An Official Alien Theory Explains Why the Xenomorphs’ Acid Blood Is So Inconsistent

An Official Alien Theory Explains Why the Xenomorphs’ Acid Blood Is So Inconsistent

Fans became aware of the Xenomorphs’ acid blood in the very first Alien film when the crew of the Nostromo tried to remove the Facehugger from the face of one of their colleagues. In that introductory scene, just a few drops of the acid burned through multiple floors of the ship with ease. However, at the very end of the movie when Ripley shoots a grappling hook through the Xenomorph itself, its blood doesn’t disintegrate it. So, what’s up with this inconsistency in just one movie? Well, one official theory regarding the Xenomorphs’ acid blood might have the answer.

Aliens: Colonial Marines Technical Manual, which was published by HarperPrism in 1995 and then reissued by Titan Books in 2012, is a novel that’s basically a ‘mockumentary’ in book form. It was written as though it was a collection of factual findings from real life Colonial Marines in the Alien universe, despite that world being totally fictitious.

An Official Alien Theory Explains Why the Xenomorphs’ Acid Blood Is So Inconsistent

The novel then expanded beyond just being an informational manual, as it also featured entire conversations between Weyland-Yutani employees in the form of official-looking manuscripts. One conversation delved into the Xenomorphs’ acid blood, and while the mysterious nature behind it wasn’t solved, there was one theory within the manuscript that definitely stood out.

Alien: Xenomorphs’ Acid Blood Is Perhaps A Bio-Electric Battery

While Aliens: Colonial Marines Technical Manual is where fans can read this theory and other interesting details regarding the Alien universe today, the book is actually the culmination of a number of stories published in Dark Horse Comics’ Aliens Magazine, for which the author of Aliens: Colonial Marines Technical Manual, Lee Brimmicombe-Wood, was a staff writer in the early ‘90s. In fact, this very theory was published in Aliens Magazine vol. 2 #11.

The theory suggests that a Xenomorphs’ acid blood acts as a bio-electric battery for the alien creature, giving it energy without the need for oxygen. It also suggests that there’s no way to ‘recharge’ this ‘battery’. While it’s suggested that the Xenomorphs can absorb essential elements presumably through the consumption of meat – first from its initial host and then from its victims once the Xenomorph reaches adulthood – there’s no direct correlation between the Xenomorphs’ hypothesized bio-electric acid blood and it’s speculated need to consume sustenance.

So, Why Is Xenomorph Acid Blood So Inconsistent In Alien?

Alien's Xenomorph shooting acid blood from its tail.

Basically, this theory suggests that the strength of a Xenomorphs’ acid blood is directly tied to how ‘charged’ it is if the acid blood is, indeed, a bio-electric battery that effectively ‘powers’ the Xenomorph. If this theory is correct, then the Xenomorphs’ acid blood is why it doesn’t need oxygen to survive, and possibly why it still needs to eat to keep itself going, as food could perhaps be the one way to strengthen the acid. It also explains why its blood is stronger in some instances throughout the franchise than others, as the Xenomorphs’ blood may simply have not been as ‘fully charged’ as it was during an instance when its blood was a stronger acid.

More Research Is Required To Substantiate This Alien Theory

AvP's 'Grid Alien'.

Admittedly, there are still a number of holes in this theory. Xenomorphs have been shown to live very long lives without the need of sustenance, so it can be presumed that the ‘charge’ of their acid blood would last pretty close to indefinitely. But, in Alien, the Xenomorph’s acid blood is incredibly weak when Ripley shoots it, indicating that the bio-electric charge was low, despite the fact that it was not only just born, but also that it presumably consumed basically the entire crew of the Nostromo. However, the theorists behind it may have been on to something, as the idea of the Xenomorphs’ acid blood being a bio-electric battery would perfectly explain why its strength is so inconsistent in the Alien franchise, but more research needs to be conducted before anything can be confidently asserted as fact.