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Hard science fiction thrives on a simple promise: that the future will be shaped not by magic, but by science. It’s a genre where impossible-seeming ideas must earn their place through plausibility. The Expanse series by James S.A. Corey is one of the few modern sci-fi stories that fully embodies that sentiment. With its realistic physics, politics, and social commentary, The Expanse redefined what a spectacular space opera could be. Despite the novels’ brilliance, other books in the genre surpass The Expanse in scope, scientific depth, and storytelling.
Long before and alongside The Expanse, a collection of extraordinary novels has pushed the hard sci-fi genre even further by venturing into unknown worlds, tackling ideas about artificial intelligence, and depicting futures built on real scientific principles. From galaxy-spanning civilizations to stories about humanity’s first contact with aliens, these novels that are better than The Expanse reach far beyond Corey’s solar system to a universe that is both ambitious and realistic.
A Fire Upon The Deep by Vernor Vinge
1992
Vernor Vinge’s A Fire Upon the Deep is a sweeping space opera built on one of the most imaginative ideas in science fiction: the Zones of Thought. In this universe, the laws of physics and intelligence change depending on where you are in the galaxy. Near the galactic core, intelligence is limited, and technology stagnates. Farther out, in the Beyond and Transcend, superintelligent beings and godlike AIs can exist. The story kicks off when a human expedition accidentally awakens an ancient, malevolent superintelligence known as the Blight, a digital god that consumes minds, civilizations, and entire networks.
Like The Expanse, A Fire Upon the Deep is a space opera, but it dwarves James S.A. Corey’s hard sci-fi novel in its vastness. While The Expanse mostly focuses on the solar system, A Fire Upon the Deep spans galaxies and civilizations. Compared to The Expanse, where alien elements are often mysterious but less biologically detailed, Vinge delivers something remarkable with the inclusion of the Tines, extraterrestrial dog-like creatures with a hive mind.
The Praxis by Walter Jon Williams
2002
The first novel in the Dread Empire’s Fall series, The Praxis takes place in a vast interstellar empire created and ruled for centuries by the Shaa, an ancient alien species that imposed a strict philosophical system known as the Praxis. This doctrine dictates how every species in the empire must behave, from social hierarchy to military conduct. But at the very beginning of the novel, the last of the Shaa dies, and chaos breaks out.
The Expanse does include space battles, but The Praxis takes it to a whole other level, which in turn makes it feel more vast. Where The Expanse excels at blending realism, politics, and social commentary, The Praxis stands out for its sharp focus on military strategy, imperial collapse, and the human struggle to adapt when the rules of the universe suddenly change.
Blindsight by Peter Watts
2006
Blindsight is probably one of the most disturbing hard science fiction novels out there, and it’s a crying shame that it isn’t as popular as other books on this list. In the late 21st century, Earth detects a mysterious alien structure and sends a crew of specialists to investigate it. What they discover goes far beyond what humans have thought extraterrestrial beings are like because the alien intelligence inside the structure may not be conscious in any human sense at all.
Blindsight completely rewrites what intelligence and consciousness are. The novel argues that humanity may be evolutionarily inefficient compared to unconscious cognition, which elevates from a hard sci-fi novel to a philosophical meditation. Blindsight isn’t just about realistic physics; it delves into neuroscience, cognitive science, and evolutionary biology.
The Martian by Andy Weir
2011
Andy Weir, one of the most iconic science fiction writers of our time, truly struck gold with his award-winning novel, The Martian. The story follows astronaut Mark Watney, who is accidentally left behind on Mars after a violent dust storm forces his crew to evacuate, believing him dead. Stranded alone on a planet with no immediate rescue, Watney has to solve one problem after another using nothing but his knowledge, ingenuity, and limited supplies.
Given that The Martian is just focused on one man, it feels much smaller in scope than The Expanse. However, it features elements that make it better than Corey’s space opera. The Expanse’s politics and space travel are intriguing, but the fact that The Martian is built around solving a concrete, technical problem gives it a real scientific feel. Despite the life-or-death situation, Watney’s voice is sarcastic, witty, and funny, adding humor to an otherwise dire situation.
Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky
2015
Winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award, Children of Time spans thousands of years and tells parallel stories of two civilizations on a collision course. In humanity’s distant future, Earth is dying, and the remnants of the human race travel aboard a generation ship in search of a new home, but something goes wrong along the way. Instead of uplifting monkeys into a new human-like species, a nanovirus accelerates the evolution of spiders. Over millennia, these spiders have evolved from simple creatures into a highly intelligent, technologically advanced civilization.
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Since Children of Time takes place across thousands of years, as opposed to The Expanse’s decades, it has a much bigger scope, given that empires rise and fall, new technology is created, and the species that occupy the world during that time evolve. Children of Time also has a non-human perspective, thus giving the story a chance to explore biology and evolution.
Seveneves by Neal Stephenson
2015
Unfolding in three phases, Seveneves by Neal Stephenson has one of the most chilling first lines in hard sci-fi history: “The Moon blew up without warning and for no apparent reason.” From that moment, humanity has just two years before the fragments of the Moon begin bombarding Earth in a catastrophic event known as the Hard Rain, rendering the planet uninhabitable for thousands of years.
Seveneves is driven as much by political conflict as it is by the impending death of the planet. The fight for resources, survival, and power is central to the novel’s story as it is the storm before the calm. What makes Seveneves so interesting is that it spans thousands of years and outlines not only how humans survive but who we become after losing the only place we call home.
Diaspora by Greg Egan
1997
One of the most radically conceptual hard science fiction novels ever written, Greg Egan’s Diaspora is a story that begins with humanity and moves beyond it into post-human digital existence and deep cosmological exploration. When a catastrophic gamma-ray burst threatens large parts of the galaxy, different branches of post-humanity are forced to explore deep space, not as biological beings, but as software minds carried in robotic or virtual forms.
Egan is known for embedding real physics and advanced mathematics into his work, and Diaspora is the perfect example of that. Because the novel goes beyond biological humanity, it’s able to explore the universe in a way that most books don’t. While space exploration and alien civilizations are fun, Diaspora is exceptional due to how it delves into virtual civilizations inside computational spaces.
Red Rising by Pierce Brown
2014
Pierce Brown’s Red Rising takes place in a far-future solar system ruled by a rigid, color-coded caste hierarchy. At the bottom of this system are the Reds, workers sent to Mars to terraform it for future generations. The protagonist, Darrow, is one of them, working in brutal underground mines under the belief that his labor will one day make Mars habitable. This all changes when he discovers Mars has been habitable for years and the elite Golds rule over the Reds.
Right from the jump, Red Rising establishes itself as an intense story, trading the slow-burn complexity of The Expanse for sky-high stakes. It could be argued that Red Rising‘s story about oppression mirrors that of The Expanse’s belters. But there’s something raw and immediate about the revolution in Red Rising. Sure, the novel feels smaller because it isn’t necessarily about space travel, but its Hunger Games–style intensity in a sci-fi empire makes it stand out in the genre.
The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin
2008
For years, humans have wondered what would happen if we came into contact with aliens. Would they be friends or foes? In The Three-Body Problem, Liu Cixin imagines a world where humanity has to fight extraterrestrial beings. Ye Wenjie, a physicist traumatized by political persecution, makes a decision that changes the fate of Earth: she sends a signal into space. That message is received by an alien civilization living on a chaotic planet called Trisolaris, where three suns create unpredictable and catastrophic orbital conditions. The Trisolarans, however, end up becoming Earth’s worst nightmare.
The Expanse is, in some ways, a story about hope, but The Three-Body Problem is the opposite of that. Cixin’s novel introduces the Dark Forest theory and the idea of a universe shaped by fear instead of exploration. Advanced astrophysics, such as the chaotic three-body orbital mechanics, creates a larger-than-life scope that is superior The Expanse.
Dune by Frank Herbert
1965
A list about some of the best hard science fiction novels would be incomplete without the inclusion of Frank Herbert’s Dune. The novel follows Paul Atreides, the young heir of the noble house Atreides, whose family is sent to Arrakis. Arrakis is the only place in the universe with spice, a substance that enables space travel. Because of this, it is the most important planet in the universe.
Dune has extensive world-building; the planet, the political systems, and the technology in the novel are simply awe-inspiring. Unlike The Expanse, Dune excellently blends science and myth. This combination doesn’t make it feel less like a sci-fi epic. It actually adds to its depth because even in a world that is scientifically rigorous, philosophical concepts usually elevate it.
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Almontather Rassoul





