Robots and androids have frequently been depicted
or described in works of fiction. The word
"robot" itself comes from a work of fiction,
Karel Čapek's play, R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal
Robots), written in 1920 and first performed
in 1921.
This list of fictional robots and androids
is chronological, and categorised by medium.
It includes all depictions of robots, androids
and gynoids in literature, television, and
cinema; however, robots that have appeared
in more than one form of media are not necessarily
listed in each of those media. This list 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.
Static computers depicted in fiction are discussed
in the separate list of fictional computers.
== Theatre ==
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 Čapek's
play, R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots) written
in 1920 in the Czech language and first performed
1921. Performed in New York 1922 and an English
edition published in 1923. In the play, the
word refers to artificially created life forms.
Named robots in the play are Marius, Sulla,
Radius, Primus, Helena, and Damon. The play
introduced and popularized the term "robot".
Čapek's robots are biological machines that
are assembled, as opposed to grown or born.
== Literature ==
=== 19th century and earlier ===
The woman forged out of gold in Finnish myth
The Kalevala (prehistoric folklore)
From 600 BC onward, legends of talking bronze
and clay statues coming to life have been
a regular occurrence in the works of classical
authors such as Homer, Plato, Pindar, Tacitus,
and Pliny. In Book 18 of the Iliad, Hephaestus
the god of all mechanical arts, was assisted
by two moving female statues made from gold
– "living young damsels, filled with minds
and wisdoms". Another legend has Hephaestus
being commanded by Zeus to create the first
woman, Pandora, out of clay. The myth of Pygmalion,
king of Cyprus, tells of a lonely man who
sculpted his ideal woman from ivory, Galatea,
and promptly fell in love with her after the
goddess Aphrodite brought her to life.
Talos, bronze giant Talos in Apollonius of
Rhodes' Argonautica, 3rd century BCE
Brazen heads, attributed to numerous scholars
involved in the introduction of Arabian science
to medieval Europe, particularly Roger Bacon
(13th century)
Golem – The legend of the Golem, an animated
man of clay, is mentioned in the Talmud. (16th
century)
Talus, "iron man" who mechanically helps Arthegall
dispense justice in The Faerie Queene, the
epic poem by Edmund Spenser, published in
1590
Olimpia, automaton who captivates the hero
Nathanael so much he wishes to marry her in
E. T. A. Hoffmann's Der Sandmann (1814)
Artificial human-like being created by Victor
Frankenstein in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
(1818)
A mechanical man powered by steam in Edward
S. Ellis' The Steam Man of the Prairies (1865)
Olympia in Act I of Jacques Offenbach's The
Tales of Hoffmann, based on the Hoffmann story
(1881)
A mechanical man run by electricity in Luis
Senarens' Frank Reade and his Electric Man
(1885)
Hadaly, a mechanical woman run by electricity,
in Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam's The Future
Eve (1886) – the novel credited with popularizing
the word "android"
"The Brazen Android" by William Douglas O'Connor.
First appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, April
1891
The Dancing Partner by Jerome K.Jerome of
Three Men in a Boat fame (1893)
The mecha-like tripods that the Martians use
to conquer the Earth in The War of the Worlds
by H.G. Wells (1897)
"The New Frankenstein" by Ernest Edward Kellett
(1899), in which an inventor creates an "anti-phonograph"
that according to the narrator "can give the
appropriate answer to every question I put",
and installs in it a robotic female body that
"will guide herself, answer questions, talk
and eat like a rational being, in fact, perform
the part of a society lady." The android proves
convincing enough to fool two suitors who
wish to marry her.
=== Early 1900s ===
The "Metal Men" automata designed by a Thomas
Edison-like scientist in Gustave Le Rouge's
La Conspiration des Milliardaires (1899–1900)
Tik-Tok in L. Frank Baum's Oz books, premiering
in Ozma of Oz (1907), and in the movie Return
to Oz, largely based on Ozma of Oz
A robot chess-player in Moxon's Master by
Ambrose Bierce (first published in the San
Francisco Examiner on Aug. 16, 1899)
In Gaston Leroux's La Poupée Sanglante (The
Bloody Doll) and La Machine à Assassiner
(The Murdering Machine), the lead character,
Bénédict Masson, is wrongly accused of murder
and guillotined. His brain is later attached
to an automaton created by scientist Jacques
Cotentin, and Masson goes on to track and
punish those who caused his death.
=== 1920s ===
R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots) (1921),
by Karel Čapek – credited with coining
the term "robot". In its original Czech, "robota"
means forced labour, and is derived from "rab",
meaning "slave." R.U.R. depicts the first
elaborate depiction of a machine take-over.
Čapek's robots can also be seen as the first
androids: they are in fact organic.
Le Singe (The Monkey) (1925), by Maurice Renard
and Albert Jean, imagined the creation of
artificial lifeforms through the process of
"radiogenesis", a sort of human electrocopying
or cloning process.
The Metal Giants (1926), by Edmond Hamilton,
in which a computer brain who runs on atomic
power creates an army of 300-foot-tall robots.
Metropolis (1927), by Thea von Harbou as novel,
by Fritz Lang as film, character Maria and
her robot double.
Automata (1929), by S. Fowler Wright, about
machines doing the humans' jobs before wiping
them out.
=== 1930s ===
The "Professor Jameson" series by Neil R.
Jones (early 1930s) featured human and alien
minds preserved in robot bodies. It was 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.
Zat the Martian robot, protagonist of John
Wyndham's short story "The Lost Machine" (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)
=== 1940s ===
Gnut in Farewell to the Master by Harry Bates
(1940), later made into the classic 1951 science
fiction film The Day the Earth Stood Still
Unnamed "living plastic" robot in "Vault of
the Beast" (1940), short story by A. E. van
Vogt
Jay Score ("J20"), emergency pilot of the
Earth-to-Venus freighter Upskadaska City (colloquially
called "Upsydaisy") in "Jay Score", a short
story by Eric Frank Russell in the May 1941
issue of Astounding Science Fiction (1941)
Jenkins in City by Clifford D. Simak (1944)
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
(1983) and subsequent novels
Andrew Martin from The Bicentennial Man (1976)
(later made into a film) and The Positronic
Man (a novel), co-written by Asimov and Robert
Silverberg
Norby in a series of books for children and
adolescents, co-written with Janet Asimov
The Humanoids from two novels by Jack Williamson
(1949 and 1980)
=== 1950s and 1960s ===
Astro Boy, series by Osamu Tezuka (published
in Japan but available in English), an atomic-powered
robot of 100,000 horsepower built to resemble
a little boy, most specifically Tobio, the
deceased son of Dr. Tenma. When not in school,
Astro Boy spent his time dealing with robots
& aliens. (1952)
The Gallegher series of stories by Lewis Padgett
(Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore) collected
in Robots Have No Tails (1952)
The Mechanical Hound from Fahrenheit 451 by
Ray Bradbury (1953)
Bors, an old government integration robot
pivotal to Philip K. Dick's novelette The
Last of the Masters (1954)
Zane Gort, a robot novelist in the short story
"The Silver Eggheads" by Fritz Leiber (1959)
SHROUD (Synthetic Human, Radiation OUtput
Determined) and SHOCK (Synthetic Human Object,
Casualty Kinematics), the sentient test dummies
in the novel V. by Thomas Pynchon (1963)
Frost, the Beta-Machine, Mordel, and the Ancient
Ore Crusher in Roger Zelazny's short story
"For a Breath I Tarry" (1966)
Trurl and Klapaucius, the robot geniuses of
The Cyberiad (Cyberiada, 1967; translated
by Michael Kandel 1974) – collection of
humorous stories about the exploits of Trurl
and Klapaucius, "constructors" among robots
The Iron Man in the novel The Iron Man: A
Children's Story in Five Nights by Ted Hughes,
illustrated by Andrew Davidson (1968), later
changed to The Iron Giant to avoid confusion
with its predecessor, the comic superhero
of the same name
Roy Batty, Pris, Rachael and several other
Nexus-6 model androids. "Androids, fully organic
in nature – the products of genetic engineering
– 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? by
Philip K. Dick (1968)
Diktor, the robotic lover in the comics and
film Barbarella (1968)
"The Electric Grandmother" in the short story
of the same name, from I Sing the Body Electric
by Ray Bradbury (1969), based on a 1962 Twilight
Zone episode of the same name
Mech Eagles from the novel Logan's Run (1967),
robotic eagles designed to track and kill
people who refuse to die at age 21
Metal Men (1962) .In DC's Showcase #37, the
Metal Men, a band of 6 robots, each of a different
metal element, are created to fight a nuclear
menace. As the issue was meant to be a one-shot
filler, they are all finally destroyed. As
it turned out, they ran for 4 trial issues
(#37-40) and then had their own bi-monthly
series.
=== 1970s ===
Personoids, in Stanisław Lem's book Próżnia
Doskonała (1971). This is a collection of
book reviews of nonexistent books, and was
translated into English by Michael Kandel
as A Perfect Vacuum (1983). "Personoids do
not need any human-like physical body; they
are rather an abstraction of functions of
human mind, they live in computers."
The Stepford Wives (1972) by Ira Levin – "The
masculine plot to replace women with perfect
looking, obedient robot replicas"
Setaur, Aniel and Terminus in Tales of Pirx
the Pilot by Stanisław Lem (1973)
The Hangman in Home Is the Hangman by Roger
Zelazny (1975), winner of that year's Nebula
Award for Best Novella
Andrew Martin from The Bicentennial Man (1976)
by Isaac Asimov and The Positronic Man (1993)
by Asimov and Robert Silverberg
All the droids from the Star Wars franchise
(since 1977 for the main canon, 1976 for the
Expanded Universe)
Marvin the Paranoid Android in The Hitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy (1979) by Douglas Adams
and subsequent novels based on the original
radio series
=== 1980s ===
Chip, the robot teenager in the Not Quite
Human series (1985–1986) by Seth McEvoy.
Disney later made the book into three movies.
Roderick (1980) and Tik-Tok (1983) by John
Sladek, two extreme examples of robot morality,
one perfectly innocent and one perfectly criminal
The Boppers, a race of moon-based robots that
achieve independence from humanity, in the
series of books The Ware Tetralogy by Rudy
Rucker
R. Giskard Reventlov from The Robots of Dawn
(1983) and subsequent novels by Isacc Asimov
All Autobots and Decepticons from the Transformers
franchise (since 1984)
Elio, a character from A Tale of Time City
(1987) by Diana Wynne Jones
Manders in The Type One Super Robot (1987),
a children's book by Alison Prince
Solo from Robert Mason's novels Weapon (1989)
and Solo (1993) – Note, the 1996 film titled
Solo is based solely on the first novel, Weapon.
Conal Cochran's androids who serve central
antagonists/villains in Halloween III: Season
of the Witch, a non-Halloween consecutive
film
Sheen, a female android mysteriously programmed
to guard and love Stile, a serf on the planet
Proton, in the sci-fi/fantasy series Apprentice
Adept (1980–82) by Piers Anthony.
=== 1990s ===
Yod in Marge Piercy's He, She and It (1991)
The One Who Waits in Charles Sheffield's Divergence
(1991)
Caliban in a trilogy by Roger MacBride Allen,
set in the robots universe of Isaac Asimov
(1993)
Solo and Nimrod in Robert Mason's novel Solo
(1993)
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
=== 2000s ===
Cassandra Kresnov, in a series by Joel Shepherd
(2001)
Clunk, in a series by Simon Haynes (2004)
Moravecs, sentient descendants of probes sent
by humans to the Jovian belt, in Dan Simmons'
Ilium (2003)
Nimue Alban/Merlin Athrawes, in the Safehold
series by David Weber (2007)
Otis, the robot dog from Tanith Lee's Indigara
(2007)
Freya, in Charles Stross' Saturn's Children
(2008)
HCR-328 and Tom in Automatic Lover and Automatic
Lover – Ten Years On by Ariadne Tampion
(2008)
Boilerplate, a Victorian-era robot in the
illustrated coffee-table book Boilerplate:
History's Mechanical Marvel, published by
Abrams (2009)
== Radio ==
Marvin the Paranoid Android in The Hitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy BBC radio series (1978–1980)
Tidy, George, Fagor, Surgeon General Kraken
and miscellaneous other androids from James
Follett's Earthsearch BBC radio series (1980–1981)
Fetchers, accident prone and apologetic gopher
robots from the BBC radio series Nineteen
Ninety-Four (1985)
== Music ==
Mr. Roboto, the prison robot in the eponymous
song from the rock opera Kilroy Was Here by
Styx (1983)
Rapbot, a robot built for rapping, but with
various other functions, including a toaster,
from Fake Songs by Liam Lynch (2003)
Cindi Mayweather, the protagonist from the
"Metropolis" concept series by Janelle Monáe
(2007)
Cyborg Noodle, the cyborg clone of Noodle
from the virtual band Gorillaz who was created
for the storyline of their album Plastic Beach
(2010)
== Film ==
=== 1940s and earlier ===
The Dummy, played by Ben Turpin in A Clever
Dummy, a Sennett silent short dating from
1917 when the term "robot" did not yet exist
The Master Mystery, a 1919 theatrical serial
starring Harry Houdini, featuring a fully
realized mechanical man (implemented as a
costumed actor)
The Mechanical Man from the Italian silent
film of the same name, directed by André
Deed (1921)
Maria/Futura, the Maschinenmensch, a robotic
gynoid, played by German actress Brigitte
Helm in both her robotic-appearing and human-appearing
forms in Metropolis, the silent science fiction
film by famed Austrian-German director Fritz
Lang (1927)
Arbeitsmaschine and Kampfmaschine, working
robots and fighting robots in the German movie
Der Herr der Welt (1934) by Harry Piel; the
mad scientist Professor Wolf (Walter Franck)
is eventually killed by his fighting robot
The Tin Man, voiced by Billy Bletcher ("My
name is robot!") from the Roach comedy short
of the same name featuring Thelma Todd and
Patsy Kelly (1935)
Annihilants, robot soldiers belonging to Ming
the Merciless in the Flash Gordon film series
(1936)
Steel "Killer" Robot in director William Witney's
early 1940s film serial of 15 episodes Mysterious
Doctor Satan (a.k.a. Doctor Satan's Robot)
(1940, re-released in full-length 1966)
The Mechanical Monsters in the Superman short
of the same name (1941)
=== 1950s ===
Gort, the robot in the film The Day the Earth
Stood Still (1951) (loosely based on Gnut,
the robot protagonist of "Farewell to the
Master" by Harry Bates, the original short
story upon which the movie is based)
Mark 1 in Mother Riley Meets the Vampire (1952)
Ro-Man, a robot bent on destroying earth,
in the movie Robot Monster (1952)
Nyah's robot, Chani, in the British film Devil
Girl from Mars (1954)
Tobor, a robot created to replace astronauts
in space in the film Tobor the Great (1954)
Venusian robots invading Earth in Target Earth
(1954)
Robby (Robby the Robot) in Forbidden Planet
(1956) and The Invisible Boy (1957) (the character
is intended to be the same in both films)
Kronos (1957)
Moguera, a large, mole-like robot in The Mysterians
(1957) and several subsequent Japanese films
Colossus in The Colossus of New York (1958)
The Human Robot in The Robot vs. The Aztec
Mummy (1958)
=== 1960s ===
Omega in First Spaceship on Venus (1960)
Neptune Men, robotic aliens in Invasion of
the Neptune Men, starring a young Sonny Chiba
(1961)
The Humanoids (or "Clickers") in The Creation
of the Humanoids (1962)
Robot John in Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet
(1965) and Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric
Women (1968), both re-edited versions of the
Russian film Planeta Bur (1962)
Talos in Jason and the Argonauts (1963)
Alien robots invade Earth in The Earth Dies
Screaming. (1964)
Torg in Santa Claus Conquers the Martians
(1964)
Frank Saunders (a.k.a. "Frankenstein"), an
android version of Frankenstein's monster
in Frankenstein Meets the Space Monster (1965)
Sexbots or Fembots, including Robot # 11 (Diane)
in Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965)
and Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs (1966),
both starring Vincent Price
Cyborg Garth A7 in Cyborg 2087 (1966)
Mechani-Kong in King Kong Escapes (1967)
Robot Operator in The Terrornauts (1967)
Robot army in Superargo and the Faceless Giants
(1968)
=== 1970s ===
The American defense computer Colossus that
takes over the world in Colossus: The Forbin
Project (1970)
The all-robot police force in THX 1138 (1971)
Huey, Dewey and Louie, drones in Silent Running
(1972) – notable as the first movie in which
non-humanoid robots were made mobile by manning
them with amputees
The robots in Sleeper (1973)
Jet Jaguar in Godzilla vs. Megalon (1973)
The Gunslinger (played by Yul Brynner) and
other androids in Westworld (1973) and Futureworld
(1976)
Mechagodzilla in various Godzilla films (1974)
The Stepford Wives (1975) – Joanna Eberhart
and other women are being replaced with identical
robots.
Box in Logan's Run (1976)
Necron-99, later called "Peace" from Ralph
Bakshi's Wizards (1977)
All the droids from the Star Wars franchise
(since 1977 for the main canon, 1976 for the
Expanded Universe)
Proteus IV from Demon Seed (1977), an AI computer
developed by Alex Harris, that eventually
rapes the scientist's wife to be immortal
Robot Overlord from the 1977 Italian film
Cosmos: War of the Planets
Alien robot army threatens Earth in Starship
Invasions. (1977)
Beba-2 in Message from Space (1978)
Aliens' robot army invades Earth in the Italian
film War of the Robots. (1978)
Tilk, Tilly and others in the 1978 Italian
film Star Odyssey
Elle and the Giant Robot in Starcrash (1979)
Sparks, Lomax and others from the 1979 Canadian
film H. G. Wells' The Shape of Things to Come
V.I.N.CENT (Vital Information Necessary CENTralized),
B.O.B. (BiO-sanitation Battalion), Maximillian
and the androids made out of humans in The
Black Hole (1979)
Ash in Alien (1979)
Ilia probe, a gynoid double of the original
Ilia in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Hermes, an android double of his creator,
in Unidentified Flying Oddball (1979)
C.H.O.M.P.S. (Canine HOMe Protection System),
a robotic dog invented by his young owner
(1979)
=== 1980s ===
Galaxina (1980), with Dorothy Stratten in
the title role
Hector in Saturn 3 (1980)
The robot who had sex with a secretary in
Heavy Metal (1981)
Val, Aqua, Phil and others from Heartbeeps
(1981)
Bubo, a mechanical owl in Clash of the Titans
(1981)
The replicants Roy Batty, Pris, Leon Kowalski,
Zhora, Rachael, and possibly Rick Deckard
in Blade Runner (1982) (the film version of
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?)
Max 404 and Cassandra One in Android (1982)
The Recognizers, police robots in Tron (1982)
Robot Spiders and various other robots, maliciously
reprogrammed to kill in Runaway (1984)
T-800, the robot assassin in The Terminator
(1984)
Beta, an android left on Earth impersonating
Alex Rogan while he is in space in The Last
Starfighter (1984)
D.A.R.Y.L. (Data Analyzing Robot Youth Lifeform)
(1985)
Tik-Tok in Return to Oz (1985)
Sico, Paulie's robot in Rocky IV (1985)
Killbots in Chopping Mall (1986)
BB and Samantha in Deadly Friend (1986)
Bishop in Aliens (1986)
Jinx from the film SpaceCamp (1986)
Spot in Eliminators (1986)
R.A.L.F. (Robotic Assistant Labor Facilitator)
and MAX (TriMAXion Drone Ship) in Flight of
the Navigator (1986)
Johnny 5 and the other S-A-I-N-T (Strategic-Artificially-Intelligent-Nuclear-Transport)
military robots in Short Circuit (1986) and
Short Circuit 2 (1988) and later Hot Cars,
Cold Facts (1990)
Optimus Prime and many others in The Transformers:
The Movie (1986)
ED-209 in RoboCop (1987)
Cherry 2000 (1987)
The "fix-its" in *batteries not included (1987)
Ulysses, an android in the film Making Mr.
Right (1987)
Dot Matrix in Spaceballs (1987)
Chip in the Not Quite Human movie adaptions
based on the books by Seth McEvoy (1987)
Data, positronic brain android from Star Trek:
The Next Generation (1987-2002)
Astor, an android played by Stacey Williams
in Gangster World (1988)
Lore, Data's older brother Star Trek: The
Next Generation (1988-1990)
=== 1990s ===
Commando Elite in Small Soldiers
Gorgonites in Small Soldiers
Lal, Data's offspring Star Trek: The Next
Generation (1990)
MARK13 in Hardware (1990)
The Enforcer Drone from the 1990 film Spaced
Invaders
Johnny Cab from Total Recall (1990)
T-800 and T-1000, model Terminators played
respectively by Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Robert Patrick in Terminator 2: Judgment Day
(1991)
The good and evil robotic doubles of Bill
and Ted in Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey (1991)
Newman in And You Thought Your Parents Were
Weird (1991)
Eve from Eve of Destruction (1991)
Mecha-King Ghidorah, a cyborg from Godzilla
vs. King Ghidorah (1991)
Alsatia Zevo, the gynoid sister of Leslie
Zevo and dollmaker in Toys (1992)
Bishop in Alien 3 (1992)
Otomo, android ninjas from RoboCop 3 (1993)
The Sterilisation Units in A.P.E.X. (1994)
J5 in Blankman (1994)
Wallace's Techno Trousers in Nick Park's animated
short Wallace & Gromit in The Wrong Trousers
(1994)
"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 (1995)
based on the short story "Second Variety"
by Philip K. Dick
Project 2501 in the movie adaptation of Masamune
Shirow's Ghost in the Shell – Japanese manga
anime describes AI surveillance of the population
(1995)
Evolver, villain from the 1995 film
Solo (1996), based on Robert Mason's 1989
novel Weapon
Call in Alien Resurrection (1997)
The seductive Fembot assassins in Austin Powers:
International Man of Mystery (1997) and in
the rest of the Austin Powers series – In
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999),
it's revealed that the character Vanessa Kensington
was a fembot, and in Austin Powers in Goldmember
(2002), Britney Spears plays herself as one.
Weebo in Flubber (1997)
"Robot" in Lost in Space (1998), a movie based
on the TV series
R.O.T.O.R. (1987)
The Iron Giant (1999), a film version of the
Ted Hughes children's novel The Iron Man
Andrew, played by Robin Williams and others,
the robot servant in The Bicentennial Man
(1999), based on a short story by Isaac Asimov
The Sentinels from The Matrix (1999)
Battle Droids from Star Wars: Episode I – The
Phantom Menace to Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge
of the Sith
RoboGadget in Inspector Gadget (1999)
Bender Bending Rodríguez (Bending Unit 22)
a.k.a. Bender from the Futurama TV series
and direct to DVD movies
=== 2000s ===
AMEE (Autonomous Mapping Exploration and Evasion),
the robot scout in the film Red Planet (2000)
who gets stuck in military mode and destroys
the human crew of the spaceship
Tima, a female android robot in the anime
film Metropolis (2001)
SIMON, from Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001)
Many robots, including David, the lead character,
in A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001); based
on the "Supertoys" of Brian Aldiss' short
story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" (ISBN
0-312-28061-0)
Kay-Em 14, female android in the tenth installment
of the Friday the 13th franchise, Jason X
(2001)
Spyder robots, used by the PreCrime police
force to locate and identify "perpetrators"
in Minority Report (2002)
Bruno from The Adventures of Pluto Nash (2002)
S1M0NE (derived from SIMulation ONE), title
character played by Rachel Roberts and starring
Al Pacino (2002)
Bio-Electronic Navigator a.k.a. B.E.N., an
absent-minded robot from Disney's 2002 film
Treasure Planet
B-4, Data's and Lore's older brother in Star
Trek: Nemesis (2002)
US 47 in the 2002 Kannada language film Hollywood
R4-P17 and the Droid Army in Star Wars: Episode
II – Attack of the Clones (2002) and Star
Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith
(2005)
Arnold Schwarzenegger as the T-850 Terminator
and Kristanna Loken as the T-X Terminatrix
in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003)
G2 from Inspector Gadget 2 (2003)
The robot butler B166ER and the residents
of the machine nation of Zero-One in the film
shorts "The Second Renaissance Part I" and
"The Second Renaissance Part II" from The
Animatrix (2003)
The Sentinels from the Matrix series (1999–2003)
The robot from Zathura: A Space Adventure
(2005)
The "dolls", including Ria, in Natural City
(2003)
R.A.L.P.H. in Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost
Dreams (2002)
Sonny (Type NS-5) and many others in I, Robot
(2004)
Omnidroid, a series of intelligent and destructive
robots developed by Syndrome to fight and
kill "Supers" in The Incredibles (2004)
The monstrous robot dog in Rottweiler (2004)
The great spirit Mata Nui, god robot from
the Bionicle franchise; and the Vahki, the
robot police enforcers in Bionicle 2: Legends
of Metru Nui (2004)
The entire cast of Robots (2005)
Marvin the Paranoid Android in The Hitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy (2005)
"EDI" (Extreme Deep Invader") from Stealth
(2005)
Autobots and Decepticons in the 2007 film
Transformers and its sequel Transformers:
Revenge of the Fallen (2009)
Transmorphers, title characters from the 2007
direct-to-DVD movie
Dor-15 and Carl in Meet the Robinsons (2007)
Iron Avengers from Next Avengers: Heroes of
Tomorrow (2007)
Giddy from Battle for Terra (2007)
RoboDoc (MD 63) from the 2008 National Lampoon
film of the same name
WALL-E, EVE, M-O, AUTO, GO-4, SECUR-T, PR-T,
BURN-E, SUPPLY-R, WALL-A and all other robot
characters from the 2008 film WALL-E and the
2008 short BURN-E
Gort, the robot in the film The Day the Earth
Stood Still (2008), remake of The Day the
Earth Stood Still (1951)
"The Golden Army", robot horde from Hellboy
II: The Golden Army (2008)
The robot ninjas from Scooby-Doo! and the
Samurai Sword (2008)
Astro Boy and other robot characters from
the 2009 film of the same name
Several characters in Terminator Salvation
(2009) including Marcus Wright, the T-800,
several T-600's, The Motor-Terminators and
The Harvester
GERTY 3000 from the 2009 film Moon
B.R.A.I.N. (Binary Reactive Artificially Intelligent
Neurocircuit) the malevolent fabricating robot
and others from the animated film 9 (2009)
Robo from Super Capers (2009)
=== 2010s ===
Brainbots, Megamind's robotic jellyfish assistants
in Megamind (2010)
Chitti, a humanoid robot played by Rajinikanth,
built to obey the three laws of Asimov, turns
evil in Enthiran (2010).
Paws, Kitty Galore's robotic Maine Coon in
Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore (2010)
Candy Droober, Franklin Droober, Maureen Droober
and Trace Mayter from the 2011 feature Android
Re-Enactment
Atom, and Many characters from the movie Real
Steel (2011)
Cybots, from Lego DC Comics Super Heroes:
The Flash (2018)
Kit, from Bling (2015)
Max, a robotic butler played by Lluís Homar,
Gris, a free-thinking robotic cat, tiny robot
horses and SI-9 in Eva (2011)
MOOSE in Chappie (2015)
Okra in Bling (film) (2015)
'80s Robot in The Muppets (2011)
David 8, an android played by Michael Fassbender
in Prometheus (2012) and Alien: Covenant (2017)
Tet, a tetrahedron in Earth's orbit that enslaved
the human population, and cloned workers to
maintain drones that keep humans from using
the generators in Oblivion (2013)
MecWilly, in the pub scene in the Italian
film Regalo a sorpresa (2013)
Jaegers, from the 2013 science fiction monster
film, Pacific Rim, which are man-made, 250-ft
war machines built to fight giant monsters
called kaiju, who emerge from a portal in
the Pacific Ocean to attack humanity.
Micro Managers, Lord Business' henchmen in
The Lego Movie (2014)
OX King in Bling (2015)
Sheriff Not-a-Robot, a robotic sheriff from
the Old West who is one of Lord Business'
henchmen in The Lego Movie (2014)
Baymax, an inflatable healthcare companion
robot in Big Hero 6 (2014)
TARS and CASE, adaptable rectangle robots
in Interstellar (2014)
Ultron, a robotic supervillain played by James
Spader and Vision, an android superhero played
by Paul Bettany in Avengers: Age of Ultron
(2015)
Ava, the android in Ex Machina (2015)
T-800, the robot protector in Terminator Genisys
(2015)
CHAPPiE, the first robot with the ability
to think and feel for himself, from the movie
of the same name (2015)
'Robo-Clowns, The Joker's minions from Lego
DC Comics Super Heroes: The Flash (2018)
Rob-Monkey, Gorilla Grodd's minions from Lego
DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League: Attack
of the Legion of Doom (2015)
Robot 7, from All-Star Superman
BB-8, an astromech droid in Star Wars: The
Force Awakens (2015)
Arthur, an android bartender portrayed by
Michael Sheen in the film Passengers (2016)
Scouts in Chappie
K-2SO, a Rebel-owned Imperial enforcer droid
in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016)
S.A.R.-003, During the battle, Mills discovers
an advanced S.A.R. (Study Analyze Reprogram),
in the film Kill Command (2016)
K, Luv, Freysa, Sapper Morton and Mariette,
replicants in Blade Runner 2049. (2017)
A.X.L. a robotic dog in A.X.L. (2018)
Victor in Bling (film) (2015)
Wilmer in Bling (film) (2015)
== Television films and series ==
=== 1960s and earlier ===
Adventures of Superman (1952–1958), "The
Runaway Robot" episode (1953).
In The Thin Man (1957–1959):
Robby (Robby the Robot), a robot accused of
murder in the episode "Robot Client" (1958)
In The Twilight Zone (1961–1962):
Alicia, an android in the episode "The Lonely"
(1959)
Jana, an android, played by Inger Stevens,
who is unaware that she is a robot, in "The
Lateness of the Hour" (1960)
The electrical grandmother in the episode
"I Sing the Body Electric" (1962)
Allen, a robot who falls in love with a human
girl in the episode "In His Image" (1962)
The Robot Simon (Robby the Robot) in the episode
"Uncle Simon" (1963)
Mr. Whipple's robot replacement (Robby the
Robot) in the episode "The Brain Center at
Whipple's" (1963)
Andromeda in A for Andromeda (1961)
In Supercar (1961–1962):
The Robot Servants of Professor Watkins in
the episode "The Lost City" (1961)
Rosie the Maid, Max and UniBlab in The Jetsons
(1962)
In Hazel (1961–1966):
A robot maid (Robby the Robot) in the episode
"Rosie's Contract" (1962)
In Fireball XL5 (1962–1963):
Robert, the transparent auto-pilot robot invented
by Professor Matic
The Granatoid Robots in the episode "The Granatoid
Tanks" (1963)
The Robots of Robotvia in the episode "Trial
By Robot" (1963)
Various unnamed robots in Space Patrol (1963–1964)
(US title: Planet Patrol)
In The Outer Limits (1963–64):
Trent, an android from the far future in the
episode "Demon with a Glass Hand" (1964)
Adam Link, a robot accused of the murder of
his creator in the episode "I, Robot" (1964)
In Doctor Who (Seasons One to Six) (1963–1969)
(see also List of Doctor Who robots):
The Ice Soldiers in the serial The Keys of
Marinus (1964)
The Mechonoids, robot enemies of the Daleks
in the serial The Chase (1965)
A robot double of the Doctor created by the
Daleks in the serial The Chase (1965)
The Chumblies in the serial Galaxy 4 (1965)
The War Machines in the serial The War Machines
(1966)
The Yeti in the serials The Abominable Snowmen
(1967) and The Web of Fear (1968)
The Servo Robot in the serial The Wheel in
Space (1968)
The Quarks in the serial The Dominators (1968)
The White Robots and the Clockwork Soldiers
in the serial The Mind Robber (1968)
In Thunderbirds (1965–1966):
Braman, a robot invented by Brains seen in
the episodes "Sun Probe" (1965), "Edge of
Impact" (1965) and "The Cham-Cham" (1966)
The plutonium store Security Robots in the
episode "30 Minutes After Noon" (1965)
Astro Boy in the Japanese animated series
(1963–1966)
Rhoda Miller (a.k.a. AF709) in My Living Doll
(1964), a fembot played by Julie Newmar
Gigantor (1964), Japanese animated TV series
about giant titular robot.
In The Avengers (1965–1969):
The Cybernauts in the episodes "The Cybernauts"
(1965) and "Return of the Cybernauts" (1967)
Tobor, the android in the Japanese anime series
8 Man (1965) and his older, stronger but less
sophisticated sister Samantha 7
The Deep Space Probe in "The Indestructible
Man" (1965) episode of Voyage to the Bottom
of the Sea (1964–1968)
Giant Toy Robot in "The Fun-Fun Killer" (1966)
episode of Honey West (1965–1966)
In Lost in Space (1965–1968):
Robot B-9 (a.k.a. The Robot)
The Robotoid (Robby the Robot) in the episode
"War of the Robots" (1966)
Verda, a gynoid in the episodes "The Android
Machine" (1966) and "Revolt of the Androids"
(1967)
Raddion, a male android in the episode "The
Dream Monster" (1966)
The IDAK Super Androids in the episode "Revolt
of the Androids" (1967)
The Industro Mini Robots in the episode "The
Mechanical Men" (1967)
The robot prison guard (Robby the Robot) in
the episode "Condemned of Space" (1967)
The Xenian Androids in the episode "Kidnapped
in Space" (1967)
The Female Robot and Mechanical Men in the
episode "Deadliest of the Species" (1967)
The Junkman in the episode "Junkyard in Space"
(1968)
In Ultra Seven (1967–68):
Windam, one of the three capsule monsters
used by Ultraseven
King Joe in the episode "Ultra Garrison Goes
West, Part 1"
Zero one, a human female looking android in
the episode "Android Zero Directive"
In Get Smart (1965–1970):
Hymie the Robot, a robot originally created
by KAOS an organization of evil, but turned
to the side of good and niceness by CONTROL
agent Maxwell Smart; first appeared in episode
19, "Back to the Old Drawing Board"
In Gilligan's Island:
The Government test robot in the episode "Gilligan's
Living Doll" (1966)
In Frankenstein Jr. and The Impossibles
Frankenstein Jr
In The Addams Family (1964–1966):
Smiley the Robot (Robby the Robot) in the
episode "Lurch's Little Helper" (1966)
In Star Trek (1966–1969):
Dr. Roger Korby, Andrea, Dr. Brown, Ruk and
the Kirk android in the episode "What Are
Little Girls Made Of?" (1966)
Nomad, a sentient robot probe in the episode
"The Changeling" (1967)
The Norman, Alice, Herman, Barbara, Maizie,
Annabelle and Trudy series androids and the
Stella Mudd androids in the episode "I, Mudd"
(1967)
Rayna Kapec in the episode "Requiem for Methuselah"
(1969)
The android replicas of Mr. Atoz in the episode
"All Our Yesterdays" (1969)
Serendipity Dog, a robot dog who asks questions
on the BBC children's science series Tom Tom
(1966–1969)
Robot "driver" of the race car Melange / X3
in the Speed Racer episodes "Revenge of Marengo
(Part one)" and "(Part two)" / "Race for Revenge:
Part 1" and "Part 2" (1967)
Giant Robo/Flying Robot and others in the
series Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot (1967–1968)
In Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons (1967–1968):
The Mysteron construction robots in the episode
"Crater 101" (1968)
Mildred the Maid (Robby the Robot) in The
Banana Splits Adventure Hour (1968–1970)
In Joe 90 (1968–1969):
The Spider riot control robots in the episode
"The Professional" (1969)
In Land of the Giants (1968–1970):
Professor Gorn's Super Giant Robot, a giant
android, in the episode "The Mechanical Man"
(1969)
Slim John, rebel robot in the BBC series (1969)
=== 1970s ===
Robot dog Dynomutt in animated series Dynomutt,
Dog Wonder
Zed, the rebel robot in The Ed and Zed Show
(c. 1970)
In Doctor Who (Seasons 7 to 17) (1970–1980):
The IMC Mining Robot in the serial Colony
in Space (1971)
The Sontaran Knight Robot in the serial The
Time Warrior (1973–1974)
The K1 Robot invented by Professor Kettlewell
in the serial Robot (1974–1975)
The Sontaran Surveillance Robot in the serial
The Sontaran Experiment (1975)
The Osirian Service Robots, mummy-like robot
servants of Sutekh in the serial Pyramids
of Mars (1975)
The Kraal Androids, including android duplicates
of the Doctor, Harry Sullivan and RSM Benton,
in the serial The Android Invasion (1975)
Dum, Voc and Supervoc robots in the serial
The Robots of Death (1977)
K9, the Doctor's robot dog companion, created
by Professor Marius and introduced in the
serial The Invisible Enemy (1977)
The Seers of the Oracle in the serial Underworld
(1978)
K9 MkII, the second version of the Doctor's
robot dog companion, introduced in the serial
The Ribos Operation (1978)
The Polyphase Avatron, the Captain's robot
parrot in the serial The Pirate Planet (1978)
The Taran Androids, including an android duplicate
of Romana, in the serial The Androids of Tara
(1978)
The Movellans, android enemies of the Daleks,
in the serial Destiny of the Daleks (1979)
Numerous android characters in the Japanese
superhero series Kikaider (1972), including
the title character
S.A.M. (Super Automated Machine) the "perfect
machine" robot in Sesame Street (1969–present),
introduced in episode 0406 (1972)
In Here Come the Double Deckers! (1971):
Robbie, a dancing robot invented by Brains
in the episode "Robbie the Robot" (1971)
In Columbo (1971–1993):
MM7 (Robby the Robot) in the episode "Mind
Over Mayhem" (1974)
In Robbi, Tobbi und das Fliewatüüt, a German
television series for children (1972):
Robbi a.k.a. ROB 344–66/IIIa, co-pilot of
the Fliewatüüt and student of a third class
at robot school (1972)
In Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1972–1975):
"Mr. R.I.N.G." (Robomatic Internalized Nerve
Ganglia), a top secret military robot in the
episode of the same name (1975)
In The Six Million Dollar Man (1973–1978):
A robot double of Major Fred Sloane in the
episode "Day of the Robot" (1974)
A robot double of Oscar Goldman in the episode
"Return of the Robot Maker" (1975)
Sasquatch, the robot watchdog of marooned
aliens in the episodes "The Secret of Bigfoot
– Part 1" (1976), "The Secret of Bigfoot
– Part 2" (1976), "The Return of Bigfoot
– Part 1" (1976) and "Bigfoot V" (1977)
The Fembots and a robot double of Oscar Goldman
in the episode "Kill Oscar – Part II" (1976)
Death Probe, a Soviet Venusian robot probe
in the episodes "Death Probe – Part 1" (1977),
"Death Probe – Part 2" (1977), "Return of
the Death Probe – Part 1" (1978) and "Return
of the Death Probe – Part 2" (1978)
Questor in The Questor Tapes (1974)
In Space: 1999 (1975–1977):
The Servant of the Guardian in the episode
"Guardian of Piri" (1975)
Gwent, a sentient spaceship in the episode
"The Infernal Machine" (1976)
Zarl, Zamara and the other Vegan androids
in the episode "One Moment of Humanity" (1976)
Brian the Brain in the episode "Brian the
Brain" (1976)
A robot double of Maya in the episode "The
Taybor" (1976)
The Cloud Creature in the episode "The Beta
Cloud" (1976)
Fi and Fum, the time-travelling androids from
the children's series The Lost Saucer (1975–1976)
In The New Avengers (1976–1977):
A Cybernaut in the episode "The Last of the
Cybernauts...??" (1976)
In Ark II (1976):
Alfie the Robot (Robby the Robot) in the episode
"The Robot" (1976)
In The Bionic Woman (1976–1978):
Sasquatch, the robot watchdog of marooned
aliens in the episode "The Return of Bigfoot
– Part 2" (1976)
The Fembots in the episodes "Kill Oscar" (1976),
"Kill Oscar – Part III" (1976), "Fembots
in Las Vegas – Part 1" (1977) and "Fembots
in Las Vegas – Part 2" (1977)
Yo-Yo, a.k.a. Geogory Yoyonovitch in Holmes
& Yo-Yo (1976)
Officer Haven in Future Cop (1976–77)
In The Fantastic Journey (1977):
Cyrus, Rachel, Daniel, Michael and the other
android members of Jonathan Willoway's community
in the episode "Beyond the Mountain" (1977)
In Logan's Run (1977–78):
REM, a male android who joins Logan and Jessica
in their search for Sanctuary
Draco, a male android, and Siri, a gynoid,
in the pilot TV movie (1977)
Friend and Nanny, Lisa's robot companions
in the episode "The Innocent" (1977)
Ariana, a gynoid, in the episode "Futurepast"
(1978)
The Clinkers in Shields and Yarnell (1977–78)
Peepo, the robot in the children's series
Space Academy (1977–1979)
In Space Sentinels (1977):
MO (Maintenance Operator), Sentinel One's
maintenance robot
Haro in Mobile Suit Gundam (1977)
Voltes V of the Japanese animated series Chōdenji
Machine Voltes V (1977)
P.O.P.S. (Robot B-9 modified) in Mystery Island
(1977–78)
7-Zark-7 and 1-Rover-1 in the animated series
Battle of the Planets (1978)
In Battlestar Galactica (1978–1979):
The Cylons, mechanical men created by a race
of reptile-like creatures
Muffit Two, a robot daggit who becomes Boxey's
pet
Lucifer, an IL series Cylon, the robot assistant
to Count Baltar introduced in "Saga of a Star
World – Part III" (1978)
Specter, an I-L series Cylon, the garrison
commander on Antilla in the episode "The Young
Lords" (1978)
Hector and Vector in the episode "Greetings
from Earth" (1979)
IQ-9 in Star Blazers (1978–1984), originally
called "Analyzer" in Space Battleship Yamato
(1974–1980)
H.E.R.B.I.E. (Humanoid Experimental Robot,
B-type, Integrated Electronics) in the 1978
Fantastic Four animated series
Blake's 7 (1978–81) featured several robots
and androids.
In The New Adventures of Wonder Woman (1977–1979):
Dr. Solano's swordmaster robot in the pilot
movie "The Return of Wonder Woman" (1977)
Orlick Hoffman's android duplicates of Dr.
Tobias, Dr. Prescott, Dr. Lazaar and Wonder
Woman in the episode "The Deadly Toys" (1977)
Rover, the IADC's robot dog, Cori, William
Havitol's robot secretary, and Havitol's evil
duplicate of Rover in the episode "IRAC is
Missing" (1978)
In Quark (1977–1978):
Andy the Robot, a cowardly robot built by
Adam Quark from spare parts
In Mork & Mindy (1978–1982):
Chuck the Robot (Robby the Robot) in the episode
"Dr. Morkenstein" (1979)
In Salvage 1 (1979):
Mermadon, a junked government-constructed
android in the episode "Mermadon" (1979)
In Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (First
Season) (1979–1980):
Twiki, Buck's ambuquad robot who wears Dr.
Theopolis, a brilliant talking computer, around
his neck
Tina, a golden ambuquad that Twiki falls in
love with in the episode "Cruise Ship to the
Stars"
Humanoid robot security guards in the episode
"Unchained Woman"
W1k1 (or Wiki), the pocket-sized robot in
the children's series Jason of Star Command
(1979–1981)
The TV movie Romie-0 and Julie-8 (1979) features
two androids who fall in love.
=== 1980s ===
Robot 67 Bright 2, a robot who appears in
two episodes of a week in Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
in 1983
Metal Mickey, the Wilberforces' household
robot in Metal Mickey (1980–1983)
In Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (Second
Season) (1981):
Twiki, Buck's ambuquad robot, and Crichton,
a robot created by Dr Goodfellow
In Doctor Who (Seasons Eighteen to Twenty-Six)
(1980–1989):
The Gundan War Robots in the serial Warriors'
Gate (1981)
The Urbankan Androids in the serial Four to
Doomsday (1982)
The Terileptil Android in the serial The Visitation
(1982)
The Cybermen's Androids in the serial Earthshock
(1982)
Kamelion, a shape-changing android introduced
in the serial The King's Demons (1983)
K9 MkIII, Sarah Jane Smith's robot dog companion,
in the episode The Five Doctors (1983)
The Raston Warrior Robot in the episode The
Five Doctors (1983)
The Daleks' Androids, including android duplicates
of the Doctor, Tegan and Turlough, in the
serial Resurrection of the Daleks (1984)
The Androzani Androids created by Sharaz Jek,
including android duplicates of the Doctor
and Peri in the serial The Caves of Androzani
(1984)
The Karfelan Android in the serial Timelash
(1985)
Drathro and the L1 robot in the serial The
Trial of a Time Lord (1986)
Sillycone, the butler of the animated kids
TV show The Bluffers (1986)
The Robotic Cleaners in the serial Paradise
Towers (1987)
The Kandy Man, a robot made from sweets (candy)
in the serial The Happiness Patrol (1988)
The Bus Conductor and the Robot Clowns in
the serial The Greatest Show in the Galaxy
(1988–1989)
In Knight Rider (1982–1985):
KITT (Knight Industries Two Thousand), a talking
Trans Am car
KARR ('Knight Automated Roving Robot), an
early prototype of KITT in the episodes "Trust
Doesn't Rust" (1982) and "K.I.T.T. vs K.A.R.R."
(1984)
In Terrahawks (1983–1986):
Zelda, Yung-Star, Cy-Star and It-Star, evil
androids from the planet Guk
Sergeant Major Zero, Space Sergeant 101, Dix-Huit
and many other Zeroids, spherical battle robots
Dr. Kiljoy, Zeroid robot doctor in the episodes
"The Ugliest Monster of All" (1983), "Zero's
Finest Hour" (1984) and "Operation Zero" (1986)
Roboz, the orange robot invented by Murray
'Boz' Bozinsky in Riptide (1984–1986)
The B.A.T.s (Battle Android Trooper) of the
evil Cobra Organization in G.I. Joe: A Real
American Hero series, first appeared in 1986
The Transformers of various Transformers television
series (1984–present)
Go-bots were featured in a cartoon series
of the same name, around the same time as
the Transformers series.
Voltron of Voltron: Defender of the Universe
(1984–1986)
Roboto from Masters of the Universe (1984)
An enemy Bioroid pilot was described by a
scientist in the Masters story (1985) of the
Robotech science fiction series as a very
advanced android with some sort of bio-electric
device "as an artificial soul." Robotech adapted
this story from Super Dimension Cavalry Southern
Cross Japanese animated series (1984), in
which these pilots are humans with mechanical
implants instead of androids with artificial
souls.
The synthoids from several episodes of the
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero series (1985)
V.I.C.I. (Voice Input Child Indenticant),
the little girl robot in Small Wonder (1985)
Vanessa from Small Wonder
The Orbots—Tor, Bort, Bo, Boo, Crunch, & Oh-No
from Mighty Orbots (1986)
Tobor, the Shadow-double of Mighty Orbots
from the episode "Devil's Asteroid" (1986)
Robo Story, French cartoon with various robots
in its main cast
Conky 2000, robot who gives out the secret
word in Pee-wee's Playhouse (1986–1991)
T-Bob, a droid developed and owned by Scott
Trakker, from the animated television series
M.A.S.K., closely resembling R2-D2, and perhaps
even a direct successor as an adapted Tx-series
Industrial Automaton astromech droid, as implied
by the show's storyline.
In Bionic Six (1987–1989)
F.L.U.F.F.I., the Bionic Six's pet/family-member
gorilla-bot and Dr. Scarab's Cyphrons
Material for the Robotech II: The Sentinels
(1987) and Robotech: The Shadow Chronicles
(2007) sequels described a character named
Janice Em as a "sexy robot" with an "android
body." JANICE is an acronym (according to
the voice actress Chase Masterson in the video:
The Face behind the Voice mini-documentary)
which means: Junctioned Artificial Neuro-Integrated
Cybernetic Entity.
There were many robots featured in Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles, including the Foot Soldier
ninjas, Metalhead the robotic turtle, MACC
the cowboy robot from the future, the Turtle
Terminator, REX-1 the robot cop, Chrome Dome,
the Pretendicon, and more.
Data, Lore, Lal (Data's daughter) and Juliana
Tainer in the series Star Trek: The Next Generation
(1987–1994, plus four movies)
Steed, a robotic horse ridden by Saber Rider
in the animated series Saber Rider and the
Star Sheriffs (1987–1988)
Chip Carson from the Not Quite Human series
(1987, 1989, 1992)
Tom Servo, Crow T. Robot, Gypsy and Cambot,
created by and friends to Joel Hodgson and
later Mike Nelson from Mystery Science Theater
3000 (1988)
Kryten, The Skutters, the Simulants and many
others from the series Red Dwarf (1988)
Blitz, a robotic dog from the cartoon C.O.P.S.
(1988–1989)
Roberta from Not Quite Human II (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
Robin, a small robot made by the clown Bassie
in the children's series Bassie en Adriaan
Yulgis from Dirty Pair: Affair on Nolandia
Kevin, a robot created by Screech Powers on
Saved by the Bell (1989–1993)
=== 1990s ===
Autonomous telepathic tentacles, Dr. Octopus'
robot from Spider-Man
D.E.C.K.S., a talking robot with a VHS tape
for a head, from the 1991 Disney Channel series
Jump, Rattle, and Roll, formerly Wake, Rattle,
and Roll (1990)
Sgt. Eve Edison, robot police officer in Mann
& Machine (1992)
The Exocomps, small sentient artificial lifeforms
that can perform a variety of tasks from the
Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The
Quality of Life"
Alpha and Omega from the TV series The Flash
(1990–1991) – Alpha, a government constructed
female android (gynoid) assassin that develops
a conscience, determines that killing is wrong,
and wishes to be free from government control.
Omega is a government-built android assassin
reprogrammed to find Alpha
Fire bots from Mega Man
Giant Robo and others from Giant Robo: The
Animation (1992–1998)
The Bots Master, a syndicated animated series
about a young inventor named Ziv "ZZ" Zulander
with robot friends and inventions, such as
the B.O.Y.Z.Z. (Brain Operated Young Zygoetopic
Zoids). Along with his younger sister, they
fight the Robotic Megafact Corporation and
its line of 3A robots. (1993)
Rexor from RoboCop: Alpha Commando
Ringer from the episode "The Replacements"
of the Space Rangers TV series, a prototype
android being tested as a Ranger replacement
(1993)
Alpha 5 from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers
(1993–1996) to Power Rangers Turbo
Handi-Driod from In Living Color
Megazord, a giant robot from Power Rangers
franchise (1993–present)
Machine Empire from Power Rangers Zeo to Power
Rangers in Space
Battle Borgs from Mighty Morphin Alien Rangers
(1995)
Alpha 6 from Power Rangers Turbo to Power
Rangers Lost Galaxy and Power Rangers Operation
Overdrive
The many Evangelions, or EVAs, from the Neon
Genesis Evangelion series
THELMA (Techno Human EmuLating MAchine) from
Space Cases (1996)
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
A number of robots appear in Buffy the Vampire
Slayer, including:
Moloch, a dæmon trapped in a robotic body,
from "I, Robot... You, Jane" (S1E8, 28 April
1997)
Ted Buchanon, a robot, made in the 1950s by
a sickly inventor also named Ted Buchanan,
who marries women resembling the wife of his
maker, from "Ted" (S2E11, 8 December 1997)
April, a sexbot made by and for Warren Mears
in "I Was Made to Love You" (S5E15, 20 February
2001)
Buffybot, a sexbot made by Warren Mears for
Spike, appears in various episodes, including
"Intervention" (S5E18, 24 April 2001)
"The Gift" (S5E22, 22 May 2001)
"Bargaining" parts one and two (S6E1&2, 2
October 2001)
Warrenbot, a robotic duplicate that Warren
Mears made of himself, from "Villains" (S6E22,
14 May 2002)
Bender the robot, as well as Flexo, Robot
Santa, Kwanzaa-Bot, Calculon, Robot Devil,
Clamps and other assorted robots including
the Epsilon Rho Rho fraternity robots in the
animated series Futurama (1999)
Melfina from Outlaw Star
Noo-Noo from Teletubbies
Psycho Rangers from Power Rangers
Quantrons from Power Rangers in Space
The marionettes from the anime series Saber
Marionette R (1995), Saber Marionette J (1997),
Saber Marionette J Again (1998), and Saber
Marionette J to X (1999)
Robotic Richard Simmons from The Simpsons
Rusty, the boy robot of the animated series
The Big Guy and Rusty the Boy Robot
Andromon and Guardromon in the Digimon anime
series
Satan's Robot, a meta-fictional robot in The
Adventures of Captain Proton, a holodeck program
from Star Trek: Voyager
Coconuts and Scratch and Grounder from Adventures
of Sonic the Hedgehog
Slo-Mo from Space Precinct
Steel/Iron Clan, Coyote, Coldfire/Coldstone
from Gargoyles
Stealthbots from Sonic the Hedgehog'
SWATbots from Sonic the Hedgehog and Sonic
Underground
Torch from Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog
Zords, giant fighting machines from all seasons
of Power Rangers series
Ian Favre, CPB officer in Total Recall 2070
Multi (HMX-12), and Serio (HMX-13) are experimental
humanoid maid robots from the anime To Heart.
Zero, the service robot in Earth 2
Beetleborg AVs (Attack Vehicles) and Gargantis
the Attack Mobile Carrier in Big Bad Beetleborgs
Beetleborg BVs (Battle Vehicles), Roboborg
and Boron in Beetleborgs Metallix
VR Troopertron in the second season of VR
Troopers
Ken in The Tomorrow Man (1996), sent into
the past to save its Inventor and prevent
a missile disaster
Robocrook in the PBS game show Where in the
World is Carmen Sandiego?
Paperboy 2000, the paper delivering robot
vehicle from the sitcom series Get a Life
Azaka and Kamidake, robot Jurai Guardians
who serve and protect Jurai Princess Ayeka,
Yukinojo, the robot pilot for Mihoshi's space
shuttle, and Zero, an android replicant of
the space pirate Ryoko, are the most notable
robots in the Tenchi Muyo! TV series.
Mac and Molly Mange, two criminals turned
robot by Professor Hackle in the animated
series SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron
Valerie 23 and Mary 25 from The Outer Limits
Spongetron, a robot double of SpongeBob SquarePants
in the future
Janperson, a purple android from Japanese
Metal Heroes Series Tokusou Robo Janperson
=== 2000s ===
Bebes from Kim Possible
C.H.E.E.S.E., a backronym for Computerized
Humanoid Electronically Enhanced Secret Enforcer,
is the main character of a fictional crime/adventure
science-fiction television show which aired
from Season 6 to Season 7 of Friends.
David From The Simpsons
Destructo Bots' from Legion of Super Heroes
Guard-Bots from Buzz Lightyear of Star Command
Satan's Robot, usually in service for Dr.
Chaotica but impressionable enough to sometimes
work for good, in episodes of Star Trek: Voyager
(1995–2001) when the holodeck program "Captain
Proton" is run
From South Park (1997–present):
Funnybot
Robot Bill Cosby
Mecha-Streisand
Kurumi and the rest of the steel angels from
Steel Angel Kurumi (1999–2001)
From Family Guy (1999–present):
Daggermouth, a sophisticated talking fish
robot designed and built by an old seaman
with no engineering background
Robot Miley Cyrus
The Machine from Celebrity Deathmatch
Linguo from The Simpsons
Simon, a humanoid robot with the mind scanned
from a dead little boy with AI technology,
from The Outer Limits episode "Simon Says"
(2000)
Mr Dent, nanotech enforcer from Code Name:
Eternity (2000)
SARA SARA from Toonami (2000–)
XR (eXperimental Ranger); XL, the proto-version
of XR; NOS-4-A2; and Zurg's robots from Buzz
Lightyear of Star Command (2000–2001)
Back-Pack, Gears' main partner from the series
Static Shock. It is a semi-independent, sophisticated
AI robot that acts as a scouting robot, a
computer, machine hacker, code breaker, alarm
system, police scanner, tracer, weapons unit
and restraining device. Back-Pack gets its
name from what it resembles when it "heels",
with the body being the bag and its legs the
backpack straps. Back-Pack is rather significant
because he can link up to Gear's thoughts,
giving Gear technopathy (2000–2004)
Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past from the
Future, Rabbot, Robositter and Sheila from
Aqua Teen Hunger Force (2000–2015)
Rommie, Gabriel/Balance of Judgement, Pax
Magelanic, Doyle and various other warship
AIs/avatars from Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda
(2001–2005)
Frax and the Cyclobots from Power Rangers
Time Force (2001)
GIR and the Robo-Parents from Invader Zim
(2001)
Ninja Bot from Kim Possible (2003)
Zeta from the TV show The Zeta Project (2001–2002)
Lawrence "Larry" 3000 from Time Squad (2001–2003)
Mahoro, the protagonist of Mahoromatic (2001–2003)
Nano Tick, from Kim Possible (2002)
Ant Drones, Flying Termites, Beetle Drones
and various other robots from the Samurai
Jack series (2001–2004)
Alpha 7 from Power Rangers Wild Force (2002)
Chii, the Persocom in the Japanese anime series
Chobits (2002)
Daigunder in the Japanese anime series (2002)
Robot Jones, Mom Unit and Dad Unit from Whatever
Happened to Robot Jones? (2002)
Thundercleese from The Brak Show (2001–2003)
J from the Japanese anime series Heat Guy
J (2002–2003)
Goddard, Jimmy Neutron's robot pet dog in
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius
(2002–2006)
From Kim Possible (2002–2007):
Diablo
Oliver
Flamingo of Doom
Wadebot
Ol Tornado, a robot horse
Destructo-Bots
Princess, a robot car
Stockbots
Synthodrones
From Toonami:
TOM 1.0
TOM 2.0
TOM 3.0
TOM 4.0
TOM 3.5
TOM 5.0
"Jenny" XJ-9 Wakeman and her sisters, also
Melody, Kenny, Vega and various robotic villains
from My Life as a Teenage Robot (2003)
R. Dorothy Wayneright in The Big O (2003)
Tinabob from Bob's Burgers
Zeo Zagart from Beyblade (2003)
Jack Spicer's army of Jack-bots, including
robots of himself and other people in Xiaolin
Showdown (2003–2006)
From Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003–2009):
Karaibots
TurtleBot
Nano
H.E.L.P.eR. (Humanoid Electric Lab Partner
Rboot), G.U.A.R.D.O. and Huggy in The Venture
Bros. (2003–present)
The Tachikoma spider tanks from Ghost in the
Shell: Stand Alone Complex (2004–2005)
C.A.R.R from Stroker and Hoop (2004–2005)
D.A.V.E. (Digitally Advanced Villain Emulator)
from The Batman (2004–2008)
Cylons from Battlestar Galactica (2004)
Cylon Centurions (Model 0005)
Cylon Centurions
The Hybrids
The First Hybrid
Number One (John Cavil)
Number Two (Leoben Conoy)
Number Three (D'anna Biers)
Number Four (Simon)
Number Five (Aaron Doral)
Number Six
Number Seven (Daniel)
Number Eight (Sharon Valerii)
The Final Five:
Galen Tyrol
Tory Foster
Samuel T. Anders
Saul Tigh
Ellen Tigh
Rachael from Viewtiful Joe (2004–2005)
Megas and T-Bot from Megas XLR (2004–2005)
Jinmay from Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce
Go! (2004–2006)
Miyu Greer from the anime series My-HiME (2004–2005)
and My-Otome (2005–2006)
X-5, B-1, & Robo-Betty from Atomic Betty (2004–2008)
The Replicators, seen in multiple seasons
of Stargate SG-1 (1997–2007) and Stargate
Atlantis (2004–2009)
The Humping Robot from Robot Chicken (2005–present)
Gunslinger from Trinity Blood (2005)
Krybots, R.I.C. 2.0 (Robotic Interactive Canine)
and S.O.P.H.I.E. (Series One Processor Hyper
Intelligent Encriptor) from Power Rangers
S.P.D. (2005)
Anne Droid, Trin-E, Zu-Zana and Davinadroid
from the Doctor Who episode "Bad Wolf" (2005)
HMX-17a Ilfa, HMX-17b Milfa, and HMX-17c Shilfa
are experimental maid robots from To Heart
2 (2005–2006).
Robotboy (2005–2008)
From Ben 10 (2005–2008):
The Mechadrones and Galvanic Mechomorphs
Slix Vigma
S.A.M, weather-controlling robot
From American Dad! (2005–present):
Robot Matthew McConaughey
Robot Johnny Depp
The construction drones and destruction drones,
in Johnny Test (2005–2014)
Fallbot from Danger Rangers (2006)
The Loganator from Zoey 101 (2006)
Lucia von Bardas from Fantastic Four: World's
Greatest Heroes (2006–2007)
Constable Biggles from Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles: Fast Forward (2006–2007)
Brainiac 5 in Legion of Super Heroes (2006–2008)
Woodbot and Rockbot from The Emperor's New
School (2006–2008)
Tama, Ms. Otose's android maid from the anime
Gin Tama (2006–2010)
GR: Giant Robo (2007)
Mackenzie Hartford from Power Rangers Operation
Overdrive (2007)
Serling and Viral from Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles: Fast Forward (2007)
From Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann (2007)
Gurren Lagann
Arc Gurren Lagann
Super Galaxy Gurren Lagann
Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann
Super Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, the largest
mecha in anime measuring 52.8 billion light
years tall according to the official guide
book from GAINAX (仕事魂); after transforming
into a drill its length is multiplied 10 times
Yui, Takaya's android maid from Koharu Biyori
(2007–2008)
Tieria Erde, Ribbons Almark, Regene Regetta
and the other Innovators from the anime Mobile
Suit Gundam 00 (2007–2009)
Jailbot from Superjail! (2007–2014)
Norm, a squirrel-powered robot owned by Doofenshmirtz
in Phineas and Ferb (2007–2015)
Plex from Yo Gabba Gabba! (2007–present)
The Interrodroids from The Middleman (2008)
Cameron from Terminator: The Sarah Connor
Chronicles (2008–2009)
Cyber Shredder from TMNT: Back to the Sewer
(2008–2010)
Ship from Ben 10: Alien Force (2008–2010)
S.T.A.N in Aaron Stone (2009)
General Crunch, General Shifter, Tenaya 7
and Grinders from Power Rangers RPM (2009)
Stan from Aaron Stone (2009–2010)
Trash Bots from Transformers: Animated (2007-2009)
Octus from Sym-Bionic Titan (2010–2011)
Robot Race Bannon from Harvey Birdman: Attorney
at Law (2010)
=== 2010s ===
Anti-Trump Pundit 3000 from The Greg Gutfeld
Show
AIDA from Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Albearto from Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles
Alpha-Red from Batman: the Brave and the Bold
Andrew from I Am Frankie
Athena from Kim Possible (2019 film)
Anti-fire Bot from Sonic Boom
April O'Neil Sex Bot 3000 from Robot Chicken
Argus from Power Rangers Super Megaforce
Ash from the Black Mirror episode "Be Right
Back" (11 February 2013)
Assisdroid from Moonbeam City
Attacbots from Marvel's Avengers Secret Wars
Berserkers from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Beto from I Am Frankie
Black Lion from Voltron Force
Blip from Bolts and Blip
Blitz Botz from NFL Rush Zone: Season of the
Guardians
Blue Lion from Voltron Force
BMO from Adventure Time (2010)
Bob from I Am Frankie (2017)
Bobert from The Amazing World of Gumball
Bolts from Bolts and Blip
Brainbot from Ultimate Spider-Man
Buddy Guard from Big Hero 6: The Series
Burn Bot from Sonic Boom
Buster from Sonic Boom
Buzzcams from Power Rangers Ninja Steel
Camera Bots from Iron Man: Armored Adventures
Carl from Final Space
Cherry Tomato from Rise of the Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles
Chip from Man Seeking Woman
Coach Gridiron from Bolts and Blip
Clevetron from The Cleveland Show
CMO' from Adventure Time (2010)
Conductor Bot from Ben 10
Conroy from Rick and Morty
Cosbytron 5000 from Saturday Night Live
Cowpokes from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Cybot from Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice
League: Attack of the Legion of Doom
CY.T.R.O. from Max Steel
Decimator from Sonic Boom
Darklops Zero from Ultra Galaxy Legend Side
Story: Ultraman Zero vs. Darklops Zero (2010)
Darrell from OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes
Derek Fisher from Legends of Chamberlain Heights
Destructo from The Thundermans
Destructo-Bot from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Diamond Dogs from The Venture Bros.
The Disciplinarian from Randy Cunningham:
9th Grade Ninja
Dorian, the MX-43s, and others in Almost Human
(2013)
Doris from Aqua TV Show Show
Dreddnaughts from Max Steel
Dropkick from NFL Rush Zone
Dudy from K.C. Undercover
Ernesto from OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes
Ethan Woods from Extant
Evil Lazer from Major Lazer
Evil Robot Axe Cop from Axe Cop
Fister Roboto from Archer
Footbot from Gravity Falls
Footbots from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Fox-bots from Power Rangers Super Ninja Steel
Frankie from I Am Frankie (2017)
Franz Nukid from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Freda from Aqua TV Show Show
Furbo from Max Steel
Future Frond from Bob's Burgers
Galactron from Ultraman Orb (2016)
Gay Robot from Nick Swardson's Pretend Time
Giant Robot Greymatter from Ben 10
Glad-One from Infinity Train
Guardbots from Avengers Assemble
Green Lion from Voltron Force
Gregory from Kirby Buckets
Grinder from Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures
Grindertron from Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures
Guardians of the Status Quo from Teen Titans
Go!
Hank from Final Space
The Hive Queen from Marvel's Avengers Secret
Wars
Hot Robor from Saturday Night Live
Hunger-bot from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Hurt Bot from Teen Titans Go!
IDBot from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja
Interrobot from Moonbeam City
Irmabots from 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Isaac from The Orville. Science Officer aboard
the U.S.S. Orville, is of the Kaylon race.
He's an artificial life form packed with knowledge.
Isaacs from Black Dynamite
Isla and other Giftias from Plastic Memories.
Giftias are androids that appear and behave
nearly identical to humans, even with convincing
emotions; however, they have a definite and
short lifespan (less than ten years), causing
problems for the humans who have established
emotional entanglements with them.
Jack Hammer from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Janet from The Good Place
Jean-Bot from Ultraman Zero: The Revenge of
Belial
Jean-Nine from Ultraman Saga Side Story: Ultraman
Zero Gaiden: Killer the Beatstar (2011)
Jethro from OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes
Jimmy the Robot of The Aquabats from The Aquabats!
Super Show!
Judy from K.C. Undercover
K-Pop from Major Lazer
Kitty Ko of Sidekick
Kraken from Ultimate Spider-Man
Krieger Bots from Archer
Krackenstein from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Kudobots from Power Rangers Ninja Steel
KVN from Final Space
Lance from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja
Laserbots from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Leaderbots from Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H.
Lucas from Extant
Lucy from Extant
The Law from Major Lazer
Lyle from Family Guy
Mandroids from Iron Man: Armored Adventures
Marauder Bots from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Marcus Davenport from Lab Rats
Matt Barnes from Legends of Chamberlain Heights
Maxum Brain of Sidekick
Mechanoids from Ben 10
Mecha Gomora from Ultra Galaxy Legend Side
Story: Ultraman Zero vs. Darklops Zero (2010)
Medbot from The Simpsons
Mega from Sonic Boom
Megabot from Ultimate Spider-Man
Mega Skullbots from Marvel's Avengers: Secret
Wars
Meka-Zorn from Son of Zorn
The Messenger from Power Rangers Megaforce
Metal Alice from Power Rangers Megaforce
Mikayla from OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes
Milton from Archer
Mindroid from Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu
Mini-Max from Big Hero 6: The Series
Molly X from Extant
MorBot from Transformers: Rescue Bots
Mr. E from Masters of Spinjitzu
Nanny bots from Ultimate Spider-Man
NEPTR from Adventure Time
Nindroids from Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu
Ninjabot from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Nod-Bot from The Simpsons
Noodles from Final Space
Noodle Burger Boy from Big Hero 6: The Series
One-One from Infinity Train
Orson from Final Space
Otto from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja
Pain Bot from Teen Titans Go!
Party-bot from Golan the Insatiable
RoboPerry from Lab Rats
P.I.X.A.L. from Ninjago: Masters of Spinjitzu.
Prankzooka from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
President Pepperoni from Rise of the Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles
Principal Howard from Mighty Med
Private Beats from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Psycho-Bot from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Radbot from Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Raymond from OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes
Redbot from Power Rangers Ninja Steel
Red Lion from Voltron Force
Rhinosaurus from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Richard from Extant
Rico from Power Rangers Megaforce
Robert the Robot from Justin’s House
Robbie from American Dad!
Roba from The Problem Solverz
Robo-Cyclops from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
RoBro from Massive Monster Mayhem
Robeasts from Voltron Force
Robo-Apes from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Robo-Baby from Transformers: Rescue Bots
Robo-Dog from PAW Patrol (2014)
Robo-Frog from Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade
Ninja
Robo Hooligans from Randy Cunningham: 9th
Grade Ninja
Robo Knight from Power Rangers Megaforce (2013)
Robo-Lawyer from Jimmy Kimmel Live!
Robonoids from Steven Universe
Robo-Panther from Ben 10 (2016 TV series)
Robo-Penguins from Lego DC Comics: Batman
Be-Leaguered
Robo-Raptors from Half-Shell Heroes: Blast
to the Past
Robo-Roaches from I Am Frankie
Robo-Sharks from Lego DC Comics: Batman Be-Leaguered
Robo-Spinosaurus from Half-Shell Heroes: Blast
to the Past
Robo-Usher 3000 from Lego Ninjago: Masters
of Spinjitzu
Robot from the R. L. Stine's The Haunting
Hour: The Series episode "My Robot" (S3E23,
30 November 2013).
Rotox from Power Rangers Megaforce
Rotox DX from Power Rangers Megaforce
R.U.R. 9500, name for Ruru Amour / Cure Amour
from Hugtto! PreCure
Sad-One from Infinity Train
Saedee from Bolts and Blip
Sasha from Jeff & Some Aliens
Scare-a-Dactyls from Randy Cunningham: 9th
Grade Ninja
Scaramouche from Samurai Jack
Scrapmaster from Transformers: Rescue Bots
Scrubber bot from Transformers: Rescue Bots
Secretarabot 2500 from TripTank
Sex Robot from The Whitest Kids U' Know
Shannon from OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes
Shot Bot from Power Rangers Super Ninja Steel
Simone from I Am Frankie
Skullbots from Marvel's Avengers: Secret Wars
Sky-Max from Big Hero 6: The Series
Space Mice from Voltron Force
Steam Accelerate from Ben 10
Steam Cannonbolt from '[Ben 10 (2016 TV series)
Steel from Max Steel
Steve from Bolts and Blip
Steward from Infinity Train
Stufferbot from Sonic Boom
TAALR from Extant
T-1, T-2, and T-3 from Lucas Bros. Moving
Co.
Team Barefoot – the GGO footballers from
the Chinese animation AI Football GGO (2010)
Ted-A from Family Guy
Ted-R from Family Guy
Tensou from Power Rangers Megaforce
The Android from Dark Matter
Thorax the Thunder Wasp from TripTank
THX-1138 from Robot Chicken: Star Wars Episode
III
Tigrr Jaxxon from Bolts and Blip
Totbot 3000 from Legends of Chamberlain Heights
Trex from Transformers: Rescue Bots
Troy West from Lab Rats: Bionic Island
Validate from Moonbeam City
VX3 Warbots from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Wafflebot from A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas
The War Drone from Teen Titans Go!
Water Rotox from Power Rangers Megaforce
Weatherheads from Ben 10
Welder from Bolts and Blip
Wi-Fido from Transformers: Rescue Bots
Wrench from Power Rangers Dino Charge
XBorgs from Power Rangers Super Megaforce
Yellow Lion from Voltron Force
Zane and P.I.X.A.L from Ninjago: Masters of
Spinjitzu
Various androids called "hosts" in the HBO
series Westworld (2016–), based on the 1973
film of the same name
== Comics ==
=== Comic Books/graphic novels ===
==== 
American ====
The Mad Thinker's Awesome Android in Fantastic
Four and various other Marvel Comics; later
featured in the She Hulk 2004 series under
the name "Awesome Andy"
Biotron from Micronauts
Clickers from Top 10
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 Amory Wars written by Coheed
and Cambria frontman Claudio Sanchez. The
characters and plotlines are also incorporated
into the band's music.
Computo, created by Brainiac 5
Doctor Doom's Doombots in Fantastic Four (1961)
Dreadnoughts in Marvel Comics
Fugitoid in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
G.I. Robot, a construct used by the U.S. Marines
in World War II, which appeared in Weird War
Tales
Grag and Otho from the pulp magazines Captain
Future and Startling Stories
The Human Torch in Marvel Comics (1939)
Jeremy Feeple and Professor Steamhead were
replaced with badly constructed, unconvincing
robot doubles (which eventually exploded)
in an early issue of Ninja High School.
Lady Ada in Ghost Rider 2099
The Little Helper by Carl Barks, Gyro Gearloose's
small robot assistant in Disney comics (1956)
The Living Brain from Spider-Man comics
Zenyatta, Mondatta,Lynx Seventeen, and others
from Overwatch
Manmachine, from the Manmachine epic
Machine Man a.k.a. Aaron Stack from Marvel
Comics
Machine Teen from Marvel Comics
The Manhunters in Green Lantern
Irona, the robot maid of Richie Rich, the
main character in a comic book and cartoon
series (1961)
The Mek-ka Men, the female android Mimi and
an android Mickey Mouse lookalike, all created
by Pegleg Pete in the Disney comic strip "Mickey
Mouse and the World of Tomorrow" by Floyd
Gottfredson and Bill Walsh (1944)
The Metal Men (1962)
Microtron from Micronauts
Mousers in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Nanotron from Micronauts
Octobots from The Amazing Spider-Man
The Red Tornado, Amazo, Tomorrow Woman and
Hourman III in JLA (1968)
Robotman from the series that would evolve
and be renamed Monty by Jim Meddick (1985)
– Robotman was eventually written out of
the story entirely.
Doctor Ivo Robotnik from the Archie Sonic
the Hedgehog comic book
The robots in the comic book Magnus, Robot
Fighter, including:
1A, the oldest sentient robot, protector of
mankind, who raised Magnus
H8, the robot police chief, who plots against
mankind
Roboduck from the NEW-GEN comic book series
Scud: The Disposable Assassin from the comic
series and accompanying games
The Sentinels in X-Men (1963)
Skeets, Booster Golds robot companion from
Booster Gold
The Spider-Slayers from the Spider-Man comics
The Superman duplicates, Brainiac (pre-Crisis)
and Kelex in Superman (1958)
Ultron, the Vision, Jocasta and Alkhema in
The Avengers (1963)
Young Vision, a member of the Young Avengers,
a rebooted new version of the Vision
Victor Mancha, an android created by Ultron
in Marvel Comics
Transmetropolitan features AIs who abuse virtual
hallucinogens
Android from Frank Miller's Hard Boiled
Ida from The Middle Man
C-Gram the android bartender from Marvel Comics'
Ghost Rider 2099 series
L-Ron, from the DC Comics series Justice League
International
Atomic Robo Tesla, eponymous hero of Atomic
Robo published by Red 5 Comics
==== Australian ====
Mr. Pendulum from Ben Templesmith's Wormwood:
Gentleman Corpse
==== British ====
The ABC Warriors from the comic 2000 AD, includes
Hammerstein
Android Andy, a parody of Robot Archie in
Captain Britain
Armoured Gideon from 2000 AD
Brassneck in The Dandy
Elektrobots in Reign of the Robots, a Dan
Dare story from the Eagle comic (1957)
Mechanismo, a range of robo-Judges from Judge
Dredd
Robo Machines
Robot Archie in the UK comic Valiant who has
appeared in Zenith and Albion
Ro-Busters, a 2000 AD series
Walter the Wobot robotic servant to Judge
Dredd also from 2000 AD
==== Franco-Belgian ====
Unnamed robot by Hergé from first adventure
of Belgian series Jo, Zette et Jocko (1936)
Otomox, the self-proclaimed "Robot Master"
by André Mavimus (writer) and Roger Roux
(artist) (1943)
Radar le robot by André Franquin from Belgian
series Spirou et Fantasio (1947)
Madame Adolphine by Peyo, an evil android
in the guise of a harmless grandma, from the
Belgian series Benoît Brisefer (1963)
La Schtroumpfette (Smurfette) by Peyo, a golem
in the guise of a female smurf, from Belgian
series Les Schtroumpfs (1966)
Exploding robots in the shape of guard dogs,
in the episode "Pâtée explosive" from Belgian
series Gil Jourdan by Maurice Tillieux (1969)
Cyanure by Tome and Janry, an evil sexy female
android from Spirou et Fantasio (1983)
Robo-cops from Incal (by Moebius and Jodorowsky)
==== Other European ====
The domestico elettrodomestico, one of the
more striking robots in Disney comics, looking
like a clown, from the comic "Zio Paperone
e il domestico elettrodomestico" by Guido
Martina and Giuseppe Perego (1967)
Robbie, a recurring robot constructed by inventor
Knox in German series Fix und Foxi, first
drawn by Massimo Fecchi (1976)
Robots from the planet Des from the Polish
series Bogowie z kosmosu (Gods from the Space),
written by Arnold Mostowicz and Alfred Górny
and illustrated by Bogusław Polch (1978)
RanXerox, a mechanical creature made from
Xerox photocopier parts, by Italian artists
Stefano Tamburini and Tanino Liberatore; first
appeared in 1978, in Italian, in the magazine
Cannibale
Uèr, an "electro-chemical" android capable
of human feelings, in the Italian comic book
Milady 3000 by Magnus (1980)
Link is an android in a team of human agents
in the Italian comics series Agenzia Alfa,
published by Sergio Bonelli (1997–present;
Nathan Never and Legs Weaver are on the same
team, although having series of their own).
Link's name could be a tribute to Adam Link.
His look has some similarity to Star Trek's
Data in an alternate timeline, except for
a silver strip of hair on top of his head.
==== South American ====
The Stellar Warriors from Karmatron by Oscar
González Loyo (1986)
Tonto and Lothar from The Metabarons (1992–2003)
==== Manga (Japanese comics) ====
Giant Robo in the manga by Mitsuteru Yokoyama
(1967–1968)
Doraemon in the manga of the same name by
Fujiko Fujio (1969)
Chihiro and Robita plus various other robots
from Osamu Tezuka's Phoenix (1971)
Arale Norimaki, the main character of Dr.
Slump; also Obotchaman (1980-1984)
Marilyn, named after Marilyn Monroe, in Kazuo
Umezu's 1982 manga My Name is Shingo
Sergeant Metallic, Android 8, Android 16,
Android 17, Android 18, and Android 19, all
created by Dr. Gero (Android 20) from Dragon
Ball (1984–1995)
Banpei and Sigel in Oh My Goddess! by Kōsuke
Fujishima (1988–present)
Project 2501 in Masamune Shirow's Ghost in
the Shell, a Japanese manga that describes
an espionage AI that achieves sentience (1991)
Alpha Hatsuseno, Kokone Takatsu, Maruko Maruko,
Director Alpha Koumiishi (female robots) and
Nai (a male robot) in the manga series Yokohama
Kaidashi Kikou by Hitoshi Ashinano in Kodansha's
monthly seinen magazine Afternoon (1994–2006)
Rin Asakura, Bathyscaphe and other robots,
cyborgs and space vessels that look like humans
in The World of Narue by Tomohiro Marukawa
(1999–2012)
Chi and other Persocoms from the manga Chobits
(2001–2002)
Chachamaru Karakuri, plus other robots in
the manga Negima by Ken Akamatsu (2003–2012)
Tres Iques from Trinity Blood by Sunao Yoshida
(2004–present)
Flandre, Flanders and Francesca from the anime
Princess Resurrection (2005–2013)
Nano Shinonome and Biscuit #1 and #2 from
Nichijou by Keiichi Arawi (2006–present)
Mira Yurizaki from Dimension W by Yūji Iwahara
(2011–present)
=== Comic strips ===
Beetle Bot from the comic strip Beetle Bailey
Bossbot, a robot created by Dilbert
Kollege Blech from the comic strips of East
German caricaturist Erich Schmitt (1965)
Robotman (1985) in the comic strip of the
same name, which eventually became "Monty".
Robotman left the strip and found happiness
with his girlfriend Robota on another planet.
A heroic female robot called Mimi, an evil
robot doppelganger of Mickey Mouse, and a
robot army led by Peg-Leg Pete in the newspaper
strip The World of Tomorrow (1944) by Floyd
Gottfredson and Bill Walsh
Rubert, a robot created by Dilbert
Tickle-Bot 3000 from the comic strip Thatababy
The Vacunator from the comic strip Pooch Cafe
Robot Cartoons Cartoon catalog featuring the
work of Dan Rosandich
=== Web comics ===
Aradia-bot, Jade-bot, "Lil' Hal (AR)" and
Bro-bot from Homestuck by Andrew Hussie
Anima: Age of the Robots (Anima) is an 18-chapter
webcomic series depicting robots taking over
the fictional planet of Anima, homeworld of
talking animals.
"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
Evil Killer Death Spybot 5000 from Mark Shallow's
Adventurers!, a robot originally designed
to spy on the party, who eventually becomes
a playable character
Ezekiel a.k.a. "Zeke", formerly known as the
"X-bot", the anthropomorphised Xbox console
from the webcomic Ctrl+Alt+Del
Fruit Fucker, a semi-sentient kitchen appliance
in the webcomic Penny Arcade that has sex
with fruit and ejaculates the juice
Carl Swangee, a sentient android from the
Penny Arcade 'Automata' storyline
J-LB8/Jalea Bates in Melonpool, started as
a robot, later became a human
Kleptobot, a supposedly Soviet-made robot
programmed to steal anything and everything,
from Joe and Monkey
Medivac 911 ("Doc"), a steam-powered medical/janitorial
droid from Polymer City Chronicles
The Ottobot, 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;
also other AnthroPCs
Various characters from Diesel Sweeties, including
Clango Cyclotron
Various characters from Saturnalia
== 
Web-based media ==
Stella 4D, a.k.a. Manager 45, on GO Moonbase;
first appears in episode 26
=== Animated shorts/series ===
Jewbot/Robobot from SuperMansion
Deathbots from SuperMansion
==== Flash ====
Rya Botkins and June Crane of Matt Wilson's
Bonus Stage (though Crane's status is disputed,
as she has claimed to be human)
The Robot, a contestant in the Strongest Man
in the World Contest, from Homestar Runner.
The Visor Robot, a futuristic robot with a
visor, from Homestar Runner
The Grape-Nuts Robot, created by Bubs to imitate
Strong Bad from Homestar Runner
Schniz, Fulker, CPDoom, and various background
characters from Andrew Kauervane's My God,
Robots!
=== Web series ===
Penny Polendina, a sentient android from the
Rooster Teeth web series RWBY
Bot Best Friend, a commercially sold robot
with five different "friendship modes" from
the Smosh video Awesome New Robot!
=== Machinima ===
Lopez, Church and Tex, characters from the
Rooster Teeth machinima Red vs. Blue. Only
Lopez is a true artificial life-form, as both
Church and Tex exist only as ghosts ( later
in the series though solid proof showed that
they both are AI programs like O'Malley the
whole time ). Both characters where blown
up during the course of the series, existing
from that point onward in robot bodies other
than their originals. They possess mechanical
bodies similar to Lopez in design.
=== Podcasts ===
Little Button Puss, character from Episode
#310 of the Comedy Bang! Bang! podcast, played
by John Gemberling. Little Button Puss, a.k.a.
HPDP69-B, is a promotional robot built by
Hewlett-Packard and is the first ever robot
created with a fully sentient artificial intelligence,
personality, and speaking function. It was
designed by HP engineers for the express purpose
of sexually pleasing humans. Comedy Bang!
Bang! host Scott Aukerman was sent Little
Button Puss as part of a promotional advertising
campaign for the line of sex-robots. Little
Button Puss looks like a metal dog, and has
small flesh patches where its genitals are.
Elsewhere, it's described as having the appearance
of "nickel blue, gun metal". It is verified
in the episode that Scott Aukerman lustily
removed Little Button Puss's retractable genitals,
threw them in a trash can, and then proceeded
to use the HPDP69-B for its intended purpose.
Afterwards, according to Comedy Bang! Bang!
official canon, Aukerman looked back on the
incident with shame. A complaint about the
HPDP69-B is that, for a sex-robot, "it looks
too much like a metal dog". In a brief look
into its past, Little Button Puss recounts
an old romantic relationship with its long
lost love, United Flight 93, who "died in
the September 11th attacks".
The Co-Host 3000 (later Sidekick 3000), character
from the Spill and Double Toasted podcasts,
voiced by Tony Guerrero.
== Computer and video games ==
Dr. Samuel Hayden, Doom (2016)
Connor, Markus and Kara among many others
from Detroit: Become Human
Bastion , Orisa , Zenyatta, Tekhartha Mondatta
and various omnics from Overwatch
Various robot from Metal Arms: Glitch in the
System
Bouncer, Wind-Up, Jawbreaker, Ro-Bow, Gearshift,
Drill Sergeant, Magna Charge, and High Volt
from the Skylanders series
Various robot fighter from Rise of the Robots
and Rise 2: Resurrection
BT-7274 from Titanfall 2
CHEFBOT-9000 from Prinny: Can I Really Be
the Hero?
Codsworth from Fallout 4
Diver and Drones from Abzû
Dr Kahl's Robot from Cuphead
DG a.k.a. Cash Cube a.k.a. ABak from PT Trading
GLaDOS from the Portal series
Dallas 13, the cyborg from Vigilante 8: 2nd
Offense
White Bomber of the Bomberman race from the
Bomberman series
Cowboy Robot monster from 100 Rogues
Ashlotte, a clockwork girl brought to life
and powered by magic in Soulcalibur IV
Eve, a playable character in Elsword. She
is part of a lost robot race called Nasod,
accompanied by Moby and Remy to assist her
in fighting she is searching for an El Crystal
to help her rebuild her race . She is known
as the "Queen of the Nasods" and in one of
her class changes she creates other robots
named Oberon, Ophelia, and Ferdinand.
King Nasod, code name Adam one of the first
Nasod built, a boss in Elsword
Various Nasod models - there are multiple
types of Nasod, each specific to the job it
was created for each given names ranging from
Leviathan and Ignis to Nasod TYPE-N and Nasod
TYPE-F; they act as basic mobs or bosses in
game.
Zero, the robotic guide to Rose in Elsword
in one of Rose's classes; helps Rose create
more robots such as G-0 Battleroid , Mecha
Volt MX , Sparrow units , Ex-C Viper , Gale
Force , and The G-Core
Talos (Or SOMA), the player character in The
Talos Principle
Arthur from The Journeyman Project video game
series
LUX TIZER, a Tetujin from The 7th Saga
B.O.B.
Many mining and defense robots in the Descent
series of games
Mining robots and combots from Red Faction
Floyd, the lovable sidekick robot from the
Infocom text adventure Planetfall
Freddy Fazbear, Bonnie, Foxy and Chica from
the Five Nights at Freddy's series; also other
animatronics
The distinct robots in the original Mega Man
series, including the main character Mega
Man and the Robot Masters
The Metal Gears from the Metal Gear series
Mettaton from Undertale; actually a ghost
residing inside a robotic body created by
the royal scientist Alphys. He is a celebrity
in Mt. Ebott, the home of the monsters.
K1-B0 (nicknamed Keebo) from Danganronpa V3:
Killing Harmony
Snatchers from the cyberpunk visual novel
adventure game Snatcher
Custom Robo
Evil robots from Toy Story 2: Buzz Lightyear
to the Rescue
Robot bosses from Contra III: The Alien Wars
Diana and Al King from Doraemon 4: In the
Moon Kingdom (ドラえもん4 のび太と月の王国)
Assorted monsters from the Final Fantasy series,
including the superboss Omega Weapon
The Badniks, the E-Series robots, Metallix,
Captain Whisker, Emerl, Gemerl, Metal Sonic,
Mecha Sonic, EggRobo, Cubot, and Orbot from
the Sonic the Hedgehog series
Dr Ion and various other robots from God Hand
Liberty Prime from Fallout 4
Mechatron from The Movie Monster Game (1986)
Miss Bloody Rachel from Viewtiful Joe 2 and
Viewtiful Joe: Red Hot Rumble
The Reploids of the Mega Man X and Mega Man
Zero series, and Mega Man ZX, robots with
the ability to think, feel, and make their
own decisions
Enemy robots from Robotron: 2084
Various robot enemies from Fantastic Four
Shamus
Cyber Sub-Zero, Cyrax, Sektor and Smoke from
the Mortal Kombat series
The Drones and Mainframe from Gunman Chronicles
Robo from Chrono Trigger
The Cyberdisc and Sectopod species in X-COM:
UFO Defense
Alisa Bosconovitch, Combot, Jacks and NANCY-MI847J
from the Tekken series
Gadget and Gadget Z from Suikoden II and Suikoden
III respectively
Cait Sith, a fortune-telling robotic cat controlled
via remote by a man named Reeve Teusti, from
Final Fantasy VII. By extension, Cait Sith
rides atop a giant, robotic moogle to which
Cait Sith relays commands through a megaphone.
ROB 64 from the Star Fox series, starting
with Star Fox 64
Emeralda, a colony of nanomachines from Xenogears
The Servbots from Mega Man Legends
Hengar from Monster Rancher
Terror Drone from Command & Conquer: Red Alert
2
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
The Robo-Kys from the Guilty Gear series
Ershin from Breath of Fire IV
The "Machina" from Final Fantasy X and Final
Fantasy X-2
Cortana, 343 Guilty Spark and 2401 Penitent
Tangent, from the Halo series
Clank, Doctor Nefarious, and countless others
in the Ratchet & Clank series
KOS-MOS, MOMO and the Realians from the Xenosaga
trilogy
Kunoichi and Ninja from The Ninja Warriors,
an arcade game starring robot ninjas
Robocalypse, Nintendo DS game
Robots from System Shock
Robot enemies from Viewtiful Joe
Scooter from Alien Storm
Monita from Nintendo Land
Thursday, sidekick of Captain Gordon the 37th
Defender of Earth (and later itself the 38th
Defender of Earth) from Disgaea: Hour of Darkness
Turtlebot from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
HK-47 from Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic,
part of the Star Wars expanded universe
Kurt Zisa, a secret Heartless boss in the
American and Final Mix versions of Kingdom
Hearts
The entire Core army in Total Annihilation
and its remakes
The robots in Zero-K
Numerous robot enemies from SpongeBob SquarePants:
Battle for Bikini Bottom
Geary, a cleanliness-obsessed and evil robot
from Crash Nitro Kart
The Ridepod, a customizable industrial revolution-style
robot that Max can ride in the dungeons in
the RPG Dark Cloud 2
Dog from Half-Life 2
Robot enemies from Journey to Silius (Raf
World)
Chibi-Robo, a tiny robot housekeeper that
is the main playable character in the game
of same name
Mike, a "karaoke robot" from WarioWare: Touched!;
its creator, Dr. Crygor used him as a janitor
Rocket in Rocket: Robot on Wheels
Browny from Contra: Hard Corps
The Robot boss from Contra: Hard Corps
Robot enemies from The Incredible Hulk: Ultimate
Destruction
Various robot enemies from Spider-Man: Friend
or Foe
The Copyroid, a robot that allows a Net-Navi
to be projected into the real world and interact
with it in Mega Man Battle Network 6
Yumemi Hoshino, a main character in the visual
novel Planetarian: The Reverie of a Little
Planet
Medabots
Many enemies and bosses from Smash TV
CD-288 from Contra: Legacy of War
Oscar, an automaton railwayman from Syberia
and Syberia II
Probotector, PAL version of Contra with the
human characters replaced with robots
Quote and Curly Brace, the "soldiers from
the surface" in Doukutsu Monogatari
Several Protoss units from StarCraft are robotic.
Most GUN units from Sonic the Hedgehog are
robots.
LapTrap from The Learning Company's The ClueFinders
series
R-110 from TimeSplitters: Future Perfect
Robot Ninja Haggle Man from Retro Game Challenge
Virtual Woman, who can be programmed with
a new personality, appearance, and history
Sasuke, a clockwork robot ninja in the Ganbare
Goemon series
Goemon Impact, a very big clockwork robot
in Ganbare Goemon, modelled after Goemon himself
Miss Impact, a female counterpart to Goemon
Impact that is modelled after Omitsu
T-elos(Telos), Ziggy, the E.S. units and the
Zarathustra system in Xenosaga
The various classes of Forerunner Sentinels
from Halo
The Jack of All Trades (or Jack) robot from
Gears of War
Big Robot Bill of the computer game The Neverhood
The W-Numbers of Super Robot Taisen: Original
Generation 2
T.O.B.O.R. and Makoto/Proto-Makoto, robots
created by Dr. F. on MySims and MySims Kingdom
The Fillibots from Rhythm Heaven
Wheatley from Portal 2
Frobot from the eponymous Wii game
Admiral Razorbeard and the Robo-Pirates from
Rayman Series
Josef from the Machinarium computer game
DeskBot, BellBot, DoorBot, LiftBot, BarBot
and the Maître d' are crucial characters
in Douglas Adams' Starship Titanic
RFS-81, a Savant fighter droid that will join
the player after being repaired in Wizardry
8
Aigis and Metis from Persona 3; also Labrys
from Persona 4 Arena
In Star Ocean: The Second Story, the main
antagonists, who call themselves the Ten Wise
Men, were androids made more than 4 billion
years ago to suppress rebel forces opposing
an ancient empire. They were then reprogrammed
to destroy the universe after the death of
their creator's daughter.
Harkness or A3-21, an android designed to
hunt down other rogue androids, before finally
going rogue himself in the 2008 role-playing
game Fallout 3. The character is a reference
to the 1982 film Blade Runner.
Mr. Handy, utility robots from the Fallout
series
Curie, a Miss Nanny robot from Fallout 4 modified
to conduct scientific experiments in secret
in Vault-tech's Vault 81
Atlas and P-Body, the android player-characters
in the co-op mode in Portal 2
CL4P-TP also referred to as "ClapTrap from
the Borderlands series
D-Tritus and various others from Scrapland
Various from Z
EDI (an artificial intelligence operating
an android formerly named Dr. Eva), Harbinger,
Sovereign, the Reapers, and the Geth, including
Legion, from the Mass Effect series
Clanker in The Learning Company's Star Flyer
series
The robotic CAST race from the Phantasy Star
series
The Simbot from The Sims 3: Ambitions
The Sackbots from LittleBigPlanet 2 and LittleBigPlanet
Karting
Turing a main character of 2064: Read Only
Memories
Working Joes and Industrial Joes from Alien:
Isolation
Ghost, artificially intelligent companion
of guardians in the video game Destiny
Skell, the giant robot mechs from the video
game Xenoblade Chronicles X used as tools
and weapons
Mimeozone, human-like robots from Xenoblade
Chronicles X; simulate humans while all the
humans are in stasis
Ruukoto, Reimu's maid from Phantasmagoria
of Dim. Dream given to her by Yumemi. Does
not appear in any other Touhou project games.
VIVIT, the protagonist of the Seihou Project
series.
Drones from Angry Birds Epic Raiding Party
events.
2B, 9S and A2, the three main protagonists
from NieR: Automata are respectively Battle,
Scanner, and Attacker model androids within
the game, along with almost all NPCs included
in the game itself.
Lone Echo The Main Character, Jack (Or ECHO
ONE) is an Android under command of Captain
Olivia "Liv" Rhodes onborad the Kronos II
Station in space.
WX-78 from Don't Starve and Don't Starve Together.
Shinatama, the female android liaison to the
main protagonist from the game Oni.
== See also ==
Robot
Android
Gynoid
Artificial intelligence in fiction
List of fictional computers
List of fictional cyborgs
List of fictional gynoids
List of military robots in fictional media
List of robots
Mecha
Robotic police officer
Science fiction
Technology in science fiction
== Notes ==
== External links ==
AMC Filmsite – Robots in Film – A Complete
Illustrated History of Robots in the Movies
Robots in Movies – over 600 movies with
robots, androids, cyborgs and AI
Robots on TV – over 300 TV series with robots,
androids, cyborgs and AI
Robot Hall of Fame at CMU – with fictional
inductees HAL-9000 and R2-D2
Round-up of fictional TV and movie robots
at Den Of Geek
Analysis of the greatest evil robots in fiction
at Mahalo
Mr ZED The Robot Comedian, David Kirk Taylor
