.4/10)
After Bender sells an NFT representing the "Concept of Bender", he feels lost and returns to his ancestral village in Mexico to rediscover himself.

Episode 2: Quids Game (6.4/10)
Bizarre aliens force the crew to reenact all the classic children's games Fry played at his 8th birthday party… except this time, they are played TO THE DEATH!

Episode 3: The Temp (6.7/10)
A mysterious temp worker takes over Fry's job… as well as his entire life.

Episode 4: Beauty and the Bug (6.6/10)
Bender becomes a matador in the sport of "Bug Fighting."

Episode 5: One Is Silicon and the Other Gold (6.6/10)
Leela becomes friends with a jealous chatbot.

Episode 6: Attack of the Clothes (6.3/10)
The Professor's fast-fashion clothes are a smash hit, but an environmental disaster.

Episode 7: Planet Espresso (6.7/10)
Hermes inherits a Jamaican coffee farm that holds the ruins of an ancient spaceship.

Episode 8: Cuteness Overload (6.7/10)
Amy sets out to collect the cutest toys in the universe – but they are not as harmless as they appear.

Episode 9: The Futurama Mystery Liberry (5.5/10)
Futurama is reimagined in the form of classic children's mystery books.

Episode 10: Otherwise (6.8/10)
When Fry proposes to Leela, he is overcome by a near-fatal attack of déjà vu.

Season 10 (10 Episodes)

Episode 1: Destroy Tall Monsters (6.5/10)
Bender undergoes a risky treatment to make himself gigantic.

Episode 2: The World Is Hot Enough (6.7/10)
The crew ignites a volcano in a desperate attempt to slow global warming.

Episode 3: Fifty Shades of Green (6.3/10)
Fry is heartbroken to learn Leela's soulmate is someone other than him.

Episode 4: The Numberland Gap (6.7/10)
The crew journeys into a mysterious world inhabited by numbers.

Episode 5: Scared Screenless (6.7/10)
Bender is sent off to Zapp Brannigan's camp for screen addicts.

Episode 6: Wicked Human (6.8/10)
Pandemonium erupts when people around the world start floating up into the sky.

Episode 7: Murderoni (6.8/10)
A conspiracy theory makes shocking claims about the basement of the local pizzeria.

Episode 8: Crab Splatter (7.3/10)
Leela's parents adopt Dr. Zoidberg.

Episode 9: The Trouble with Truffles (6.6/10)
Bender and his trusty pig set off to hunt space truffles in the truffle belt.

Episode 10: The White Hole (8/10)
The crew embarks on an epic ten-million-year journey to witness the birth of a new universe.

Season 11 (10 Episodes)

Episode 1: Episode 1

Episode 2: Episode 2

Episode 3: Episode 3

Episode 4: Episode 4

Episode 5: Episode 5

Episode 6: Episode 6

Episode 7: Episode 7

Episode 8: Episode 8

Episode 9: Episode 9

Episode 10: Episode 10

Where to Watch

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