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* Ping from ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' sleeps like an actual human when she's in idle mode, can use the chemical energy from sugar to recharge her batteries, and in one chapter, she angrily tells Piro that she has ''real'' feelings even though these feelings are simulated. However, she does have a couple of robotic quirks: when she sees Piro all mopey because he couldn't wind up the courage to call Kimiko, Ping misrecognizes his posture and attitude as being rejected by Kimiko, and suddenly goes into GenkiGirl mode. Not bad for a UsefulNotes/PlayStation2 accessory. She has also been explicitly stated to be "fully functional", and WordOfGod has even implied that she has a working uterus.

to:

* Ping from ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' sleeps like an actual human when she's in idle mode, can use the chemical energy from sugar to recharge her batteries, and in one chapter, she angrily tells Piro that she has ''real'' feelings even though these feelings are simulated. However, she does have a couple of robotic quirks: when she sees Piro all mopey because he couldn't wind up the courage to call Kimiko, Ping misrecognizes his posture and attitude as being rejected by Kimiko, and suddenly goes into GenkiGirl mode. Not bad for a UsefulNotes/PlayStation2 Platform/PlayStation2 accessory. She has also been explicitly stated to be "fully functional", and WordOfGod has even implied that she has a working uterus.
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* The all-android cast of ''Webcomic/NextSoundOfTheFuture'' eat, sleep, drink, and generally look indistinguishable from humans. All the androids in the cast are specifically created to be idols, so their humanlike appearances serve to make them more appealing to their human fans.

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%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
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* Warmech from ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater'' tries to convince the Light Warriors that it is an example of this, despite being a walking tank. It's at least ''incompetent'' in only the way a deeply stupid human would be.
-->'''Warmech:''' BEHOLD MY HUMAN LASER!
* Lie Bot and Vlad from ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' are both robots who are constantly lying and talking about Make-outs, respectively. Vlad, for no reason at all, has an accent.



* [[ProtagonistTitle The titular character]], Pilot, and also ''quite a few of'' the characters in ''Webcomic/{{Pilot}}'' are like this. Androids such as Norman are ''very'' easy to be mistaken as human beings, and as for Pilot, aside from his grey skin, one could easily mistake him for a human.
* Ping from ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' sleeps like an actual human when she's in idle mode, can use the chemical energy from sugar to recharge her batteries, and in one chapter, she angrily tells Piro that she has ''real'' feelings even though these feelings are simulated. However, she does have a couple of robotic quirks: when she sees Piro all mopey because he couldn't wind up the courage to call Kimiko, Ping misrecognizes his posture and attitude as being rejected by Kimiko, and suddenly goes into GenkiGirl mode. Not bad for a UsefulNotes/PlayStation2 accessory. She has also been explicitly stated to be "fully functional", and WordOfGod has even implied that she has a working uterus.

to:

* [[ProtagonistTitle The titular character]], Pilot, and also ''quite a few of'' the characters in ''Webcomic/{{Pilot}}'' are like this. Androids such as Norman are ''very'' easy to be mistaken as human beings, and as for Pilot, aside from his grey skin, one could easily mistake him for a human.
* Ping from ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' sleeps like an actual human when she's in idle mode, can use the chemical energy from sugar to recharge her batteries, and in one chapter, she angrily tells Piro that she has ''real'' feelings
''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'' plays this trope even though these feelings are simulated. However, she does have a couple straighter than its inspiration ''Franchise/MegaMan'' [[RuleOfFunny in the name of robotic quirks: when she sees Piro all mopey comedy]] with robots, Mega Man in particular, being capable of eating ice cream, getting drunk and vomiting.
* ''Webcomic/{{Castoff}}'' has [[spoiler:Frankie the cartographer]], a cheerful, YoungerThanTheyLook, bandage-clad Cloudcuckoolander who shrugs off snake bites and CannotCrossRunningWater
because he couldn't wind up it makes him go haywire. If it wasn't for the courage to call Kimiko, Ping misrecognizes his posture water thing, we'd never have learned.
* [[BigBad Zenith]] from ''WebComic/CommanderKitty''. She wants a [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/04/25/plot/ biological boyfriend]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/07/04/nothing-like-a-good-rant/ has wild mood swings]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/09/12/table-for-blue/ may or may not be capable of eating]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/12/12/nothing-to-see-here/ gets tired easily]],
and attitude even [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/08/28/process-of-elimination/ cries]].
* There turns out to be a few of these in ''Webcomic/TheFarSideOfUtopia''; Ila certainly counts,
as does [[spoiler:Mium]], though both have fairly obvious parculiar tendencies. Averted (or perhaps played really straight...) with the only character that looks a robot (Mir) seemingly not being rejected by Kimiko, and suddenly goes into GenkiGirl mode. Not bad for a UsefulNotes/PlayStation2 accessory. She has also been explicitly stated to be "fully functional", and WordOfGod has even implied that she has a working uterus.robot.



* ''Webcomic/NinePlanetsWithoutIntelligentLife'' has a cast consisting of nothing but Ridiculously Human Robots, who eat (and gain/lose weight somehow), drink (and get drunk), feel pain and even date and wed each other. It {{justifie|dTrope}}s this by explaining that the humans that built them [[spoiler:before [[HumanitysWake humanity went extinct]]]] wanted to make sure robots could better appreciate and interact with normally humans-only pleasantries, such as theme restaurants.

to:

* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'':
** The Muses, twelve breathtakingly advanced humanoid clanks created for the Storm King two hundred years ago.
--->'''Master Payne:''' The Muses were renowned as miraculous, beautiful machines -- but few would believe they were truly ''aware''. And maybe they're ''not''. It would certainly be ''easier'' to create machines that merely ''simulate'' emotion. However... even if her grief is artificial, it is ''destroying'' her.
** Agatha's dingbots (pocketwatch-sized clanks she builds as assistants) are intelligent enough to carry out complex commands, show love and loyalty towards their creator, and even remember old grudges.
* Stephanie in ''Webcomic/GroovyKinda'' is a robot who can actually drink... ''and get drunk.''
* ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'':
** Various robots display human-like personalites, and human-like comical incompetence. For example, they hide their presence by labeling their spare part storage room as "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial NO spare robot parts]]". Their gatekeeper, Doorbot, was fooled by Annie's PaperThinDisguise. And the Guardbots attempting to apprehend Annie [[TheGuardsMustBeCrazy are completely flummoxed]] when she ''runs away from them''. A possible explanation for this arises later: the robots are {{magitek}}.
** A later arc features a Robot King (who draws emotions on 'his' face with markers), a Robot Society, in turmoil, nonetheless. And let's not even count the fact that the robots apparently have true emotions, are capable of being moved by a painting and upset by a wreckage. {{Magitek}} at its finest...
* Dr. Robot in ''Webcomic/TheIncredibleAndAweInspiringSerialAdventureOfTheAmazingPlasmaMan'' not only seems to have an almost sociopathic sense of humor, but is also evil, both of which are decidedly human traits.
* On the world of Terra, in ''Webcomic/MagicalMisfits'', magic makes artificial intelligences like computers, or robots, living things.
* Ugofandian from ''Webcomic/{{Marooned}}'' has built a ridiculously Martian robot.
* Ping from ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' sleeps like an actual human when she's in idle mode, can use the chemical energy from sugar to recharge her batteries, and in one chapter, she angrily tells Piro that she has ''real'' feelings even though these feelings are simulated. However, she does have a couple of robotic quirks: when she sees Piro all mopey because he couldn't wind up the courage to call Kimiko, Ping misrecognizes his posture and attitude as being rejected by Kimiko, and suddenly goes into GenkiGirl mode. Not bad for a UsefulNotes/PlayStation2 accessory. She has also been explicitly stated to be "fully functional", and WordOfGod has even implied that she has a working uterus.
* ''Webcomic/NeverMindTheGap'' is an unusually [[SlidingScale/MohsScaleOfScienceFictionHardness hard]] and {{justified|Trope}} example. The comic is about a town inhabited by a mix of humans and RidiculouslyHumanRobots, which are almost ''exactly'' like humans personality-wise (though obviously robotic in appearance). They have to go through a very human-like childhood as they mature, and can become romantically involved with each other and with humans. The explanation is that in this universe, AI researchers found no way to make an AI with human-level intelligence ''except'' for modelling the AI very closely on the human mind, and also giving it a fairly humanoid body. Every attempt to make a less human-like AI either failed or resulted in insanity. Intelligent robots were initially found to be useful for a variety of tasks, which explains why people bothered to build them, but eventually, predictably, they wanted to be treated as people; the comic is set in a time and place where they've largely won this fight, and so now they no longer need to be "useful," as such, other than as equal members of society. It's notable that there ''are'' also non-human-like "smart" devices and non-humanoid robots in this setting, but their intelligence and abilities are limited. The Ridiculously Human Robots are realistic in other ways -- for instance, the complexities and limitations of their humanoid bodies, and the associated maintenance costs, are explicitly addressed. The possibility of non-human robots is contemplated with the uplifted octopi, who could possibly make robots modeled after their own mind.
* ''Webcomic/NinePlanetsWithoutIntelligentLife'' has a cast consisting of nothing but Ridiculously Human Robots, who eat (and gain/lose weight somehow), drink (and get drunk), feel pain and even date and wed each other. It {{justifie|dTrope}}s this by explaining that the humans that who built them [[spoiler:before [[HumanitysWake humanity went extinct]]]] wanted to make sure that robots could better appreciate and interact with normally humans-only pleasantries, such as theme restaurants.restaurants.
* Al and Sulla from ''Webcomic/OHumanStar''. Justified in that they're [[BrainUploading copies of a human mind]].
* [[ProtagonistTitle The titular character]], Pilot, and also ''quite a few of'' the characters in ''Webcomic/{{Pilot}}'' are like this. Androids such as Norman are ''very'' easy to be mistaken as human beings, and as for Pilot, aside from his grey skin, one could easily mistake him for a human.



** Later on, Momo shows a more human and well-rounded personality than most of the other cast, including things as complex as sadness for the plight of the first AI (it was stuck in a box for several years while it was tested) to gratitude and love for humans in general for accepting AI's so welcomingly.
** As the series continues and TheSingularity sets in, this trope is pretty much turned up to Mundanely Human Robots.
--->'''Faye:''' ''Why is fainting even a thing she can do.''
* Lie Bot and Vlad from ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' are both robots which are constantly lying, and talking about Make-outs respectively. Vlad, for no reason at all, has an accent.
* On the world of Terra, in ''Webcomic/MagicalMisfits'', magic makes artificial intelligences like computers, or robots, living things.
* Robots in ''Webcomic/{{SSDD}}'' seem prone to developing into this unless they are designed with caps on their intelligence and personality or if they don't have them they usually have their memories erased every few months.
* ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'':
** Various robots display human-like personalites, and human-like comical incompetence. For example, they hide their presence by labeling their spare part storage room as "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial NO spare robot parts]]". Their gatekeeper, Doorbot, was fooled by Annie's PaperThinDisguise. And the Guardbots attempting to apprehend Annie [[TheGuardsMustBeCrazy are completely flummoxed]] when she ''runs away from them''. A possible explanation for this arises later: the robots are {{magitek}}.
** A later arc features a Robot King (who draws emotions on 'his' face with markers), a Robot Society, in turmoil, nonetheless. And let's not even count the fact that the robots apparently have true emotions, are capable of being moved by a painting and upset by a wreckage. {{Magitek}} at its finest...
* Warmech from ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater'' tries to convince the Light Warriors that it is an example of this, despite being a walking tank. It's at least ''incompetent'' in only the way a deeply stupid human would be.
-->'''Warmech:''' BEHOLD MY HUMAN LASER!

to:

** Later on, Momo shows a more human and well-rounded personality than most of the other cast, including things as complex as sadness for the plight of the first AI (it was stuck in a box for several years while it was tested) to gratitude and love for humans in general for accepting AI's [=AIs=] so welcomingly.
** As the series continues and TheSingularity sets in, this trope is pretty much turned up to [[MundaneFantastic Mundanely Human Robots.
Robots]].
--->'''Faye:''' ''Why is fainting {{fainting}} even a thing she can do.''
* Lie Bot and Vlad from ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' are both robots which are constantly lying, and talking about Make-outs respectively. Vlad, for no reason at all, has an accent.
* On the world
Some of Terra, in ''Webcomic/MagicalMisfits'', magic makes artificial intelligences like computers, or robots, living things.
* Robots in ''Webcomic/{{SSDD}}'' seem prone to developing into this unless they are designed with caps on their intelligence and personality or if they don't have them they usually have their memories erased every few months.
* ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'':
** Various robots display human-like personalites, and human-like comical incompetence. For example, they hide their presence by labeling their spare part storage room as "[[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial NO spare robot parts]]". Their gatekeeper, Doorbot, was fooled by Annie's PaperThinDisguise. And the Guardbots attempting to apprehend Annie [[TheGuardsMustBeCrazy are completely flummoxed]] when she ''runs away from them''. A possible explanation for this arises later:
the robots in ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' are {{magitek}}.
** A later arc features a Robot King (who draws emotions on 'his' face with markers), a Robot Society, in turmoil, nonetheless. And let's not
like this, especially the construction drones. They can even count the fact that the robots feel pain, although that's justified:
-->'''Drone:''' "Pain will help us cut maintenance costs." You didn't mention how much it would ''hurt''.
* In ''Webcomic/{{Sinfest}}'', [[http://www.sinfest.net/view.php?date=2006-11-05 a woman talking to Slick malfunctions, and Satan shows up to repair her. She's once again
apparently have true emotions, are capable of being moved by a painting and upset by a wreckage. {{Magitek}} at its finest...
* Warmech from ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater'' tries to convince the Light Warriors that it is an example of this, despite being a walking tank. It's at least ''incompetent'' in only the way a deeply stupid
human would be.
-->'''Warmech:''' BEHOLD MY HUMAN LASER!
at the end.]]



* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'':
** The Muses, twelve breathtakingly advanced humanoid clanks created for the Storm King two hundred years ago.
--->'''Master Payne:''' The Muses were renowned as miraculous, beautiful machines -- but few would believe they were truly ''aware''. And maybe they're ''not''. It would certainly be ''easier'' to create machines that merely ''simulate'' emotion. However ... even if her grief is artificial, it is ''destroying'' her.
** Agatha's dingbots (pocketwatch-sized clanks she builds as assistants) are intelligent enough to carry out complex commands, show love and loyalty towards their creator, and even remember old grudges.
* Dr. Robot in ''Webcomic/TheIncredibleAndAweInspiringSerialAdventureOfTheAmazingPlasmaMan'' not only seems to have an almost sociopathic sense of humor, but is also evil, both of which are decidedly human traits.
* Some of the robots in ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' are like this, especially the construction drones. They can even feel pain, although that's justified:
-->'''Drone:''' "Pain will help us cut maintenance costs." You didn't mention how much it would ''hurt''.
* ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'' plays this trope even straighter than its inspiration ''Franchise/MegaMan'' [[RuleOfFunny in the name of comedy]] with robots, Mega Man in particular, being capable of eating ice cream, getting drunk and vomiting.
* Nicki in ''Webcomic/TimesLikeThis'' acts human enough to be actually mistaken for a human.
* Stephanie in ''Webcomic/GroovyKinda'' is a robot that can actually drink... ''and get drunk.''
* ''Webcomic/NeverMindTheGap'' is an unusually [[SlidingScale/MohsScaleOfScienceFictionHardness hard]] and {{justified|Trope}} example. The comic is about a town inhabited by a mix of humans and RidiculouslyHumanRobots, which are almost ''exactly'' like humans personality-wise (though obviously robotic in appearance). They have to go through a very human-like childhood as they mature, and can become romantically involved with each other and with humans. The explanation is that in this universe, AI researchers found no way to make an AI with human-level intelligence ''except'' for modelling the AI very closely on the human mind, and also giving it a fairly humanoid body. Every attempt to make a less human-like AI either failed or resulted in insanity. Intelligent robots were initially found to be useful for a variety of tasks, which explains why people bothered to build them, but eventually, predictably, they wanted to be treated as people; the comic is set in a time and place where they've largely won this fight, and so now they no longer need to be "useful," as such, other than as equal members of society. It's notable that there ''are'' also non-human-like "smart" devices and non-humanoid robots in this setting, but their intelligence and abilities are limited. The RidiculouslyHumanRobots are realistic in other ways -- for instance, the complexities and limitations of their humanoid bodies, and the associated maintenance costs, are explicitly addressed. The possibility of non-human robots is contemplated with the uplifted octopi, who could possibly make robots modeled after their own mind.
* In ''Webcomic/{{Sinfest}}'', [[http://www.sinfest.net/view.php?date=2006-11-05 a woman talking to Slick malfunctions, and Satan shows up to repair her. She's once again apparently human at the end.]]
* Al and Sulla from ''Webcomic/OHumanStar''. Justified in that they're copies of a human mind.
* [[BigBad Zenith]] from ''WebComic/CommanderKitty''. She wants a [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/04/25/plot/ biological boyfriend]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/07/04/nothing-like-a-good-rant/ has wild mood swings]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/09/12/table-for-blue/ may or may not be capable of eating]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/12/12/nothing-to-see-here/ gets tired easily]], and even [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/08/28/process-of-elimination/ cries]].
* Tentadora from ''Webcomic/{{Zoophobia}}'': At first, she looks like she might be human or at least, some humanoid creature, knowing the setting. But then she changes to [[http://www.zoophobiacomic.com/Zoophobia/?p=443 a more robotic look]], revealing herself to be a robot with a ridiculously humanoid form.

to:

* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'':
** The Muses, twelve breathtakingly advanced humanoid clanks created for the Storm King two hundred years ago.
--->'''Master Payne:''' The Muses were renowned as miraculous, beautiful machines -- but few would believe
Robots in ''Webcomic/{{SSDD}}'' seem prone to developing into this unless they were truly ''aware''. And maybe they're ''not''. It would certainly be ''easier'' to create machines that merely ''simulate'' emotion. However ... even if her grief is artificial, it is ''destroying'' her.
** Agatha's dingbots (pocketwatch-sized clanks she builds as assistants)
are intelligent enough to carry out complex commands, show love and loyalty towards their creator, and even remember old grudges.
* Dr. Robot in ''Webcomic/TheIncredibleAndAweInspiringSerialAdventureOfTheAmazingPlasmaMan'' not only seems to have an almost sociopathic sense of humor, but is also evil, both of which are decidedly human traits.
* Some of the robots in ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' are like this, especially the construction drones. They can even feel pain, although that's justified:
-->'''Drone:''' "Pain will help us cut maintenance costs." You didn't mention how much it would ''hurt''.
* ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'' plays this trope even straighter than its inspiration ''Franchise/MegaMan'' [[RuleOfFunny in the name of comedy]]
designed with robots, Mega Man in particular, being capable of eating ice cream, getting drunk and vomiting.
* Nicki in ''Webcomic/TimesLikeThis'' acts human enough to be actually mistaken for a human.
* Stephanie in ''Webcomic/GroovyKinda'' is a robot that can actually drink... ''and get drunk.''
* ''Webcomic/NeverMindTheGap'' is an unusually [[SlidingScale/MohsScaleOfScienceFictionHardness hard]] and {{justified|Trope}} example. The comic is about a town inhabited by a mix of humans and RidiculouslyHumanRobots, which are almost ''exactly'' like humans personality-wise (though obviously robotic in appearance). They have to go through a very human-like childhood as they mature, and can become romantically involved with each other and with humans. The explanation is that in this universe, AI researchers found no way to make an AI with human-level intelligence ''except'' for modelling the AI very closely
caps on the human mind, and also giving it a fairly humanoid body. Every attempt to make a less human-like AI either failed or resulted in insanity. Intelligent robots were initially found to be useful for a variety of tasks, which explains why people bothered to build them, but eventually, predictably, they wanted to be treated as people; the comic is set in a time and place where they've largely won this fight, and so now they no longer need to be "useful," as such, other than as equal members of society. It's notable that there ''are'' also non-human-like "smart" devices and non-humanoid robots in this setting, but their intelligence and abilities are limited. The RidiculouslyHumanRobots are realistic in other ways -- for instance, the complexities and limitations of personality, or if they don't have them, they usually have their humanoid bodies, and the associated maintenance costs, are explicitly addressed. The possibility of non-human robots is contemplated with the uplifted octopi, who could possibly make robots modeled after their own mind.
* In ''Webcomic/{{Sinfest}}'', [[http://www.sinfest.net/view.php?date=2006-11-05 a woman talking to Slick malfunctions, and Satan shows up to repair her. She's once again apparently human at the end.]]
* Al and Sulla from ''Webcomic/OHumanStar''. Justified in that they're copies of a human mind.
* [[BigBad Zenith]] from ''WebComic/CommanderKitty''. She wants a [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/04/25/plot/ biological boyfriend]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/07/04/nothing-like-a-good-rant/ has wild mood swings]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/09/12/table-for-blue/ may or may not be capable of eating]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/12/12/nothing-to-see-here/ gets tired easily]], and even [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/08/28/process-of-elimination/ cries]].
* Tentadora from ''Webcomic/{{Zoophobia}}'': At first, she looks like she might be human or at least, some humanoid creature, knowing the setting. But then she changes to [[http://www.zoophobiacomic.com/Zoophobia/?p=443 a more robotic look]], revealing herself to be a robot with a ridiculously humanoid form.
memories erased every few months.



* Ugofandian from ''Webcomic/{{Marooned}}'' has built a ridiculously Martian robot.
* There turns out to be a few of these in ''Webcomic/TheFarSideOfUtopia''; Ila certainly counts, as does [[spoiler:Mium]], though both have fairly obvious parculiar tendencies. Averted (or perhaps played really straight...) with the only character that looks a robot (Mir) seemingly not being a robot.
* ''Webcomic/{{Castoff}}'' has [[spoiler: Frankie the cartographer]], a cheerful, YoungerThanTheyLook bandage-clad Cloudcuckoolander who shrugs off snake bites and CannotCrossRunningWater, because it makes him go haywire. If that wasn't for the water thing, we'd never have learned.

to:

* Ugofandian Nicki in ''Webcomic/TimesLikeThis'' acts human enough to be actually mistaken for a human.
* Tentadora
from ''Webcomic/{{Marooned}}'' has built ''Webcomic/{{Zoophobia}}'': At first, she looks like she might be human or at least, some humanoid creature, knowing the setting. But then she changes to [[http://www.zoophobiacomic.com/Zoophobia/?p=443 a more robotic look]], revealing herself to be a robot with a ridiculously Martian robot.
* There turns out to be a few of these in ''Webcomic/TheFarSideOfUtopia''; Ila certainly counts, as does [[spoiler:Mium]], though both have fairly obvious parculiar tendencies. Averted (or perhaps played really straight...) with the only character that looks a robot (Mir) seemingly not being a robot.
* ''Webcomic/{{Castoff}}'' has [[spoiler: Frankie the cartographer]], a cheerful, YoungerThanTheyLook bandage-clad Cloudcuckoolander who shrugs off snake bites and CannotCrossRunningWater, because it makes him go haywire. If that wasn't for the water thing, we'd never have learned.
humanoid form.

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