List of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction

List of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction

This is a list of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction works, sorted by the nature of the catastrophe portrayed.

World War III and other apocalyptic wars (between humans)

Films

1930s

*1936. "Things to Come", in which an extended future "second" world war leads to a breakdown of civilization in most of the world, with technology returning to medieval levels by 1970.

1950s

* 1951. "Five" by Arch Oboler, the first film to show the aftermath of a nuclear war, centered on a group of five survivors.
* 1952. "Captive Women", the first film to imagine a new primitive society emerging long after a nuclear war. Features two tribes, the "Norms" and the "Mutates", fighting in the remains of New York City, and later banding together to fight a third tribe, the "Upriver People", who are invading Manhattan through the Hudson Tunnel in order to steal the other tribes' women.
* 1952. "Invasion U.S.A.
* 1955. "Day the World Ended"
* 1956. "World Without End" by Edward Bernd, starring Hugh Marlowe and the film debut of Rod Taylor. Robust 20th Century mennarrowly escaping the ubiquitous "time warp"kill giant spiders, help pale nerds and their beautiful women emerge from underground, and retake the post World War III surface from troglodyte mutants.
* 1958. "Teenage Cave Man"
* 1958. "Terror from the Year 5000"
* 1959. "On the Beach" by Stanley Kramer, starring Gregory Peck, Fred Astaire, Anthony Perkins and Ava Gardner. The crew of an American submarine finds temporary safety from the fallout in Australia after the nuclear holocaust (from the 1957 novel by Nevil Shute).
* 1959. "The World, the Flesh and the Devil", adapted from M.P. Shiel's "The Purple Cloud".

1960s

* 1960. "Atomic War Bride"
* 1960. "The Time Machine" had an atomic war to explain the downfall of civilization.
* 1960. "The Final War" by Shigeaki Hidaka, a Japanese film about a third world war started when the US accidentally drops a nuclear bomb on South Korea (Japanese title: "Dai-sanji sekai taisen: Yonju-ichi jikan no kyofu").
* 1961. "The Last War" by Shuei Matsubayashi, another Japanese film about World War III (Japanese title: "Sekai daisenso").
* 1962. "La Jetée" by Chris Marker.
* 1962. "Panic in Year Zero!", a 1962 movie about a family that escapes Los Angeles that was devastated by a nuclear attack.
* 1962. "This Is Not a Test"
* 1964. "Fail-Safe", theatrical release based on the novel of the same name. Drama in which a technical failure causes a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union by the United States. Deals with American and Soviet attempts to prevent escalation into a full-scale nuclear war.
* 1964. "" by Stanley Kubrick, adapting the novel "Red Alert" by Peter George.
* 1964. "The Last Man on Earth starring Vincent Price" this is the first film adaptation based on Richard Matheson's 1954 novel, I Am Legend.
* 1964. "The Time Travelers"
* 1965. "The Bedford Incident"
* 1965. "She", a low-budget B-movie, an extremely loose adaptation of the novel "She" by H. Rider Haggard, starring Sandahl Bergman as a post-civilization warrior.
* 1967. "The End of August at the Hotel Ozone" (Czech title: "Konec srpna v Hotelu Ozon")
* 1967. "In the Year 2889", a remake of the 1955 film "Day the World Ended"
* 1967. "Journey to the Center of Time"
* 1968. "Planet of the Apes", adapted from the novel "La planète des singes" by Pierre Boulle.
* 1969. "The Bed Sitting Room"

1970s

* 1970. "Beneath the Planet of the Apes"
* 1971. "Glen and Randa"
* 1971. "The Omega Man". An immune survivor of a biological/nuclear war battles plague-altered quasi-vampires bent on erasing all vestiges of science and technology. The movie is based on Richard Matheson's 1954 novel, I Am Legend.
* 1973. "Battle for the Planet of the Apes"
* 1973. "Genesis II" by Gene Roddenberry, later remade as unsuccessful TV pilot Planet Earth
* 1973. "Refuge of Fear" (Spanish title: "El refugio del miedo")
* 1974. "The Third Cry" (Swiss film, French title: "Le Troisième Cri")
* 1974. "Zardoz"
* 1975. "Black Moon"
* 1975. "A Boy and His Dog". A young man and his pet dog struggle for survival and encounter strife in a harsh, post-apocalyptic wasteland where food and sex are scarcities.
* 1975. "La città dell'ultima paura"
* 1975 "The Noah" An American soldier who appears to be the sole survivor of a nuclear war.
* 1976. "The People Who Own the Dark" by Amando de Ossorio (Spanish title: "Último deseo")
* 1977. "Wizards" by Ralph Bakshi. A good wizard and his evil brother battle some two millennia after Armageddon.
* 1977. "Damnation Alley." A surviving American ICBM crew sets out across the United States in an armored vehicle in search of survivors in Albany, New York. Loosely based on the novel by Roger Zelazny.
* 1978. "Deathsport"
* 1979. "Ravagers"

1980s

* 1981. ""
* 1981. "Escape From New York"
* 1982. "2020 Texas Gladiators"
* 1982. "The Aftermath" (AKA "Zombie Aftermath" in UK)
* 1982. "Human Highway"
* 1982. "Warriors of the Wasteland"
* 1982. "World War III". Television miniseries depicting a possible scenario in which the Cold War gets hot.
* 1983. "2019, After the Fall of New York"
* 1983. "Barefoot Gen", based on the actual atomic bombing of Hiroshima (not technically post-apocalypse, but rather post-disaster)
* 1983. "Endgame"
* 1983. "Exterminators of the Year 3000"
* 1983. "Le Dernier Combat" by Luc Besson
* 1983. "Stryker"
* 1983. "Testament"
* 1983. "Warrior of the Lost World"
* 1983. "Yor, the Hunter from the Future"
* 1984. "Dark Enemy"
* 1984. "Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind" by Hayao Miyazaki
* 1984. "Sexmisja". A Polish comedy.
* 1984. "Radioactive Dreams". After an atomic war Phillip Hammer and Marlowe Chandler have spent 15 years on their own in a bunker, then they find the keys to the last MX missile.
* 1984. "Radio Free Steve" Steve, is a radio pirate in the days after WWIII bringing hope to the people after the remnants of the government re-emerged and shut down all TV and radio stations that had been broadcasting unclisensed.
* 1985. "City Limits"
* 1985. "Def-Con 4"
* 1985. "Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome"
* 1985. "Warriors of the Apocalypse". After civilization is wiped out by nuclear war, an adventurer leads a group of wanderers on a search for the fabled Mountain of Life.
* 1985. "Warrior of the Lost World"
* 1986. "Dead Man's Letters"
* 1986. "Fist of the North Star"
* 1986. "The Sacrifice"
* 1986. "When the Wind Blows" by Jimmy Murakami, adapting the graphic novel by Raymond Briggs
* 1986. "Whoops Apocalypse"
* 1987. "Cherry 2000"
* 1987. "Creepozoids"
* 1987. "Death Run"
* 1987. "Hell Comes to Frogtown"
* 1987. "Steel Dawn"
* 1987. "Survivor"
* 1987. "Urban Warriors". Three technicians working in an underground laboratory discover that a nuclear war has destroyed most of the above ground world.
* 1987 "The Survivalist". The Soviet Union threatens a retaliatory nuclear attack, amid the chaos, only The Survivalist has a plan.
* 1988. "Akira" by Katsuhiro Otomo
* 1988. "Miracle Mile"
* 1988. "World Gone Wild"
* 1988. "Empire of Ash"
* 1989. "Empire of Ash II"
* 1989. "Empire of Ash III"
* 1989. "Black Rain", another film about the actual bombing of Hiroshima.
* 1989. "Deadly Reactor"
* 1989. "The Blood of Heroes"

1990s

* 1990. "By Dawn's Early Light"
* 1990. "The Handmaid's Tale"
* 1990. "Hardware"
* 1990. "Mindwarp"
* 1990. "Robot Jox"
* 1991. "Delicatessen" by Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro
* 1993. "Cyborg 2"
* 1993. "Robot Wars" (sequel to "Robot Jox")
* 1995. "Fist of the North Star"
* 1995. "Judge Dredd"
* 1996. "". A late-21st century Earth is devastated by nuclear conflict.
* 1997. "The Postman", partly based on the David Brin novel
* 1998. "Six-String Samurai"

2000s

* 2000. "On the Beach". A remake of the 1959 film.
* 2002. "Equilibrium". After barely surviving yet another worldwide conflict, mankind rejects all emotion and outlaws all forms of expression which might encourage emotional response.
* 2003. "" based on the book series Deathlands
* 2003. "Time of the Wolf"
* 2004. "Appleseed"
* 2004. "Casshern"
* 2007. "The Beach Party at the Threshold of Hell"
* 2008. "Mutant Chronicles" Based on the Mutant Chronicles RPG
* 2008. "20 Years After" This is a post apocalyptic fairy tale set 20 years after a nuclear war. It tells the story of a young woman's journey to deliver the first child born in 15 years.
* 2008. "City of Ember" Based on the book by Jeanne Duprau

Television


* 1959. "The Offshore Island", a TV adaptation of a play by Marghanita Laski.
* Numerous episodes of "The Twilight Zone" and its revivals, including "Time Enough at Last" (1959); "The Old Man in the Cave" (1963); "A Little Peace and Quiet" (1985); "Quarantine" (1986); "Shelter Skelter" (1987); and "Voices in the Earth" (1987)
* 1964. "Soldier" an episode of the anthology series The Outer Limits, often cited as an influence on the 80's movie The Terminator
* 1965. "The War Game" by Peter Watkins.
* 1974. "Planet Earth", unsuccessful TV pilot remake of Genesis II
* 1974 "Planet Of The Apes" TV series
* 1975 "Return to the Planet of the Apes" Animated TV series
* 1975. "Strange New World" Another unsuccessful TV pilot remake of Genesis II & Planet Earth
* 1978. "Future Boy Conan", an anime series by Hayao Miyazaki. Supermagnetic WMDs devastate Earth and causes virtually all land to be submerged underwater.
* 1979. "Buck Rogers In The 25th Century" Mostly futuristic in appearance, but outside of the gleaming Utopian city lies apocalyptic ruins swarming with mutants.
* 1982. "Whoops Apocalypse"
* 1982. "World War III". Miniseries with Rock Hudson.
* 1983. "The Day After". The effects of nuclear war on a Kansas town.
* 1984. "Threads". BBC Television Docudrama.
* 1984. "Z for Zachariah" BBC adaptation of the 1975 novel of the same name.
* 1984-1987. "Fist of the North Star". Post-apocalyptic anime series.
* 1987. "Knights of God"
* 1990. "The Girl from Tomorrow", Australian children's drama in which a girl from the 31st century (after the Northern Hemisphere has been destroyed in the Great Disaster, later revealed to be a nuclear holocaust) becomes stranded in the 20th century. In the sequel, "" (1993), she and her friends fight to prevent history from being changed in such a way that the Southern Hemisphere is destroyed as well.
* 1992. "woops!", a very short-lived sitcom about the survivors of a nuclear war.
* 1994. "Knight Rider 2010", made for TV movie that was designed to be a pilot for a post-apoc spin-off from the original Knight Rider
* 1999. "Now and Then, Here and There", an Anime series that takes place 10 billion years into the future, where mankind lusts for power, and children are forced into military duty.
* 2000. "Fail Safe", televised play based on the novel of the same name directed by Stephen Frears and produced by George Clooney. Drama in which a technical failure causes a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union by the United States. Deals with American and Soviet attempts to prevent escalation into a full-scale nuclear war.
* 2002. "Jeremiah". A live-action television series which takes place 15 years after a worldwide pandemic wipes out every post-adolescent human on earth.
* 2002. "Saikano". Anime series.
* 2004-2005. "Desert Punk." Anime series.
* 2005. "Dance Of The Dead" is an episode of "Masters of Horror" directed by Tobe Hooper. It has a triple apocalyptic theme as it features a man made virus causing a zombie outbreak after World War 3.
* 2006. "Jericho" (CBS), about the residents of a small Kansas town which remains isolated in the aftermath of a series of nuclear attacks on America.
* 2007. "Masters of Science Fiction" episode, "A Clean Escape"

Novels

1880s

* 1826. "The Last Man" by Mary Shelley
* 1885. "After London" by Richard Jefferies

1930s

* 1933. "The Shape of Things to Come" by H. G. Wells, predicting an extended world war fought with modern scientific weapons, societal upheaval, and the beginning of space travel. Filmed as "Things to Come" in 1936.
* 1934. "Quinzinzinzili" by Régis Messac, also predicting a great world war that ends with the vanishing of humanity. Only a group of children survives and forms a strange new mankind.
* 1937. "By the Waters of Babylon" (Short Story) by Stephen Vincent Benet.

1940s

* 1948. "Ape and Essence" by Aldous Huxley. Also screenplay.
* 1949. "Earth Abides" by George R. Stewart.

1950s

* 1950. "Pebble in the Sky" by Isaac Asimov. (A later book, "Robots and Empire", gave a different explanation)
* 1952 "Star Man's Son" by Andre Norton
* 1954 "Tomorrow!" by Philip Wylie
* 1955 "The Chrysalids" (U.S. title: "Re-Birth") by John Wyndham, the aftermath of a nuclear war in a rural Canadian community.
* 1955. "Few Were Left" by Harold Rein
* 1955 "The Long Tomorrow" by Leigh Brackett, in the aftermath of a nuclear war scientific knowledge is feared and restricted.
* 1956 "The World Jones Made" by Philip K. Dick
* 1957 "On the Beach" by Nevil Shute (also the films based on the book)
* 1958 "Red Alert" by Peter George. Filmed as "" by Stanley Kubrick.
* 1959 "Alas, Babylon" by Pat Frank, the aftermath of a nuclear war in a rural Florida community.
* 1959 "Level 7" by Mordecai Roshwald.

1960s

* 1960. "A Canticle for Leibowitz" and later its sequel "Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman", both by Walter M. Miller, Jr.
* 1961. "Dark Universe" by Daniel F. Galouye.
* 1963. "Triumph" by Philip Wylie
* 1964. "Farnham's Freehold" by Robert A. Heinlein
* 1964. "The Penultimate Truth" by Philip K. Dick
* 1965. "Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb" by Philip K. Dick
* 1967. "Ice" by Anna Kavan. Nuclear winter is encroaching the entire planet.
* 1968. "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" by Philip K. Dick, filmed as "Blade Runner".
* 1969. "Damnation Alley" by Roger Zelazny (made into a movie 1977).
* 1969. "Heroes and Villains" by Angela Carter

1970s

* 1970. "The Incredible Tide" by Alexandar Key.
* 1970. "The Year Of The Quiet Sun" by Wilson Tucker.
* 1971. "Love in the Ruins" by Walker Percy.
* 1971. "The Overman Culture" by Edmund Cooper.
* 1972. "Malevil" by Robert Merle.
* 1974. "The Last Canadian" by William C. Heine.
* 1975. "Z for Zachariah" by Robert C. O'Brien.
* 1975. "Caravan" by Stephen Goldin.
* 1975. "The Coming of the Horseclans" by Robert Adams, followed by seventeen other books in the horseclans series.
* 1977. "Lucifer's Hammer" by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle.
* 1976. "Deus Irae" by Philip K. Dick in collaboration with Roger Zelazny.
* 1979. "Down to a Sunless Sea" by David Graham.

1980s

* 1980. "Riddley Walker" by Russell Hoban.
* 1980. "The Fifth Horseman" by Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre.
* 1980."The Zone (series)" by James Rouch. Chronicling the conflict between NATO and Warsaw Pact forces in Europe.
* 1982. "Survivors" by John Nahmlos.
* 1983. "The Last Children of Schewenborn (" [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Die_letzten_Kinder_von_Schewenborn Die Letzten Kinder Von Schewenborn] ") by Gudrun Pausewang (in German).
* 1983. "Pulling Through" by Dean Ing
* 1983. "Trinity's Child" by William Prochnau
* 1983. "Hiero's Journey" (sequel "The Unforsaken Hiero" 1985), by Sterling E. Lanier. A "metis" priest/killman quests across post-apocalyptic northeastern North America, seven thousand years in the future.
* 1984. "Brother in the Land" by Robert Swindells
* 1984. "Doomsday Plus Twelve" by James D. Forman
* 1984. "Emergence" by David R. Palmer
* 1984. "Warday" by Whitley Strieber and James Kunetka
* 1985. "Freeway Fighter" by Ian Livingstone, part of the Fighting Fantasy Gamebook series
* 1985. "Children of the Dust" by Louise Lawrence
* 1985. "The Postman" by David Brin and the 1997 movie of the same name.
* 1985. "This is the Way the World Ends" by James Morrow
* 1987. "Swan Song" by Robert R. McCammon
* 1988. "The Gate to Women's Country" by Sheri S. Tepper
* 1988. "The Last Ship" by William Brinkley.

1990s

* 1990. "Nightfall" by Isaac Asimov and Robert Silverberg (extension written by Silverberg of the Asimov story of the same name)
* 1990–1994. Gan Moondark trilogy ("Warrior", "Wanderer", & "Witch") by Donald E. McQuinn, set in the Pacific Northwest, generations after World War III.
* 1991. "Yellow Peril" in Chinese by activist Wang Lixiong under the pseudonym Bao Mi, about a nuclear civil war in the People's Republic of China
* 1997. "Aftermath" by Levar Burton. American civilization crumbles after a civil war pitting blacks against whites and a devastating earthquake.
* 1999. "Resurrection Day" by Brendan DuBois, set 10 years after the Cuban Missile Crisis escalated into nuclear war.

2000s

* 2001. "" by Darrin Brent Patterson.
* 2003. "Apokalipsa wedlug Pana Jana" by Robert J. Szmidt
* 2003. "The City of Ember" and its sequel, "The People of Sparks", and prequel, "The Prophet of Yonwood", by Jeanne DuPrau
* 2004. "Cowl" by Neal Asher.
* 2004. "Fitzpatrick's War" by Theodore Judson
* 2004. "Cloud Atlas" by David Mitchell contains one of six novellas set in a post-apocalyptic future.
* 2005. "Deadlands" by Scott A. Johnson
* 2006. "The Road" by Cormac McCarthy. A father and son's post-apocalyptic tale of survival.
* 2006. "The Book of Dave" by Will Self. Split between modern London and post-apocalyptic London where a new society and religion is based on the legacy of a cab driver.
* 2007. "The Slynx" by Tatyana Tolstaya (this is the English translation first publication date)
* 2007. "The Pesthouse" by Jim Crace
* 2007. "Last Light" by Alex Scarrow. Sudden end of oil availability leads to worldwide social collapse.
* 2007. "The Oblivion Society" by Marcus Alexander Hart
* 2008. "Flood" (with two sequels projected) by Stephen Baxter. Huge underground oceans start leaking to the surface, lifting sea levels by thousands of metres over several decades.
* 2008. "The Valley-Westside War" by Harry Turtledove

Book series and uncertain dates

* "Masters of the Fist" and "The Long Mynd" by Edward P. Hughes
* "The Goodness Gene" by Sonia Levitin
* "The King Awakes" and "The Empty Throne" by Janice Elliott, set in a Medieval-style society several generations after a nuclear war. Both novels deal with the return of King Arthur and his friendship with a youth from the post-holocaust world
* "The Last War" by Kir Bulychev
* "The Steel, the Mist and the Blazing Sun" by Christopher Anvil
* "The World Ends in Hickory Hollow" by Ardath Mayhar
* "Time Capsule" by Mitch Berman
* Series "The Amtrak Wars" by Patrick Tilley
* Series "Deathlands" by James Axler
* Series "Firebrats" by Scott Siegel and Barbera Siegel
* Series "Freeway Warrior" by Joe Dever
* Series "Horseclans" by Robert Adams
* Series "Mortal Engines Quartet" by Phillip Reeve
* Series "Obernewtyn Chronicles" by Isobelle Carmody
* Series "Shannara Series" by Terry Brooks
* Series "The Ashes" by William W. Johnstone
* Series "The Pelbar Cycle" by Paul O. Williams
* Series "The Survivalist" by Jerry Ahern, first novel "Total War" from 1981
* Series "Traveler" by D. B. Drumm, first novel "First, You Fight" from 1984
* Series "Wingman" by Mack Maloney, follows a former U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds pilot trying to restore a balkanized and largely disarmed United States of America while flying the last remaining F-16 Fighting Falcon in existence
* Series "Vampire Earth" by E. E. Knight
* The "Vampire Hunter D" novels (and later anime movies), set ten thousand years after a nuclear war occurs in 1999
* Trilogy "The Greatwinter Trilogy" by Sean McMullen

hort stories and plays

* 1937. "By the Waters of Babylon" by Stephen Vincent Benét.
* 1941. "Nightfall" by Isaac Asimov
* 1950. "There Will Come Soft Rains" by Ray Bradbury in "The Martian Chronicles".
* 1954. "The Offshore Island" (play) by Marghanita Laski.
* "Autobahn nach Poznan" by Andrzej Ziemianski
* "Dear Devil" by Eric Frank Russell
* "Let the Ants Try" by Frederik Pohl under the pseudonym James MacCreigh
* "Magic City" by Nelson S. Bond
* "Second Variety" by Philip K. Dick
* "A Boy and His Dog" by Harlan Ellison. Filmed in 1975.
* "Enta Geweorc" by Nicholas Waller (Interzone 198, 2004).
* "Time to Rest" and sequel "No Place Like Earth" by John Wyndham
* "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" by Harlan Ellison
* "Extinction is Forever" by Louise Lawrence. A scientist uses a time machine to travel to the future and film the results of a nuclear war in a bid to prevent it from happening. However, his actions could have serious repercussions for the mutated descendants of the human race.

Games

* "Armour-Geddon" from Psygnosis
* "Auto Assault" While seemingly caused by aliens, it is in fact human mistakes, breakdown and war that forges Auto Assault's apocalyptic world. Similar to the Command & Conquer series where an alien event is the catalyst needed to start decline.
* "Badlands" by Atari Games
* "Outlander" Mad Max inspired driving game from 1992/93 for Snes and Genesis
* "KKnD series"
* "Gamma World" from TSR, Inc., the makers of "Dungeons & Dragons"
* "Fallout series"
* ""
* "Land of Devastation" (a BBS Door)
* "Operation Overkill" (a BBS Door)
* "Wasteland"
* "Interstate '76" from Activision
** "Vigilante 8" from Activision
* "Civilization Revolution" from Firaxis
* "Mad Max" for the NES
* "Neuroshima" from Portal Publishing
* "The Morrow Project" from Timeline Ltd
* "" from Game Designer's Workshop, set in a world where a Sino-Russian war degenerates into a limited nuclear conflict that eventually drags in Europe and America.
* "Rifts", in which a nuclear exchange triggers the return of Ley Lines and Interdimensional Rifts or portals. These Ley Lines and Portals subsequently cause several natural and supernatural disasters.
* "Warzone 2100"
* ""
** ""
* "Aftermath! from Fantasy Games Unlimited.
* The computer game "Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri" tells of a ship leaving Earth on the eve of World War III to found a new colony orbiting Alpha Centauri
* The "Command & Conquer series" of games features several worldwide conflicts in the Tiberian (GDI vs. Brotherhood of Nod), Red Alert (Soviets vs. Allies), and Generals (USA vs. GLA vs. China) series. The Tiberian series in particular is noted for the continuing decay of Earth by the alien "Tiberium" crystals which spread across the surface and render much of the planet uninhabitable; a setting which, thus far, has become more serious with each subsequent game of the timeline.
* "World in Conflict" takes place in an alternate history in which the Soviet Union mounts a land invasion of the United States.
* "Post Apocalyptic Hero" a genre book for Hero System 5th Edition Revised.
* "Darwin's World" a d20 role-playing game from Impressions
* "Crystalis" from SNK
* "Earth 2150" and "Earth 2160" The world is destroyed in 2150 and people settle on mars in 2160.

Comics and manga

* Kamandi comic books, featuring the "last boy on earth", first published in 1972.
* Comics franchise "Judge Dredd", first popularized in 1977 by John Wagner, Carlos Ezquerra and Pat Mills.
* Webcomic "Post-Nuke", taking place during a post-apocalyptic nuclear winter
* The comic book "Ex-Mutants" is set in a post-nuclear world.
* The comic book ""
* The comic book ""
* Japanese manga (and subsequent anime adaptations) "Appleseed" by Masamune Shirow
* Manga series "Fist of the North Star"
* Manga series "Desert Punk". (Later adapted into an anime)
* Manga series "Saikano"
* Comic series 'The Last American, originally from Marvel in 1990/1991, re-released by Com.X
* Manga series Battle Angel Alita contains post-apocalyptic elements, and takes place in a highly futuristic dystopian world.
* Manga series X/1999
* Dark Horse Comics series Judge Dredd vs. Aliens & Predator vs. Judge Dredd

Other

* Visual novel ""
* "April 2031" a song by the band Warrant on the "Dog Eat Dog" album depicts an earth devastated by war where life lives on only by artificial means.
* "Your Attention Please", poem by Peter Porter, written in the style of a radio broadcast warning of an impending nuclear attack
* "Your Attention Please", a song adaptation of the above Porter poem written and recorded by the Scottish post-punk group the Scars
* "The Horses", poem by Edwin Muir. Deals with society's regression to pre Industrial Revolution conditions in the wake of a nuclear war
* The "Ayreon" series of concept albums depicts the end of life on Earth in 2084 due to, among other factors, a catastrophic nuclear war.

Pandemic (Plague)

Films

* The 1962 short film "La Jetée", later remade as "Twelve Monkeys"
* The 1964 film "The Last Man on Earth"
* The 1969 film "The Seed of Man" by Marco Ferreri (Italian title: "Il Seme dell'uomo")
* The 1971 film "The Omega Man"
* The 1975 film "The Ultimate Warrior"
* The 1978 film "Plague", also known as "Induced Syndrome" (UK), "M-3: The Gemini Strain" (USA), or "Mutation".
* The 1980 Japanese film "Fukkatsu no hi" also known as "Virus", directed by Kinji Fukasaku
* The 1985 film "City Limits"
* The 1986 film "Dead Man's Letters" by Konstantin Lopushanskij
* The 1988 film "Dead Man Walking"
* The 1989 film "Cyborg"
* The 1995 film "Twelve Monkeys" directed by Terry Gilliam
* The 2001 film "Ever Since the World Ended"
* The 2002 film "28 Days Later", and its 2007 sequel "28 Weeks Later"
* The 2005 film "Æon Flux, based on MTV's animated series Æon Flux
* The 2006 film "Children of Men"
* The 2006 film "The Zombie Diaries", a British made movie in which a virus creates a plague of zombies. This film was actually made and completed before George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead
* The 2007 film ""
* The 2007 film "I Am Legend"
* The 2007 film "I Am Omega" A cheap cash in remake of "I Am Legend" made by The Asylum
* The 2008 film "The Happening"
* The 2008 film "The Last Man", based upon Mary Shelley's 1826 novel The Last Man
* The 2008 film "Doomsday"
* The 2008 film "Repo! The Genetic Opera"

Television

* The 1974 made for TV movie "Where Have All The People Gone?" A mutated virus created by a solar flare destroys virtually all of the human population. One family has survived, and endeavours to travel across America to their family home.
* The 1975-1977 BBC television series "Survivors" by Terry Nation
* The 1990 ITV show "Not with a Bang", about 3 people who lived after everyone else in England was turned to dust by a chemical that caused rapid aging.
* The 1994 miniseries "Stephen King's The Stand"
* The 1999 series Crusade", a spin-off from the hit TV show "Babylon 5"
* The 1999-2003 New-Zealand TV series "The Tribe", that takes place in a near-future in which all the adults have been killed by a man-made Virus and the children have to survive on their own.
* The 2002 TV movie "Smallpox"
* The 2002-2004 Showtime cable television series "Jeremiah", based on the comic of the same name. In the year 2021, 15 years after a virus kills everyone over the age of puberty, the child survivors have grown up, living on the scraps of the old world.
* The 2005 Masters of Horror episode Dance Of The Dead directed by Tobe Hooper. It has a triple apocalyptic theme as it features a man made virus causing a zombie outbreak after World War 3.
* The 2008 BBC television series Survivors a remake of the 70's series of the same name

Novels

* The 1826 novel "The Last Man" by Mary Shelley
* The 1912 novella "The Scarlet Plague" by Jack London
* The 1949 novel "Earth Abides" by George R. Stewart
* The 1951 novel "The Day of the Triffids" by John Wyndham
* The 1954 novel "I Am Legend" by Richard Matheson, filmed as "The Last Man on Earth" (1964); "The Omega Man" (1971) and "I Am Legend" (2007)
* The 1954 novel "Some Will Not Die" by Algis Budrys
* The 1975 novel "The Girl Who Owned a City" by O.T. Nelson
* The 1977 novel "The Last Canadian (book" by William C. Heine. The planet is decimated by a virus, as told through the eyes of one survivor.
* The 1977 novel "Empty World (book" by John Christopher. A virus wipes out the weak and the old, until the planet is populated by young teenagers only.
* The 1978 novel "The Stand" by Stephen King
* The 1982 novel "The White Plague" by Frank Herbert
* The 1984 novel "Clay's Ark" by "Octavia Butler"
* The 1985 novel "Blood Music" and the 1983 novelette of the same name by Greg Bear
* The 1989 novel "Plague 99" by Jean Ure and its sequels Come Lucky April and Watchers at the Shrine
* The 1990 novel "The City, Not Long After" by Pat Murphy. In the wake of a devastating worldwide plague, a handful of artists transform the City of San Francisco, and fend off marauders with a touch of magic.
* The 1990 novel "A Gift Upon the Shore" by M.K. Wren
* The 1992 novel "The Children of Men" by P.D. James
* The 1993 novel "Doomsday Book" by Connie Willis
* The 1998 novel "Eternity Road" by Jack McDevitt. Set 1000 years after a civilization-destroying plague.
* The 1999 novel "The Transall Saga" by Gary Paulsen
* The 2001 novel "The Night of the Triffids" by Simon Clark (sequel to "The Day of the Triffids" by John Wyndham)
* The 2001 novel "Hole in the Sky" by Pete Hautman
* The 2002 novel "Year Zero" by Jeff Long
* The 2003 novel "Idlewild" by Nick Sagan
* The 2003 novel "Oryx and Crake" by Margaret Atwood
* The 2003 novel "Full Circle" By Michael Boyle
* The 2003 novel trilogy "Fire-Us"
* The 2004 novel "Cloud Atlas" by David Mitchell
* The 2004 novel "Day by Day Armageddon" by J.L. Bourne
* The 2004 novel "A Planet for the President" by Alistair Beaton
* The 2004 novel "White Devils" by Paul McAuley
* The 2004-2007 series "The Uglies Trilogy": "Uglies", "Pretties", "Specials", and the companion novel, "Extras" by Scott Westerfeld, which takes place in a future civilization that arose after our current civilization collapsed because of an engineered bacterium that attacked not people, but oil, changing its chemical composition so that it exploded on contact with oxygen (first explained on p. 345 of "Uglies")
* The 2005 novel " [http://greatauthorsonline.com/the_empire_of_texas The Empire of Texas] " by Rodger OlsenVerify credibility|date=September 2008
* The 2006 novel "Burning Stones" by Steven Mills
* The 2007 novel "" by Max Brooks
* The 2007 novel "Quentel" by Deric R Budendorf
* The 2007 novel "Dead Sea" by Brian Keene
* The 2007 novel "Plague Year" by Jeff Carlson (slated to be a trilogy)
* The Trilogy including "Monster Island" (2006), "Monster Nation" (2006), and "Monster Planet" (2007), by David Wellington
* The novelization of Resident Evil Extinction

Other

* The 1950 short story "The City" by Ray Bradbury
* The 1951 short story "The Visitor" ("The Illustrated Man") by Ray Bradbury
* The 1977 short story "Night Surf" by Stephen King. Collected in the book "Night Shift".
* The 1996-Present videogame series Resident Evil
* The 1998-present manga "" by Hiroki Endo
* The 1999 video game ""
* The 2000 game "Deus Ex" (in relation to the Gray Death)
* The 2001 role-play game "After The Bomb"
* The 2001-present webcomic "Wandering Ones" by Clint Hollingsworth
* The 2002-2008 comic series "" features a lone man & his monkey in a world populated only by women, series written by Brian K. Vaughan and published by Vertigo Comics
* The 2003-present comic series "The Walking Dead" follows a small group of people attempting to survive a zombie outbreak, series written by Robert Kirkman and published by Image Comics
* The 2004 game "". An organization called Delphi uses man-made viruses to destroy the human race and especially doctors.
* The 2005-2006 comic series "Marvel Zombies"

Astronomic impact (meteorites)

Films

* The 1979 film "Meteor"
* The 1984 film "Night of the Comet". When a comet passes too close to earth, two girls are left amid mutants.
* The 1995 film "Tank Girl". Loosely based on the comic by Jamie Hewlett
* The 2002 film "The Time Machine" We learn that the downfall of man is caused by the Moon breaking apart and bombarding Earth with rocks after extensive lunar mining.
* The 2007 film "Gangs of the Dead" Meteorites deposit spores that turn people into zombies. In the UK this film is known as "48 Weeks Later" in a cynical attempt to fool people into believing it to be a sequel to 28 Weeks Later, however it is entirely unrelated.
* The 2007 film "", a speculative documentary produced by the Discovery Channel which hypothesizes the effects on modern-day earth of a large comet impact.

Television

* The 1980-82 Animated Series "Thundarr the Barbarian"
* The 1994 Animated Series ""
* The 1997 TV movie "Asteroid"
* The 1999 TV drama "The Last Train" ("Cruel Earth" in Canada) British TV six part drama.
* The 1999 TV Series "Thunderstone"
* The 2006 TV series "Three Moons Over Milford"

Novels

* The 13th century novel "Theologus Autodidactus" by Ibn al-Nafis
* The 1932 novel "When Worlds Collide" by Philip Gordon Wylie and Edwin Balmer, and the 1951 and 2008 films of the same name.
* The 1951 novel "The Day of the Triffids," by John Wyndham on what is initially thought to be a blinding meteor strike, but later suggested to be a manmade satellite based weapon accidentally discharged and the (bioengineered?) Triffid plants.
* The 1977 novel "Lucifer's Hammer" by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle
* The 1991 novel "Survival 2000" by James McPhee
* The 1997 novel "Titan", by Stephen Baxter
* The 1998 novel "Moonfall", by Jack McDevitt
* The 2001-present book series Remnants, by K.A. Applegate
* 2002. The Peshawar Lancers
* The 2002 novel "The Visitor" by Sheri S. Tepper
* The 2004 novel "Earth, the New Frontier" by Adam Celaya
* The 2004 novel "Singularity" by Bill DeSmedt, in which it turns out that a presumed meteor that struck the earth is in fact a microscopic black hole that entered the earth's crust, and never exited.
* The 2005 novel "It's Only Temporary" by Eric Shapiro

Other

* The 1956 short story "A Pail of Air" by Fritz Leiber. A small family struggles to survive at near-zero temperatures after Earth is ripped from its solar orbit.
* The 1979-1980 anime series "Mobile Suit Gundam", talks of the impact of a massive space colony on Earth.
* The 1996-1997 anime series "After War Gundam X"
* The 2000 console game "", a Nintendo 64 game where the main character, Link, has three days to save the world of Temrina from its moon that has broken from orbit.
* The 2001 console game ", for PlayStation 2
* The Compilation of Final Fantasy VII, which includes video games, short stories, and animated features, revolves largely around the fate of a planet which is ravaged by the impact a giant meteor/asteroid, summoned by magic.
* iD Software's new project, Rage, is set after a meteor collision with the Earth.
* "" from Pipeworks, set in the post-apocalyptic earth in which earth has been destroyed by crystals.
* "" - With virtually all of humanity wiped out by a meteor strike, the game follows the exploits of an army of survivors, fighting bandit raiders and hostile armies across the planet's desolate remains.
* 2003 short story Shikari in Galveston.

Alien invasion

Films

* The 1953 film "The War of the Worlds", based on the novel of the same name.
* The 1956 film "Invasion of the Body Snatchers", based on the The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney
* The 1962 film "The Day of the Triffids", based on a John Wyndham novel of the same name (in the novel, the Triffids seem to have been bioengineered on Earth, while in the film they were aliens who arrived as spores in a meteor shower).
* The 1966 film "Daleks - Invasion Earth 2150 AD", based loosely on BBC Television series, but not part of the official canon
* The 1978 film " Invasion of the Body Snatchers", Another film based on the novel The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney
* The 1985 film "Lifeforce", based on the novel The Space Vampires by Colin Wilson
* The 1986 film "Maximum Overdrive" Initially people believe radiation from a passing comet is the cause, but it turns out that aliens are remotely control Earth machines (Trucks, cars and even vending machines) to kill the population before invading. Based on the Stephen King short story Trucks.
* The 1988 film "They Live"
* The 1990 film "I Come in Peace" (also known as "Dark Angel", directed by Craig R. Baxley
* The 1993 film " Body Snatchers", Another film based on the novel The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney
* The 1996 film "Independence Day"
* The 1996 film "Mars Attacks!", based on the trading card series "Mars Attacks" (1962)
* The 2000 film "Battlefield Earth", based on the novel of the same name by L. Ron Hubbard.
* The 2000 animated film "Titan A.E."
* The 2001 CGI animated film ""
* The 2002 film "Signs", directed by "M. Night Shyamalan"
* The 2005 film "Alien Apocalypse" produced by Sci Fi Channel
* The 2005 film "War of the Worlds" directed by Steven Spielberg, along with the independent 2005 productions "H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds" and "H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds", all based on the H. G. Wells novel.
* The 2007 film " The Invasion", Yet another film based on the novel The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney
* The 2007 film "Invasion of the Pod People" A cheap cash in remake of " Invasion of the Body Snatchers" made by The Asylum to cash in on the release of " The Invasion"
* The 2007 film "Transmorphers", A race of alien robots devastate the Earth.

Novels

* The 1898 novel "The War of the Worlds" by H. G. Wells (also in several other media)
* The 1951 novel "The Puppet Masters" by Robert A. Heinlein
* The 1953 novel "The Kraken Wakes" by John Wyndham
* The 1956 novel "The Genocides" by Thomas M. Disch. Alien flora is seeded on Earth, and quickly comes to dominate all landmasses, threatening Human extinction.
* The 1979-1992 book series "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" by Douglas Adams (also in several other media)
* The 1980 novel "Battlefield Earth" by L. Ron Hubbard and the Razzie award winning film based on the novel
* The 1980 novella "The Mist", by Stephen King
* The 1980 novel "The Visitors" by Clifford D. Simak
* The 1985 novel "Footfall" by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle
* The 1987 novel "The Forge of God" by Greg Bear
* The 1996 novel "The Killing Star" by Charles Pellegrino and George Zebrowski - aliens conduct a preemptive strike against humanity with relativistic missiles
* The 1996 novel "" edited by Kevin J. Anderson is an anthology of short stories set during the events of "The War of the Worlds" by H. G. Wells
* The 1997 novel "Shade's Children" by Garth Nix. "Overlords" destroy all human life over the age of 14.
* The 1998 novel "The Alien Years" by Robert Silverberg
* The 2005 novel "" by Douglas Niles is a retelling of the original "The War of the Worlds" story, but displaces the events to 2005. It is not a sequel, rather it is an update.
* The "Eight Worlds" series, by John Varley
* The "Outlanders" series by Mark Ellis aka James Axler
* "The Tripods" series by John Christopher
* The 2003-2007 "Legacy Trilogy" by Ian Douglas

Television

* The 1964 "Doctor Who" serial "The Dalek Invasion of Earth"
* The 1966 television series "The Invaders" Created by Quinn Martin and Larry Cohen
* The 1970 television series "UFO" Gerry Anderson Production
* The 1981 series "The Day of the Triffids", an adaptation of the book by John Wyndham
* The 1983-1985 television series "V"
* The 1984-1985 series "The Tripods", an adaptation of the first two books in the trilogy by John Christopher
* The 1986 series "Tomes & Talismans
* The 1988-1990 series "" The second season of this television spin-off from the 1953 movie was set after a successful alien invasion.
*The 2005 "Doctor Who" episodes "Army of Ghosts" and "Doomsday" were Cybermen and Daleks fight for control over humans and Cybermen begin converting Humans into Cybermen
* The 2006 "Doctor Who" episodes "The Sound of Drums" and "Last of the Time Lords" where Humans from the future, lead by The Master try to enslave Humans to launch an attack on the rest of the Universe.

Other

* The 1938 radio play "The War of the Worlds", Directed and narrated by Orson Welles
* The 1982-1983 anime series "The Super Dimension Fortress Macross" and its sequels (rewritten and combined with "The Super Dimension Cavalry Southern Cross" and "Genesis Climber Mospeada" to create "Robotech', which dealt similarly with post-apocalyptic themes)
* The 1983-1984 anime series "Genesis Climber Mospeada" (see also "Robotech")
* The 1986-1989 manga "Outlanders", by Johji Manabe.
* The 1988 computer game "Manhunter"
* The 1995 console game "Chrono Trigger", where modern civilization is at risk of being destroyed by an alien parasite in 1999 AD.
* The 1997 computer game "" by MicroProse, third in the X-COM series of games.
* The 1998 computer game "Half-Life" and its sequel
* The 1998 OVA Getter Robo Armageddon, where a combination of a nuclear missile and amorphous alien Invaders results in a war with the fate of humanity at stake.
* The 1999 console game "Chrono Cross", where in alternate time lines modern civilization was destroyed by an alien parasite in 1999 AD.
* The 2003 computer game "" and it's sequels & by Altar Games
* The 2005 console game "Destroy All Humans!", in which the player controls a Furon alien in an attempt to overthrow mankind.
*2005-2006 Anime series "Eureka Seven " and its video games are set 10,000 years after humans had to leave the earth due to a Coralian appearing in Africa. In the current timeline, the remnants of humanity are now settled on a planet they refer to as the "Promised Land".
* The 2006 video game Gears of War, which portrays humans fighting a losing war against alien monsters that have emerged from underground.
* The 2006 Game Boy Advance game Mother 3, where in the final chapter, the protagonists find out the island they live on is a post-apocalyptic utopia that is being contaminated by Porky Minch (From the previous game).
* The 2007 computer game . In the midst of the Third Tiberium War, an alien faction known as the Scrin lands on Earth seeking the alien mineral Tiberium for themselves. The prequels suggest the apocalypse was actually caused by humans, though.
* The Halo video game series - An alien alliance called the Covenant begin attacking human colonies in 2525. By 2552, almost all of the human colonies are destroyed and the Covenant are attacking Earth.
* In an alien species known as the chimera have almost wiped out the human race. The game focuses on taking a last stand in Britain.

Ecological catastrophe

Films

* The 1960 film "The Last Woman on Earth" by Roger Corman, where the Earth's oxygen levels drop suddenly, suffocating most life–survivors in an oxygen-producing jungle speculate that this happened because of "a bigger and better bomb" but the reasons are not made clear.
* The 1960 film "Beyond the Time Barrier" X-plane arrives in future after solar radiation catastrophe
* The 1961 film "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea", where the Van Allen belt catches on fire.
* The 1964 film "The Day the Earth Caught Fire" Earth starts hurtling toward sun as a result of man's nuclear testing
* The 1970 film "No Blade of Grass based on the novel The Death of Grass
* The 1972 film "Silent Running" directed by Douglas Trumbull
* The 1974 film "Prophecies of Nostradamus"
* The 1975 film "Logan's Run", in which a society chased into domes by an ecological disaster holds a ceremonial death ritual for all citizens who reach the age of 30 to control the population. A man who formerly helped control the population flees the domed city to avoid his own ceremony.
* The 1979 film "Quintet" directed by Robert Altman
* The 1986 film "Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind" by Hayao Miyazaki based on the manga of the same name
* The 1986 film "Solarbabies" (AKA Solarwarriors)
* The 1989 film "Millennium"
* The 1989 film "Slipstream", by Steven Lisberger
* The 1990 film "Mindwarp It takes place in the year 2037, after the loss of the ozone layer has left most of the planet a desolate wasteland scattered with highly radioactive Death Zones.
* The 1990 film "Omega Cop" After an environmental holocaust a lone cop battles a gang of rampaging marauders.
* The 1993 film "The Last Border - Viimeisellä Rajalla" by Mika Kaurismäki. One man's quest for revenge in a world where toxic waste has driven the remains of civilization into the Arctic Circle.
* The 1995 film "Waterworld" starring Kevin Costner
* The 2002 film "Jason X", the tenth "Friday the 13th" film, Earth became a polluted wasteland by 2455. Humanity left Earth an colonized a planet designated as Earth 2.
* The 2003 film "Dragon Head" Based on the Manga of the same name.
* The 2003 film "It's All About Love" written, directed and produced by Thomas Vinterberg
* The 2004 film "The Day After Tomorrow" written, directed and produced by Roland Emmerich. Based in part on the novel "The Coming Global Superstorm" by Art Bell & Whitley Strieber
* The 2005 film "Serenity" and 2002-2003 television show "Firefly" by Joss Whedon, in which the Earth's resources and biosphere get used up prompting mass exodus for the stars.
* The 2006 film The World Sinks Except Japan, a parody of Japan Sinks. All the land on earth sinks into the ocean, with Japan being the last to go. The sinking has something to do with tectonic plates.
* The 2008 film "The Happening" by M. Night Shyamalan depicts an unknown deadly neurotoxin.
* The 2008 film "WALL-E" Earth is abandoned after becoming too polluted to sustain life. A cute droid is sent in to clean up.
* The 2009 (TBA) film "Wynter Dark", set 800 years in the future after the world is devastated by an ice age [ [http://www.quietearth.us/articles/2008/07/10/20th-Century-Fox-doing-ice-age-PA-flick-Wynter-Dark 20th Century Fox doing ice age PA flick Wynter Dark ] ]
* The 2009 short film "The Third Garden"
* The 2009 film "2012" directed by Roland Emmerich

Novels

* The 13th century novel "Theologus Autodidactus" by Ibn al-Nafis
* The 1901 novel "The Purple Cloud" by M.P. Shiel, in which a volcanic eruption flood the world with cyanide gas.
* The 1946 novel "Mr. Adam" by Pat Frank depicts a world in which a nuclear power plant explosion renders the entire male population infertile.
* The 1956 novel "The Death of Grass" by John Christopher, which was made into the film "No Blade of Grass", in which a virus that destroys plants causes massive famine and the breakdown of society
* The 1961 novel "The Wind from Nowhere" by J.G. Ballard - First published novel. World destroyed by increasingly powerful winds
* The 1962 novel "Hothouse" by Brian Aldiss, which presents a dying Earth where vegetation dominates and animal life is all but extinct. Originally published in the United States in abridged form as "The Long, Hot Afternoon of Earth."
* The 1962 novel "The Drowned World" by J.G. Ballard Climate change causes flooding.
* The 1962 novel "The World in Winter (UK)/The Long Winter (US)" by John Christopher in which a decrease in radiation from the sun causes a new ice age.
* The 1963 novel "Cat's Cradle" by Kurt Vonnegut, in which all the water on Earth freezes
* The 1964 novel "The Drought" by J.G. Ballard A super drought evaporates all water on earth.
* The 1964 novel "Greybeard" by Brian Aldiss, in which the human race becomes sterile
* The 1965 novel "A Wrinkle in the Skin (The Ragged Edge(US))" -John Christopher - Civilization destroyed by massive world-wide earthquakes
* The 1966 novel "The Crystal World" by J.G. Ballard Jungle in Africa starts to crystallize all life and expands outward
* The 1966 novel "Make Room! Make Room!" by Harry Harrison, which was made into a 1973 film "Soylent Green" directed by Richard Fleischer, showing a world where humanity had become massively overpopulated.
* The 1969 novel "The Ice Schooner" by Michael Moorcock which is set in a new ice age on earth
* The 1972 novel "The Sheep Look Up" by John Brunner, in which the United States is overwhelmed by environmental irresponsibility and authoritarianism.
* The 1973 novel "The Bridge" by D. Keith Mano presents a world dominated by a global environmental fascism, where the government ultimately promotes the extinction of the human race by enforced mass suicide, so as to ‘save’ the environment.
* The 1976 novel "The HAB Theory" by Allan W. Eckert, in which the stability of the Earth comes into question.
* The 1981 novel "The Quiet Earth" written by Craig Harrison and the film adaption by the same name
* The 1983 novel "The Last Gasp" by Trevor Hoyle
* The 1984 novel "In the Drift" by Michael Swanwick (also an alternate history story), in which the 1979 Three Mile Island reactor incident resulted in a very large release of radioactivity, devastating the Northeastern U.S.
* The 1985 novel "The Handmaid's Tale", by Margaret Atwood, in which the dystopia is fueled by rampant infertility caused by pollution.
* The 1986 novel "Nature's End" by Whitley Strieber and James Kunetka.
* The 1991 novel "Fallen Angels" by Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and Michael Flynn, in which space-based civilization exists despite the government's wishes during an ice age.
* The 1993 novel "The Fifth Sacred Thing" by Starhawk
* The 1993 novel "Deus X" by Norman Spinrad, the results of global warming
* The 1993 novel "This Other Eden" by Ben Elton in which the earths population is forced to live in Biodomes for 50 years while the environment recovers from mankind's actions.
* The 1995 novel "Mother of Storms" by John Barnes - where a tactical nuclear strike in the North Pacific releases massive amounts of methane, spawning world-wide super hurricanes.
* The 1995 novel "Ill Wind (novel)" by Kevin J. Anderson and Doug Beason in which a microbe consumes all materials based on petroleum.
* The 1998 novel "Aftermath" by Charles Sheffield, in which Alpha Centauri goes supernova and causes cataclysmic climate change
* The 1998 novel "Dust" by Charles Pellegrino, in which all the insect species on Earth die out, and the ecology crashes as a result
* The 1999 novel "The Rift" by Walter Jon Williams.
* The 2003 novel "Oryx and Crake" by Margaret Atwood
* The 2003 novel "Clade" by Mark Budz
* The 2003 novel "The Secret Under My Skin" by Janet Mcnaughton, set in a period following a technocaust, when scientists were blamed for environmental disasters and taken to concentration camps.
* The 2004 novel "Crache" by Mark Budz
* The 2004 novel "The Snow" by Adam Roberts, in which the world is buried under kilometres of unnatural snow.
* The 2006 novel "Small-Minded Giants" by Oisín McGann
* The 2006 novel "Return (novel)" by Clayton J Elliott - in which ecological and social unrest leave a world fighting to find a new relationship to the earth. An anti-technology novel
* The novels "Children of Morrow" and "Treasures of Morrow" by H. M. Hoover, set in California several centuries after pollution all but wiped out the human race
* The novel trilogy "Snowfall" by "Mitchell Smith" (Snowfall, Kingdom River, and Moonrise) in which North America has retreated into hunter-gatherer societies and military kingdoms some 500 years after an apocalyptic ice age.
* The novels "Mara and Dann", "" by Doris Lessing Set in a future ice age. Other Lessing novels like "Memoirs of a Survivor" and "Shikasta" deal with apocalyptic themes.

Television

* The 1976-1979 TV series "Ark II" - pollution devastates humanity
* The 1993 animated series "Cadillacs and Dinosaurs"
* The 2003 television movie "Encrypt"
* The 2004 television movie "" where Chicago is suffering from a series of tornadoes from numerous changes occurring in the climate. This series was followed in 2005 by
* The 2004 mini series "10.5" and its 2006 follow up In which a series of Earthquakes tears America apart, separating the USA from Canada.
* The 2006 Anime series "Innocent Venus" Set after the world population and economy is devastated by simultaneous hyper-hurricanes.
* The Captain Planet two-parter "Two Futures", in which the character Wheeler gets a glimpse of what could happen if damage to the environment was allowed to continue unchecked
* The 2008 "Doctor Who" episode "The Poison Sky"

Other

* The 1952 short story "The Birds" by Daphne du Maurier, made into the 1963 film "The Birds" by Alfred Hitchcock - in which birds begin launching spontaneous mass attacks against mankind
* The 1973 collection of short stories "Flight of the Horse" by Larry Niven
* The 1977 short story "The Screwfly Solution" tells the tale of a virus which turns males into female-hating psychopaths when sexually aroused.
* The 1986 short story "The End of the Whole Mess" by Stephen King in which a distillate of a Texas aquifer, originally harvested and distributed worldwide to reduce human propensity for violence--curses humanity with premature Alzheimer's disease and senility.
* The 1993 console game "Secret of Mana" takes place long after a time of environmental collapse that destroyed the world's older advanced civilizations.
* The 1994 console game "Final Fantasy VI" (named "Final Fantasy III" during initial American launch of the game) features a plot twist in where villain Kefka moves magical statues out of their intended alignment, which in turn causes the balanced fictional world to fall into ruin (and for Kefka to become its new god while protected by the powers of the same statues).
* The 1994-2006 Japanese manga series Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō, set in a peaceful post-cataclysmic Japan, after an untold environmental disaster.
* The 1998-1999 anime series "Cowboy Bebop" in which a man made disaster has caused earth's moon to fragment, resulting in a constant rain of meteor strikes on the planet and forcing humanity to move out into the solar system.
* The 2002 video game "", in which a flood has decimated the fictional world of Hyrule.
* The 2002-2003 anime series "Overman King Gainer", which depicts humanity living in domes after an ecological disaster.
* The 2005 short story "The Garden Where My Rains Grows" by Brian Keene, set in a post-apocalyptic world where it started raining one day and never stopped.
* The 2005-2006 anime series "" where an earthquake triggers a series of worldwide natural disasters that devastate Planet Zi.
* The 2005-present radio drama "Nebulous" by Graham Duff, in which much of the world was destroyed by an event known as "the Withering".
* The 2006 anime series "Ergo Proxy" by the Japanese production company Manglobe, in which an undefined global ecological disaster has decimated the surface of the Earth, and the small remaining human population lives in isolated, city-state dome complexes.
* The 2006 PC game, "Battlefield 2142", in which a new ice age renders most of the Northern Hemisphere uninhabitable. Wars are fought over the remaining habitable land.
* The "" of games in which a radioactive, self-replicating alien crystal known as Tiberium has rendered most of the Earth's surface uninhabitable.
* The game "Dark Sun" from TSR, Inc.
* The Game ""

Cybernetic revolt (apocalyptic wars between humans and technology)

Literature

* The 1872 novel "Erewhon"'s section The Book of Machines
* The 1909 short story "The Machine Stops" by E. M. Forster (emphasizing machinery instead of computers)
* The 1919 story "The Mind Machine" by Michael Williams
* The 1921 play "R.U.R." by Karel Čapek, notable for coining the term ".
* The 1926 story "The Metal Giants" by Edmond Hamilton
* The 1929 story "Automata" by S. Fowler Wright
* The 1931 short story "" by Fletcher Pratt
* The 1934 short story Rex by Harl Vincent
* The 1935 short story Nightmare Number Three by Stephen Vincent Benet
* The 1947 short story "With Folded Hands" by Jack Williamson
* The 1948 short story "The Brain" by Alexander Blade
* The 1951 "The Last Revolution" short story by Lord Dunsany
* The 1954 short story "Slaves To The Metal Horde" by Milton Lesser
* The 1954 short story "Answer" by Fredric Brown
* The 1963 comic books series "Magnus, Robot Fighter" by Gold Key Comics
* The 1966 novel "Colossus" by Dennis Feltham Jones
* The 1967–2005 "Berserker" series by Fred Saberhagen
* The 1967 short story "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" by Harlan Ellison
* The 1967 The Cyberiad is a series of short stories by Stanisław Lem
* The 1968 novel "The God Machine" by Martin Caidin
* The 1969 novel Plan for Conquest by A.A. Glynn
* The 1971 "Moderan" series by David R. Bunch
* The 1972 novel "Night of the Robots" (aka Regiments of Night) by Brian N. Ball
* The 1981 novel "Robot Revolt" by Nicholas Fisk
* The 1985 novel "The Adolescence of P-1" by Thomas J. Ryan
* The 1989 short story "La Rebelión de los Robots" in Spanish by Alberto I. Balcells
* The 1993 novel "Computer One" by Warwick Collins
* The 1994 novel "The Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect" by Roger Williams
* The 1995 Comics "" Great Droid Revolution
* The 1996 short story from Star Wars saga "" by Kevin Anderson
* The 1977–1996 "Galaxy Express 999" manga series
* The 2003 "Robota" an illustrated book by Doug Chiang and Orson Scott Card
* The 2003–2004 "Legends Of Dune trilogy" (part of the "Dune universe")
* The 2003 "The Matrix" comic books
* The 2004 manga Deus Vitaea series created by Takuya Fujima
* The 2005 book "How to Survive a Robot Uprising" a semi-satirical book by Daniel Wilson
* The 2005–2007 "Lego Exo-Force" comics and books

Cinema & TV

* The film "Alphaville, une étrange aventure de Lemmy Caution" by Jean-Luc Godard
* The film "I, Robot" starring Will Smith. Title and some details taken from short stories by Isaac Asimov
* The film "" from the novel by Dennis Feltham Jones
* "The Matrix" series of films, especially "The Second Renaissance".
* "The Terminator" series of films based on the idea of machines killing all humans as they pose a threat to the survival of the machines. (Humans trying to shut down Skynet)
* "Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future", a television series that ran for one season.
* Cybermen, a cyber race in the British television series "Doctor Who"
* "Omega Doom" a 1996 film
* "" a 1992 film
* "Screamers" a 1995 film
* "Gunhed" or "Ganheddo" a 1989 film
* The Replicators from "Stargate SG-1"
* "Lego Exo-Force" a 2006 Television series
* The D-Reaper from "Digimon Tamers"
* "Casshan", a 1973 anime series and 1993 OVA revision.
* a 2001 3D-CG Chinese animated TV series called "Zentrix"
* "Galaxy Express 999" anime series, ovas and movie
* "The Human Operators" an episode of the new "The Outer Limits" TV series
* "Resurrection" an episode of the new "The Outer Limits" TV series
* "Meet the Robinsons", the 'Helping Hats'
* "Battlestar Galactica"
* "" a 1985 animated movie
* "Android Apocalypse" a 2006 scifi tv film
* WOTAN the controlling computer in the Doctor Who 1966 series episode "The War Machines"
* "" a 2003 computer animated movie based on the PlayStation video game Galerians
* "" a short-lived 1995 TV science fiction series, the 'AI War'
* "Moontrap" a 1989 science fiction film

Gaming

*"Earthsiege" and sequels, from Sierra Entertainment.
*"Neuroshima", the Polish role-playing game from Portal Publishing.
*"I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" from Cyberdreams
*"GURPS Reign of Steel" a setting for the GURPS role playing system.
*"Mega Man X series", a video game series created by Capcom and Keiji Inafune.
*""'s expansion pack "Firestorm" from Westwood Studios.
*"Deus Ex", which features, as part of its plot, a conflict between a Friendly AI and a non-friendly one
*"System Shock" by Looking Glass Technologies and its sequel "System Shock 2", which also incorporates elements from Alien invasion theory.
* "Galerians" a PlayStation video game developed by Polygon Magic
* "Descent 3" a PC game developed by Outrage Entertainment, which explains that mostly mining robots attacked by an unknown virus and now attacking people.
* the Choose Your Own Adventure book "The Computer Takeover" by Edward Packard
* "The Mechanoid Invasion" (and its source books, supplements and sequels) was the first role-playing game from Palladium Books, conceived and written by Kevin Siembieda.
* "Splicers" a role-playing game set in the midst of a war between humans and a world-wide computer intelligence.
* "Gunlok" is a squad based action adventure computer game developed by Rebellion.
* "" is a Japanese post-apocalyptic visual novel and video game.
* "" is the sequel to KKnD, as part of its plot, Series 9 are advanced farming robots that have taken it unto themselves to destroy all life.
* "" as part of its plot, the AI Calculator a fusion of computers and human brains sent army of robots to attack the world.
* "Too Human" a video game currently under development by Canadian developer Silicon Knights.
* "Red Alarm" a game for the Nintendo Virtual Boy video game console.
* "Vertical Force" a vertical shoot-em-up scroller game, with two layers for Nintendo's Virtual Boy video game system.
* "RayForce", a Japanese scrolling shooter arcade game.
** "RayCrisis", a prequel to "RayForce".

Music

*The Flight of the Conchords song "Humans Are Dead"
*the Hazel O'Connor song "The Eighth Day"
*The 1998 Fear Factory album Obsolete

The decline and fall of the human race

* The novel "At Winter's End" (1988) by Robert Silverberg
* The poem "Bedtime Story" from "Collected Poems 1958 – 1970" by George Macbeth
* Gene Wolfe's "The Book of the New Sun" series
* The novel "The Camp of the Saints" (1973) by Jean Raspail.
* The novel "The Bridge" (1973) by D. Keith Mano presents a world dominated by a global environmental fascism, where the government ultimately promotes the extinction of the human race by enforced mass suicide, so as to ‘save’ the environment.
* Arthur C. Clarke's "Childhood's End"
* The novel "City" (1952) by Clifford D. Simak
* "Friday (novel)" by Robert A. Heinlein, which portrays human society on a future Earth as slipping into a gradual, but inevitable, collapse.
* "Galápagos" by Kurt Vonnegut. After an ambiguous eradication of the human species, several people on a cruise to the Galápagos Islands get stranded there. Much to the dismay of the only male left, the women of the island continue the human species for thousands of years where they evolve into seal-like creatures.
* "Planet of the Apes" by Pierre Boulle
* The latter part of H. G. Wells' "The Time Machine"
* The 1974 John Boorman film "Zardoz"
* The Japanese manga Biomega, NOiSE, Blame! and Net Sphere Engineer by Tsutomu Nihei
* The Japanese manga and anime The Big O, where humans apparently suffered mass amnesia 40 years prior and are afraid to leave their city, Paradigm. It is a sort of mecha/apocalypse subclass of its own; the protagonist has to battle mechanical beings and other robots who are trying to destroy the remnants of the human race.
* The Cartoon Network/Adult Swim animated parody of the barbarian/post-apocalyptic genres, Korgoth of Barbaria
* The Dark Tower Series by Stephen King
* The 1979 Australian movie "Mad Max" depicts a declining civilization. The sequel suggests that peak oil is the cause.
* Michael Haneke's film Le Temps du Loup (The Time of the Wolf), following a family through the (French?) country side after an undefined catastrophic collapse of civilization.
* The movie A.I. depicts human extinction after 2000 years.
* The manga/anime series Wolf's Rain takes place in a post-apocalyptic world where constant conflicts between nobles leaves whole parts of the earth uninhabited, cities in ruins, and technology rare. Only the nobles possess futuristic ships, and the richest have domed cities where the debilitated earth can still support life. A second apocalypse ends the series, with a presumable renewing of the planet.
* The song "In the Year 2525" by Zager and Evans, which describes, stage by stage, the decline of the human race. Covers the 26th, 36th, 46th, 56th, 66th, 76th, 86th and 96th centuries.
* The television series "The Future Is Wild", which uses computer animation to simulate the sort of creatures that may evolve from present-day animals. In the world depicted in the series, the human race either has become extinct or has left Earth. The reason is not given.
* The short story "To Serve The Master" By Philip K. Dick
* The 2006 film "Children of Men", where the human race has become infertile.
* The 1984 film "" In 1990 the Bronx is declared a No Mans Land after a catastrophic uprising.
* The 1997 film "The End of Evangelion", in which all humankind are reverted to a "primordial soup" and merged into a single consummate being.
* The "The House of the Dead" series of video games. Scientist Dr. Curien finds a way to reanimate the dead, though not without disastrous results. Later in the series' timeline, Caleb Goldman uses the undead in his mission to destroy the human race and protect the Earth from further destruction by humans.
* The 2006 novel "Return" by Clayton J Elliott - in which ecological and social unrest leave a world fighting to find a new relationship to the earth. An anti-technology novel.
* The 2007 film "Tooth and Nail" Post-apocalyptic movie where a group of survivors, called Foragers, take cover in an old abandoned hospital where the group attempt to re build society. All we know of the apocalypse is that man "Ran out of gas", but not in the sense of oil, just that our time was up.

Monsters and biologically altered humans

* The 1951 novel "The Day of the Triffids" by John Wyndham's, on a blinding meteor strike and the (bioengineered?) Triffid plants.
* Film "Them!" - desert nuclear tests create mutated gigantic ants - 1954
* The last two novels of James Herberts "Rats Quadrilogy" show how after a nuclear war, humanity is overthrown by mutated Giant Black Rats.
* The 1954 novel "I Am Legend" by Richard Matheson, filmed as "The Last Man on Earth" (1964), "The Omega Man" (1971) and "I Am Legend" (2007)
* The films "Night of the Living Dead" (1968), "Dawn of the Dead" (1978), "Day of the Dead" (1985), "Land of the Dead" (2005), and "Diary of the Dead" (2008) by George Romero.
* "The Mist" by Stephen King, 1980 short story. Now a movie The Mist (2008)
* The comic series "Marvel Zombies"
* The Walking Dead is a comic chronicling the story of survivors in a world overrun by zombies.
* The 2002 film "28 Days Later", and its 2007 sequel "28 Weeks Later"
* The 2002 film "Reign of Fire", in which dragons take over
* The 2004 film version of "Dawn of the Dead"
* 2005. Dance Of The Dead is an episode of Masters of Horror directed by Tobe Hooper. It has a triple apocalyptic theme as it features a man made virus causing a zombie outbreak after World War 3.
* The 2005 anime series "Trinity Blood" involving a war between humans and vampires.
* The 2006 novel "Cell" by Stephen King
* The 2006 film "The Quick and the Undead
* The 2006 TV Series "Heroes" Features scenes from an apocalyptic New York after Peter Petrelli exploded. However this future is averted thanks to a time traveling character named Hiro.
* The 2006 book "" by Max Brooks
* The Trilogy including "Monster Island" (2006), "Monster Nation" (2006), and "Monster Planet" (2007), by David Wellington
* The 2006 film "The Zombie Diaries", a British made movie in which a virus creates a plague of zombies. This film was actually made and completed before George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead
* The 2007 film "". In this third chapter of the game-based movie, a virus infects most of the Earth's population, turning them into zombies. The few survivors move away in armored groups, or hide underground.
* The 2007 anime series "Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann", in which cloned "Beastmen" fight an apocalyptic battle with humanity.
* The 2007 film "Gangs of the Dead" Meteorites deposit spores that turn people into zombies. In the UK this film is known as "48 Weeks Later" in a cynical attempt to fool people into believing it to be a sequel to 28 Weeks Later, however it is entirely unrelated.
* The 2008 film "A Numbers Game" "Zombies have taken over the outside world. A group of people holed up in a shelter have eaten their last bit of food and they know that just across the street lies a fully stocked corner grocery. The group plays a numbers game to decide who is it, but this is a game no one wants to win."
* The 2008 TV series "Dead Set in which a zombie outbreak occurs. Centered around the real television show Big Brother UK

After the fall of space-based civilization

* "Against the Fall of Night" by Arthur C. Clarke
* Gene Roddenberry's "Andromeda" series
* Yukito Kishiro's "Battle Angel Alita"
* "The City and the Stars" by Arthur C. Clarke
* "The Dragon Masters", by Jack Vance
* The final two novels in Frank Herbert's "Dune" series, set after the disintegration of the Padishah Empire into many smaller factions.
* Dan Simmons's "Endymion" & "The Rise of Endymion"
* Few stories of "Ray Bradbury" "Martian Chronicles" mention catastrophe on earth
* "The Mote in God's Eye by Niven & Pournelle
* Yasuhiro Nightow's "Trigun"
* The PlayStation video game "Xenogears"
* Red Dwarf, the British Science-Fiction Sitcom
* "Star Man's Son 2250 A.D." by Andre Norton
* "Transfusion" by Chad Oliver
* "Warhammer 40,000" tabletop, card and computer games are set in a far future after the fall of the Eldar, where mankind wars amongst many other races.
* Larry Niven's Ringworld, an expedition from earth to find a futuristic planet, a ring surrounding a star, results in the members finding that a meteor puncture in the ring's floor and power failure caused the cities to break apart and civilization to collapse.
* The "Last Legionary" series by Douglas Hill, in which a lone soldier fights to bring down the organisation which unleashed a deadly radiation against his planet, killing all his people and rendering the planet uninhabitable.
*The computer game Supreme Commander is set at the end of a thousand year long war, called the infinite war, between two separate factions of humans and a race of cyborgs.
* "Homeworld"- a small human civilization on the desert planet of Kharak on the far side of the Milky Way Galaxy is brought to the brink of extinction for violating a forgotten 5000-year old treaty forbidding them from developing hyperspace technology. The survivors, however, are fortunate to have the use of the recently-completed Mothership- a large colony vessel meant to take them back to their ancient and forgotten homeworld near the center of the galaxy, Hiigara. The game was succeeded by sequels "" and "Homeworld 2".
* "Space Viking" by H. Beam Piper.

The Sun's expansion

* The 1895 novel "The Time Machine". Towards the end of the book The Time Traveler witnesses the Suns expansion, causing the death of all life on Earth.
* The 1912 novel "The Night Land" by William Hope Hodgson, in which the Sun burns out and the last of humanity is sheltered in an arcology from the hostile environment and the creatures adapted for it.
* The 1971 short story "Inconstant Moon" by Larry Niven.
* The 1974 film "Where Have All The People Gone?" A solar flare destroys virtually all of the human population. One family has survived, and endeavours to travel across America to their family home.
* The 1976 novel "A World Out of Time" by Larry Niven
* The 1981 novel "The Quiet Earth" by Craig Harrison Adapted into the 1985 movie of the same name.
* The episode "The Deconstruction of Falling Stars", of J. Michael Straczynski's "Babylon 5"
* The episode "The End of the World", of the television series "Doctor Who"
* The novel "Songs of Distant Earth" by Arthur C. Clarke in which the last survivors of Earth arrive at a distant colony unexpectedly.

* The comic series "Just a Pilgrim" by Garth Ennis
* The video game "Tetris Worlds"
* The poem "Darkness (poem)" by Lord Byron describes the end of life on earth after the sun's extinction.
* The movie "Last Night (film)" by Don McKellar, which follows the lives of several individuals as they cope with their final six hours on Earth before the apparent incineration of the Earth by the sun (the cause of the apocalypse is never directly stated).
* The short story "Finis" by Frank Lillie Pollock where a second sun's light incinerates the Earth.
* The 2007 movie, "Sunshine", directed by Danny Boyle. The film follows a spaceship crew in the year 2057 who are tasked with reigniting Earth's dying sun.

Religious and supernatural apocalypse (Eschatological fiction)

* The 1908 novel "Lord of the World" by Robert Hugh Benson.
* The 1953 short story "The Nine Billion Names of God" by Arthur C. Clarke, taken from the short story collection of the same name.
* The evangelical Christian film series 1972 "A Thief in the Night", sometimes referred to as the "Mark IV" films.
* A series of films made in the 1990s and 2000s by Cloud Ten Pictures
* The young adult book series "Countdown" by Daniel Parker, in which a demon wipes out the entire human population save for teenagers.
* The "" role-playing game, in which the Earth is reduced to a haunted, radioactive wasteland as a result of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse ravaging the planet shortly after an eldritch nuclear war.
* "The End of the Age", by Pat Robertson
* The book and film series "Left Behind", concerning the Rapture.
* The novels "Black Easter" and "The Day After Judgment" by James Blish, in which a black magician brings about the end of the world by releasing all the demons from Hell.
* The Power of Five series by Anthony Horowitz
* 1995. The sci-fi anime "Neon Genesis Evangelion" in which mankind's unearthing of a being known as Adam brings about Second Impact, a catastrophic shockwave which destroys Antarctica and subsequently leads to the extinction of thousands of organisms, the destruction of much of the civilized world, and the deaths of billions. Millions more die from the social and economic troubles which follow this impact and the ensuing wars.
* 2007-2008 . "Rebuild of Evangelion"- remake of the anime series. The first of the four films, " [Evangelion: 1.0 You Are (Not) Alone|Evangelion: 1.0- You are [Not] Alone] ", debuted in this year, with the second part, "2.0- Division", debuting in 2008.
* The film "Prince of Darkness", directed by John Carpenter, in which all Hell breaks loose.
* The film "The Rapture" (1991)
* The 1989 novel "The Dead", by Mark E. Rogers. Combines themes of the rapture and zombies.
* The zombie novels "The Rising" and its sequel "City of the Dead" by Brian Keene. Rather than the zombies being an infection, as in most zombie fiction; these zombies are reanimated by demonic entities, the sisquisim, from the Old Testament. Keene has also written "Conqueror Worms" which is a very Lovecraftian tale of one of the last survivors on earth.
* The novel "Shade's Children" by Garth Nix, in which a group of extradimensional beings invade earth and cause all human adults to vanish.
* The manga and subsequent anime movies and TV series "Silent Möbius" by Kia Asamiya. The story is set in a Blade Runner-style world which has been invaded by demonic beings.
* The novel "The Taking", by Dean Koontz in which a malevolent demonic force kills off the majority of the human race.
* "The Third Millennium" (1995) and "The Fourth Mellennium" (1996), by Paul Meier
* The "Tribe 8" role-playing game, in which sadistic demons invade (and conquer) the Earth.
* The Clamp anime "X/1999" in which the seven Dragons of Heaven battle the Dragons of Earth to save the world.
* "" – computer game released in 2007, where demons and humans are in constant struggle on earth.
* The "Doom" series of computer games, in which demons invade a human base on Phobos (changed to Mars in "Doom 3") and then move on to Earth.
* The 2006 film "Pulse" & it's 2009 sequel
* "The Shadow of Yesterday" role-playing game, in which the unification of all people in a fantasy world under a single, supernatural language results in the destruction of a world by what is presumed to be an asteroid that becomes that world's new moon, one that eclipses the sun for a week out of each month.

ocial or economic collapse

*The 1951 novel "Foundation" by Isaac Asimov. Mathematician Hari Seldon foresees the fall of the Galactic Empire, which encompasses the entire Milky Way.
*The 1954 short story "The Last of the Masters" by Philip K. Dick. 200 years after a global anarchist revolution, society has stagnated due to the loss of scientific knowledge during the revolt. Elsewhere, the last government, a highly centralized and efficient society, is in hiding from The Anarchist League, a global militia preventing the recreation of any government.
*The 1957 novel "Atlas Shrugged" by Ayn Rand. American society slowly collapses after the country's leading industrialists mysteriously disappear.
*The 1977 film Jubilee directed by Derek Jarman
*The 1988 Games Workshop RPG Dark Future.
*The 1990 novel "Wolf and Iron" by Gordon R. Dickson. A man and a wolf band together to survive in an America devastated by financial collapse.
*The video game "". After total global economic collapse (an event known simply as 'The Collapse'), all religion is collected into one, which is in conflict with the new world order. Throughout the game, the player can choose to be on either side, affecting the game's outcome.
*The 1998 novel "Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse" by James Wesley Rawles (1998) is an apocalyptic survivalist novel about a total socio-economic collapse.
*The 2005 film "Apocalypse and the Beauty Queen" The world crashed, not with a scream, but just a whimper. The failure of the national power grid caused the government to crumble.
*The 2006 film "Puzzlehead" Set in what looks like Brooklyn, "after the decline", the streets are empty and there seems to be constant random killings.
* The 2006 novel "Return" by Clayton J Elliott - in which ecological and social unrest leave a world fighting to find a new relationship to the earth. An anti-technology novel
*The 2008 novel "World Made By Hand" by James Kunstler explores life in an agrarian village in upstate New York after America collapses under the combined trauma of plague, peak oil, global warming, and nuclear terrorism.
* The 2008 Doctor Who episode Turn Left in which we glimpse an apocalyptic alternative future in which British society has collapsed into anarchy.

Unspecified phenomena

* The films "Blade Runner" (1982) and "The Fifth Element" (1997) both deal with distopian societies that appear to be suffering from rampant poverty, overpopulation, socio-political and climatological upheaval although neither movie specifically addresses the subject of "how" society has fallen so low (although Philip K. Dick's novel "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep", the basis for "Blade Runner", suggests that war, probably nuclear or atomic in nature, is at least partially responsible for that world's woes).
* The 1885 novel "After London" by Richard Jefferies; the nature of the catastrophe is never stated, except that apparently most of the human race quickly dies out, leaving England to revert to nature.
* The 1914 novel "Darkness and Dawn" by George Allan England, in which two characters wake from suspended animation and find that some great disaster has torn an enormous chasm in the Earth and created a second moon.
* "The Starlost" is a Canadian-produced science fiction television series devised by writer Harlan Ellison and broadcast in 1973 on CTV in Canada and on NBC in the United States.
* The 1975 novel "Dhalgren" by Samuel R. Delany.
* The 1978 short story Trucks by Stephen King. An unknown phenomenon makes Earths machines turn against mankind. It was later made into the movie Maximum Overdrive which added an alien invasion subplot.
* The 1987 novel "In the Country of Last Things" by Paul Auster.
* The BBC sitcom "Red Dwarf" (1988-1999), in which Dave Lister is the last human alive after being left in suspended animation for 3 million years. His only company is a member (presumably the last) of a race of Cat People which evolved from a housecat inside the titular Ship, a hologram of his former bunkmate and immediate superior Arnold Rimmer, the ship's senile computer Holly and later an android named Kryten. The setting implies mankind have gone extinct, though this is never proven, it is simply concluded by the characters that the human race must have gone extinct and/or evolved into a life form beyond humans during the 3 million years Dave was in suspended animation.
* The 1994 novel "Vanishing Point" by Michaela Roessner. Life in Silicon Valley 30 years after the mysterious and spontaneous disappearance of 90% of the world's population. The Winchester Mystery House ("The House") serves as a focal point for parallel universes and inexplicable energies that are changing the world and its post-Vanishing children.
* The Emberverse series novels by S. M. Stirling, in which a disaster of indeterminate cause (most speculation within the novels concerns an all-powerful outside force, often facetiously referred to as "Alien space bats") causes electricity, combustion engines, and modern explosives to cease functioning.
* The series of novels set in the world of Wraeththu by Storm Constantine, in which humanity is replaced as the planet's dominant species by a race of mystic hermaphrodites. War and plague ravage the human population, but no single cause is specified.
* The 1988 novel "Tea from an Empty Cup" by Pat Cadigan, set in a cyberpunk world following a vaguely described natural cataclysm.
* Ongoing comic series 'Wasteland', takes place roughly 100 years in the future where North America is a dustbowl and lacking modern technology.
* The 1997 movie "Alien Resurrection features a deleted scene (Restored to the film in the Alien Quadrilogy Boxset) in which Ripley and the other survivors land the Auriga in a devastated Paris. The cause of the destruction is never made clear, but presumably there was a war.
* The 2006 novel "The Road by Cormac McCarthy.
* The 2006 film Android Apocalypse Cause of apocalypse unknown
* The 2008 Documentary "Life After People" produced by the History channel, chronicles the effect on Earth after the human race inexplicably vanishes (it has been suggested that having people vanish from inside locked buildings suggests a biblical Rapture or similar phenomenon although the documentary itself very specifically avoids addressing this matter, going so far as to include a disclaimer to the effect that "this "isn't" the story of "how" we might vanish," in the show's introduction.
* The 2008 film The Road based on the 2006 novel of the same name.
* "", a 2008 RPG from Greymalkin Designs.

See also

* Apocalypse
* Apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction
* List of nuclear holocaust fiction
* Nuclear holocaust
* Nuclear weapons in popular culture
* World War III
* World War III in popular culture
* Zombie apocalypse

References

External links

*cite book
last = Dodson
first =Eric
authorlink =Eric Dodson
coauthors =
year =2003
title = [http://www.westga.edu/~psydept/dodson/postapoc.html Post-apocalyptic film and the post-modern apocalypse]
publisher =State University of West Georgia
location =
id =

* [http://www.quietearth.us/postapoc.htm Quiet Earth] - A website dedicated to post apocalyptic media
* [http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/nuclear/index.htm Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction] - online book by Paul Brians, Professor of English at Washington State University.
* [http://www.empty-world.com Empty World: Apocalyptic and End of the World Fiction, Film and TV]
* [http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/61/broderick61art.htm Surviving Armageddon: Beyond the Imagination of Disaster] - article by Mick Broderick in Science Fiction Studies.
* [http://greatauthorsonline.com/the_empire_of_texas The Empire of Texas] by Rodger Olsen
* [http://www.pamedia.com Post Apocalyptic Media] - Lists of P.A. games / movies / etc
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20070407074533/http://www.answers.com/topic/list-of-songs-about-nuclear-war List of songs related to World War III and nuclear war]


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