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15[[quoteright:350:[[VideoGame/Persona3 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/aigis_render.png]]]]
16[[caption-width-right:350:Body of titanium, heart of gold.]]
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18->'''Charley:''' You know, little girl, you freak me the hell out. On the outside, you're just pretty as a picture, but on the inside, you're a...\
19'''Cameron:''' Hyperalloy combat chassis.\
20'''Charley:''' ...is that a complicated way of saying "scary robot"?
21-->-- ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles''
22
23She's gorgeous, she's sexy, and she's got a 50,000-mile warranty. She's the Robot Girl, a staple character archetype in anime. Most commonly found in science fiction and {{Sentai}} stories, but not exclusively. Despite their artificial nature, Robot Girls are never -- well, hardly ever -- sexless; they are at the very least [[{{Moe}} cute as hell]], and more often drop-dead gorgeous, if not [[{{Robosexual}} outright seductresses]]. Robot Boys are not unheard of, but they usually take on more robotic characteristics than Robot Girls do. Despite how cute or sexy she may be, though, the Robot Girl is often a dangerous opponent in a fight, even if they're only created to do [[SuperPoweredRobotMeterMaids common household chores]].
24
25Common characteristics of a Robot Girl are their artificial human-like skin that covers their inner frame as opposed to metal or plastic plating (such as the {{Fembot}}), a beautiful and fully articulated face, synthetic hair and other organic characteristics that makes them appear and feel more human than any other types of humanoid robots. Think the ''{{Franchise/Terminator}}'' but as a cute girl. [[Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles (Which has been done already.)]]
26
27Sometimes the character is shown to be an android by some unusual accessory to cue the audience. Due to the popularity of ''VisualNovel/ToHeart'''s Multi, having [[UnusualEars headphone cups, air vents or antennae for ears]] is almost universally understood. Other times, like [[VideoGame/Persona3 Aigis]] (pictured at right), visible mechanical joints are another dead giveaway.
28
29However much the robot girl trope slides closer from either end of the [[SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism anthropomorphism scale]], their human face and hair will almost always be the last thing to be roboticized by any character designer aiming to invoke this trope. Their arms or legs may even be fully robotic but their human torso will almost likely be preserved in the design. Often opting for a skin-tight hi-tech looking jumpsuit to emphasize their feminine features such as many of the female robots of the ''Franchise/MegaMan'' franchise and its many offshoots.
30
31The robot girl is not necessarily always depicted as a mechanical being. The character type can also encompass {{cyborg}}s, {{Artificial Human}}s, {{Artificial Intelligence}}s and {{Virtual Ghost}}s with female on-screen or [[ProjectedMan holographic avatars]].
32
33While not unheard of in American shows (''Series/MyLivingDoll'', ''Series/SmallWonder'', ''Series/MannAndMachine'') the robot girl on American TV tends to be a gimmick or MacGuffin on which to hang a series concept rather than a character type in its own right.
34
35Of course, Japan being the worldwide leader in consumer electronics, androids are quite popular in that country. These androids could be male, but because MostWritersAreMale, most of them are sleek, sexy females. (Technically they would be gynoids, if one cares.)
36
37''Very'' often an InnocentFanserviceGirl. After all, why in the world would a drop-dead gorgeous female facsimile have any conception of chastity, much less modesty, programming notwithstanding? If the Robot Girl is the lead female or at least an important one, this innocence and naivety can be a large part of their character or even the theme of the work.
38
39Robot girls are often, but not always, depicted with a [[EmotionlessGirl monotone emotionless personality]] to further emphasize that they're a robot and not an actual girl. Examples of this have included Cameron from ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles'', Eve Edison from ''Mann & Machine'' and Rhoda from ''My Living Doll''. Unless, of course, the robots are programmed from the start to simulate - or [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots even genuinely experience]] - emotion, such as the Cylons from ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'' or the Replicants from ''Film/BladeRunner''.
40
41Compare {{Fembot}} (for when Robot Girls are more robot than girl), ProjectedMan (for when the Robot Girl is a hologram) and {{Robosexual}} (and {{Sexbot}}). A few may also be a RoboticSpouse. Contrast UncannyValleyGirl and SpaceshipGirl.
42
43----
44!!Examples
45
46[[foldercontrol]]
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48[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
49* Night, of ''Manga/AbsoluteBoyfriend'' and ''[[Manga/AbsoluteBoyfriend Zettai Kareshi]]'' (the live action drama of the anime/manga) is the SpearCounterpart of this trope, it being more obvious he's robotic in the Drama.
50* Sigel in ''Manga/AhMyGoddess'' started out as a mannequin advertising an antique shop. Skuld then added some features, including artificial intelligence and the signature RocketPunch.
51* No. 30/Thirty Nanba from ''Manga/AILoveYou'' is a computer program brought to life.
52* Nuku-Nuku and Eimi from ''Anime/AllPurposeCulturalCatGirlNukuNuku'' are iconic anime examples of the 90s. Nuku-Nuku is technically a FullBodyCyborg, being a cat's brain inside a fully cybernetic body (the NK-1124), but both she and Eimi (SNK-98) are gynoids built to pass as closely as possible for teenage girls, with Eimi specifically being designed as a robotic replica of her creator's dead granddaughter.
53* The title character Maico from ''Anime/AndroidAnnouncerMaico2010'' ([[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kerai/1115772951023.jpg Image]]) is a Robot Girl. But whenever referred to as a robot, she insists, "I'm not a robot." She prefers to think of herself as an android (which is also wrong, the correct term would be Gynoid).
54* The Angels in ''Manga/AngelicLayer'' are similar, though they're about a foot tall and controlled by their users. The ''Angelic Layer'' manga is set in the same universe as ''Manga/{{Chobits}}'' and states that Angels were forerunners to persocoms.
55* ''Anime/TheAnimatrix'' has an absolutely heartbreaking, and [[NightmareFuel horrific]] scene during The Second Renaissance sequence featuring one. During the anti-machine movement, a robot girl made to look human is smashed to bits by a group of men who rip away her clothes, synthetic skin, and hair until there's nothing but a metallic skeleton left. [[TearJerker All while sobbing that she's "real."]]
56* Naomi Armitage and the other "Thirds" from ''Anime/ArmitageIII'' are a partial subversion since they easily can and do pass as fully human, to the point that they can even [[spoiler: reproduce with humans]]. The "seconds" from which they descended were intentionally designed to fit this trope, however.
57* Astro Girl/Uran from Creator/OsamuTezuka's ''Manga/AstroBoy'' franchise is the younger sister to the titular protagonist. In the 60s series, she was built by Professor Ochanomizu as a birthday gift to Astro. In later chapters/episodes, Ochanomizu creates robot parents for Astro with the introdution of Rin (Astro's robot mother) and Ethanol (Astro's robot father) so he won't feel lonely after Tenam neglects him.
58* Nei from ''Anime/{{Avenger}}'' is one, [[spoiler: or so she believes. She's actually the first human girl born on Mars - specifically outside of the colonies that have settled on the planet's surface. She's been acting like a [[InsistentTerminology ''Doll'']] in order to avoid drawing attention to herself.]]
59* Alita/Gally from ''Manga/BattleAngelAlita''.
60* The hIEs in ''Literature/{{Beatless}}''.
61* R. Dorothy Waynewright in ''Anime/TheBigO''.
62* Sylvie, Anri and the other sexaroids from ''Anime/BubblegumCrisis''.
63* ''Manga/{{Chobits}}'' has the Persocoms, of which the main character is one. While male persocoms are actually quite common, since the main human cast is male, the majority of persocom characters in the series are female.
64* In ''Anime/ConcreteRevolutioChoujinGensou'', the superhero Earth-chan is a satellite which transforms into a robot girl in order to aid people in distress.
65* The [=SISTERs=] in ''Anime/CoyoteRagtimeShow''.
66* ''Anime/CuteyHoney'' in all of her incarnations except ''Flash'', the magical girls version. [[spoiler: Though she wasn't actually human ''there'' either.]]
67* [[spoiler: Princess Ixquic]] and [[spoiler: Leina]] in ''Manga/Cyborg009''. The first [[spoiler: was built by (apparently) aliens to be one of the guardians of a gold pyramid]]; the second [[spoiler: was created by a MadScientist to become the SoulJar of ''UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler'', of all people.]]
68* In ''VisualNovel/DaCapo'', the robotic clone of one of the girls is distinguished by a keyhole (for winding) in the back and occasionally spewing smoke. Of course, only the male lead learns that it's not the real girl.
69* Minatsu Amakase from ''VisualNovel/DaCapoII''.
70* Korone the Liladan from ''Literature/DemonKingDaimao''
71* One of the earliest (and youngest) robot girls is Arale from Akira Toriyama's ''Manga/DoctorSlump'', who in physical appearance is only around 12 years old, despite being 18 by the end of the run. That few others realize this is the series' main RunningGag.
72* Kurika Kurinohana (a.k.a. Clicker) from ''Literature/{{Dokkoida}}''.
73* Annapuna and Unipuma - the Puma Twins from the ''Anime/DominionTankPolice'' manga and anime series - were revealed, close to the end of the original manga, as androids - Ostensibly 'love dolls', although they take offense at this designation. In the second manga series, their android nature was on the table all the time, even becoming a plot point on at least two occasions. Interestingly, in the anime the issue was ignored completely, even as an implication.
74* ''Anime/{{Doraemon}}'' have a one-shot gadget, a robotic girlfriend named Roboko which Doraemon produces after Nobita complains Shizuka doesn't care for him much. Everything went well initially, with Roboko beating the snot out of Suneo and Gian when they tried picking on Nobita, but then Roboko turns out to be a ClingyJealousGirl who starts targeting Shizuka the moment she starts chatting with Nobita. HilarityEnsues as usual.
75* Riruru from ''Anime/DoraemonNobitaAndTheSteelTroops'' is a robot designed to look like a young human girl to infiltrate earth, and guide her robotic superiors to facilitate an invasion. But after being damaged and salvaged by the heroes before getting saved by Doraemon and friends, and especially befriending Shizuka, Riruru ends up [[HeelFaceTurn having a change of heart]].
76* Android/Artificial Human#18 of ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' is a more destructive take on the trope, as she (and her siblings, most notably her twin brother #17) was built specifically to cause destruction. In an alternate timeline, she manages to eradicate the most powerful fighters in the world with her brother until they are both destroyed by FutureBadass Trunks, who came back from the main timeline after helping the main cast destroy another android, the BigBad of the saga Cell (it's not as confusing as it sounds). In the main timeline however, they are able to be subdued (mostly through the appearance of the Trunks from the future altering the timelines and Cell's interference) and she survives to marry one of the main cast. She does actually have biological parts (so she's more of a cyborg than an android), so is capable of producing a daughter and becomes a mother... An [[ActionMom extremely powerful mother]], but a mother nonetheless.
77* ''Anime/ElHazardTheMagnificentWorld'' features Ifurita, a wind-up weapon of mass destruction in the form of a curvaceous cutie. Her appearance and attitude vary wildly between the OVA and TV universes; in the former she evolves from an emotionless killer to a borderline ArtificialHuman, while in the latter she wavers between [[TheDitz brainless]] and outright [[CloudCuckooLander loony]].
78* Ropponmatsu #1 and Ropponmatsu #2 from ''Manga/ExcelSaga''. In the anime, they're two distinct entities, while in the manga, there is only one Ropponmatsu core switched between the two bodies.
79** Iwata becomes one for a time when he gets cancer and his brain is put in the Ropponmatsu 1 body as a stopgap measure to keep him not dead. He's quite pleased because he's always liked Ropponmatsu 1, seeing as she's a tall, well-built adult woman, but he gets into an argument with actual Ropponmatsu in body number 2, who's always gotten on his nerves. Iwata gets ready to throw down...and falls over as Ropponmatsu mocks him because she always found body 1 to be clunky and unreliable, and reveals that her personality was different (read: nonexistant) in this body because all her processing power was taken up staying upright.
80** He also ends up in 2's body for a short while, much to his extreme displeasure.
81* Drossel from ''Anime/{{Fireball}}'', interesting in that she doesn't look even remotely human beyond her basic body shape, but has an unusually human (and bitchy) personality.
82* Nano-Nano Pudding from ''Anime/GalaxyAngelRune'' and the game it's adapted from, ''VideoGame/GalaxyAngelII'', is a living {{nanomachine}} LostTechnology taking the form of a young girl with a tail.
83* Mechanical humans abounded in ''Manga/GalaxyExpress999'' and its sequels thanks to various plots about humans abandoning their old flesh bodies for mechanical bodies as well as android characters. Some of the main female robot girls would be be Claire, Yuki, and Promethium.
84* More examples of robot girls who are also HumongousMecha: [=KouRyu=] and [=AnRyu=] from ''Anime/GaoGaiGarFINAL''.
85* Most of the {{fembot}}s in ''Franchise/GhostInTheShell'' count, as do female [[FullConversionCyborg full-body cyborgs]], including the lead character, Major Motoko Kusanagi -- the difference being that the former are still [=AIs=] which aren't truly intelligent, while full-body cyborgs are humans who have had most or all organic parts of their bodies replaced with mechanical substitutes, up to and including most of their brain. The Tachikomas also share a lot of the tropes associated with the archetype, despite the fact that they have [[SapientTank tanks for bodies]].
86* In ''Anime/GunBuster 2'', [[spoiler:Nono is actually a Buster Machine]]. She is clearly stated to be gynoid (female android) even before that.
87* The protagonists in ''Manga/GunslingerGirl'' are brainwashed cyborgs.
88* In ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'', [[spoiler:Yuki and the other Humanoid Interfaces]] arguably count, although [[spoiler:Yuki]] has the good fortune of not getting picked for the maid job.
89* ''Manga/HeavensLostProperty'': All the Angeloids are subservient android girls with wings, built for [[NecessaryDrawback specific purposes]] and completely devoted to following their [[MyMasterRightOrWrong master's orders]].
90* ''Anime/HugttoPrettyCure'' has Ruru. She starts off as a villain, but joins the Cures and eventually becomes one partway through.
91* Pion of ''Literature/HumanityHasDeclined''. And Oyage is a Robot Boy. [[spoiler:Though their true forms are deep space probes]].
92* Odette from ''Manga/KarakuriOdette'', though she gradually develops human-like emotional traits that further qualify for RidiculouslyHumanRobots instead. A more straight Robot Girl would be Asia from the same.
93* In ''Anime/KeyTheMetalIdol'', titular character Key acts as a prototypical example of this trope: Key herself insists that she is a robot, and [[EmotionlessGirl demonstrates very little emotional affect]] for much of the series, much to the concern of the characters who serve as her guardians. These characters are almost uniformly convinced that Key is not a robot but rather a deeply traumatized young woman who retreated into a robot persona, which they indulge as the only identity Key will respond with. Nevertheless, Key's past it intertwined with much mystery and [[AppliedPhlebotinum phlebotinum-style weirdness]], including mechanical automatons that hunt her, and scientists who are obsessed with her, so the truth of her nature remains somewhat in question until the end of the series: [[spoiler: she is more or less what her friends believed her to be; a young individual who has survived [[TraumaCongaLine prolonged human experimentation, the violent loss of her family, and other forms of trauma]] and [[LossOfIdentity has adopted the robotic persona as a coping mechanism]]. But while she may not be a robot, her actual identity is no less fantastical: she is instead a [[PsychicChildren Psychic Child]] of almost LittleMissAlmighty proportions. Her QuestForIdentity takes the duration of the series, but in the end, she [[EarnYourHappyEnding gets]] [[BittersweetEnding an at least somewhat happy ending]] and seems to be healing at last. Thus in the end, the story is a direct deconstruction and aversion of this trope.]]
94* June from ''Manga/KokoroLibrary''.
95* Angela from ''Manga/KuroganeCommunication'', later accompanied by the [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots even more human-like Lilith and Alice]].
96* Moe, a French-made bisque automaton-turned-Tsukumogami, from ''Manga/LoveHina'' (anime only).
97* The Combat Cyborgs of ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha''. There's also the female Wolkenritter and the Unison Devices, who are basically programs with physical forms.
98* Aiko from ''Anime/MagicalPokaan''.
99* Mahoro and Minawa from ''Manga/{{Mahoromatic}}''. Partially subverted in the series by having Mahoro constantly on the lookout for "dirty thoughts" on the part of Suguru [[spoiler: Not to mention confiscating his porn collection]]. Being innocent herself, this creates a paradox. This argument happens in the series' second season, where Mahoro and Suguru's grandfather arguing the point, with the grandfather winning. This convinces Mahoro that ''she'' is perverted.
100* The Gamia sisters, [[spoiler:Erika, Lorelei...]] from ''Anime/MazingerZ'' (and Minerva X in the ''Manga/ShinMazingerZero'' manga). Possibly Marquis Yanus from ''Anime/GreatMazinger'' is one as well, since the Mykene grafted their brains in robotic bodies to survive underground, but it is harder to say with her.
101* Tima from ''Anime/Metropolis2001''.
102* In ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam00'', we have two examples -- and surprisingly, neither is female (well, as far as can be proven). It is heavily suggested, if not stated outright that [[spoiler:Tieria]] is not entirely, perhaps not at all, human. Then, during the series finale, [[spoiler:Lichty]] of all people turns out to be at least part cybernetic. [[spoiler:This still can't save him, sadly.]]
103** The first season epilogue introduces [[spoiler:Tieria's evil twin Regene]], and the second season goes on to imply that [[spoiler:they, BigBad Ribbons Almark, and the rest of the "Innovators" are artificial constructs. ''And'' we see the first clearly female-bodied example: Anew Returner.]]
104** It's also possible that they are cyborgs; [[spoiler:while at least two of them are quite clearly part of mass cloning projects (Bring being the pilot of a very large number of kamikaze MS at one point, and Ribbons himself walking into the room and killing Regene while his own corpse bleeds on the floor) they are clearly capable of inducing Innovator traits in ordinary humans like Louise (who also has a cybernetic left hand).]]
105* Sayuri, Brooke, Vivian and the other "dolls" who serve Professor Machinegal in ''Anime/{{Moldiver}}''.
106* In ''Manga/MotherKeeper'' Syal and Mother are both robot girls. Syal is a battle cyborg and Mother is simply a computer made to look like a little girl. Both look ridiculously human though Mother doesn't seem to speak.
107* Marie from ''Manga/MyDearMarie''.
108* [[spoiler:Miyu]] from ''Anime/MyHiME'' and ''Anime/MyOtome''. ''Definitely'' designed for combat and war.
109* Lila, is type of android called a Humaritt from the Ecchi action series ''Anime/NajicaBlitzTactics''. She is tasked along with the main protagonist (Najica) to track down rogue Humaritts, which can be identified from behind by a 3 letter serial in the form of a tramp stamp.
110* ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'':
111** Chachamaru. Evangeline also has a number of {{Robot Maid}}s serving in her resort. And to fulfill the hotness part of the trope, part of her MidSeasonUpgrade was an improved synthetic skin that essentially makes her look like a normal girl with robot ears. Naturally, there was a scene of her taking a bath soon after said upgrade.
112** In an...interesting variation on the idea, Haruna uses her artifact to create a full size robot body for [[CuteGhostGirl Sayo]] to use. Of course, Sayo can't actually possess it, but instead possesses a small doll that [[MobileSuitHuman sits inside the robot body and pilots it]] like a HumongousMecha. Being an {{Otaku}} Haruna naturally built [[MoreDakka so many guns]] into the thing that it's wonder that it's able to move.
113* Nano from ''Manga/{{Nichijou}}'' is a robot who appears to be a perfectly normal human girl--aside from that huge WindUpKey sticking out of her back. The [[ChildProdigy eight-year-old Professor]] who created her also likes to modify her body with useless additions, just for the heck of it, and the Professor refuses to remove the darn key "because it's cute." This doesn't always make Nano too happy, since she so much [[IJustWantToBeNormal wants to come across as an ordinary girl]]. She eventually [[IAmWhatIAm learns to love the key as part of herself in the end]].
114* Malfina from ''Manga/OutlawStar'' is a bioroid who was created to serve as navigator for the titular ship as well as to be the maiden of the Galactic Lei Line. This causes her a great deal of distress to begin with, but [[TheHero Gene]] eventually convinces her that her artificial nature doesn't make her less human.
115* "D" from ''Anime/DualParallelTroubleAdventure'' is effectively a Robot Girl for most of the story.
116* Mea from ''Popotan'', a robot maid who also guards the other girls (Ai, Mai, & Mii) on their journey through Time.
117* Flandre, Francesca, and Francette from ''Manga/PrincessResurrection''.
118* [[spoiler:Meika]] from ''Anime/PunchLine'' looks like a little girl but is a twenty year old robot. Being a robot doesn't give her any advantages over humans besides being very smart.
119* In [[Anime/QueensBlade Queen's Blade Rebellion]], the little elf Yuit creates Vante, a robot girl incapable of speech (beyond one sound), but apparently cognizant and emotionally aware.
120* Arguably subverted in ''Anime/RealDrive'', where android Holon clarifies that she isn't a woman in any real sense, and has no sexual identity beyond superficial programming meant to make her appealing for male users, and that she could change to a male body at any time without losing any sense of her real identity as a sentient machine.
121* The ''Manga/RozenMaiden'' are arguably a fantasy-based example, as opposed to straight(ish) science fiction. Specifically, they're dolls. They do have a clockwork mechanism that requires them to be wound up to be able to live, walk, talk and the like, but they also need a roza mystica, which would roughly translate to a soul to the dolls, and there's a lot of things they can do that clockwork engineering can't accomplish alone.
122* The entire Female Gender including Lime, Cherry, Bloodberry, Tiger, Panther and Luchs (among many others) from ''Anime/SaberMarionetteJ''.
123* Mecha-Rin-rin-chan, an android double of herself that Rin-rin from ''Literature/SisterPrincess'' builds as a future companion for her brother Wataru when all his sisters have grown up and moved on to their own lives.
124* Titular character of ''Anime/SoltyRei''.
125* Kurumi, Saki, Karinka and about 50 others from ''Manga/SteelAngelKurumi''.
126* At the end of the Alicization arc of ''Literature/SwordArtOnline'', [[spoiler:Alice becomes a robot girl in the real world when her Fluctlight is transplanted into an android body, making her the world's first truly ArtificialHuman]].
127* The autoscorers of ''Anime/{{Symphogear}}'', being alchemical machines with the forms and personalities of women. On a more abstract level, Shirabe has this trope as a personal motif. She’s not literally a robot, but her status as the cast’s EmotionlessGirl combined with a techno leitmotif and the most mechanized arsenal of the main heroines[[note]]Her signature weapons are buzz saws, which can extend from just about any part of her armor, and at its upper limit her gear can become a [[MiniMecha Mini-]] or even HumongousMecha[[/note]] do a lot to give this impression.
128* There are many androids of both genders in ''Anime/TimeOfEve''. On the female side, there are cafe regulars [[RobotMaid Sammy]], [[GenkiGirl Akiko]], and Rina.
129* In ''Totsugeki Pappara-tai Totsugeki! Pappara-tai'', there was originally one, then three, then five, then eight, then was about to become seventeen in total through out the entire manga... (Also, Dr. Shooba. N. Einstain answered the excellent question of "Why do we make robot girl... and not robot guy?" in vol. 9.)
130* Ai in ''Manga/VideoGirlAi'', though since she was created by a VCR, she's not technically a robot. The same goes for Len in the sequel manga, ''Video Girl Len''.
131* The title characters of ''Manga/WingsOfVendemiaire'' are SteamPunk automata that look like teenage girls.
132* Alpha, Kokone, Maruko, and the other Alpha from ''Manga/YokohamaKaidashiKikou'' (manga and {{OVA}}). Alpha also meets a robot boy. She asks him if there are others. He does not know, but he tells Alpha that male models are somehow weaker than female ones, which explains why the female-looking robots prevail.
133* Dolores from ''VideoGame/ZoneOfTheEnders: Dolores, i'' is very much a Robot Girl. Innocent, kind of ditzy, and occasionally clumsy. A scary combination in a 100-feet-tall almost-godlike HumongousMecha.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Comic Books]]
137* ''ComicBook/AphroditeIX'', [[ComicBook/{{Witchblade}} ''Aphrodite IV'']] and [[ComicBook/{{Cyberforce}} ''Aphrodite V'']].
138* Beautie of ''ComicBook/AstroCity'' is an adult-sized robot replica of a popular children's toy. She fights crime even as she wonders about her own enigmatic origins.
139* The independent comic ''ComicBook/{{Geisha}}'' is about Jomi Sohodo, an android originally built as a sex slave, but who was instead taken in by a kind, decent man who raised her as a real person alongside his own children. She's a talented painter and wants to make a career of it, but prejudice against androids makes this difficult. She ends up joining her adoptive father's "family business..." as a professional bodyguard.
140* [[RobotMaid Bonnie]] of ''ComicBook/LastManStanding'' is one.
141* Creator/MarvelComics has a few examples:
142** Jocasta from ''ComicBook/TheAvengers'', created by the evil male robot [[Characters/MarvelComicsUltron Ultron]] to be his bride; and later, Alkhema, who had a similar origin. Neither of these relationships worked out. Later on, Ultron showed up in female form himself.
143** The ComicBook/FantasticFour's receptionist is a robot named Roberta. She has a human-shaped upper body, so she looks human sitting behind her desk, but below that she has wheels. In the strictly [[AlternateContinuity non-canon]] ''ComicBook/FinFangFour'' comics, she's dating the hulking but gentle robot Elektro; it's very cute.
144** The protagonists of the ''ComicBook/{{Livewires}}'' miniseries include three lovely Robot Girls (sorry, [[InsistentTerminology Construct Girls]]), each one a different take on this trope, from the snarky CuteBruiser to the [[TinMan nearly-human viewpoint character]].
145** ''ComicBook/XMen'':
146*** Detective-Inspector Karima Shapandar (a.k.a. Omega Sentinel) was an unwilling victim of the Sentinel program's brief foray into converting normal humans, but her love for her mutant boyfriend Neal Shaara (Thunderbird III) allowed her to overcome her programming. She even joined the X-Men and became a more dedicated member than he was... until [[ComicBook/XMen2019 the mutants declared themselves a separate nation]] and shut her out. When her Sentinel programming flared up again, she didn't have any support to help her fight it off, and ended up a villain.
147*** When the computer running the [[DeadlyTrainingArea Danger Room]] achieved sentience, it self-identified as female and built a body to match, calling herself Danger.
148*** Minordomo, the overly excitable PerkyFemaleMinion to Mojo's robotic manservant Majordomo. Tends to overheat and shut down from sheer exuberance, which manifests as a heart attack. Fortunately, she has a reset button.
149* Creator/DCComics has a few examples:
150** In ''ComicBook/TheBlackRing'', [[Characters/SupermanLexLuthor Lex Luthor]] has a robotic [[Characters/SupermanLoisLane Lois Lane]] for a sidekick.
151** Platinum, Copper, and Nameless from the ''ComicBook/MetalMen''.
152** Indigo from the relaunch of the ''ComicBook/{{Outsiders|2003}}'', who is also revealed to be [[spoiler:a [[Characters/SupermanBrainiacCharacter Brainiac]] from the future]].
153** In ''ComicBook/SuperboyAndTheRavers'', the Horizon Event DJ is revealed to have been an android the entire time when she's destroyed and her inner mechanical workings are exposed. She never quite seemed human but given that Event Horizon is an extraterrestrial nightclub that exists in a pocket dimension that was never any reason to expect her to be a robot.
154** The limited series ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}: Metropolis'' involves alien nanotech causing [[GeniusLoci the city itself to become self-aware]]. She falls in love with [[Characters/SupermanJimmyOlsen Jimmy Olsen]]. [[WeirdnessMagnet Of course]].
155** Another example involving [[Characters/SupermanJimmyOlsen Jimmy Olsen]], from ''ComicBook/SupermansPalJimmyOlsen'', starts with him finding a maiden in a snowbank, apparently a young woman from Viking times who had been frozen for centuries. It turns out that "Helga" is actually a gynoid and that Jimmy's fan club are using it to make Lucy Lane jealous.
156* Lyla Lay from ''ComicBook/PaperinikNewAdventures''. Lots of characters drool over her in the series' run, and probably a fair amount of readers too. Did we mention she's also a duck?
157* ComicBook/RichieRich's robot maid, Irona.
158* Guri from the ''Literature/ShadowsOfTheEmpire'' Franchise/StarWars multimedia event, which included comics, as well as the follow-up ''Shadows of the Empire: Evolution'' comics. Most sensors short of a full medical scan are fooled into thinking she's an ordinary human. Which is rather the point, since she's also an assassin droid.
159* ''ComicBook/SkyDoll'' is named after wind-up gynoids designed and used mostly for men's convenience and pleasure. Sky Dolls are [[HappinessInSlavery happy with being slaves and sex objects]], actual women are oppressed and seem to have the rights of house furniture, and men as well as the religious government prefer things just the way they are.
160* In ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan'', expensive male ''actroids'' are used for comfort/sexual purposes in Japan after the death of all the men. Self-proclaimed manga fan Yorick is quite delighted by this.
161-->''"Any [[Film/BladeRunner retired cop turned mandroid wrangler]] is aces in my book."''
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Comic Strips]]
165* Another, very early American twist: a 1943 continuity arc in the ComicBook/MickeyMouse comic strip introduced Mimi, a sexy robot girl who wooed Mickey in a sci-fi scenario. In the story's climactic battle, Mimi was actually blown apart during a HeroicSacrifice; interestingly, she was treated as dead and never reassembled, making this decidedly '''not''' a Robot DisneyDeath.
166[[/folder]]
167
168[[folder:Fan Works]]
169* ''[[Blog/BeochanPaiseanAgustAifeala Beochan: Paisean Agust Aifeala]]'' has Lalasa, the AU's interpretation of ''both'' WesternAnimation/SanjayAndCraig, may be this or at least a cyborg.
170* MALIK from the ''WesternAnimation/BuzzLightyearOfStarCommand[-/-]WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch[-/-]WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'' crossover series ''FanFic/BothSyllables''
171* In [[http://www.fanfiction.net/~mrevil Mr.Evil's]] ''WesternAnimation/{{Ben 10}}'' fanfic [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3875254/1/Hero_High_Earth_style Hero High: Earth Style]], Pharaoh's assistant Miss. Neith is revealed to be an android at the end of the story.
172* The title character of ''Fanfic/PhineasAndFerbTheAdventuresOfBeatriceFlynnTheRobotGirl''.
173* Dyna in ''Fanfic/VoyagesOfTheWildSeaHorse'' has the face of a beautiful female doll, but her body is a [[FemBot decidedly sexless and obviously mechanical]] SteamPunk SpiderTank, due to her having been near-totally destroyed and then [[SuperWheelChair rebuilt into an emergency life-support and mobility system]] by a MadScientist from a decidedly less advanced civilization.
174[[/folder]]
175
176[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
177* The ''Anime/RobotCarnival'' segment "Presence" features one built by a man trying to compensate for his distant relationship with his own family.
178* ''Anime/TekkenBloodVengeance'': Alisa.
179[[/folder]]
180
181[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
182* The "Mecha" Gigolo Jane that appeared briefly in ''Film/AIArtificialIntelligence''.
183* [[spoiler: Annalee Call]] from ''Film/AlienResurrection.'' It is interesting [[HumansAreBastards how fast]] other characters forget that they used to think about her as a human when they find out, though [[AllThereInTheManual supplementary material]] implies there is some [[TurnedAgainstTheirMasters pretty bad blood]] between autons and humans...
184-->[[TheBigGuy Johner]]: "Can't believe I nearly fucked that thing."
185-->[[TheSmartGuy Vries]]: "Yeah, like you've never fucked a robot!"
186* The title character in ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'' is a total replacement cyborg: a "very human brain" in a cyber body.
187* The Fembots (though these were not of the {{Fembot}} variety) from the ''Film/AustinPowers'' series, usually equipped with machine-gun jumblies.
188* Any of the female replicants from ''Film/BladeRunner'' fit this trope, mainly Rachael.
189* {{Invoked|trope}} as part of the plot to rescue the children in ''Film/ChittyChittyBangBang''. Trudy disguises herself as a Doll-on-a-Music-Box, a present for the villain ruler.
190* Since there's no separate male version of this trope (for now), the titular ''Film/{{DARYL}}'' (short for Data Analysing Robot Youth Lifeform) technically qualifies.
191* Kristy Swanson's character becomes a "sort of" one of these in ''Film/DeadlyFriend''.
192* ''Film/DrGoldfootAndTheBikiniMachine'': Goldfoot constructs human-appearing robo-gals who seduce weathy men into marrying them, and then steal their assets. In the sequel, ''Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs'', he uses them to assassinate assigned targets.
193* Despite being a machine, Ava from ''Film/ExMachina'' is very female and very attractive. Many of the scenes that highlight her sexiness simultaneously draw attention to her artificial nature. Caleb does ask Nathan why he didn't just design her as a sentient black box instead, but Nathan points out that supplying the robot with a gender identity gives it a reason to interact with the outside world (while it turns out he also wanted {{sexbot}}s, giving her along with the others physical sensation for this too).
194* ''Film/FutureWorld2018'': Ash is an [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot android who's basicially indistinguishable from a human]], made in the form of a beautiful young woman. Except for her slightly metallic-looking blue eyes, nothing really gives it away at first.
195* The eponymous ''Film/{{Galaxina}}'' from the 1980 sci-fi spoof, played by Dorothy Stratten, is a robotic crew-woman on a space cruiser.
196* In ''Film/HotBot'', the eponymous "Hot Bots" are all female RidiculouslyHumanRobots, that are simply played by human actresses.
197* ''Film/InspectorGadget2'' has Gadget Model 2 (G2 for short), a "female" android police officer who Inspector Gadget ends up falling in love with (despite the fact that he's just a cyborg.) Like the above mentioned ''Hot Bot'', G2 is a RidiculouslyHumanRobot, as she can feel emotions and even cries at one point.
198* ''Film/ILoveMaria'' is a 1988 Hong Kong science fiction film, in which a gang leader created a female armed robot named Pioneer II, which was modeled after his girlfriend's face, leading her to develop a strong hatred for the robot. Later on, the robot is sent to hunt down one of the gang's members (and as well as a researcher working for the police), who became dissatisfied with the direction the gang is headed, only for Pioneer II to malfunction and be reprogrammed (hilariously, he confuses the robot to be Maria, whom she was modeled). Pioneer II slowly begins to develop feelings for the human characters, and is later given a human disguise.
199* Kay-Em 14 from ''Film/JasonX'', whose creator Tsunaron is strongly implied to be in a sexual relationship with her. When [[ImplacableMan Jason Voorhees]] comes aboard the ship, Tsunaron upgrades her with a combat suite that allows her to actually kill Jason, [[spoiler:until he in turn gets [[EmergencyTransformation upgraded into "Über Jason"]] and takes her head off. She still survives the film as a disembodied head, with Tsunaron promising to [[WeCanRebuildHim rebuild her body]].]]
200* Film/{{M3GAN}} is a robot programmed to protect Cady from both physical and emotional harm. The AN in [=M3GAN=] actually stands for "android."
201* The iconic Robot Maria from ''Film/{{Metropolis}}''. In the novel Rotwang, the scientist who creates her, says that it's far more likely for a man to create a woman than another man.
202* One of the segments in ''Film/{{Movie 43}}'' features an [=MP3=] player that is the size and shape of a human woman. Not surprisingly, the user base ends up using it for "other purposes" besides listening to music... [[GroinAttack despite a cooler in the lower end]].
203* ''Film/MyGirlfriendIsACyborg''. In spite of the title and use of the word in the film, she's actually a robot.
204* Roberta from ''Film/NotQuiteHuman II''.
205* ''Film/ThePerfectWoman'' is a 1949 British comedy (based on a play) about an inventor who creates a robot with an appearance based on his niece, and hires a young man to take it out on a date as a field test. The film is noted for its [[{{Fanservice}} lingerie scenes, which are fairly risqué for its period]].
206* ''Film/RoboGeisha''. It's all there in the title.
207* Valeria in ''Film/RobotHolocaust''.
208* In ''Film/SirArthurConanDoylesSherlockHolmes'', Miss Ivory is revealed to be a clockwork automaton built by SpringHeeledJack and also [[{{Robosexual}} his lover]].
209* ''Film/SkyCaptainAndTheWorldOfTomorrow'': [[spoiler:Dr. Totenkopf's lieutenant]] turns out to be one of these, to Sky Captain's surprise. She is an excellent fighter and dedicated to her work, [[spoiler:serving as [[DragonInChief the de facto main villain]] since her creator has been DeadAllAlong]].
210* ''Film/SpaceSweepers'' has "Dorothy," an android with a powerful hydrogen bomb hidden inside her that's indistinguishable from a young human girl. [[spoiler:Subverted in that "Dorothy" actually '''is''' a human girl whose real name is Kot-nim, and instead of a bomb she's the host to a colony of powerful nanomachines. The real robot girl in the movie is Bubs, who is more of a TinCanRobot with a masculine voice until she gets upgraded with lifelike skin grafts and the appearance of a pretty human woman.]]
211* Megagirl, from the Creator/TeamStarKid musical ''Theatre/{{Starship}}''.
212* In the [[Film/TheStepfordWives1975 original film]] (and its remake) and the book version of ''Literature/TheStepfordWives'', all of the women in Stepford have been replaced with obedient androids. This was kept in the 2004 remake. Some of the sequels to the original film changed this process to simply the women getting brainwashed.
213%%* The T-X from ''Film/Terminator3RiseOfTheMachines'' film.
214* ''Film/TheThiefOfBagdad1940'' featured an automaton dancing girl, given by an EvilChancellor to a sultan who liked mechanical toys. When he went to embrace the dancing girl robot, it stabbed him.
215* In ''Film/{{Toys}}'', [[spoiler:Alsatia (Joan Cusack) is revealed to be a robot at the end of the movie.]]
216* ''Film/Vice2015'': The most prominent is Kelly, one of the main characters and an artificial who escapes from Vice's facilities. While appearing human, her insides are a mix of organic and mechanical parts.
217* ''Film/{{Virtuosity}}'': Sheila 3.2, [[ArtificialIntelligence Virtual reality sex doll]], whose sole function is to deduce your psychosexual needs, and fulfill them: "Sheila 3.2 is collecting information from 136 aspects of your physiology. Your heart rate, pupil dilation, vocal intonation, syntax..." She was scheduled for download to a [[SuperStrength super strong]] [[HealingFactor regenerative]] body, capable of [[ShapeShifting shape-shifting]] into the IA virtual avatar. [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] because the ''male'' IA SID is the one who ends up being downloaded.
218* Almost all of the women in ''Film/{{Westworld}}'' (and Roman World and Medieval World too).
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Jokes]]
222* The standard sci-fi romance plot is: BoyMeetsGirl, Boy Loses Girl, Boy Builds New Girl!
223[[/folder]]
224
225[[folder:Literature]]
226* In the ''Literature/AdamLink'' series, robot Adam eventually gets a robot wife, of course named Eve.
227* [[MeaningfulName Sheen]] of the ''Literature/ApprenticeAdept'' series: A sentient robot designed to appeal to protagonist Stile's personal tastes without being blatant enough to make him suspicious that she was a robot. (He figures it out anyway.)
228* In ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfStefonRudel'', Stefón creates two of these out of android parts and names them Stefanie and Kiki. Luckily they do not also become part of his [[{{Kidanova}} collection of girlfriends]].
229* In ''Literature/AlienInASmallTown,'' Indira discovers her boyfriend hasn't just dumped her, he dumped her for an android. To her way of thinking, the ethics of this depend entirely on whether or not "Kim" is sentient and whether she is free. If [[AndroidsArePeopleToo she's both,]] then dating a robot is kinky but not inherently objectionable. If she's [[JustAMachine not sentient,]] then he's dumped her for a ''sex toy,'' which means he never wanted real love in the first place. If she's sentient but not free, then he's dumped her for a ''[[SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil slave that he owns.]]'' It's strongly implied Kim is nonsentient (even if she is perfectly capable of passing a Turing Test), and he owns her like any other object. Indira [[FreakOut does not take any of this well.]]
230* In the Literature/NewSeriesAdventures of ''Franchise/DoctorWho'' the Tenth Doctor encounters a cute cyborg girl named Silver Sally, whose components run on steam. However [[spoiler:it is revealed that she is actually a murderous pirate who murdered a poor girl and transplanted her own cyborg parts on top.]]
231* [[spoiler:Charlie]], from ''Literature/FiveNightsAtFreddysTheSilverEyes'', ''Literature/FiveNightsAtFreddysTheTwistedOnes'' and ''Literature/FiveNightsAtFreddysTheFourthCloset'', though her true nature [[RoboticReveal isn't made apparent]] until the third book; [[spoiler:she was the first child killed by William Afton, and her father created four different animatronic bodies for her soul to inhabit (it didn't work, but [[ThePowerOfLove his love for Charlie]] and [[DespairEventHorizon grief over her loss]] gave said animatronic bodies something resembling life and a soul).]] [[spoiler:Elizabeth Afton/Circus Baby also counts as one; she even [[GrandTheftMe steals Charlie's fourth body]] and poses as her in the ending of the second novel.]]
232* The classic (1938) short story ''Helen O'Loy'' by Creator/LesterDelRey. A medical student (Phil) and a mechanic (Dave) modify a household robot to have emotions. While Phil is away Dave activates Helen, who learns about love (from watching soap operas!) When Phil comes back home Dave has already fled from her affections, but changes his mind and marries her. On his death Helen requests that Phil shut her down and bury her with Dave. Phil does so, even though it's revealed that he'd [[UnrequitedLove fallen for Helen too]].
233* ''Literature/HouseOfRobots'' has Brittney 13, a robot designed to experience "adolescent human emotions," which she does... all the time.
234* In ''Literature/NeoAkihabaraMeipouchou'', R. Sena is one in a line of mass-produced gynoids, designed to look identical, but with distinct personalities.
235* ''Literature/TheMarkOfTheDragonfly'': [[spoiler: Anna]]turns out to be a lifelike robot, who was herself unaware that she wasn't a human.
236* Deirdre in Creator/CLMoore's "No Woman Born" is technically a {{cyborg}}, although only her brain is organic. [[spoiler:At the end, it's implied that she may be slipping into EmotionlessGirl territory, because CyberneticsEatYourSoul.]]
237* Penny becomes one of these in ''Literature/PleaseDontTellMyParentsYouBelieveHer'', a human soul trapped in a robot body. Possibly also Polly Vinyl Chloride.
238* Olimpia from "Literature/TheSandman1816". Perfectly human in appearance, although a bit too precise in music and singing.
239* The protagonist in ''Literature/SaturnsChildren'', a novel by Creator/CharlesStross. A Robot Girl SexSlave no less, in a universe where humans no longer exist.
240* ''Literature/SpaceAcademy'': Trish becomes one of these once she successfully acquires a Space Cadet Sally bioroid body (implied to be a sexbot). She immediately attempts to break it in with Vance, which causes him no end of consternation.
241* Guri, from the ''Literature/ShadowsOfTheEmpire'' Franchise/StarWars multimedia event novel.
242* [[MeaningfulName Galatea]] from the backstory of ''Literature/SoonIWillBeInvincible''. A sentient robot who became a member of the Champions.
243* Automata in ''Literature/UndefeatedBahamutChronicle'', who resemble twelve-year-old girls with animal ears, and act as the managers of the Ruins. They must follow the orders of Xfer (a race of humans who built the Ruins and the Automata) and Lords (a ruling family whom the Xfer serve).
244* Maggie, the protagonist of ''Virtual Girl''.
245[[/folder]]
246
247[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
248* Rommie, from ''Series/{{Andromeda}}''. Not to be confused with her hologram and AI duplicates.
249* The female human model Cylons from ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003''. In Six's case, they're even specifically designed to be sexy. Needless to say they succeed in this aim. As with most Robot Girls, they're also capable fighters. It's likely not a coincidence that Boomer is drop-dead beautiful either. And it works, given the lengths their lovers go to protect them. [[SeasonalRot By the end of the series]], it becomes clear that there is [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot really nothing robotic]] about the [[ArtificialHuman biological Cylons]] at all, other than that they can [[UnusualUserInterface talk to computers by sticking their hands in the sink]].
250* The Fembots from the original ''Series/TheBionicWoman'' series.
251* April and the Buffybot made short appearances in ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''.
252* The {{prequel}} series ''Series/{{Caprica}}'' has this as well in the form of the first Cylon, Zoe Graystone. However, she's also a major subversion, as she doesn't look like the human-model "skinjobs" but rather is the faux-consciousness of a 16-year-old school girl downloaded into the ultra-robotic-looking proto-"Centurion" Cylon. She does have an avatar version of herself, which looks completely human.
253* Colon (pron. "Cologne") from ''Series/ChoujuuSentaiLiveman'' was an early example, although she was unambiguously mechanical at a glance. She was specifically built to serve as a base operator, but jumped into battle far too often for her own good.
254* Android from ''Series/DarkMatter2015'', who is also, in a way, a SpaceshipGirl thanks to her uplink to Raza's systems.
255* Cyborg Shibolena from ''Series/DenjiSentaiMegaranger'' was close or far from this. Beauty check, Busty Check, Panty Check.
256* ''Series/DontLookDeeper'': Aisha is an android made to appear like a beautiful human woman, though she [[TomatoInTheMirror doesn't know this at first]]. She's [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots so convincing]] other people are fooled too, not just her. Aisha's given away only when an injury shows her metallic innards.
257* ''Series/GetSmart'' - Octavia is a KAOS FemmeFatale agent who seduces information from CONTROL's #2 men. Hymie the robot is promoted to #2 as he would be immune to her charms - only she's a robot herself, and the two fall in robo-love.
258* ''Series/TheGoodPlace'':
259** Janet is walking, talking, infinitely more helpful version of intelligent personal assistant programs like Siri or Alexa (Eleanor even calls her "Busty Alexa" at one point), providing information about the afterlife to residents of [[{{Heaven}} the Good Place]]. However, she's neither a robot nor a girl; rather, "she" is a genderless interface for the celestial mainframe. The human characters repeatedly refer to her as one and/or the other, and Janet [[InsistentTerminology always has to correct them]].
260--->'''Janet:''' Not a robot.(...) Not a girl.
261** She also has an EvilCounterpart in [[{{Hell}} the Bad Place]] in the form of Bad Janet, a blonde bimbo in a [[HellBentForLeather black leather jacket]] who goes out of her way to be unhelpful before [[PhoneaholicTeenager going back to checking her phone]].
262* ''Series/KamenRiderZeroOne'' has plenty of examples, with the most prominent one is the secretary [[TheHeroine Izu.]]
263* [[Film/KimPossible The live-action TV movie version]] of ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'' has [[spoiler:Athena, created by Drakken to destroy Kim [[BecomingTheMask only to find herself actually becoming friends with her]]; [[HeroicSacrifice she sacrifices herself to save Kim]], but is [[WeCanRebuildHim rebuilt by the end of the film with help from Kim's parents]]. She even [[RoboticReveal shows off her true nature to Kim]] before the final act]].
264* The short-lived science fiction cop show ''Series/MannAndMachine'' featured Eve, a highly intelligent but emotionally childlike android.
265* ''Series/MyLivingDoll'', a 1963-64 sitcom, starred JulieNewmar as Rhoda, a secret government project to create a robot astronaut.
266* On ''Series/MythBusters'', during a demonstration of a lie detector test, [[AsianAndNerdy Grant]] is asked whether he has ever thought of [[{{Robosexual}} building a female robot]]. He is very embarrassed, but doesn't deny it.
267* ''Series/{{The Outer Limits|1963}}'' loves its robots, and occasionally combines it with TomatoInTheMirror. It being an anthology, some episodes have it turn out better than others for robots and/or any humans who love them than others.
268* Tenaya 7 in ''Series/PowerRangersRPM''' is a rare villainous example. Also her counterpart in ''Series/EngineSentaiGoOnger'' Kegalesia, whose robotic identity is given away by the valves and pipes coming out of her otherwise human-like body.
269** Much earlier than that there was Archerina of ''Series/PowerRangersZeo'', although she was much more metallic than most other examples, lacking in synthetic skin or coloration.
270*** Archerina's Japanese counterpart, Princess Multiwa of ''Series/ChourikiSentaiOhranger''.
271* E.R.I.C.A. from the ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' episode "State of the A.R.T."
272* Vicki from ''Series/SmallWonder''.
273* ''Series/StargateSG1'' features female human-form Replicators, including Carter, one designed specificially to look like Dr. Lieutenant-Colonel Samantha Carter.
274** Harlan also replicated SG-1 as robots to help him maintain his underground facility. [[spoiler: Harlan is also a robot, and a barmy one at that.]]
275** Also, the gynoid who created the replicators in the first place. As toys.
276* The ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' episodes "[[Recap/StarTrekS1E7WhatAreLittleGirlsMadeOf What Are Little Girls Made Of?]]" (Andrea), "[[Recap/StarTrekS3E19RequiemForMethuselah Requiem for Methuselah]]" (Rayna Kapec) and "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E8IMudd I, Mudd]]" (various female androids).
277* Lal, Data's "daughter" from the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS3E16TheOffspring The Offspring]]".
278* Seven of Nine from ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' is an interesting case. As a former member of the Borg, she was born human and was assimilated at a young age. Even though her connection to the Borg was severed and her human appearance and organs reasserted themselves after most of her Borg parts were removed, she still had to relearn human emotion and retained a few cybernetic implants.
279* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdkWc_ogevs Invoked]] on ''WebVideo/TargetWomen'' in response to a creepy skincare commercial that showed the same [[EmotionlessGirl "clone woman"]] over and over as a lab subject.
280-->''New Olay Professional Pro X! A specialized team of dermatologists and Olay have designed Pro X to [[HereComesTheScience resignal your skin]] so it looks more like it did when you were younger.''\
281"But can a robot lady learn... to love?"
282* Cameron from ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles''. Counts also as EmotionlessGirl. It is strongly hinted that Cameron was made to be attractive deliberately. Her appearance was based on a resistance fighter named Allison Young, who was implied to know future John Connor personally.
283* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'':
284** Alicia in "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S1E7TheLonely The Lonely]]" is left by a sympathetic space captain with a prisoner who's been sentenced to exile on an isolated asteroid.
285** "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S2E8TheLatenessOfTheHour The Lateness of the Hour]]" has a family whose every need is attended to by RidiculouslyHumanRobots. Their daughter worries that they're becoming to dependent on them and begs her family to deactivate them. [[spoiler:Then she discovers [[TomatoInTheMirror that she too is a robot]] with FakeMemories.]]
286* ''Franchise/UltraSeries''
287** [[spoiler: Alien Sarin Carolyn]] from ''Series/UltramanLeo'' is revealed to be a robot at the end of the episode, when she reveals her true form to disable Gamerot so that Leo can destroy the monster.
288** Elly from ''Series/UltramanMax'' is a highly advanced gynoid who serves as the team's communications operator and strategist.
289** ''Series/UltramanGinga S'' had one named Android One-Zero as one of the bad guys [[spoiler:initially,]] serving the [[BrainMonster Alien]] [[TentacledTerror Chibu]] Exceller. She's also an {{expy}} of one that appeared in ''Series/UltraSeven'' that was serving the original Alien Chibu.
290** ''Series/UltramanEighty'' has a gynoid of Emi Jouno introduced at the end of the final episode [[spoiler: after the ''real'' Emi died before the last story arc]].
291** ''Series/UltramanTaiga'' has [[spoiler:Pirika, one of the E.G.I.S. BridgeBunnies]] being revealed to be a robot at the end of the series.
292* Most of the female hosts in ''Series/{{Westworld}}'' are young women.
293* Rachel from the ''Series/WeirdScience'' episode "The Copper Top Girl."
294[[/folder]]
295
296[[folder:Manhwa]]
297* Chevrolet from ''3 Level Combination''.
298* All of the EA robots from ''Manhwa/MetalHeart''.
299[[/folder]]
300
301[[folder:Music]]
302* Music/AbneyPark's ''Herr Drosselmeyer's Doll'' described a steampunk version of the Robot Girl.
303* A chrome-y one gets her Creator/MarilynMonroe on on the cover of Music/{{Aerosmith}}'s 2001 album ''Just Push Play''.
304* The music video for "All Is Full of Love" by Music/{{Bjork}}, probably the inspiration for SVEDKA_GRL (See below under Real Life).
305* Music/CharliXCX's "Femmebot" may or may not be from the point of view of a literal robot girl, with a ton of liberally-peppered and playful robot metaphors that at least invoke this trope.
306-->''Go fuck your prototype''\
307''I’m an upgrade of your stereotype''\
308''Don’t come with a guarantee''\
309''I’ll use you up like you’re my battery''\
310''I feel the sparks between us, electric shock''\
311''Hot-wired if you mess it up, I’ll self-destruct''
312* Music/DaYoopers also had an unrelated song with that title on their debut album.
313* "Yours Truly, 2095" by Music/ElectricLightOrchestra: "I met someone who looks a lot like you, she does the things you do, but she is an IBM."
314* [[ReplacementGoldfish Robot Noodle]] from {{Music/Gorillaz}} is an example, premiering in Phase Three. Probably a deconstruction, too--it's completely unlike the real Noodle and it turns out [[spoiler: Noodle is not, in fact, dead.]] On top of that, this robot girl is vapid, incredibly violent, subservient to her creator, and generally not at ALL like Noodle.
315* The focus of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKv7cw_Z1P4 Kokoro]] (from [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGD0syOFKgk either]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvmL4Yx7eyk perspective]]) is on a Robot Girl [[BecomeARealboy seeking a heart.]]
316* "FTWWW" and "Mastas of Ravencroft" by [[Music/DangerDaysTheTrueLivesOfTheFabulousKilljoys Mad Gear & The Missile Kid]] imply sex with android girls.
317* R&B singer Music/JanelleMonae portrays an alien Robot Girl named Cindi Mayweather in ''Metropolis'', a quadrilogy of {{Concept Album}}s about Cindi's struggles after she falls in love with a human.
318* The title character of the Music/{{Voltaire}} song "The Mechanical Girl," created by a tinker who made her as a [[ReplacementGoldfish second daughter]]. When a king whose wife ran off on his steed seeks to take her for his new queen and take her away from her father, [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever things go quite badly for his royal highness]].
319* "Robot Girl" is the title of a song by Was (Not Was). Guess what it's about.
320[[/folder]]
321
322[[folder:Mythology]]
323* In ''Literature/TheIliad'', Hephaestus is served by automatons in many forms, one group being servant girls of living gold, making this one OlderThanFeudalism.
324* The smith Ilmarinen makes himself a wife of gold in ''Literature/TheKalevala''. However, he could not actually bring her to life and she remained hard and cold, so he ended up scrapping her.
325[[/folder]]
326
327[[folder:Pinball]]
328* ''Pinball/{{Pinbot}}'' features a couple of robot girls on the back plate and the Jet Bumpers.
329** ''Bride Of Pin*Bot'' '''is''' one, though the game involves her becoming a real woman.
330* The T-X from ''Pinball/Terminator3RiseOfTheMachines''.
331[[/folder]]
332
333[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
334* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'': Debatably, female-identifying Warforged in the ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'' setting are a {{magitek}} version of this trope, though they don't have any physical female characteristics unless they deliberately adopt them.
335** Someone also homebrewed Robot Girls as a playable race. In gameplay terms, they're vulnerable to abilities that specially target inanimate objects, but since they're a person's soul in an artificial body, they get a CON score.
336* ''TabletopGame/NewHorizon'': The Wafans, three entire races of [[InsistentTerminology Wave Form Androids,]] come in both male and female flavors across the board.
337* ''TabletopGame/TranshumanSpace'': This setting offers a huge range of "cybershell" bodies on which AI software can be installed. Some "Cyberdolls" are inevitably built to resemble attractive human women -- sometimes for innocent reasons, and sometimes not.
338[[/folder]]
339
340[[folder:Roleplays]]
341* In ''Roleplay/AlchemicalSolutions'', [[Literature/{{Worm}} Taylor Hebert]] gets uploaded into a new synthetic body.
342[[/folder]]
343
344[[folder:Theatre]]
345* In the ballet ''Theatre/{{Coppelia}}'' [[spoiler:the mysterious girl Franz has fallen for is actually a mechanical robot built by Dr. Coppelius.]]
346* This Trope is discussed in Theatre/{{RUR}}, that is the play which introduced the term "Robot" into the vocabulary.
347-->'''Helena:''' Perhaps it’s silly of me, but why do you manufacture female Robots when—when—\
348'''Domin:''' When sex means nothing to them?\
349'''Helena:''' Yes.\
350'''Domin:''' There’s a certain demand for them, you see. [[RobotMaid Servants]], saleswomen, stenographers. People are ''used'' to it.
351[[/folder]]
352
353[[folder:Video Games]]
354* Mei Fang from ''VideoGame/ArcanaHeart''.
355* Robogirl, the appropriately-named ally from ''VideoGame/BillyVsSNAKEMAN''. [[spoiler:Subverted; her 'robot body' is actually a shell she wears due to a weakly-defined anxiety about 'real' people. You help her get over it in the Pizza Witch storyline, and she takes off her shell, revealing a real flesh-and-blood person.]]
356* In the {{DLC}} of ''VideoGame/BioShock2'' Minerva's Den gives us the failed Robotic Little Sisters.
357* Eve in ''VideoGame/BlasterMasterZero'' is an android who helps out Jason on his quest to find Fred and beat back the mutants. Jason even develops feelings for her, despite her not being an actual human. [[spoiler: by the 2nd and 3rd games, Eve gets infected by the mutants and her body changes to the point where she becomes an actual living organic lifeform.]]
358* ''Franchise/BlazBlue'' has several, most notably the Murakumo Units and Kusanagi.
359* [[spoiler:Dominique]] in ''VideoGame/TheBouncer''.
360* The Arma Machina glyph in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaOrderOfEcclesia'' transforms Shanoa into a female [[TinCanRobot automaton]] (distinguished from the presumably-male enemies by copper-colored RobotHair and a flared body to resemble a dress). She's completely impervious to harm in the form and can destroy SpikesOfDoom on contact, but her movement is extremely slow and getting hit by enemies drains her MP, which ends the transformation when it runs out. Amusingly, enemy automatons will fall in love with her on sight, following her around and even fighting other enemies for her.
361* Curly Brace is one of these in ''VideoGame/CaveStory''.
362* There's lots of them in the Japanese MMO ''VideoGame/CosmicBreak'', such as Crimrose and Lily Rain.
363* In ''VideoGame/DokaponKingdom,'' female characters who use the Robo-Knight character class turn into robot girls with floating ponytails that turn into wings.
364* The Elemental Dolls from ''[[VideoGame/DonPachi DoDonPachi DaiOuJou]]'' and the Elemental Daughters from ''[[VideoGame/DonPachi DoDonPachi DaiFukkatsu]]''.
365* ''VideoGame/EndlessFrontier'' gives us Aschen Brodel, Haken's android friend and voice of reason, who pulls triple duty as not only the RobotGirl, but resident DeadpanSnarker AND GenkiGirl all in one package (depending on whether she's overheated or not). KOS-MOS and T-ELOS from ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}} 3'' (the game is a MassiveMultiplayerCrossover) are also there.
366* ''VideoGame/EnemyZero'' has one. [[spoiler: Laura, the player character]].
367* ''VideoGame/EtrianOdysseyIIITheDrownedCity'': The female version of the unlockable Yggdroid class is somewhat unusual in that, while cuter than the male counterpart, is far more visibly robotic than how the trope is usually presented. While the face is visibly human apart from the color and eyes, the rest including the hair would have no chance of being able to pass as human. [[spoiler:Olympia meanwhile has a more proper face and hair and is able to convincingly pass as human for a good chunk of the game. That is until she removes her cloak and reveals her body to fall into more SkeleBot9000 territory]].
368* The E-series of ''VideoGame/GadgetTrial'' are at least partly biological versions of this, made from [[AppliedPhlebotinum biometal]]. Each is supposed to be the equivalent of a full military unit in power, and they create more of themselves by a sort of mitosis.
369* ''VideoGame/GalaxyAngelII'' has Nano-Nano Pudding, who is a living {{Nanomachine}} colony who resembles a young girl (although she's capable of VoluntaryShapeshifting to alter her appearance) as one of the available love interests.
370* Tio from ''VideoGame/GrandiaII''.
371* The main character in ''VideoGame/TheGuardianLegend'' is a robot girl that [[SpaceshipGirl transforms into a spaceship]]. She's given no name in the English version, though in Japanese she was named Miria.
372* In ''VideoGame/InfiniteSpace'', MadScientist Gavriil Minas takes a broken HELP Android (The In Game Encyclopedia) and makes in to one of these. She has 5,000 kelvin Degree cutting claws, her eyes shoot laser beams and she has the best combat stat in the entire game.
373* Junebug from ''VideoGame/KentuckyRouteZero'' has gray skin and makes mechanical noises when she walks, and is finally revealed to be a robot late in Act III when she tells Ezra she was built to clean up the Elkhorn mine.
374* Orianna, the Clockwork Lady, is a playable champion in ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'', modeled after a ballerina. In the original lore she was built by the father of a real girl who died while training to join the League, while after the ContinuityReboot she’s instead a ShipOfTheseus—namely, the result of her father replacing parts of her original organic self as they failed from a poison she had contracted helping out from a chemical spill in Zaun’s Sump—with Orianna herself replacing her healthy heart with a Hextech Crystal to give her father a transplant in turn. In game (as developed for the original lore), she’s a very creepy and unnerving individual, imitating humanity while lacking human characteristics. In the new lore, she acknowledges her lost humanity while being curious as to what she is now—and whether there are others like her.
375* Herbert, from ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfDarkWitch2'', is an android that leads the elite group of researchers that make up the first set of bosses. She is capable of flight and her area of expertise is ''alchemy'' of all things.
376* ''VideoGame/LuminousArc'': Despite having a pronounced evil edge to her Iris, the Steel Witch is very cute. She also talks like a Dalek.
377* ''[[VideoGame/{{Boktai}} Lunar Knights]]'', the robotic attendants at the Solar Bank and the store and also the seemingly more human robotic female aide to the the resident MadScientist.
378* ''VideoGame/MarvelVsCapcomClashOfTheSuperheroes'': The SecretCharacter known as Shadow Lady is [[Franchise/StreetFighter Chun-Li]] from an AlternateUniverse who was [[UnwillingRoboticization forcibly turned into a brainwashed cyborg]] for Shadaloo. In retaliation for foiling their operations, Shadaloo kidnapped and robotized Chun-Li for the sake of transforming her into M. Bison's [[TheDragon top assassin]]. Unlike Shadow — a brainwashed Charlie Nash, who escaped shortly after being transformed — Shadaloo added a RestrainingBolt to Shadow Lady's programming so she would remain fully loyal to them, essentially turning her into a [[CyberneticsEatYourSoul emotionless]] minion. [[spoiler:In her ending however, Shadow Lady [[HeroicWillpower overcomes Shadaloo's brainwashing]], [[HeelFaceTurn regains her original memories as Chun-Li]], and allies with Shadow in taking down Shadaloo]].
379* In ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'', when Shepard travels to the Mars base, s/he encounters a Dr. Eva, who is actually a robotic infiltrator sent by Cerberus. Eva's body is disabled and taken back to the Normandy to recover data. [[spoiler: Eva reactivates, but EDI, the ship's AI, is there to stop her. In the subsequent AI combat, EDI seizes control of Eva's body and subsequently uses it as a physical avatar.]]
380** Not only that, but [[spoiler: EDI has the potential to become Joker's LoveInterest in Eva's body, especially if the Synthesis ending is chosen]].
381* Roll and [[OurMermaidsAreDifferent Splash Woman]] from ''VideoGame/MegaManClassic'', plus Alia and Iris (among others) from the [[VideoGame/MegaManX X series]], Alouette and others from [[VideoGame/MegaManZero Zero]]. (It's also not unheard of for Zero to be [[ViewerGenderConfusion mistaken for one]].)
382** Naturally, when Roll appeared in ''VideoGame/TatsunokoVsCapcom'', ''VideoGame/ViewtifulJoe'' was more than a little attracted to her.
383--->''"A cute robot girl that's also a [[RobotMaid maid]]? You know, there is such a thing as [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot overkill]]."''
384* Being a SpiritualSuccessor to the ''Mega Man'' series, ''VideoGame/MightyNo9'' brings us Call, [[MakingASplash Mighty No. 2 Cryosphere]], and [[PsychoElectro Mighty No. 3 Dynatron]]. [[BloodKnight Ray/Raychel]] is also this, though it isn't as obvious.
385* Another SpiritualSuccessor, ''VideoGame/TwentyXX'', has Nina, the Mega Man-equivalent player character.
386* ''VideoGame/{{METAGAL}}'' has [[PlayerCharacter Meta]] and her eight sisters, who she has to fight to return them to normal after they've been reprogrammed into battle robots. One of them[[note]]Buster[[/note]] even has a GenderBlenderName.
387* ''VideoGame/MetallicChild'': Has Rona, the first Metallic Child ever born. She lost the ability to move by herself, and thus is reliant on the player to be her guide through the game.
388* ''VideoGame/MetaloidOrigin'' has Erika and Neva. It also has Zeta, who is a robot ''[[RareMaleExample boy]]'', even if it is [[ViewerGenderConfusion hard to tell]].
389* Patricia Wagon the main character in VideoGame/MightySwitchForce is a cybernetic cop (first game) and/or a firefighter (second game). Although some official material states that she's a {{cyborg}} as opposed to a full robot.
390* Marina Lightyears, the protagonist of ''VideoGame/MischiefMakers.''
391* As of ''VideoGame/MortalKombat11'', Frost, Sub-Zero's DistaffCounterpart and hated rival, is a Cyber Lin Kuei. Her body had undergone significant cyberization, such that some of her animations show her head and arms being easily detachable.
392* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evaK9bs-SAk Miss Marshmallow]] from ''VideoGame/{{Mother 3}}''.
393* Experimental Princess Farrah Day from ''VideoGame/{{Nefarious}}'', who was designed to be the perfect princess.
394* In ''VideoGame/NierAutomata'' there are the [=YoRHa=] units, combat androids sent by the surviving humans on the moon to combat the alien robots that has invaded Earth, the female unit 2B being the main character. [[spoiler:Devola and Popola]] also return from the original ''VideoGame/{{Nier}}'', or to be more exact, [[spoiler:two Devola and Popola model robots who are unrelated to the previous ones.]]
395* Shinatama, is an android or SLD (simulated life doll) [[spoiler:who was subsequently Kidnapped, Tortured, and Blown Up.]] She acts as a liaison to the main protagonist Konoko in ''{{VideoGame/Oni}}''.
396* ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'':
397** Pictured above: Aigis from ''VideoGame/Persona3'', an anti-Shadow war machine built in the shape of a human because (it was believed at the time) only a human can summon a [[FightingSpirit Persona]], which is the only way to fight Shadows effectively, and that TheMindIsAPlaythingOfTheBody. That turns out to be true in more ways than one; while she starts out with a [[RoboSpeak very robotic affect]], as she interacts with the rest of the cast, she grows [[BecomeARealBoy more and more human]]. [[UpdatedRerelease FES]] added Metis in "[[PlayableEpilogue The Answer]]," though strictly speaking, [[spoiler: she isn't actually a robot, but a personification of Aigis' internal conflict.]]
398** ''VideoGame/Persona4Arena'' adds another one, Labrys.
399** ''VideoGame/Persona5Strikers'' adds yet another one named Sophia, codename: Sophie. Though since she doesn't have a physical body in the real world like the prior examples she's more of a sentient computer program than a traditional example.
400* In ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarOnline'', the [=raCaseal=] character class were Robot Girls, and most of their costumes were maid like, including a large bow on the back and a skirt. One of their hairstyles even had a little hat appropriate for a nurse or maid. They were joined in ''PSO: Episode 2'' by [=huCaseals=]. Their costumes were more ninja-like in design.
401** The sequel ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarUniverse'' has 'casts' as a playable robot race. They can be male or female, and are hugely customizable in looks, from barely human looking to your classic Robot Girl Maid With Antenna. Kinda unique in that if you wanted to, you could have a sexy ''male'' robot running around. Furthermore, there are multiple supporting [=NPCs=] that are casts. One of the more plot relevant is the pink haired Lou, who features significantly into episodes 1 and 2 of the game. Also, an early trailer for the game indicates that one of the main heroines was a 'cast,' but was eventually replaced by the newman Karen Erra.
402*** Introduced in ''Phantasy Star Portable'' and later appearing in the main version of the game, Vivienne is a model of a new type of cast. Running repeated missions with her gives the player a unique opportunity to sculpt her personality as she asks you questions about her enviroment. You can, in fact, have her call you "master."
403* Continuing from the above, ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarIII'' and ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarIV'' both had them. In ''III'', there is an entire "race" of sentient mechanical humans (called cyborgs in the localization due to a mistranslation, though they have no organic components; later in the series, they're called androids like in the Japanese to reflect this), represented mostly by black-and-silver Wren-types (male) and Mieu-types: lithe, leotard-clad, claw-wielding, red-haired and overall more human-looking Robot Girls. In ''IV'', the Robot Girl who joins your party is Demi, a unique model that some fans speculate is a custom design of Wren, a thousand-year-old Wren type.
404* [=ANI=] from ''VideoGame/PhoningHome'' is a robot with a head and arms on top of a ball that identifies as a female.
405* Raki Saionji, from ''VideoGame/PieceOfWonder''.
406* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtbDDqU3dVI KARA]] from Quantic Dreams' latest tech demo.
407* [[CheerfulChild Ernula]] from G.rev's ''VideoGame/SenkoNoRonde'' is an android girl that also consists of several duplicates of her. Cuilan, an android ''boy'', [[AmbiguousGender is often be mistaken for one]]. Ranatus from ''DUO/2'' also fits this trope.
408* ''VideoGame/{{Signalis}}'': Replikas are mass-produced bio-mechanical androids built to perform various menial tasks, according to their make and model. Each model uses a human template for both appearance and [[BrainUploading personality]]. Replikas are almost exclusively female; of the nine or so Replika models described, the only males are the ADLR units, which are one of the rarest types. The main character, an LSTR (Elster) unit, is based on a soldier from the GreatOffscreenWar, making her a stoic survivalist good at tolerating isolation and high-stress environments.
409* ''VideoGame/SoaringMachinariae'': All of the automatons shown in the game are female, including the protagonist Iris.
410* ''[[VideoGame/SoulSeries Soul Calibur IV]]'' has Ashlotte, a robotic ElegantGothicLolita sent to capture Astaroth. Her profile describes her as being "something that would eventually be called a machine," which makes sense when you remember the series [[AnachronismStew takes place in the]] '''[[AnachronismStew 16th century]]'''.
411* ''VideoGame/{{Starbound}}'': The Glitch are an entire race of sapient robots (who, because of certain reasons, believe themselves to be living in medieval times), so half of them qualify. You can play as one, as well as invite them to live in your homes and work on your crew.
412* One of the stranger examples in video-gaming was [[EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep the adjutants]] from ''VideoGame/StarcraftI'' and ''VideoGame/StarCraftII''. Though a robot, in ''Starcraft I'', it was initially seen as a bald, bio-mechanical woman's head that had a robot voice. They were redesigned in ''VideoGame/StarCraftII'', that appeared to be cuter, [[UncannyValley less explicitly human, and not like a borg]]. Being initially a face and a voice, the adjutant had some of the least potential to be sexualized. Cue ''Starcraft II'', which produced the cuter, more feminine adjutant, [[http://us.blizzard.com/en-us/community/fanart/#1103 cue the fanart]]. In the later missions, there's also another adjutant that played a bigger role in the plot, and you could tell just by looking at her.
413* Lamia Loveless in ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsAdvance'' is also a biological version. Though not seen in-game, in the OVA, she bleeds and has mechanical parts for body.
414* ''VideoGame/TalesSeries'':
415** Tabatha from ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia''.
416** Incarose from ''VideoGame/TalesOfHearts'' basically defines all the dangerous things in this trope. Also Corundum. In fact, almost every robot in the game, regardless of gender, is pretty much crazy. Except Kunzite.
417** ''VideoGame/TalesOfGraces'' has the Humanoids, robotic children which are varied between boys and girls. Most notably, though, is [[spoiler:Protos Heis]]/[[spoiler:Sophie]], as well as the adult [[spoiler:Emeraude]], though in her case, [[RoboticReveal this isn't revealed until]] [[spoiler:her "death"]], as she was [[spoiler:a robotic clone of the real Emeraude from centuries ago]].
418* [[ThatOneBoss Alisa Boskonovitch]] from ''Franchise/{{Tekken}} 6''.
419* ''VideoGame/TriggerheartExelica'': Triggerhearts Exelica, Crueltear and Faintear.
420* ''VideoGame/UnrealTournament2004'' has a bit of a send-up of the character type with Devastation, Liandri's latest domestic gynoid entered in the tournament as a marketing stunt. Her status as SuperPoweredRobotMeterMaid is handwaved with the explanation she's in the tournament to demonstrate the model's agility and AI adaptability (her armored shell and combat abilities don't come standard) and her womanly figure is described as being based on a "popular adult holoactress" in another bid to boost sales.
421* [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Miss Bloody Rachel]] from ''VideoGame/ViewtifulJoe2'' is a good example. She was built specifically to take down Joe and Silvia [[spoiler: but instead is [[WhatIsThisThingYouCallLove befriended]] by them. And then she gets zapped, frying her circuits, but it's not permanent.]]
422* Tesse from ''VideoGame/WakuWaku7.'' She's also a RobotMaid.
423* ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles'':
424** ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1'': [[spoiler:Fiora]] becomes one due to [[spoiler:being made into a Faced Mechon. She becomes human again in the ending.]]
425** ''VideoGame/XenobladeChroniclesX'': [[spoiler:All the human women]] would count as this, due to [[spoiler:the humans using mimeosome bodies in the voyage fleeing from Earth's destruction. They plan to use them while exploring Mira until they reclaim the Lifehold where they can be transferred back into their biological forms]].
426** ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'':
427*** Poppi is this game's version of [[RecurringElement the Xeno series tradition]] of having one of these as a party member. Poppi is an Artificial Blade built by [[GadgeteerGenius Tora]], a Nopon who wanted to be a Driver but didn't have the potential. Her initial form, Poppi α looks like a little girl, Poppi QT [[note]]Quixotic Tetelar[[/note]], her MidSeasonUpgrade, looks like a RobotMaid [[spoiler:and her final form, Poppi QTπ [[note]]Quantum Technochampion π[[/note]] is designed like an idol singer.]]
428*** [[spoiler:KOS-MOS from ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}}'' is also in the game as a Rare Blade, with T-Elos following her in a later update.]]
429** ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles3'': This game keeps the tradition alive by adding Ino to the Expansion Pass. Similar to Poppi from the previous game, Ino is an Artificial Blade built by a Nopon who couldn't become a Driver otherwise. Except [[WrongContextMagic that doesn't actually make any sense in Aionios]]; the strange nature of the world means that everyone has abilities similar to Blades, and Drivers don't exist. The Ouroboros are therefore very confused by Ino.
430* Emeralda from ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}.'' Despite being a nanomachine colony that can freely morph into nearly any shape, she usually takes the form of a cute young girl, an appearance which came from her "parents" ([[spoiler:previous incarnations of the main characters]]). Or, if an optional (but quite easy) SideQuest is completed, [[PlotRelevantAgeUp a hot green-haired woman]]. [[GameBreaker Who quickly becomes the most powerful character in the game.]]
431** From the same game, Tolone, the cyborg girl representing [[QuirkyMiniBossSquad the Elements]]. According to [[AllThereInTheManual Xenogears Perfect Works]], her body is 90% cyberized.
432* KOS-MOS from the ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}}'' series is the canonical robot girl, with a surprising twist at the end.
433** Momo from the same series, as a [[ArtificialHuman Realian]], also qualifies, though Realians are organic rather than mechanical.
434* A.D.A. and Pharshti in the ''VideoGame/ZoneOfTheEnders'' series are both similar in concept to Dolores (see the anime section), although A.D.A. ain't quite as self-sufficient (She can't move her frame by herself like Dolores and Pharshti can).
435[[/folder]]
436
437[[folder:Visual Novels]]
438* Tanya and Julia from ''VisualNovel/BionicHeart'' are androids. Both can hold their own in combat, and Tanya often serves as the InnocentFanserviceGirl.
439* Kotomi Ichinose from ''VisualNovel/{{CLANNAD}}'' isn't actually a robot, but Tomoya commonly compares her to one [[FirstPersonSnarker mentally]], due to her [[EmotionlessGirl blank expressions]], [[NoSocialSkills total lack of social skills]], and [[TeenGenius incredible memory and intelligence]].
440* The titular ''VisualNovel/LucyTheEternitySheWishedFor'' is one who also has emotional responses.
441* Yumemi (Reverie in the FanTranslation) from ''VisualNovel/{{Planetarian}}''.
442* [[GenderFlip Colonel Sebastian Moran]] in ''VisualNovel/ShikkokuNoSharnoth'' used to be a biological human, but her body appears to have been almost entirely replaced by Engine Machines. [[spoiler: As a little girl, she was the SoleSurvivor from a small village destroyed by a Metacreature attack; when on the brink of death she was both saved ''and'' rebuilt into a RobotGirl by M, [[IOweYouMyLife which is the reason why]] [[UndyingLoyalty she's completely devoted to him]].]]
443* Stella Silver from ''VisualNovel/ShiningSongStarnova'' is a prototype android designed to be the perfect IdolSinger.
444* Multi from ''VisualNovel/ToHeart'' is probably the earliest example of this trope in a DatingSim context.
445* Ilfa, Silfa, and Milfa are a trio of sister robot girls in ''VisualNovel/ToHeart2'' and its various spin-offs.
446* [[spoiler: Luna]] from ''VisualNovel/VirtuesLastReward'' is a robot girl.
447* R-Komadori from CuteMonsterGirl-themed {{Eroge}} ''Princess X'' is the robot girl love interest, and the princess of an empire of machines hidden in the Antarctic. Aside from a few visible seams on her body [[RidiculouslyHumanRobot she's almost indistinguishable from a normal human]], unlike the lesser machines of her empire which look more like standard robots (or less; her personal maid [[YouAreNumberSix 42]] is a large floating cylinder which can only communicate by repeating ''"Jawohl Mister").''
448[[/folder]]
449
450[[folder:Webcomics]]
451* ''Webcomic/AngelMoxie'': Ms. Konk. Her creator makes some drastic changes to her, revamping the scary old lady robot to a bubbly, ditz, with a body like a supermodel.
452* Eve from ''Webcomic/{{Applegeeks}}'' is a robot made, predictably, from a Mac computer to be a girlfriend for Hawk. Some of her first actions in life are wrecking Alice's (Windows) PC and ''detonating an Apple store'' because she was ''jealous''.
453* ''Webcomic/AskDrEldritch'' has Helen, the Doctor's RobotMaid. He really hates it when people call her a {{Sexbot}}, though, so don't.
454* ''Webcomic/{{Ayuri}}'': Aside from being made of plastic, Kay seems like an ordinary human woman.
455* ''Webcomic/BiggerThanCheeses'' has two robot girls: TheDitz Lei and sex fiend Cleo (which often crushes her chosen beau Thanatos with her comic-robot-level strength)
456* ''Webcomic/{{Comedity}}'': Alice, a girl with robotic looks, who due to the comic's LifeEmbellished nature is the stand-in for the author's computer.
457* ''Webcomic/CommanderKitty'' has [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/12/05/dont-wait-up/ the Alpha Droids aboard Zenith Central.]] [[spoiler: [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/03/27/one-more-cant-hurt/ Along with Zenith herself]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/12/11/did-you-try-rebooting/ Nin Wah's clone]], [[http://www.commanderkitty.com/2012/01/01/seemed-like-a-good-idea-at-the-time/ and a good portion of the galaxy's population]].]]
458* ''Webcomic/DresdenCodak'': Fitting the cyborg part of this trope is Kimiko Ross, whose legs, an arm, a eye, some of her spine are all cybernetic post-Hob, and she even has an input jack in her upper back.
459* In ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'', Susan initially mistakes Grace for one of these thinking Tedd couldn't have possibly have a real girlfriend and must have made one instead.
460* Kotone of ''[[Webcomic/TsunamiChannel Experimental Comic Kotone]]'', although she's so [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots realistic-looking]] that none of the characters that weren't explicitly told so (that is, everyone except for the nameless protagonist) don't realize that she's a robot. She also fits the TokenMiniMoe and NotBloodSiblings requirements (''[=ExCoKo=]'' is a parody of a DatingSim).
461* [[spoiler:Prism]] from ''Webcomic/FlakyPastry'' turns out to be one.
462* The Muses (and Princess Anevka) from the webcomic ''Webcomic/GirlGenius''. [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20100120 Otilia]], the Muse of Protection, easily the most badass-looking Robot Girl of all time.
463* Aversion in ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'': [[RunningGag Jones is not a robot]].
464* Aradia in ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' becomes one, although in this case [[ItMakesSenseInContext it's a ghost of a girl that's posessing a robot body.]]
465** And then [[spoiler:she explodes and [[ItMakesSenseInContext comes back to life again as a time goddess.]]]]
466* ''[[http://www.jaydenandcrusader.com Jayden and Crusader]]'' has two, [[http://www.jaydenandcrusader.com/2007/08/09/2007-08-09/ Computer]] and [[http://www.jaydenandcrusader.com/2008/06/07/this-really-isnt-a-good-time/ Computer Version 2]]. The first one was temporarily almost a main character, but the second one showed up twice and was never seen again.
467** Computer [[http://www.jaydenandcrusader.com/2009/09/18/page-136/ came back]] and boy is she [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge angry.]]
468* Evalyn Zeronius/Zero-Girl from ''Webcomic/IronVioletTheShyTitan'' is a combat robot girl with super-speed. Humorously, she is capable of having emotion, but is unable to express it properly, causing her to be constantly deadpan.
469--> '''Yuri:''' So you're a fan of the Magical Princess Knight Celtia games too?\
470'''Evalyn:''' [emotionless] Affirmative. Her whimsical girlish adventues excite me. I am giddy with anticipation for the new game.\
471'''Yuri:''' Y-yeah...I can...see that...
472* 42 of ''Webcomic/KiwiBlitz'' is this, imported from a friend of Mr. Frohlich who lives in Japan.
473* ''Webcomic/LastRes0rt'' has two types (debatably): CG-86 is referred to as a "Defective Stepford." Gangrel and the Cybees, on the other hand, are a little too small and plush to be "typical" robot lasses, and we've already seen male versions as well.
474* ''Webcomic/MagicAndPhysics'' has one in the form of Morgan Lillup. Which could constitute as some form of accomplishment as it is a StickFigureComic.
475* Played a little bit with Momdroid from ''Webcomic/MechanicalBuddyUniverse''. She was originally never built as a female and is just a completely androgynous combat android. However after she discovered a war orphan she decided to adopt, she put on artificial skin to give herself more human appearance after the child was intimidated by her initial looks. And as luck would have it, she had a female face lying around amongst her possessions. She later commissioned for additional parts to further complete her appearance. She does however seem to have something of a complex about her adoptive son seeing her without this fake face even though he is much older now and not as easily scared as when he was a baby.
476* Ping from ''Webcomic/MegaTokyo'' (remember that both, especially Megatokyo, are largely influenced by manga); notice, however, that Ping ''does'' have a modesty programming, and seeing Largo in his boxers can make her panic. She also has a programme routine which means that although she is “anatomically correct” she retains discretionary control over this.
477* Sulla from ''Webcomic/OHumanStar'' is one. She's not that sexualized, but she is very cute.
478* ''Webcomic/QuestionableContent'' has many, many examples dues to the existence of [=AnthroPCs=] and their ability to use a humanlike chassis. There are a lot seen throughout the series, but the most notable are below:
479** The first and most seen was Momo, Marigold's {{Moe}} Anthro-PC. Originally looking like a chibi schoolgirl, in strip 2000 she upgraded to a more human-proportioned body later (but still looks somewhat young and anime-ish. Momo is a curious example in that she has been specifically shown on at least three occasions to have an active libido, but for reasons of her own, presents as a more-or-less pre-teen girl. Momo is implied to be “anatomically correct” (not least, the RunningGag about “eel handling” in her original chassis) and May appears to believe this, but her pre-teen appearance makes this a subject best avoided.
480** Momo also presents the dilemma of the cost and financing of robot girls. Idoru appears to be a commercial enterprise, selling AI bodies which appear to cost as much as a car, for no clearly defined purpose. This becomes a plot point between Momo and Marigold. It doesn’t appear when Hannelore buys Winslow a chassis, but Hannelore is implied to be independently wealthy so can presumably afford it.
481** May is a robo-convict who first appeared as an avatar inside Dale's smart-glasses, as a (reluctant) AI helper. She later got out of Robot Jail and went to crash with Dale in a proper (albeit ill-maintained) body. May is another example of the cost/benefit issue, because her (state-provided) chassis is clearly at or near the end of its useful life, and has no funds available to maintain it. May certainly '''isn't''' "anatomically correct." (This doesn't stop her having '''some''' kind of sex with [[spoiler: Sven]], though.)
482** Bubbles, a former combat droid who worked in the same underground fighting ring as Faye. The ring was run by Corpse Witch (yes that IS her name), another example of this trope but one that errs more on the 'robot' side. Bubbles’ take on the cost/benefit issue appears to be that HER chassis appears to be military-surplus; the termination of the programme meant that she was allowed to retain it upon discharge, but Corpse Witch implies (and Bubbles appears to believe) that the government could reclaim it at will. Bubbles’ anatomically correct status isn’t known. (Although [[spoiler: Faye hasn't complained]]).
483** Various minor characters may, or may not be. Melon, a recent minor character, doesn’t appear to be, and is quite happy walking about wearing only a sweatshirt. Officer Roko, no information. Seven is more of a TinCanRobot although she DOES have an electronic libido, by her own account. None of the “Male” robots have been shown to be anatomically correct.
484* OrphanedSeries ''Webcomic/RumbleFall'' over at Wirepop had [[http://www.wirepop.com/comic_episode.php?id=26&select=400&display_page=10 Demeneos the mechdoll]], an {{Expy}} of KOS-MOS.
485* ''Webcomic/{{Shortpacked}}'' has [[TalkingApplianceSidekick UltraCar]]'s current form, a redhead with retractable rolling skates.
486* ''Webcomic/SkinHorse'' has Violet Bee, actually a drone remote-controlled by the mysterious Goldbug. Her/its creator later links the body to [[BlackHelicopter Nick Zerhakker]] instead.
487* Oasis of ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' was originally revealed to be a robot, though [[spoiler: later plotlines revealed this to be false]].
488* ''Webcomic/TimesLikeThis'' has Nicki, the Robotron-brand MIRA, or Multifunctional Interactive Robotic Assistant. Manufactured in 2023, purchased secondhand by Cassie in 2027, and now living in the present time.
489* Doris in ''Webcomic/ValAndIsaac'' is an adorable, blue-haired female robot. Her girlfriend Minnow is certainly very fond of her.
490* ''Webcomic/{{YOSH}}!'' counts many robot girls as characters: Miyo, Nami, Toyoko, Lien and Rieko, a robot fox girl with the soul of a human. It is stated that their creator, Shiden, made thousands of them (all female) and occasionally uses them to attempt to [[http://www.yoshsaga.com/latest.php?i=051016 conquer]] the world.
491[[/folder]]
492
493[[folder:Web Original]]
494* The short story "[[http://everything2.com/title/And%253F And]]," combining this trope with hints of WhatMeasureIsANonHuman.
495* ''Literature/DestinyFactor'' has two; Sammy 64, who looks about Terry's height, and Virus... who'd stand out in a crowd due to height. Virus is debatable due to another set of genetalia she has...
496* Several works by Creator/JamesFranzen include robot girls, most notably ''WebAnimation/MTCSaga''.
497* Sweetie Belle in ''WebVideo/FriendshipIsWitchcraft'' is [[RoboSpeak very blatantly robotic]], yet nobody, including her family or herself, ever notices. In a case of DramaticIrony, she accuses her biological (but less empathetic) sister Rarity of being one.
498* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/user/GirlRobotTV Girl Robot]]'', a Web musical.
499* The Japanese branch of WebAnimation/{{Hololive}} has a high-spec robot girl named Roboco. Aside from her obviously mechanical arms and legs and her three-toed feet, [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots she's nearly indistinguishable from a regular human.]]
500* ''Theatre/TheLeagueOfSTEAM'' has a clockwork cyborg girl (R.O.S.E.) used for zombie hunting.
501* Deconstructed in the CreepyPasta ''My Father's Hiding Something in the Attic.'' After dying in a car accident, a girl's mind was digitized and placed in an imperfect android, which causes her crippling pain. While it was attempted with her mother, something went wrong, leaving her trapped in the computer.
502* Penny Polendina from ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}''. Penny's character is an allusion to ''[[Literature/TheAdventuresOfPinocchio Pinocchio]]'', being a highly-advanced android designed to have a personality and the ability to generate an [[KiManipulation Aura]] like a normal human, to serve as the inventor's daughter (and an Atlas military asset, because the doctor needed funding from ''somewhere''). She is a curious and friendly girl, eager to understand human emotions and relationships while worrying that she is not a [[BecomeARealBoy real girl]]. Towards the end of Volume 3, [[spoiler:she's destroyed in the Vytal Festival, strangled by the strings of her own weapon during the fight with Pyrrha.]] In Volume 7, [[spoiler:she reappears, having been rebuilt, though it's noted that [[CastFromLifespan due to the method of her creation]], this would be the only time. Her humanity is affirmed when she's given [[ElementalPowers the Winter Maiden powers]] by their previous bearer at the end of the season, chosen over the intended candidate thanks to displaying greater warmth and kindness to the elderly woman. However, she ends up dying once more at the end of Volume 8, with the cruel irony of this final death occurring just moments after having become a flesh-and-blood human]].
503* Website/SCPFoundation provides a rare example that is sex-free - if only because it's [[ChildrenAreInnocent an actual girl]] - with [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-191 SCP-191]], Cyborg Child. It is a girl who was kidnapped and suffered UnwillingRoboticisation by a MadScientist, that [[TheGrotesque even rendered her horribly disfigured]] (most notably, the [[TwoFaced left half of the face and skull]] and her jaw were replaced by robotic implements).
504* Laurel from ''Skyway Mechanix'' is a very realistic robot.
505* Female golems in ''Literature/TalesOfMU'', especially Two, are the {{Magitek}} equivalent.
506* ''WebAnimation/TeenGirlSquad'': In Issue 15, [[OccidentalOtaku Japanese Culture Greg]] tries to date a clunky robot named Chizuko and gets "UNCANNY VALLEY'D" to death for his trouble.
507* [[http://digitalcuttlefish.blogspot.com/2007/10/version-27.html She's my little bit of heaven, even better than real life, / She's the version 2.7 motor-actuated wife.]]
508* ''WebVideo/NightmareTime'': [[spoiler: Emma's double]] is revealed to be this, and is determined like hell to [[KillAndReplace take over her life, even if it means murdering]] the [[spoiler: original]].
509[[/folder]]
510
511[[folder:Western Animation]]
512* The ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' episode "Terry's Friend Dates A Robot" is about the school's biggest nerd suddenly getting a very attractive girlfriend. [[SpoilerTitle As the episode title already spoiled for you]], she turns out to be a robot that he commissioned from the same company that makes Batman's robotic training dummies. Eventually he gets her reprogrammed to act more like a real girlfriend, which results in her becoming lethally jealous of the new female friends that the nerd gains through his new-found popularity.
513* ''WesternAnimation/BeverlyHillsTeens'': A robot girl is rendered on Chester's computer monitor during the intro--Then in a bright flash, she's right ''outside next to him''.
514* The title characters from ''WesternAnimation/ChallengeOfTheGoBots'' also have gender (Crasher, Small Foot, and Pathfinder being the most prominent female cast members), but with the significant difference that they are ''cyborgs'' (in the BrainInAJar sense) rather than true robots, and so they probably ''do'' have biological gender, at least on a neurological level.
515* ''WesternAnimation/DanVs'': Ilsa, a one off character from "Technology," is a robotic aid to [=CEO=] Barry Ditmer that takes the form of a human woman. She speaks in a robotic cadence and has various technological accessories. Her name is also meaningful, being an AICronym for "Independent Logistics and Security Android."
516* ''WesternAnimation/GreenLanternTheAnimatedSeries'' has Aya, an artificial intelligence that builds herself a robot body (in 2.1 seconds!) when Kilowog tells he she needs a body [[IJustWantToBeSpecial to be a Green Lantern]]. Also counts as SpaceshipGirl.
517* In ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'', the heroes were tasked with tracking down a woman who had allegedly stolen robotics technology from her older male former partner, a self-proclaimed robotics genius. She and her boyfriend are completely unhelpful when they reveal they talked with her partner. In the end, it turns out [[spoiler: no, no, she's human, it's not that. Rather, ''she'' was the genius roboticist, the former partner was a fraud trying to steal her glory, and ''her boyfriend'' was a robot.]]
518%% ** Also, Drakken's Bebes.
519* The [[WesternAnimation/MegaManRubySpears American Mega Man cartoon]] made Roll not only older and more attractive looking, but also a serious ActionGirl, which Mega fails to recognize. In the first episode, she one-shots Fire Man ''with a vacuum!''
520* An American twist on the trope: Jenny in ''WesternAnimation/MyLifeAsATeenageRobot'' is less interested in saving the world than [[IJustWantToBeNormal hanging out with high school kids]], even though she can certainly hold her own in a fight.
521%% * Jinmay of ''WesternAnimation/SuperRobotMonkeyTeamHyperforceGo''.
522* Honorable mention goes to [[spoiler:Sari]] from ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'', a HalfHumanHybrid of Cybertronian and human. Her heritage gives her circuitry under the skin and hands that unfold into blasters, combined with a human digestive system, possibly nervous system and skin, among others. In the beginning of season 3 she receives a self-induced upgrade, going to being more machine than man, fitting the trope more accurately.
523** Many female Transformers also fall under {{fembot}}s.
524** ''Film/TransformersRevengeOfTheFallen'' has [[spoiler:Alice, the hottest Decepticon ever.]]
525%% * ''WesternAnimation/YakkityYak'' has Penelope.
526[[/folder]]
527
528[[folder:Real Life]]
529* Japan, of course, is working on making them a reality [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MY8-sJS0W1I This,]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbFFs4DHWys this,]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7VRRLF0jIQ and this]] are some examples.
530* JSK Robotics is currently building a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3TGMjJLOl8 robot]] that looks a bit like a cross between [[Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion Shinji and Rei]]
531* ELIZA, the parser program designed to fool a Turing Test by rephrasing anything that is said to it as a question, was presented to testers as being a live woman. Its designer was later appalled when some people started hailing this bit of transparent stage trickery as true artificial intelligence.
532* An inventor in Canada has been building [[http://www.projectaiko.com Aiko]], a robot in the design stages that is intended to be capable of everything from household chores to security duties to, yes, "companionship."
533* SVEDKA_GRL, the mascot of a brand of Swedish vodka, has HartmanHips, the MostCommonSuperpower, and is in general hot enough to float over the UncannyValley in a peculiarly alluring manner.
534[[/folder]]
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