List of fictional robots and androids
This
List of fictional robots and androids is a
chronological list, catagorised by medium. It includes all depictions of
robots,
androids and
gynoids in
literature,
television, and
cinema. It is intended for all fictional computers which are described as existing in a humanlike or mobile form. It shows how the concept has developed in the human imagination through history.
See also the
List of fictional computers for all fictional computers depicted as static machines.
See also mechanical automata produced for entertainment in the eighteenth century.*
Coppélia, a life-size dancing doll in the ballet of the same name, choreographed by
Marius Petipa with music by
Léo Delibes (
1870).
* The word "robot" comes from
Karel Capek's play,
R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots) written
1920; first performed
1921; performed in
New York 1922;
English edition published
1923. In the play, the word refers to
artificially created life forms [
1]. Named robots in the play are: Marius; Sulla; Radius; Primus and Helena.
See also Robots in literature* Maidens made of gold, Bronze giant
Talos, in The
Iliad by
Homer (
circa 800 BC)
* The woman forged out of gold in Finnish myth The
Kalevala (
prehistoric folklore)
* The legend of the
Golem, an animated man of clay, mentioned in the
Talmud. (
16th century)
* Olimpia in
E.T.A. Hoffmann's
Der Sandmann (
1814)
* A mechanical man powered by steam in Edward S. Ellis'
Steam Man of the Prairies (
1865)
* A mechanical man run by electricity in Luis Senarens'
Frank Reade and his Electric Man (
1885)
*
Tik-Tok in
L. Frank Baum's
Oz books (
1900-)
* A robot chess-player in "
Moxon's Master" by
Ambrose Bierce (
1909)
* The "Professor Jameson" series by Neil R. Jones (early
1930s) featured human and alien minds preserved in robot bodies. Reprinted in five Ace paperbacks in the late
1960s:
The Planet of the Double Sun,
The Sunless World,
Space War,
Twin Worlds and
Doomsday on Ajiat* The
Martian robot in
The Lost Machine by
John Wyndham (
1932)
* Human cyborgs in
Revolt of the Pedestrians by
David H. Keller (
1932)
* Robot surgeon in "Rex" by
Harl Vincent (
1934)
*
Helen O'Loy, from the story of the same title by
Lester del Rey (
1938)
*
Adam Link of
I, Robot by
Eando Binder (
1938)
* Robots discover their "roots" in
Robots Return by
Robert Moore Williams (
1938).
* Robot as murder witness in
True Confession by
F. Orlin Tremaine (
1939)
*
Gnut, in
Farewell to the Master by
Harry Bates (
1940) - (Later made into the classic 1954 SF film
The Day the Earth Stood Still)
* Robots by
Isaac Asimov:
** Robbie, Speedy, Cutie, and others, from the stories in
I, Robot (
1940 -
1950) (not to be confused with the Binder short story of the same title)
** L-76, Z-1, Z-2, Z-3, Emma-2, Brackenridge, Tony, Lenny, Ez-27 and others, from the stories in
The Rest of the Robots 1964**
R. Daneel Olivaw, from
The Caves of Steel (
1954) and subsequent novels
**
R. Giskard Reventlov, from
The Robots of Dawn and subsequent novels
** Andrew Martin, from
The Bicentennial Man (
1976) (later made into a film) and
The Positronic Man (a novel) with Robert Silverberg
**
Norby, in a series of books for children co-written with
Janet Asimov* The
Humanoids, from two novels by
Jack Williamson,(
1949 and
1980)
*
Zane Gort, a robot novelist, in the short story
The Silver Eggheads by
Fritz Leiber, (
1959)
* Irona, the robot maid of
Richie Rich, the main character in a
comic book series. (
1961)
*
The Iron Man, in the book by
Ted Hughes (
1968)
*
Androids, fully organic in nature and so human-like that they can only be distinguished by psychological tests; some of them don't even know that they're not human. --
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (
1968) by
Philip K. Dick*
The Electric Grandmother in the short story of the same name, from
I Sing the Body Electric by
Ray Bradbury,(
1969)
*
Doraemon in a
manga by
Fujiko Fujio (
1969)
*
Personoids - Personoids do not need any human-like physical body; they are rather an abstraction of functions of human mind, they live in computers - in
Stanisław Lem's book " Próżnia Doskonała" (1971). It is a collection of book reviews of nonexistent books. Translated into English by Michael Kandel as A Perfect Vacuum (1983).
* The
masculinist plot to replace women with perfect looking, obedient robot replicas --
The Stepford Wives (
1972) by
Ira Levin*
HARLIE in
When H.A.R.L.I.E. was One by
David Gerrold (
1972)
* Setaur, Aniel, and Terminus in
Tales of Pirx the Pilot by
Stanisław Lem (
1973)
*
Marvin the Paranoid Android in
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (
1978–
1981) (originally a radio series, then a book trilogy and a TV series, and later a motion picture)
*
Tidy,
George,
Fagor,
Surgeon General Kraken and miscellaneous other androids from
James Follett's Earthsearch series (
1980–
1981) (originally a radio series, then a two book series).
* Chip, the robot teenager in the
Not Quite Human series (
1985-
1986), by
Seth McEvoy. Later,
Disney made the book into two movies.
* Marilyn, named after
Marilyn Monroe, in
Kazuo Umezu's 1982 manga My name is Shingo* Two extreme examples of robot morality, one perfectly innocent and one perfectly criminal, in
Roderick and
Tik-Tok (
1980,
1983) by John Sladek
* Frost, Beta, Mordel, and the Ore Crusher in
Roger Zelazny's short story
For a Breath I Tarry.
* The
Boppers, a race of moon-based robots that achieve independence from humanity, in the series of books The
Ware Tetralogy by
Rudy Rucker.
*Solo, from Robert Mason's novel
Weapon* Jay-Dub and Dee Model in
Ken MacLeod's
The Stone Canal (
1996)
* Dorfl, and other
Discworld golems deliberately described in terms reminiscent of an Asimovian robot, in
Terry Pratchett's
Feet of Clay, (
1996) and subsequent
Discworld novels
*
Moravecs are sentient descendants of probes sent by humans to the Jovian belt, in
Dan Simmons'
Ilium, (
2003)
*
Project 2501 in
Masamune Shirow's
Ghost in the Shell Japanese
manga describes an espionage
AI that achieves sentience. (
1991)
* Thinkbot [
2] - the robot who taught the world to be human.
1930s and earlier
* Futura in
Metropolis (
1927)
* Annihilants, robot soldiers belonging to Ming the Merciless in the
Flash Gordon film series (
1936).
1950s
*
Gort, in
The Day the Earth Stood Still (
1951) (film version of
Farewell to the Master)
*
Robby, in
Forbidden Planet (
1956)
1960s
*
B9 Robot in
Lost In Space (
1965-1968)
*
Mechani-Kong in
King Kong Escapes (
1967)
1970s
* The all-robot police force in
THX 1138 (
1971)
* The drones Huey, Duey, and Louie, in
Silent Running (
1972). Notable as the first movie in which non-anthropomorphic robots were made mobile by manning them with amputees.
* The robots in
Sleeper (
1973)
*
Jet Jaguar in
Godzilla vs. Megalon (
1973)
* The robotic
gunfighters in
Westworld, one of which was played by
Yul Brynner (
1973)
* The bomb in
Dark Star (1974, by
John Carpenter)
*
Mechagodzilla in various Godzilla films (
1974).
* Box, in
Logan's Run (
1976)
*
C-3PO,
R2-D2 in
Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (
1977) and subsequent films
* V.I.N.CENT., B.O.B, Maximillian and the androids made out of humans --
The Black Hole (
1979)
*
Ash in
Alien (
1979)
1980s
* Hector, in
Saturn 3 (
1980)
* Uèr, an "electro-chemical" android capable of human feelings, in
Milady 3000 comic book by
Magnus (
1980)
* The
replicants Roy Batty, Pris, Leon Kowalski, Zhora, Rachael, and possibly
Rick Deckard --
Blade Runner (
1982) (the film version of
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?)
*
T-800 as the robot assassin in
The Terminator (
1984)
* The young boy Data Analyzing Robot Youth Lifeform in
D.A.R.Y.L. (
1985)
*
Bishop in
Aliens (
1986)
*
Max, periscope-like robot aboard an alien spacecraft in
Flight of the Navigator (
1986)
* Number 5 aka Johnny 5 in Short Circuit (1986) and Short Circuit 2 (1988)
* Tik-Tok in Return to Oz (1985)
* ED-209 in RoboCop (1987)
* Cherry 2000 in Cherry 2000 (1987)
* The android Ulysses
in the film Making Mr. Right (1987)
* The android Astor
, played by Stacey Williams, in Gangster World'' (
1988)
*Jinx from the
1986 film
SpaceCamp.
* The
Cylons in
Battlestar Galactica* The two androids "Hector" and "Vector" in
Battlestar Galactica1990s
* The evil robotic doubles in
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey (
1991)
*
Arnold Schwarzenegger as the T-800 Model 101 and
Robert Patrick as the
T-1000 Model Terminator in
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (
1991)
* Alsatia Zevo, the gynoid sister of Leslie Zevo and dollmaker in
Toys. (
1992)
* Battle Droids in
Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace to
Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith*
Project 2501 in the Movie Adaptation of
Masamune Shirow's Ghost in the Shell Japanese manga anime describes AI surveillance of population. (1995)
* Bishop (android) in Alien³ (1992)
* "SID 6.7", the villain in the film "Virtuosity" (1995) as a nanotech synthetic android, played by Russell Crowe.
* David, Becker and Jessica from Screamers (film) (1995) based on the short story Second Variety by Philip K. Dick
* Solo in Solo (1996), based on Robert Mason's novel (see above)
* Annalee in Alien: Resurrection (1997)
* "Robot" in Lost in Space, the movie of the TV series (1998 )
* The Iron Giant (1999) (film version of The Iron Man
)
* Andrew, and others the robot servant in Bicentennial Man (1999) -- based on a short story by Isaac Asimov
* Vanessa
the exploding fembot assassin in Austin Powers The Spy Who Shagged Me'' (
1999)
2000s
* AMEE the robot scout in the film
Red Planet, who gets stuck in military mode and destroys the human crew of the spaceship. (
2000)
* Many robots, including David, the lead character, in
Artificial Intelligence: AI (
2001); based on the "Supertoys" of
Brian Aldiss' short story,
Supertoys Last All Summer Long[
3].
*
Arnold Schwarzenegger as the
T-850 Model 101 Terminator and
Kristanna Loken as the
T-X Terminator in
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (
2003)
* The robot butler
B166ER, the residents of the machine nation of
Zero-One, and the
Sentinels from the
Matrix series.(
1999-
2003)
*
B-4, Data's brother in
Star Trek: Nemesis (
2003)
* Sonny (Type
NS-5) and many other robots in
I, Robot (
2004)
* The entire cast of
Robots (2005)
1960s and earlier
* Rosie the Maid in
The Jetsons (
1962)
* Robert the Robot, the transparent mechanical spaceship co-pilot in the
Fireball XL5 British
puppet television series created by
Gerry Anderson (
1962)
* Various unnamed robots in the series
Space Patrol (known as
Planet Patrol in the US (
1962)
* K-9, Kamelion, the Movellans, and many more, in the British
Doctor Who series (
1963–2005) (See also
List of Doctor Who robots)
* Astro Boy from
Astro Boy the Japanese animated series (
1963–
1966)
* "Rhoda Miller" in
My Living Doll (
1964)
* "The Cybernauts" in
The Avengers (TV series) (
1965)
* "Robot B-9" in
Lost in Space TV series (
1965–
1968)
*
Hymie the Robot in the comedy series
Get Smart (
1965–
1970)
* Various minor characters and villains (Dr. Korby, Rayna, the Nomad probe, Mudd's androids) in
Star Trek (
1966–
1969)
*
Serendipity Dog - a robot character that asked questions on the BBC children's television science series
Tom Tom (1960?-1969)
* Tobor The
8th Man in the Japanese Anime TV series. Also, his younger, stronger, but less sophisticated sister Samantha 7. See http://www.alphalink.com.au/~roglen/tobor.htm
1970s
* Zed, the rebel robot in
The Ed and Zed Show (c1970)
* Questor,
The Questor Tapes (1974)
* Mr. R.I.N.G.
The Night Stalker (1975) Acronym stands for Robomatic Internalized Nerve Ganglia
* Yo-Yo, aka Geogory Yoyonovitch,
Holmes and Yo-Yo (1976)
* Officer Haven
[Future Cop] (1976-77)
* The Clinkers,
Shields and Yarnell (1977-78)
*
K-9, the talking robotic dog (actually, dogs) from the British television series
Doctor Who.
* Peepo, the robot from the children's series
Space Academy (1977-1979)
*
Haro,
Mobile Suit Gundam (1977)
* 7-Zark-7 and 1-Rover-1 in the animated series
Battle of the Planets (1978)
* The
Cylons in
Battlestar Galactica (
1978–
1980) (in the novelizations, Cylons were simply humanoid aliens wearing mechanical armor)
* H.E.R.B.I.E. in the 1978
Fantastic Four animated series
* Twiki and Dr. Theopolis in
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (
1979)
* W1k1 or Wiki, the pocket-sized robot from the children's series
Jason of Star Command (1979-1981) (a seeming spinoff of
Space Academy)
*
Blake's Seven, science fiction series 1978-81, featured several robots and androids.
1980s
*
Metal Mickey first appeared on British television in the
ITV London Weekend Television children's magazine show
The Saturday Banana in
1979 and then in his own show from
1980 to
1983 *
KITT (Knight Industries Two Thousand), a non-humanoid robot in the form of a car (and its prototype, KARR [Knight Automated Roving Robot]), from
Knight Rider (
1982–
1986)
*
The Transformers of various
Transformers television series (
1984-present)
*
Go-bots were featured in a Transformers-like series also named
Go-Bots around the same time as the
Trasnformers series.
*
Voltron Defender of the Universe (
1984-
1986}
* Vicki (Voice Input Child Indenticant) the little girl robot in
Small Wonder (
1985)
*
Conky 2000, robot who gives out the secret word in
Pee-wee's Playhouse ,
1986 until
1991.
*
Data, Lore,
Lal (Data's daughter) and
Juliana Tainer in the series
Star Trek: The Next Generation (
1987)
* The
synthoids from several episodes of the
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero series (
1985).
* Tom Servo, Crow T. Robot, Gypsy and Cambot from
Mystery Science Theater 3000 (
1988)
*
The Skutters,
Kryten, the Simulants and many others from
Red Dwarf (
1988)
* Blitz, a robotic dog from the cartoon
C.O.P.S.,
1988 and
1989.
* No-No, from the animated children's series
Ulysses 31* Blinky, from the animated children's series
Bucky O'Hare*
ASTAR, a golden robot promoting safe play to children
*Jinx from the
1986 film
SpaceCamp.
1990s
* Androids 16-20,
Dragonball series.
* Sgt. Eve Edison, robot
police officer in
Mann & Machine (1992)
*
Alpha 5 from
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers (
1993 -
1996) to
Power Rangers: Turbo*
Battle Borgs from
Mighty Morphin Alien Rangers (
1995)
*
Alpha 6 from
Power Rangers: Turbo to
Power Rangers: Lost Galaxy*
790, the sarcastic and perverse bodyless robot head of
Lexx*
Blue Senturion, robotic Intergalactic Police Officer from
Power Rangers: Turbo to
Power Rangers: In Space*
Buffybot,
April and
Ted in the series
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (
1997)
*
Bender the robot, as well as Flexo, Santa-Bot and Kwanzaa-Bot, and other assorted robots including the Epsilon Rho Rho fraternity robots, in the
animated series Futurama (
1999)
* Robot Devil, the demonic ruler of Robot Hell in the
animated series Futurama (
1999)
* The marionettes from the anime series
Saber Marionette R (
1995),
Saber Marionette J (
1997),
Saber Marionette J Again OAV (
1998), and
Saber Marionette J to X (
1999)
* The boy robot Rusty, of the animated series
The Big Guy and Rusty*
Satan's Robot, a meta-fictional robot in
The Adventures of Captain Proton, a
holodeck program from
Star Trek: Voyager*
Zords, giant fighting machines from all seasons of
Power Rangers* Ian Favre, CPB officer in
Total Recall 20702000s
*
Rommie Gabriel/Balance of Judgement, Pax Magelanic and various other warship AIs/Avatars from
Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda (2001-2005)
*
Frax from
Power Rangers: Time Force*
Alpha 7 from
Power Rangers: Wild Force* XR, the indestrutible, self healing sidekick robot in
Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (also XL, the proto-version of XR)
*
Chii, the Persocom in the Japanese anime series
Chobits (
2002)
* Robot Jones from
Whatever Happened to Robot Jones? (
2002)
* The
Tachikoma spider tanks from
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex* Thundercleese from
The Brak Show (
2001–
2003)
*
GIR and the Robo-Parents from
Invader Zim (
2001)
*
"Jenny" XJ-9 Wakeman from
My Life as a Teenage Robot (
2003)
*
R. Dorothy Wayneright in
The Big O (
2003)
* The Mobile Doll systems onboard Virgos and other mobile suits in
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing.
*
B4 in the movie
Star Trek: Nemesis (
2002)
*
Cylons from "
Battlestar Galactica"
*
Number Six (and six other models so far) in
Battlestar Galactica (2003-present)
*
H.E.L.P.eR., a robot developed by Jonas Venture, Sr., in
The Venture Bros.* Mahoro, the protagonist of
Mahoromatic.
* Goddard,
Jimmy Neutron's robot pet dog.
*
Bill Cosby from
South Park*
A.W.E.S.O.M.E.O. from
South Park* Mecha-Streisand from
South Park*
R.I.C. 2.0, Robotic Interactive Canine who transforms itself into a Canine Cannon from
Power Rangers: SPD*
S.O.P.H.I.E., Series One Processor Hyper Intelligent Encriptor who is kidnapped and used for her programming from
Power Rangers: SPD* The replicators, seen in multiple seasons of
Stargate: SG-1.
* Toy Santa from
The Santa Clause 2* Mr Dent, nanotech enforcer from
Codename Eternity*
MEGAS from
Megas XLR*
XL from
Atomic Betty*
Buffybot from
Buffy the Vampire Slayer*
April (Btvs) from
Buffy the Vampire Slayer* Anne Droid, Trin-E, Zu-Zana and Davinadroid from the
Doctor Who episode
Bad WolfComic Books
*The
ABC Warriors from the comic
2000 AD.
*Grag and Otho from the pulp magazines
Captain Future &
Startling Stories*The
Golden Age Human Torch in
Marvel Comics, (
1938)
*The
Superman duplicates,
Brainiac (
pre-Crisis) and Kelex in
Superman, (
1958)
*
Doctor Doom's Doombots in
Fantastic Four (
1961)
*
Ultron, the
Vision,
Jocasta and
Alkhema in
The Avengers (
1963)
*The
Sentinels in
X-Men (
1963)
*The
Red Tornado,
Amazo and
Tomorrow Woman and
Hourman III in
JLA (
1968)
*
Robotman in
Doom Patrol (
1963)
*The
Manhunters in
Green Lantern (
1959)
*The
Mad Thinker's
Awesome Android in
Fantastic Four and various other
Marvel Comics. Would later be featured in
She Hulk's 2004 series under the name 'Awesome Andy'.
*Jeremy Feeple and Professor Steamhead got replaced with badly constructed, unconvincing robot doubles (which eventually exploded) in an early issue of
Ninja High School.
*
Robot Archie in the UK comic
Valiant*Android Andy, a parody of Robot Archie in
Captain Britain*
Brassneck in
The Dandy*
Tonto and
Lothar from
The Metabarons.
*Robots from planet Des from polish serie "Gods from The Space", which was written by Arnold Mostowicz and Alfred Górny and ilustrated by Bogusław Polch.
* "Clickers" from
Top 10*Android from Frank Miller's "Hard Bolied".
*Robo-cops from Incal (by Moebius & Jodorowsky)
*The
Stellar Warriors from
Karmatron (
1986) by
Oscar González Loyo.
*
Robotman in the comic strip of the same name, which eventually became Monty.
Animated Shorts/Series
Flash
* Rya Botkins of Matt Wilson's
Bonus Stage* June Crane of
Bonus Stage (possibly not--see page for more details)
* The Grape Nuts Robot, Created by
Bubs to imitate
Strong Bad from
Homestar Runner Appears here [
4]
* Schniz, Fulker, CPDoom, and various background characters from
Andrew Kauervane's My God, Robots!
Web Comics
* ARPA-01 (female type) and VIC-02 (male type) virtual intercourse companions in
Sexy Losers'
Scientific Erotican plot thread (
2003)
*"Clanks", various (steam powered?) robots in
Phil Foglio's
steampunk fantasy
Girl Genius.
*
Eve, a female android from
Applegeeks, built using
Apple Macintosh parts.
* Emotibot, a robot programmed to feel emotions, from
Beaver and Steve* Ezekiel aka 'Zeke' - Formally known as the "Z-bot", the
anthropomorphised Xbox console from the webcomic
Ctrl+Alt+Del.
* J-LB8/Jalea Bates in
Melonpool. Started as a robot, later to become a human.
* Lothar Hex from
Exterminatus Now.
* Medivac 911 ('Doc'), a steam-powered medical/janitorial
droid from
The Polymer City Chronicles.
* The
Ottobot [
5], a robot duplicate of the character Francis Ray Ottoman featured in
PvP.
* PC, ASCII and O in
Funny Farm.
*
Ping, the
PlayStation 2 accessory robot-girl from
Fred Gallagher's
Megatokyo.
* Pintsize, an AnthroPC from
Questionable Content. Other AnthroPCs have featured in
Questionable Content.
*
Robot Frank, an internet personality found at
Robot Frank's website* Sancho, from
Bigger Than Cheeses.
* The giant talking dildo featured in
Girly by Josh Lesnick.
* A sugar powered robot suit owned by Beefsteak from
Filthy Lies!.
* The self-aware technology in
Gene Catlow.
* Various characters in
Freefall, including Helix.
* Various characters in
21st Century Fox.
* Various characters from
Diesel Sweeties, including Clango Cyclotron.
* Geary, a
cleanliness-obsessed and
evil robot from
Crash Nitro Kart.
* The reploids in the
Megaman Zero series, robots with human intelligence. The main character robots and bosses in its precursor series, Mega Man X, are also reploids, but not always stated as such specifically. All of the minor enemies in both series and the Mega Man Classic series are also robots using a less advanced technology.
* The
Badniks, the
E-Series robots and
Metallix; all developed by
Doctor Robotnik in the
Sonic the Hedgehog series
* Floyd, the lovable sidekick robot from the
Infocom text adventure
Planetfall.
*
Cait Sith, a fortune-telling robotic
cat controlled via remote by a man named Reeve Teusti. By extension, Cait Sith rides atop a giant, robotic
moogle to which Cait Sith relays commands through a megaphone.
* HMX-12 Multi and HMX-13 Serio, the popular robot maids from
To Heart as well as their successor, HMX-17a Ilfa from
To Heart 2.
*
Robo from
Chrono Trigger.
* Thursday, sidekick of Captain Gordon the 37th Defender of Earth (and later itself the 38th Defender of Earth) from
Disgaea: Hour of Darkness.
* Gadget and Gadget Z from Suikoden II and Suikoden III respectively.
* Assorted monsters from the Final Fantasy series.
* The "machina" from Final Fantasy X and Final Fantasy X-2.
* Emeralda, a colony of nanomachines from Xenogears.
* KOS-MOS, MOMO, and the Realians from Xenosaga.
* The Cyberdisc and Sectopod species in X-COM: UFO Defense.
* 343 Guilty Spark, from the Halo series of video games.
* 2401 Penitent Tangent, from Halo 2.
* HK-47 from Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, part of the Star Wars Expanded Universe
* The entire Core army in Total Annihilation
* The Servbots from Mega Man Legends
* JACK from the Tekken series
* The Metal Gears from the Metal Gear series
* Cyrax, Sektor, and Smoke from the Mortal Kombat series
*Hengar from Monster Rancher
*The Robo-Kys from the Guilty Gear series
*Dog from Half-Life 2
*Kurt Zisa, a secret Heartless boss in the American and Final Mix versions of Kingdom Hearts
*Clank, Doctor Nefarious and countless others in the Ratchet & Clank series.
*ROB 64 from Star Fox 64 and Star Fox: Assault
*Mike, a "karaoke robot" from WarioWare: Touched!. However, its creator, Dr. Crygor used him as a janitor.
*Chibi-Robo, a tiny robot housekeeper that is the main playable character in the game of same name.
*The Ridepod, a customizable industrial revolution-style robot that Max can ride in the dungeons in the RPG Dark Cloud 2.
*The Copyroid, a robot that allows a Net-Navi to be projected into the real world and interact with it in MegaMan Battle Network 6.
*Reverie (Hoshino Yumemi in the original Japanese version), a main character in the visual novel Planetarian''.)
* Ershin from
Breath of Fire IV*
Transmetropolitan features AIs who abuse virtual hallucinogens
* Various
Star Trek "characters".
* Harry Harrison / Marvin Minsky:
The Turing Option (novel)
*
The Mind's I edited by
Daniel C. Dennett and
Douglas Hofstadter* Arthur from
The Journeyman Project video game series
*
Solace in the
Callahan's Place stories of
Spider Robinson* IQ-9 of
Star Blazers, originally called Analyzer in
Space Battleship Yamato.
* Haro, mascot character of U.C.
Gundam.
*
Sy Borg from
Frank Zappa's
Joe's Garage.
*
Fetchers, accident prone and apologetic gopher robots from the
BBC radio series Nineteen Ninety-Four by William Osborne and Richard Turner.
* Coheed (the Beast), Cambria (The Knowledge), Jesse (The Inferno), Mayo Deftinwolf, and a number of other IRO-Bot "children", who are genetically altered humans with superhuman powers and robotic qualities, (i.e: can be taken apart and terminated) from the graphic novel series
The Bag On Line Adventures written by
Coheed and Cambria frontman
Claudio Sanchez. The characters and plotlines are also incorporated into the band's music.
* Robots from "System Shock" game.
* "Slo-Mo" from
Space Precinct*
Shawabty The idea of
something to do the work in the ancient Egypt
*
Archive of fictional things*
Artificial intelligence*
Science fiction*
List of fictional computers*
Cyborgs in fiction*
Robot Hall of Fame at CMU – With fictional inductees HAL-9000 and R2-D2