The Expanse and Mass Effect are two of the most acclaimed science fiction franchises in modern media, each celebrated for its hard sci-fi realism, intricate worldbuilding, and exploration of political, social, and existential themes. While they exist in entirely separate universes with no official crossover or shared canon, fans often draw comparisons and even speculate about how they might intersect—especially given their striking thematic and stylististic parallels.
Here’s how The Expanse weaves elements reminiscent of Mass Effect into its own sci-fi saga:
1. Hard Sci-Fi Foundation with Political Depth
Both franchises root themselves in plausible science—space travel, artificial gravity, relativistic physics—and use them to explore complex political dynamics.
The Expanse portrays a fractured solar system: Earth, Mars, and the Belters (independent asteroid miners), each with competing ideologies and resources.
Mass Effect similarly explores a galaxy divided by factions: the Alliance, the Turian Hierarchy, the Asari Republics, and the geth/Reapers.
→ Shared theme: Power struggles between established governments and marginalized populations, with war often erupting not from alien invasion, but from human (or alien) fear of the "other."
2. The Role of Artificial Intelligence and Consciousness
In The Expanse, the protomolecule—an ancient alien artifact—manifests as a self-evolving, non-human intelligence that challenges human understanding of life and purpose.
In Mass Effect, the geth (a synthetic race) and the Reapers (ancient machine overlords) grapple with the nature of consciousness, identity, and freedom.
→ Parallel: Both series explore the moral and existential questions surrounding AI: Should synthetic life have rights? Can they evolve beyond their creators?
3. The Presence of Ancient, Advanced Civilizations
The Expanse features the ancient alien race known as the Laconians (in later seasons) and hints at a mysterious, god-like precursor civilization (the protomolecule’s creators).
Mass Effect centers on the Protheans—ancient race who were wiped out by the Reapers, leaving behind ruins and technology that shape the galaxy.
→ Shared trope: Humanity (and others) discovering that they are not the first—or the smartest—intelligent species in the cosmos, and that history is cyclical, driven by long-lost forces.
4. The Cosmic Threat That Binds Species
In The Expanse, the protomolecule isn’t just a weapon—it’s a civilization in motion, reshaping reality and potentially ending all known life to create something new.
In Mass Effect, the Reapers are a recurring force that harvest advanced civilizations every 50,000 years, believing that organic life inevitably creates synthetics that destroy them.
→ Parallel: Both series feature existential threats that force cooperation across species, political lines, and even species of differing biological forms.
5. Humanity’s Evolution and Identity
The Expanse explores how humans adapt to life in zero-g, with Belters developing distinct physiologies and cultures.
Mass Effect shows humanity ascending from a minor species to a major player in the galactic community, with the potential to become a “Prothean-like” species in the future.
→ Shared narrative arc: The journey from isolation to interdependence, and from being a backwater species to a guardian of galactic destiny.
Conclusion: Not a Crossover—But a Convergence of Ideas
While The Expanse does not weave Mass Effect into its universe (they are separate intellectual properties), the two series converge in their vision of sci-fi: not as mere space operas, but as meditations on humanity’s place in a vast, uncaring cosmos. Both use hard science as a foundation to ask profound questions: What does it mean to be alive? Can civilizations coexist? And when confronted with forces beyond comprehension, will we choose destruction—or evolution?
In that sense, The Expanse doesn’t just "weave" Mass Effect into its story—it stands as a philosophical sibling in the grand tapestry of modern sci-fi, offering a mirror to the same cosmic anxieties and hopes that Mass Effect so powerfully portrays.