If 11.22.63 lured you with its eerie combination of time travel, close-in romance, and the burden of changing history, you’re not alone. Hulu’s Stephen King novel adaptation succeeded because it presented sci-fi not as spectacle, but as an emotional and ethical conundrum, where every leap through time had consequences.
The good news? There are plenty of other sci-fi thriller shows that portray related themes, revolving around shattered timelines, destiny vs. choice, love spanning realities, and the silent terror of knowing too much about the future.
Here are the five shows that fans of 11.22.63 will want to check out.
Here are 5 sci-fi thrillers if you like Hulu's 11.22.63
Stranger Things
If we are talking about sci-fi shows, we can’t simply miss the most popular one, especially in the year 2025. At a glance, Stranger Things appears to be more horror- and nostalgia-driven, but at its essence, it’s about time, trauma, and the price of rewriting fate. When the Hawkins children and adults confront alternate dimensions and government experiments, they are forced to confront the same question Jake Epping does: how much pain can you, or rather should you, erase?
Like 11.22.63, the series is a mix of high-concept sci-fi and deeply emotional stakes. People are shaped by moments they are unable to change, and endeavoring to “repair” the past can lead to further consequences, reinforcing the notion that time cannot be manipulated in anyone’s favor.
Castle Rock
This show takes place in Stephen King’s made-up Maine community and could be another great watch if you liked the Hulu show, 11.22.63. It’s not about old-school time travel, but there are warped timelines, cyclical histories, and characters trapped by past sins of theirs that won’t stay buried.
This show portrays time as a hostile and conscious force. Like the past in 11.22.63 that “pushes back,” Castle Rock argues that history fights changing itself and lashes out at those who seek to flee its grasp.
Black Mirror
Though this Netflix show, Black Mirror, is more speculative and episodic, it shares 11.22.63’s fixation on consequence. Several episodes deal with technology that alters memory, time perception, and alternate realities, before it shows the terrible human impact of that innovation.
Those who loved 11.22.63 will similarly like how Black Mirror turns sci-fi into a morality play. The question is not “Can we change things?” but “Should we, and what part of ourselves do we lose when we try?”
Undone (Amazon Prime Video)
Undone is another fabulous show by the producers of BoJack Horseman on Amazon Prime Video. It is an emotionally satisfying, surreal reimagining of time travel. Having survived a disastrous crash, Alma starts to glide through time, re-experiencing memories of her past and possible futures while investigating the truth behind her father’s death.
Like 11.22.63, the series gently distorts the boundary between destiny and delusion. Is time genuinely pliable, or are these people merely revisiting trauma in non-linear ways? Undone is notable for depicting time travel as a profoundly intimate, mental experience rather than a plot-driven mechanic.
Outlander
Outlander portrays Claire Randall from the 20th century going back in time to 18th-century Scotland. The show runs on the idea that anticipating the future doesn’t make tragedy easier to stop; in fact, it just makes the emotional burden heavier.
Love is at the heart of this time-travel tale, just like Jake and Sadie’s romance, for that matter, in Outlander. The series is perpetually wrestling with the question: if you know the future, do you have the right or the power to change it?
If the Hulu show left an impression on you with the way it rendered time as fragile, mean, and heartbreakingly mortal, you must find your next pick from the above list. Stay tuned to Soap Central for more such curated pieces.