List of fictional computers
This page is intended to be a
list of computers in fiction and
science fiction.
See the
List of fictional robots and androids for all fictional computers which are described as existing in a mobile or humanlike form.
Computers have often been used as fictional objects in
literature,
movies and in other forms of
media. Fictional computers tend to be considerably more sophisticated than anything yet devised in the real world. It is interesting to note that while science fiction writers have anticipated many of the advances in technology which have occurred (with varying degrees of accuracy), almost no writer foresaw the computer as we know it today.
Before 1950
*
The Engine, a kind of mechanical information generator featured in
Gulliver's Travels (
1726). This is considered to be the first description of a fictional device that in any way resembles a computer.
*
Joe, a "logic" (that is to say, a personal computer) in
Murray Leinster's 1946 short story "
A Logic Named Joe"
1950s
*
The Machines, positronic supercomputers that manage the world in Isaac Asimov's short story "
The Evitable Conflict". (
1950)
*
EPICAC in
Kurt Vonnegut's
Player Piano, which coordinates the United States economy. It is also featured in other of his writings. (
1952)
* The unnamed computer from
Fredric Brown's short story "Answer", which answers the question "Is there a God?" with "Yes,
now there is a God." (
1954)
*
Multivac, a series of supercomputers featured in a number of stories by
Isaac Asimov (
1955 to
1975)
* The
Central Computer of the city of Diaspar in
Arthur C. Clarke's
The City and the Stars (
1956)
*
Cosmic AC, the ultimate computer at the end of time in
Isaac Asimov's short story "
The Last Question" (The name is derived from "Automatic Computer"; see also AC's ancestor,
Multivac, and the contemporary
UNIVAC). (
1959)
1960s
*
The Machine, a computer built to specifications received in a radio transmission from an alien intelligence beyond our galaxy in the novel
A for Andromeda by
Fred Hoyle. (
1961)
*
Merlin from the
H. Beam Piper novel
The Cosmic Computer (1963, originally
Junkyard Planet).
*
Colossus, a cybernetic computer built to control the nuclear capability of the United States of North America, by Dr Charles Forbin and his team. Colossus initiates communication with an equivalent computer in the Soviet Union, called
Guardian. The two computers eventually merge and take control of the human race. Colossus and Guardian appeared in the novel
Colossus, by
Dennis Feltham Jones. (
1966)
*
The Ox in
Frank Herbert's novel
Destination: Void. (
1966)
*
WESCAC (West Campus Analog Computer) from John Barth's
Giles Goat-Boy. (
1966)
*
Frost, the protagonist computer in
Roger Zelazny's story "For a Breath I Tarry"; also
SolCom,
DivCom, and
Beta. (
1966)
*
Mycroft Holmes (aka Mike,
Adam Selene), in
Robert A. Heinlein's
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (Named after
Mycroft Holmes, the brother of
Sherlock Holmes) (
1966)
*
AM from
Harlan Ellison's short story
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream (
1967)
* The
Berserker (Saberhagen), a vast network of autonomous machines that are programmed to destroy all life, as found in the stories of
Fred Saberhagen. (
1967 to present)
*
Shalmaneser, from
John Brunner's
Stand on Zanzibar, a small (and possibly semi-sentient) supercomputer cooled in liquid helium. (
1968)
*
HAL 9000 (
Heuristically programmed
ALgorithmic computer), a
fictional computer/
character from the novel and film
2001: A Space Odyssey, written by
Arthur C. Clarke in
1968.
1970s
*
TECT, from George Alec Effinger, various books. Notice that there are several computers named TECT in his novels, even though they are unrelated stories. (1970s onward)
*
Maxine from the Roger Zelazny story "My Lady of the Diodes". (
1970)
*
T.E.N.C.H. 889B, shipboard super-computer in
A Maze of Death by
Philip K. Dick. (
1970)
*
UniComp, the central computer governing all life on Earth in
This Perfect Day by
Ira Levin. (
1970)
* The Müller-Fokker computer tapes in
The Muller-Fokker Effect (
1971)
*
HARLIE, protagonist of
When HARLIE was One by
David Gerrold. (
1972)
*
Dora, starship computer in
Time Enough for Love by
Robert A. Heinlein,
1973.
*
Minerva, executive computer in
Time Enough for Love by
Robert A. Heinlein,
1973.
*
Pallas Athena, Secundus planetary computer in
Time Enough for Love by
Robert A. Heinlein,
1973.
*
Extro, in
Alfred Bester's novel
The Computer Connection (
1975)
*
First Universal Cybernetic-Kinetic Ultra-micro Programmer, from the
Illuminatus trilogy by
Robert Anton Wilson (
1975)
*
Peerssa, shipboard computer imprinted with the personality of a man of the same name, from
A World Out of Time by
Larry Niven. (
1976)
*
Proteus IV, the computer self-programmed to
rape in the film/novel
Demon Seed by
Dean Koontz. (
1976)
* The benevolent
CC (Central Computer) in
John Varley's
Eight Worlds novels and short stories (
1977 to
1998)
*
Com-pewter, a parody of other malevolent computers in
Piers Anthony's
Xanth series (
1977 onwards).
*
Com Passion, Com Pewter's friendlier counterpart, in that series.
*
Obie, an artificial intelligence with the ability to alter local regions of reality, in
Jack L. Chalker's
Well World series (
1977)
*
Well World, the central computer responsible for "simulating" an entire new universe superimposed over the old Markovian one in
Jack L. Chalker's
Well World series (
1977)
*
IMP, in
Joseph McElroy's
PLUS (
1977)
*
TOTAL , the vast military network in
Up the Walls of the World by
James Tiptree Jr. (
1978)
*
ZORAC, the shipboard computer aboard the ancient spacecraft in
The Gentle Giants of Ganymede and the related series by
James P. Hogan. (
1978) Also in the same series is
VISAR (the network that manages the daily affairs of the Giants) as well as
JEVEX, the main computer performing the same function for the offshoot human colony.
*
Googolplex Star Thinker in Douglas Adams'
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which can calculate the trajectory of every single dust particle throughout a five-week Dangrabad Beta sand blizzard. (
1979)
*
Deep Thought also in Douglas Adams'
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which calculates the answer to "Life, the Universe, and Everything".
*
Spartacus, an AI deliberately designed to test the possibility of provoking hostile behavior towards humans, from
James P. Hogan's book
The Two Faces of Tomorrow (
1979).
*
MU-TH-UR Onboard computer of the ship
Nostromo in the film
Alien.
1980s
*
Golem XIV, from
Stanisław Lem's novel of the same name. (
1981)
*
AIVAS, Artificial Intelligence Voice Address System, from
Anne McCaffrey's
Dragonriders of Pern books. (1980s to present)
*
Hactar, the computer that designed the cricket-ball-shaped doomsday bomb (that would destroy the universe) for the people of
Krikkit, in
Douglas Adams's
Life, the Universe, and Everything. (
1982)
*
SAL 9000, the counterpart of
HAL 9000 in
2010: Odyssey Two (
1982)
*
Cyclops and
Millichrome, sentient computers built just before a series of disasters destroyed the American government and society in
The Postman by
David Brin. (
1984)
*
Neuromancer and
Wintermute, from
William Gibson's novel
Neuromancer. (
1984)
*
Loki 7281, from Roger Zelazny's short story by the same name, in which his home computer wants to take over the world. (
1984)
*
Ghostwheel, built by Merlin in
Roger Zelazny's
Chronicles of Amber. A computer with esoteric environmental requirements, designed to apply data-processing techniques to alternate realities called "Shadows". (
1985)
*
Jane, from
Orson Scott Card's
Ender Series 1986*
The Quark II in
Douglas Adams's
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency. (
1987)
* The ship, hub and planetary
Minds in
Iain M. Banks' "
Culture" novels and stories. (
1987 to
2000)
*
Arius from
William T Quick's novels
Dreams of Flesh and Sand,
Dreams of Gods and Men, and
Singularities. (
1988 onwards)
*
GWB-666, the Great Western Beast of
Robert Anton Wilson's
Schrödinger's Cat trilogy. (
1988)
*
Abulafia, Jacopo Belbo's computer in the novel
Foucault's Pendulum by
Umberto Eco. (
1988)
*
LEVIN, Low Energy Variable Input Nanocomputer from
William T Quick's novels
Dreams of Gods and Men, and
Singularities. (
1989)
*
Eagle, from
Arthur C. Clarke's
Rama series. (
1989)
1990s
*
Grand Napolean, a
Charles Babbage style mechanical supercomputer from the
alternate history novel
The Difference Engine by
William Ford Gibson and
Bruce Sterling. (
1990)
*
Thing, a very small box shaped computer owned by the Nomes, from
Terry Pratchett's The Bromeliad series. (
1990)
*
Aleph, in Tom Maddox's novel
Halo. The computer which not only operates a space station but also houses the personality of a human character whose body became malfunctional (
1991)
*
Blaine the Mono, from
Stephen King's The Dark Tower. A control system for the City of Lud and monorail service. Also
Little Blaine and
Patricia. (
1991)
*
Lingo, a sentient AI that evolves from a simple home computer and escapes to the Internet in the book "Lingo" by
Jim Menick. (
1991)
*
Art Fish AKA Dr Fish, later fused with a human to become Markt, from
Pat Cadigan's novel
Synners (
1991)
*
FLORANCE, spontaneously generated AI from
Doctor Who Virgin New Adventures (
1992)
*
David and
Jonathon from
Arthur C. Clarke's
The Hammer of God (
1993)
*
Hex, from
Terry Pratchett's
Discworld. (
1994)
*
Prime Intellect, the computer controlling the universe in the Internet novel
The Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect by
Roger Williams. (
1994)
*
ordinator, The name used for any computer in the parallel universe occupied by Lyra in the novel
Northern Lights by
Philip Pullman. (
1995)
*
Rei Toei, an artificial singer from
William Gibson's novels
Idoru and
All Tomorrow's Parties. (
1996)
*
GRUMPY/SLEEPY: Psychic AI in the
Doctor Who New Adventures novel
SLEEPY by
Kate Orman (
1996)
*
DOCTOR: AI designed to duplicate the
Doctor's reactions in the
Doctor Who Eighth Doctor Adventures novel
Seeing I by Kate Orman and
Jon Blum. Eventually became an explorer with FLORANCE as its "companion". (
1998)
*
TRANSLTR, NSA supercomputer from
Dan Brown's Digital Fortress. (
1998)
*
Engine for the Neutralising of Information by the Generation of Miasmic Alphabets, an advanced cryptographic machine created by
Leonard of Quirm,
Discworld. (
1999) (see
Enigma machine)
2000s
*
Turing Hopper, the artificial intelligence personality (AIP) turned cybersleuth in
You've Got Murder and subsequent books of the mystery series by Donna Andrews. (
2002)
Un-sorted
*
Solace, the distributed intelligence in some of the stories of
Spider Robinson.
1950s
* The
Interocitor communication device in the film
This Island Earth (
1955)
*
The Great Machine built inside a planet that can manifest thought in
Forbidden Planet (
1956)
*
EMERAC, the business computer in
Desk Set1960s
*
Alpha 60, in
Jean-Luc Godard's film
Alphaville, une étrange aventure de Lemmy Caution (
1965)
*
HAL 9000 (Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic computer) is a fictional mission computer in the films
2001: A Space Odyssey and sequel
2010: Odyssey Two that fatally malfunctions when contra-programmed with the secret purpose of the mission. (
1968) It is also said that the name was derived using a one-letter reverse shift from IBM. Hence, I became H; B became A; and M became L.
1970s
*
Colossus â€" a massive U.S. defense computer which becomes sentient and links with Guardian to take control of the world. From the film
Colossus: The Forbin Project (
1970)
*
Guardian â€" a massive U.S.S.R defense computer which becomes sentient and links with Colossus to take control of the world. From the film
Colossus: The Forbin Project (
1970)
*
Bomb 20 â€" the sentient nuclear bomb from the film
Dark Star (
1974)
*
Mother, the ship-board computer in the SF horror movie
Alien (
1979)
*
Proteus, artificial intelligence in SF horror movie
Demon Seed (
1977)
1980s
*
SCMODS (State, County, Municipal Offender Data System), police patrol car computer in the movie
The Blues Brothers (
1980)
*
Master Control Program, the main villain of
Tron (1982)
*
WOPR (War Operations Plan and Response) from the movie
WarGames (
1983)
*
Joshua, a subprogram that runs on the WOPR (q.v.) in
WarGames (
1983)
*
Skynet, the malevolent fictional world-AI of
The Terminator and its sequels. (
1984)
*
Edgar, AI computer that takes part in a romantic rivalry over a woman in the movie
Electric Dreams (
1984)
*
ROK, the faulty computer in ''
Airplane II: The Sequel which steers the shuttle toward the sun.
1990s
*
Lucy, jealous AI home automation system who falls in love with her owner in movie "Homewrecker" (
1992)
*
Zed, female-voiced AI prison control computer who eventually goes over warden's head in movie "Fortress". (
1993)
*
Charon, female-voiced AI computer assisting a scientist in hypnotizing subjects in movie "The Lifeforce Experiment" (
1994)
*
Father, the station computer in the movie
Alien: Resurrection. (
1997)
*
Euclid, powerful personal computer used for mathematical testing by the main character in the movie
Pi. (
1998)
*
The Matrix, virtual reality simulator for pacification of humans,
The Matrix series (
1999)
2000s
*
Red Queen, the AI from the movie
Resident Evil (
2002)
*
Vox, a holographic computer in the 2002 movie version of
The Time Machine. (
2002)
*
I.N.T.E.L.L.I.G.E.N.C.E. â€" computer for
Team America: World Police (
2004)
*
V.I.K.I., (Virtual Interactive Kinetic Intelligence) from
I, Robot (
2004)
*
E.D.I (Extreme Deep Invader) is the flight computer for an unmanned fighter plane in
Stealth (2005)
1970s
*
Deep Thought, from
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, (
1978)
*
Earth, the greatest computer of all time in Douglas Adams's
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, bought and run by
mice to find the Question to Life, the Universe, and Everything. (
1978)
*
Eddie, the shipboard computer of the starship Heart of Gold, from
Douglas Adams's
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. (
1978)
1980s
*
Alarm Clock, an artificially intelligent alarm clock from Nineteen Ninety-Four by William Osborne and Richard Turner. Other domestic appliances thus imbued also include
Refrigerator and
Television. (
1985)
*
ANGEL 1 and
ANGEL 2, Ancillary Guardians of Environment and Life, shipboard 'Freewill' computers from
James Follett's Earthsearch series. Also
Solaria D,
Custodian,
Sentinal, and
Earthvoice. (
1980 â€"
1982)
*
Executive and
Dreamer, paired AI's running on The Mainframe; Dreamer's purpose was to come up with product and policy ideas, and Executive's function was to implement them, from Nineteen Ninety-Four by William Osborne and Richard Turner. (
1985)
*
Hab a parody of
HAL 9000 and precursor to
Holly, appearing in the Son of Cliché radio series written by
Rob Grant and
Doug Naylor (
1983 â€"
1984)
*
The Mainframe, an overarching computer system to support the super-department of The Environment, in the
BBC comedy satire Nineteen Ninety-Four by William Osborne and Richard Turner. (
1985)
2000s
*
Alpha, from Mike Walker's
BBC radio play of the same name. (
2001)
*
Gemini, the AI of K.E.N.T from
Nebulous. (2005)
*
System from the Doctor Who audio adventure
The Harvest by
Big Finish Productions (
2004) is a sophisticated administration computer for a hospital in the future.
1960s
*
WOTAN (Will Operating Thought ANalogue) from
Doctor Who ("
The War Machines"). (
1966)
*
ARDVARC (Automated Reciprocal Data Verifier And Reaction Computer) â€" CONTROL master computer in
Get Smart episodes
The Girls from KAOS (
1967) &
Leadside (
1969)
*
The Library Computer, from
Star Trek, the otherwise unnamed computer of the
Starship Enterprise. Voiced by
Majel Barrett. (
1967)
*
The General, from
The Prisoner. (
1967)
*
Landru, from the
Star Trek original series episode "The Return of the Archons". (
1967)
*
Vaal, from the
Star Trek original series episode "The Apple". (
1967)
*
M5, an experimental computer featured in the
Star Trek original series episode "The Ultimate Computer". (
1968)
*
The Oracle, from the
Star Trek original series episode "For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky". (
1968)
1970s
*
BOSS (Bimorphic Organisational Systems Supervisor), from
Doctor Who ("
The Green Death"). (
1973)
*
TIM, from
The Tomorrow People, is a computer able to telepathically converse with those humans who have developed psionic abilities, and assist with precise teleporting over long distances. (
1973)
* The
Matrix, database of all
Time Lord knowledge,
Doctor Who (not to be confused with
The Matrix). (
1976)
*
Alex7000, from the two-parter episode
Doomsday is Tomorrow of the TV show
The Bionic Woman. It was programmed to set off a nuclear holocaust if anyone tested any more nukes. Clearly meant in homage to
Stanley Kubrick films
2001: A Space Odyssey and
Dr Strangelove. (
1977)
*
Xoanon from
Doctor Who ("
The Face of Evil"). (
1977)
*
Orac in
Blake's 7. (
1978)
*
The Oracle, from
Doctor Who ('
Underworld'). (
1978)
*
Vanessa 38-24-36 from the sitcom
Quark. (
1978)
*
Zen, the somewhat aloof computer of the Liberator in
Blake's 7. (
1978)
*
Mentalis from
Doctor Who ("
The Armageddon Factor"). (
1979)
1980s
*
Gambit, game playing computer from
Blake's 7 ('Games'). (
1981)
*
Shyrka, the onboard computer of Ulysses' ship in the French animated series "
Ulysses 31". (
1981)
*
Slave, a somewhat subservient computer on the ship
Scorpio in
Blake's 7. (
1981)
*
Teletraan I, the
Autobots' computer in
Transformers, 'revives' The Transformers after crashing on the planet Earth. (
1984)
*
Vector Sigma, the supercomputer in
Transformers, responsible for creating the Transformers race. (
1984)
*
SID (
Space
Investigation
Detector), the computer onboard the
Voyager in the children's comedy series
Galloping Galaxies. (
1985)
*
Max Headroom, the cyber punk TV presenter from
The Max Talking Headroom Show. (
1987)
*
Box, a small, box shaped computer from the British television show
Star Cops. (
1987)
*
KITT fictional computer built into a car from the television show
Knight Rider. (
1982)
*
LCARS fictional computer architecture of the
Starship Enterprise-D and E, and other 24th century starfleet ships, in
Star Trek. (
1987)
*
Magic Voice, the Satellite of Love's onboard computer on
Mystery Science Theater 3000. (
1988)
*
Holly, and
Queeg 500, the on-board computer and back-up computer (respectively) for the space ship
Red Dwarf in the
BBC television series of the same name. (
1988)
*
The Ultima Machine, a WWII code-breaking "computing machine" used to translate Viking inscriptions, from
Doctor Who ('
The Curse of Fenric'). (
1989)
*
Ziggy, hybrid computer from
Quantum Leap (
1989)
1990s
*
COS (Central Operating System), homicidal computer from the season 1
X-Files episode ('
Ghost in the Machine'). (
1993)
*
CAS (Cybernetic access structure), homicidal automated building in "The Tower" (1993)[
1]
*
Nicole,
Princess Sally's computer in the
Sonic the Hedgehog Saturday morning TV series and
US comic series. (
1993)
*
CentSys, sweet yet self-assured female-voiced AI computer who brings the crew of the SeaQuest into the future to deactivate her in
SeaQuest DSV episode, "Playtime". (
1994)
*
The Magi, a trinity of computers individually named
Melchior,
Balthasar and
Casper, from
Neon Genesis Evangelion. (
1995)
*
Eve, somewhat assertive AI computer (projecting herself as hologram of beautiful woman) orbiting planet G889 and observing/interacting with Earth colonists in
Earth 2 (TV series) episode "All About Eve". (
1995)
* Unnamed AI from the season 5
X-Files episode ('
Kill Switch'). (
1998)
* CPU for D-135 Artificial Satellite, dubbed
MPU by Radical Edward from '
Cowboy Bebop' in the episode "Jamming with Edward". (1998)
*
Starship 31, the sapient spaceborne battleship, from the episode 'The Human Operators' in
The Outer Limits. (
1999)
*
Computer, from
Courage the Cowardly Dog.
*
SELMA, from
Time Trax,
Selective Encapsulated Limitless Memory Archive carried in the wallet of future cop Darien Lambert (Dale Midkiff), and good wherever MasterCard is accepted. (
1993)
*
H.A.R.D.A.C., from
Batman: The Animated Series, is an evil, sentient, computer AI that controls various androids for the goal of world domination
2000s
*
Comp-U-Comp, a super computer from an episode of the
Dilbert TV show. In the episode, Dilbert must face off against Comp-U-Comp when a clerical error results in his not getting the computer he ordered. (
2000)
*
Aura from
.hack//sign, the Ultimate AI that Morganna, another AI, tries to keep in a state of eternal slumber. Morganna is served by Maha and the Guardians, AI monsters. (
2002)
* The
FETCH! 3000, on
PBS Kids series
FETCH! with Ruff Ruffman is capable of tabulating scores, disposing of annoying cats, blending the occasional smoothie, and anything else Ruff needs it to do.
*
GLADIS from TV show
Totally Spies! *
Vox from the TV show
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (
2002)
* The
AI of the Planet Express ship in
Futurama (2002)
*
OoGhiJ MIQtxxXA â€" (supposedly
Klingon for "superior galactic intelligence") from the "Super Computer" episode of
Aqua Teen Hunger Force (
2003)
*
XANA, from
Code Lyoko (
2004)
*
AIMA (Artificially Intelligent Mainframe Interface) from
Dark Minds. (
1997)
* Aura, the Ultimate AI that governs
The World from
.hack//Legend of the Twilight. The story revolves around Zefie, Aura's daughter, and Lycoris makes a cameo.
*
Banana Jr. 6000, from the comic strip
Bloom County by
Berke Breathed.
*
Batcomputer, the computer system used by Batman and housed in the
Batcave.
*
Erwin, the AI from
Userfriendly the Comic Strip.
*
Fate, the Norsefire police state central computer in
V for Vendetta.
*
iFruit, from the
FoxTrot comic strip.
*
Virgo, an artificial inteligence in Frank Miller's
Ronin graphic novel.
*
Kilg%re, an alien AI that can exist in most electrical circuitry,
The Flash*
Max, from
The Thirteenth Floor.
*
Mother Box, from
Jack Kirby's Fourth World comics.
*
Praetorius from the
X-Files comic book series, issue 13 "One Player Only". (
1996)
*
Toy, from
Chris Claremont's Aliens vs. Predator: The Deadliest of the Species. (
1995)
*
0D-10, Artificial intelligent computer in the sci-fi chapter from the game Live A Live. Secretly plotted to kill humans onboard the spaceship of the same name in order to 'restore the harmony'. Its name derives from 'odio', a Spanish word for 'hate'. An obvious reference to
Hal 9000.
*
343 Guilty Spark, Monitor of Installation 04, In the video game
Halo, and its sequel,
Halo 2*
2401 Penitent Tangent, Monitor of Delta Halo in
Halo 2*
ADA, from the video game "Zone of the Enders".
*
Adam, the computer intelligence from the
Game Boy Advance game
Metroid Fusion.
*
Benson, the sardonic 9th generation PC from the computer game
Mercenary and its sequels
*
CABAL (Computer Assisted Bio-engineered Artificial Life-form) the computer of Nod in
Westwood's Command and Conquer: Tiberian Sun,
Command and Conquer: Renegade, and, by implication,
Command and Conquer: Tiberian Dawn.
*
Central consciousness, massive governing body from the
computer game Total Annihilation.
*
Cortana, the shipboard A.I. of the U.N.S.C.
Pillar of Autumn in the
Halo video games
*
Dr. Carroll from the
Nintendo 64 game
Perfect Dark.
*
Durga/Melissa/Yasmine the shipboard A.I. of the U.N.S.C.
Apocalypso in the
Alternate Reality Game I Love Bees (promotional game for the
Halo 2 video game)
*
Durandal, one of three A.I.s onboard the U.E.S.C.
Marathon*
EVA, the
Electronic Video Agent AI, console interface, and more benign equivalent of the
Brotherhood of Nod CABAL in
Command & Conquer (see above).
*
FATE, the computer that determines how events span out from
Chrono Cross.
*
Icarus,
Daedalus,
Helios,
Morpheus and
The Oracle of
Deus Ex â€" see
Deus Ex characters*
Leela, another A.I. onboard the U.E.S.C.
Marathon*
LINC, from the video game "Beneath a Steel Sky".
*
Lycoris, the failed Aura prototype from the game
.hack//AI Buster. (
2005)
* The mascot of the "Hectic Hackers" basketball team in "Backyard Basketball".
*
Mother Brain from
Chrono Trigger, a supercomputer from the 2300 AD time period that is controlling robotkind and exterminating humans.
*
Mother Brain from
Metroid.
*
Pokedex database of all
Pokémon monsters appears in all versions of the game, usually as a desk top computer.(
1996 onwards)
*
PRISM, the "world's first sentient machine" which you play as the protagonist of the game
A Mind Forever Voyaging by
Steve Meretzky published by
Infocom.
*
SHODAN, the enemy of the player's character in the
System Shock computer game and its sequel
System Shock 2.
* Sol â€" 9000
Xenogears*
System Deus from
Xenogears*
Thiefnet computer, Bentley the turtle's laptop from the
Sly Cooper series.
*
Traxus IV, A.I. that went rampant on Mars,
Marathon (computer game)*
Tycho, the third A.I. onboard the U.E.S.C.
Marathon*
XERXES The ship computer system which is under the control of
The Many in the computer game
System Shock 2.
*
Aura and Morganna from the
.hack series, the Phases that serve Morganna, and the Net Slum AI's.
* The
Xenocidic Initiative, a computer that has built itself over a moon in
Terminal Velocity*
PETs, standing for PErsonal Terminal, the cell-phone sized computers that store Net-Navis in
Megaman Battle Network. The PETs also have other features, such as a cell phone, e-mail checker and hacking device.
*
The Computer from
West End Games Paranoia role playing game.
*
The Autochthon, the extradimensional AI which secretly control
Iteration X, in
White Wolf's
Mage: The Ascension.
*
Unreal Tournament, UT and the UT engine, which is used for several games. The most exciting shooter of all moments. [Unreal Tournament.][
2] And Unreal. [
3]
*
The CENTRAL SCRUTINIZER, narrator from
Frank Zappa's
Joe's Garage*
Compy 386,
Strong Bad's second computer in
Homestar Runner*
Lappy 486,
Strong Bad's third computer, a laptop, in
Homestar Runner*
Tandy 400,
Strong Bad's first computer with which he answered e-mails in
Homestar Runner.
Tandy is a real company, but never produced a 400 model.
See the
List of fictional robots and androids for all fictional computers which are described as existing in a mobile or humanlike form.
*
AI in fiction*
Archive of fictional things*
List of fictional electronic games*
List of movie clichés*
Sentient computers
* http://newark.rutgers.edu/~hbf/compulit.htm
* http://www.computer.org/intelligent/homepage/x2his.htm
* http://technicity.net/articles/writing_the_future.htm
* http://sun.soci.niu.edu/~rslade/mnbkfc.htm â€" A large set of reviews of fiction that bears on computers in some aspect
*
List of computer names in science fiction â€" Also includes androids, robots and sundry aliens
*
Robot Hall of Fame at CMU â€" With fictional inductees HAL-9000 and R2-D2
*
Jokes about computers in science fiction