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  2. List of fictional gynoids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_gynoids

    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 ...

  3. List of fictional robots and androids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_robots...

    "Maschinenmensch" from the 1927 film Metropolis. Statue in Babelsberg, Germany. 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.

  4. List of fictional cyborgs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_cyborgs

    The Clockwork man from a novel of same name written by E.V. Odle in 1923. [11] Gabriel, real name Benedict Masson, from Gaston Leroux's novel La Poupée sanglante (1923). [12] The Ardathian from Francis Flagg's story "The Machine Man of Ardathia" (1927). [13] Hanley and the comet-people from Edmond Hamilton's story "The Comet Doom" (1928). [14]

  5. List of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Teenage_Mutant...

    Dregg then tracks the Turtles to Magdomar, home of the last Black Hole Generator fragment, in order to exact revenge for their destruction of his Scorpinoid. After failing to defeat them alone, Dregg contacted the Triceratons, offering to help them locate the generator fragment in exchange for a hefty bounty and the Turtles for his own vengeance.

  6. Battle Angel Alita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_Angel_Alita

    Battle Angel Alita tells the story of Alita, an amnesiac female cyborg. Her intact head and chest, in suspended animation, are found by cyber medic expert Daisuke Ido in the local garbage dump. Ido manages to revive her, and finding she has lost her memory, names her Alita after his recently deceased cat.

  7. Alita: Battle Angel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alita:_Battle_Angel

    In the year 2563, 300 years after Earth was devastated in a catastrophic war against the United Republic of Mars (URM), scientist Dr. Dyson Ido scavenges a disembodied female cyborg with an intact human brain in the Iron City scrapyard. He unites it with a new cyborg body and names her "Alita" after his late daughter. Alita wakes with no memory ...

  8. Gynoid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gynoid

    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]

  9. List of space pirates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_pirates

    The self-declared "Queen of the Space Pirates," who heads a crew of three other pirates (Ostea, Cyborg Dwayne, and Boop), and the doppelgänger of series protagonist, Cleopatra. [2] She previously had the telepathic space shark ninja as her ex-boyfriend, and the series villain, Octavian, might be her ex-boyfriend as well.