 Until now, astronomers have found about 4,000 confirmed planets outside our solar system. Of these, Earth-like exoplanets often make headlines, such as Proxima B, the closest rocky planet to our solar system. This Earth-like exoplanet was found with the Harps instrument on ESO's 3.6-metre telescope at La Silla Observatory. But ESO telescopes have helped find plenty of other exciting worlds, some so exotic you would not dare to compare them with Earth. Meet the Stranger Exoplanets. Let's start with WASP-19B or, as we like to call it, the Inferno world with titanium skies. This hot, Jupiter-sized planet has an atmosphere with a rather strange chemical composition. It was the first exoplanet where astronomers detected titanium oxide thanks to ESO's very large telescope and its Force II instrument. This element acts as a heat absorber in the atmosphere of an Inferno world. It can prevent heat from entering or escaping through the atmosphere, leading to a thermal inversion. So on WASP-19B, the temperature could be higher in the upper atmosphere and lower further down, unlike what we see on our solar system planets. We move on from this upside-down world to present to you the Lonely Planet. A few years ago, ESO telescopes and their instruments helped identify an object that could be a planet without any ties to a star. A free-floating world that, rather than move around a star, roams rogue through space. It could be that these planets have formed like other worlds around a parent star, but then have been kicked out of their home system. So our Lonely Planet may well be an orphaned world. Our next strange exoplanet is not orphaned at all. In fact, it hung onto its parent star through thick and thin. The evaporating exoplanet is the first giant planet ever found to be orbiting a white dwarf, the remnant of a sun-like star. Astronomers think that this exoplanet survived the transition of its parent solar-type star to a red giant and then to a white dwarf. But that's not all that is strange about this planet. Observations with ESO's X-shooter on the VLT have hinted that this giant exoplanet is evaporating. It orbits the hot white dwarf at close range, and the extreme ultraviolet radiation from the star strips away part of the planet's atmosphere, forming a disk around the white dwarf. Our final alien world is even stranger. WASP-76B, an ultra-hot giant exoplanet with a twist. This planet orbits very close to its parent star, receiving thousands of times more radiation from it than the Earth does from the sun. It is also tidally locked, meaning it has a day-side that always faces the star and a much cooler night-side. The temperature difference on the planet is extreme. On the day-side, it is above 2,400 degrees Celsius, and everything, including metals, is vaporized. This is where things get really weird. Using the espresso instrument on the VLT, astronomers found that iron vapor from the ultra-hot day-side is carried to the cooler night-side. There, it condenses into iron droplets. In other words, this extreme exoplanet has a day-side where metals evaporate, and a night-side where it rains iron. Will we find even stranger worlds? Well, nobody knows. But astronomers keep on hunting for exoplanets. Stay tuned for future discoveries with ESO telescopes.