The Simpsons Treehouse Of Horror All Seasons Access
Suddenly, they’re not in Springfield. They’re in a pitch-black void filled with floating product placement from discontinued 90s brands: Butterfinger BBs, a crushed can of Buzz Cola, a talking Krusty doll whose voice box says only “You’ll never leave.”
Homer flips through channels. Every station is playing an old Treehouse of Horror episode—but wrong. In the Shinning , instead of chopping the door, Homer turns to the camera and says, “I’ve done this 12 times now. Can I go home?” In Time and Punishment , when he fixes the toaster, he doesn’t create a dinosaur world—he creates a world where Maggie grows up alone, clutching a pacifier in an empty house. The Simpsons Treehouse of HORROR All Seasons
Lisa appears. She’s older—maybe 16, maybe 40. She holds a remote control with one button: “CONTINUE WATCHING.” Suddenly, they’re not in Springfield
Homer is now alone. He walks through a hallway of infinite doors, each labeled with a year: 1990, 1994, 2002, 2015, 2031. Behind each door, a different version of his family is being murdered by a different monster—zombies, aliens, giant广告, robots, the Fantasia broomsticks, a sentient NFT of Poochie. In the Shinning , instead of chopping the
Then, just before the streaming service automatically plays the next episode:
“See you next Halloween.” No music. Just the names of every writer who ever worked on a Treehouse episode, scrolling backward into illegibility.

