In the 1957 Disney feature "Mars and Beyond" there is this little segment about media depictions of Mars including the war of the Worlds. The animation is silly but the martian fighting machine walk cycle is fun and interesting.

In the 1957 Disney feature "Mars and Beyond" there is this little segment about media depictions of Mars including the war of the Worlds. The animation is silly but the martian fighting machine walk cycle is fun and interesting.

@Aaron_DeVries @swope It is straightforward in 3D if you see the hub as rotating.
IIRC, Wells describes the motion of the tripods to be rotating, or maybe I'm just confusing with The Tripods.
Either way, a rotating hub makes it all work okay.
@isaackuo @Aaron_DeVries @swope
I'd have to check the books, but in John Christopher's "Tripods" series my impression was that the base plate was continuously rotating as the tripod walked. I don't know if the crew compartment for the Masters was, though.
Edit: Come to think of it, the crew compartment probably was also rotating, because the Masters were tripods who would move by spinning when they were in a hurry. So they would not be prone to dizziness.
It's been dozens of years since I read The Tripods, but I think you and @isaackuo are correct that when moving fast the tripods (and the masters inside the dome) did the sort of rotation hub motion.
@cptbutton
I don't know if that level of detail was ever given for the war machines in War of the Worlds, but all the film adaptations seem to avoid showing a continuous gate (that I can remember). I specifically remember looking for the foot placements, but they are hidden behind the foreground.
@cptbutton @isaackuo @Aaron_DeVries
I'm not finding the passage online about how John Christopher's tripods moved, but apparently the introductions to later editions of the 2nd book say he consulted with Asimov:
https://skullsinthestars.com/2025/07/04/the-tripods-the-city-of-gold-and-lead-by-john-christopher/
I don't have the books handy.
Whoops, seems like the blogger got the wrong consultant -- it was Arthur C. Clarke. And he sort of punted on the solution.
But indeed The Tripods did a sort of whirling spiral, similar to @isaackuo 's rotating hub.
I got the passage from https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_City_of_Gold_and_Lead/PQ4uAAAAQBAJ
@swope @Aaron_DeVries @isaackuo
Digressing, but I've wondered what the Master's green-tinted native atmosphere was, such that their atmosphere was toxic to humans but could be made human-breathable by filtering it through green sponges. And that Earth's natural atmosphere was toxic, or at least unbreathable to Masters.
Green suggests chlorine. Maybe the sponges reacted with chlorine in a way that liberated oxygen?
Did the Masters plan to reverse the Great Oxidation Event?
Was _War of the Worlds_ the first example of xenoforming in sci-fi?
Maybe a question for @nyrath
@swope @cptbutton @nyrath @Aaron_DeVries Not aliens, but I figured Jules Verne might have written something with similar themes:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Purchase_of_the_North_Pole
It involves wealthy capitalists with a scheme to alter Earth's climates and get filthy rich with coal under the current arctic region.
Maybe more relevant is this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Germ_Growers
This involves an alien invasion, with germs used to wipe out humans.
I would say 1950s, because Soviet and American submarines did sonar mapping of the Arctic under the ice.
But think small islands are still being discovered as the ice is retreating.