Doom Patrolβ β β β βAn absurd, character-focused, darkly humorous, psychological take on people with the super-power/body horror combo.
Galactic Derelictβ β β ββ
Andre Norton A decent outer space adventure from the anything-goes era of science fiction. The story drags a bit after it switches from time travel to space travel.
Good Time Travel Comicsβ β β β β Some DC stories I can recommend include DC One Million, JLA: Rock of Ages, Time Masters, and Chronos.
Key Out Of Timeβ β β β β
Andre Norton Lost in time, lost in space, out of their depth, a handful of humans are caught in the middle of a four-way power struggle on the high seas of an alien world.
Night Watch (Discworld)β β β β β
Terry Pratchett Time travel, barricades and a mix of humor and darkness in a rebellion with good cops, bad cops and time monks.
Nomad of the Time Streamsβ β β β―ͺβ
Michael Moorcock A 19th-century British soldier in India is flung into three wildly different future wars, forcing him to reexamine the world he thought he was building.
Scott Pilgrim Takes Offβ β β β β The cartoon is both wackier and more introspective than the source material. Sort of a mash-up of the movie and comics, sort of a reunion, sort of a remake, and sort of a What If.
Star Trek: Discovery - Season 2β β β ββThe stand-alone episodes are good, and the Burnham/Spock family dynamics, but the main arc gets really frustrating in the second half.
Star Trek: Picard - Season 2β β β ββHard to pin down, with a weird start, then a few good time travel episodes, before throwing in not just the kitchen sink but everything in the sink.
Tales From The Bully Pulpitβ β β β β
Benito Cereno and Graeme MacDonald A sci-fi comedy graphic novel featuring a time-traveling Teddy Roosevelt and the ghost of Thomas Edison, battling a descendant of Adolf Hitler. On Mars. Wearing mecha armor.
Time Breakersβ β β β β
Rachel Pollack and Chris Weston This comic book from the 1990s flips the familiar time-cop trope on its head: Instead of protecting time from paradoxes, the protagonists are trying to create more paradoxes, convinced that the very existence of life depends on it.
The Time Machineβ β β β β
H.G. Wells A bit dry, but it draws you in, and if the plot is simple, itβs enough to wrap around some thought-provoking speculation about the future of humanity - and a critique of industrial society.
The Time Shipsβ β β β―ͺβ
Stephen Baxter A sequel to H.G. Wellsβ The Time Machine that drastically expands the scope across multiple timelines, from the dawn of time to the far future seen in the original. Now with Dyson spheres, nanobots, and a seemingly endless war that can only be stopped in the past.
The Time Tradersβ β β β β
Andre Norton A fun time-travel spy thriller through the bronze age thatβs very rooted in the cold war.
The Windβs Twelve Quartersβ β β β β―ͺ
Ursula K. Le Guin A collection of short stories from early in Le Guinβs career, spanning her first sale through the time when sheβd begun to be recognized as a major force in the genre.