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Game of Tones

"Game of Tones" is the twenty-third episode of the seventh season of the American animated television series , originally broadcast on on August 14, 2013. The episode was written by Michael Rowe and directed by Edmund Fong, with a runtime of approximately 22 minutes. It features the core voice cast of , including as and Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth, as Turanga Leela, as Bender Bending Rodríguez, and as Hermes Conrad, among others. In the story, a massive alien vessel approaches while emitting a repetitive sequence of four piercing tones audible worldwide, causing and environmental disruption. To decipher the signal's intent, the Planet Express crew uses advanced technology to enter Fry's subconscious mind, navigating dream sequences set in his pre-cryogenic past on December 31, 1999, in an effort to connect the tones to unresolved personal memories. The title serves as a parody of George R. R. Martin's fantasy series, reflecting the episode's blend of sci-fi adventure, humor, and emotional introspection. Critically, "Game of Tones" received positive for its inventive and heartfelt exploration of Fry's , earning an 8.5 out of 10 on from over 2,800 user votes, though awarded it a 7.3, praising the dream-diving premise while noting some pacing inconsistencies. As part of Futurama's revival era on following its initial run, the episode contributes to the series' tradition of satirical , incorporating references to films like Close Encounters of the Third Kind and .

Production and development

Writing process

"Game of Tones" was authored solely by Michael Rowe, representing his first solo writing credit on Futurama after co-writing earlier episodes including "Bend Her" (2002) and part three of the direct-to-video film Bender's Game (2008). This episode formed part of the seventh production season, which constituted the final original run of the series on Comedy Central. Rowe's script centered on the concept of four haunting tones originating from a Nibblonian key fob linked to Philip J. Fry's past on 1999, fusing an interstellar sci-fi peril with nostalgic reflections on Fry's pre-cryogenic life. The narrative incorporated dream sequences manifesting from Fry's subconscious mind, allowing the Planet Express crew to navigate his memories through advanced technology to resolve the tonal mystery. Key creative decisions in the script highlighted the alien vessel's methodical destructive patterns across multiple planets, triggered by the tones' broadcast, which escalated in volume and intensity. The story built to an emotional climax in a dream reunion between Fry and his mother, providing a resolution that emphasized themes of loss and familial connection, praised by executive producer David X. Cohen as a touching episode about Fry's connection with his mother, designed to bring tears to the audience.

Direction and animation

The episode was directed by Edmund Fong, who brought a focus to surreal dream sequences characterized by layered visuals representing Fry's subconscious mind. These sequences incorporated imaginative transitions that blended Fry's memories with fantastical elements, enhancing the episode's exploration of and loss. Animation highlights featured the depiction of vibrating tones leading to planetary destruction, building escalating chaos across multiple worlds. The production utilized elements for the alien ship designs and fluid dream world transitions, providing a contrast to the series' predominant traditional animation style. Produced by , the placed emphasis on audio-visual to the recurring tones , integrating with visual cues for immersive effect. This approach drew from writer Michael Rowe's script to translate narrative beats into visually compelling scenes.

Episode content

Plot

The opens with an alien ship approaching a distant planet and broadcasting a sequence of four repetitive tones over several days. The vibrations from the tones gradually intensify, causing structural damage until the planet explodes. The ship then sets course for , where the same tones begin to broadcast globally, rattling windows and causing widespread annoyance and minor destruction. determines that the ship will arrive in two weeks and theorizes the tones may be an attempt at communication, but only recognizes the as something he heard on New Year's Eve 1999, the night he was cryogenically frozen. To uncover the origin of the tones, the Planet Express crew uses a radio-cranial dream to enter Fry's and relive his memories from that fateful night. Inside the dream, Fry navigates his old life in , visiting his rundown apartment, joining a crew, and spending time with his family, including his mother, whom he deeply misses. This ties briefly to Fry's established of accidental cryogenic freezing during a on that date. As the dream progresses and the real-world threat looms, the crew urges Fry to focus on locating the source of the tones. Fry eventually recalls hearing them at Applied Cryogenics, where they emanate from a Nibblonian key fob belonging to Digby, a Nibblonian associate of who lost it down a after a night of drinking; Digby, who took a cab back to his base after losing the fob, has spent the last millennium piloting it around the galaxy, broadcasting the key fob's increasingly louder to elicit a locating response from the lost fob, destroying any planet without such a reply. In the climax, as the ship nears Earth, Fry and the crew reach a pivotal memory where Nibbler appears to explain the situation. To stop the ship, Fry remembers the full sequence of tones including the fob's two additional reply notes and has it broadcast from Mount Shushmore, signaling to Digby. The Nibblonian lands, and with the crew's help, the key fob is fished out from the storm drain. Digby then retrieves his original ship, parked on the roof of Applied Cryogenics, and leaves peacefully. Nibbler fulfills a promise by granting Fry one final dream sequence within the dream, allowing him to reunite with his mother at a laundromat. In this emotional encounter, Fry expresses his love and regrets, receiving maternal reassurance and closure about his lost life before the vision fades. The crew awakens, with Fry having grown from the experience, processing his longing for his family, while the Planet Express ship returns to its routine deliveries amid restored normalcy on Earth.

Cultural references

The episode "Game of Tones" incorporates several allusions to prominent films, particularly in its central conflict involving mysterious musical signals from an alien vessel. The four repeating tones emitted by the ship the iconic five-note sequence from Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), where the melody facilitates contact; in the episode, however, the tones are reimagined as a catastrophic that progressively destroys planets unable to respond appropriately. The narrative structure draws heavily from Inception (2010), with the Planet Express crew using a dream-entering device to delve into successive layers of Fry's subconscious, navigating distorted recollections of his pre-cryogenic life in a manner reminiscent of the film's layered dream heists and time-dilated subconscious exploration. Additional elements evoke Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986), as the alien probe broadcasts insistent, whale-like tones that ravage unresponsive worlds, paralleling the film's scenario where a celestial probe unleashes devastation on via humpback whale songs until interstellar communication is established through replicated whale responses. Fry's nostalgic immersion in his 1999 memories, triggered by the tones, culminates in the revelation of a key fob device whose sound matches the alien signal, serving as a callback to established lore involving the Nibblonians and Fry's cryogenic freezing in "." This sequence also briefly nods to the emotional mother-son reunion common in science fiction narratives.

Broadcast and distribution

Airing details

"Game of Tones" premiered on on August 14, 2013, serving as the twenty-third episode of the seventh season with the production code 7ACV23 and the 137th episode overall. The episode formed part of 's revival run on , which followed the series' cancellation by after its original 1999–2003 broadcast and subsequent direct-to-video films in 2007–2009; it aired in the final batch of original episodes leading up to the season seven finale on September 4, 2013. Season seven marked the concluding season of original episodes before the show's later revival. With a of approximately 22 minutes, the received a TV-14 rating for suggestive dialogue and mild violence. Internationally, "Game of Tones" experienced airing delays in various regions due to processes for local languages.

Viewership and home media

"Game of Tones" premiered on on August 14, 2013, and attracted 1.07 million viewers in the United States, according to Nielsen ratings, consistent with the averages for season 7 episodes on the network. The episode was included in the Futurama: Volume 8 DVD and Blu-ray set, released on December 10, 2013, by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. This collection features the final 13 episodes of the show's run, along with bonus materials such as audio commentaries for select episodes (including an animators' commentary track for "Game of Tones"), deleted scenes, and featurettes on the production process like "Futurama University." The home media release contributed to the overall strong physical sales performance of the series during this era, which had previously supported the show's revival through robust DVD demand. Following the 2023 revival of the series on Hulu, "Game of Tones" became available for streaming on both Hulu and Disney+, where it is bundled within complete season collections for subscribers.

Reception and legacy

Critical reception

Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club awarded "Game of Tones" an A− grade, lauding its emotional depth particularly in Fry's family reunion, which he described as "devastating" in allowing Fry one last chance to connect with his mother. Handlen also appreciated the episode's clever sci-fi parody, including nods to Close Encounters of the Third Kind through Fry reliving his past. However, he critiqued the pacing in the dream sequences, calling the plotting "loopy and soft" and pointing out the implausibility of Fry's first dream session lasting 13 days. Max Nicholson of gave the episode a 7.3 out of 10 rating, deeming it "Good" for its nostalgic tone and humor during Fry's journey to his past. Nicholson commended the fun elements but criticized the underdeveloped subplots for secondary characters, noting that the story lacked the emotional weight of prior similar visits to Fry's history. Critics commonly praised Fry's for providing heartfelt closure amid the show's signature absurdity, with the tones motif serving as a fresh and inventive that blended humor and sentiment effectively. This underscored the episode's strength in the revival era, further evidenced by its nomination for a Award in the Animation category.

Awards and nominations

"Game of Tones" received a at the 66th in 2014 for Best Animation (non-prime time), recognizing writer Michael Rowe's script. The episode was one of four entries nominated in the category that year, alongside "," "," and "Viva Mars Vegas," highlighting the strong writing across the show's seventh and final season. However, it lost to "A Test Before Trying" from , written by Joel H. Cohen. The episode did not secure any wins, but the nomination underscored the quality of its writing during 's concluding push, contributing to the series' critical acclaim in its later years. At the 41st in 2014, "Game of Tones" was nominated for Outstanding Achievement in Writing in an Animated Television/Broadcast Production for Michael Rowe's script, while as a series received additional nominations, including for Best Animated Television/Broadcast Production and production design. This recognition emphasized the episode's place within a critically esteemed final run for the series.

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