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Genji, an advanced cyborg ninja who appears as a playable character in Overwatch and Heroes of the Storm. Gray Fox & Raiden from the Metal Gear Solid series; The Grox are a race of cyborg carnivores creatures, that rule most of the Galaxy in Spore, and the main antagonists. Hung Lo, Lo Wang's evil brother from Shadow Warrior: Twin Dragon
Although there are a variety of gynoids across genres, this list excludes female cyborgs (e.g. Seven of Nine in Star Trek: Voyager), non-humanoid robots (e.g. EVE from Wall-E), virtual female characters (Dot Matrix and women from the cartoon ReBoot, Simone from Simone, Samantha from Her), holograms (Hatsune Miku in concert, Cortana from Halo ...
Cyborg Noodle, the cyborg clone of Noodle from the virtual band Gorillaz who was created for the storyline of their album Plastic Beach (2010). "Selfmachine", titular character from the opening track of I Blame Coco's 2010 album The Constant. Rovix, K-pop group VIXX's robotic mascot (2012).
The term gynoid was first used by Isaac Asimov in a 1979 editorial, as a theoretical female equivalent of the word android. [4] Other possible names for feminine robots exist. The portmanteau "fembot" (feminine robot) was used as far back as 1959, in Fritz Leiber's The Silver Eggheads, applying specifically to non-sentient female sexbots. [5]
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Must be a defining trait - A "cyborg" is loosely and deliberately defined here as a being with both "biological or organic" parts and "artificial or synthetic" parts, regardless of either source being "natural" or a "fabrication [disambiguation needed]". This definition is not perfect and requires some "common sense" to be applied.
In the original manga, "Gally"/"Alita" was the name of Ido's pet black cat, who died a month before he found the remains of cyborg girl in the Tiphares junkyard. Gally the cat was a male, and Ido's friend Gonzu comments that it is strange to name a female cyborg after a male cat.
She has been given several names through the decades: Parody (the name Rotwang calls her in the novel), Ultima, Machina, Robotrix, False Maria, Robot Maria, Roboria and Hel. The intertitles of the 2010 restoration of Metropolis quote Rotwang, the robot's creator, referring to his gynoid Maschinenmensch , literally translated as "Machine human".