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11[[quoteright:300:[[Webcomic/TheySayIWasBornAKingsDaughter https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/just_trust_baba.png]]]]
12
13->'''Number Two:''' You are Number Six.\
14'''Prisoner:''' I am not a number, I am a free man!
15-->-- ''Series/ThePrisoner1967''
16
17When a character has a number as a name, i.e. a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numeronym numeronym]].
18
19Usually this carries dehumanizing implications. This can be for (at least) two overlapping reasons:
20# The character is an ArtificialHuman or robot, whose creators regard it as non-sentient (or at least did when they were handing out names). The number is a serial number or [[SomeCallMeTim shortening thereof]].
21# The character is a prisoner or otherwise an inhabitant of a large bureaucratic institution, which assigns people numbers to keep track of them. (And in some cases, to intentionally dehumanize them.)
22
23For some reason, these implications are usually somewhat lessened when [[MyHeroZero the number in question is "zero"]]. They also don't necessarily apply to spy or superhero {{Code Name}}s that are numbers (like [[Franchise/JamesBond 007]]), unless they become part of a SecretIdentityIdentity. Having a low number (i.e. in the single digits) as a name is generally considered less humiliating than a large one. And Heaven help you if your name is [[FourIsDeath 4]], [[ThirteenIsUnlucky 13]], [[Rule34 34]], [[LOL69 69]], [[Mystical108 108]], [[FourTwentyBlazeIt 420]], [[NumberOfTheBeast 666]], or a combination of them.
24
25ScienceFiction stories, especially {{dystopia}}s, are likely to use this trope to some extent. It's also common for prisoners to have serial numbers instead of names.
26
27Note that several languages have numeronyms (Japanese and Latin being the most likely to be encountered). In this case, the kids will be named in order of birth: literally, "Primus", "Secundus", "Tertius", etc.
28
29Bizarrely, this can actually also serve to ''humanize'' beings that have never had separate identities before. If you have a race of robots or drones that become sentient, they may adopt their numbers as their actual names (à la [[Franchise/StarWars Artoo Deetoo and See Threepio]]).
30
31Compare OneLetterName. See also: NumericalThemeNaming, SevenIsNana, GoroawaseNumber. For replacing an entire area's name with a number, see AirstripOne.
32
33Not to be confused with ''Literature/IAmNumberFour'' or "[[Series/LazyTown We Are Number One]]".
34
35----
36!!Example Subpages:
37
38[[index]]
39* YouAreNumberSix/AnimeAndManga
40* YouAreNumberSix/{{Literature}}
41[[/index]]
42
43!!Other Examples:
44
45[[foldercontrol]]
46
47[[folder:Advertising]]
48* Many companies, particularly insurance or medical services, try to convince you in their advertisements that [[DefiedTrope if you sign up with them, you won't be treated as just a number]].
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Asian Animation]]
52* One character who appears later on in ''Animation/HappyHeroes'' is named "玖", which is a more formal way to write the Chinese character for the number nine.
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Audio Plays]]
56* The android Fourteen in the ''AudioPlay/BlakesSeven'' audio drama "The Turing Test". Avon wonders what exactly happened to the earlier thirteen versions... turns out they were all sacrificed as distractions whenever the research station was raided.
57* ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho''. In "The Butcher of Brisbane", Dr. Sa Yy Findecker is having dissident journalist Ragnar Crezzen [[TestedOnHumans undergo a fatal time travel experiment]] and addresses him as "Prisoner 100742, because that's all you are now." Ironically, he later encounters a dying Crezzen and remembers this number because, "I never forget a statistic."
58[[/folder]]
59
60[[folder:Comic Books]]
61* The character from the adventure strip The Q Bikes (and later the Q Karts and parodied as the Q Shoes in ''ComicBook/{{Viz}}'') from ''ComicBook/TheBeano'' had names but the characters were also identified by numbers Q1, Q2, etc. up to Q6.
62* Partial example, the first two ComicBook/{{Blue Beetle}}s assumed that "Kaji Da" was the scarab's name. During Jaime Reyes's run it's revealed that Kaji Da is in fact its serial number in the Reach language.
63* Four-Girl from ''ComicBook/BoxersAndSaints'' had parents that didn't want her and called her by her birth order rather than giving her a name.
64* The ''ComicBook/CaptainCarrotAndHisAmazingZooCrew'' villain known as the Bunny from Beyond was actually named/numbered RALF-124C4U (in reference to the story of the similar name by Hugo Gernsback, below).
65* Harold Higgins, who was featured in ''Daredevil Comics'', fought crime as the superhero 13.
66* Subverted rather bizarrely in DC by Dr. 13: real name, Dr. Terrence Thirteen. His daughter Traci Thirteen is there too. He was the Ghostbreaker after all.
67* The Beagle Boys in Creator/{{Disney}} comics are all identical and distinguished only by their prison numbers. In one Creator/DonRosa story they discuss the fact that none of them can even remember their real names, and another time Rosa has one of them reminisce how his mother expected to get a bribe to reveal his name to him, as a child.
68* In the ''Magazine/DoctorWhoMagazine'' comic strip, the Thinktwice prison wipes the memories of its inmates, including all the details of their identity. The Doctor finds CorruptCorporateExecutive Majenta Pryce there, where she's known as [=MP8/1/14/4=] or "[=EmPee=]".
69* In Marvel's ''[[ComicBook/GIJoeARealAmericanHeroMarvel G.I. Joe]]'' series, [[PraetorianGuard Crimson Guardsmen]] of the "Fred" series all took the name Fred followed by a Roman numeral, and had plastic surgery so they all looked alike. As the Freds were all infiltrating corporations and politics, this allowed any Fred to replace another should the need arise.
70* 711, a short-lived [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks Golden Age]] character who first appeared in ''Police Comics #1'' (the same book in which [[RubberMan Plastic Man]] debuted). He was unjustly imprisoned and "711" was his prisoner number. He tunneled his way out of prison so he could fight crime every night and return to his cell every morning, no one the wiser.
71* Two-Six of the ''[[Franchise/GreenLantern Green Lantern Corps]]'' comes from a mathematics-based culture where everyone is designated by the their birth order in a given year. Her full name is 2-6-8-1-7-9-5, but is nicknamed Two-Six for short.
72** Upon being inducted into the Indigo Tribe, [[spoiler: Iroque]] forsook her birth name, but says the others can call her Indigo-1 to distinguish her.
73* ''ComicBook/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy'': Uno, Duo and Trey, Rocket Raccoon's sons (although he insists that they're his nephews) in ''ComicBook/MarvelOneHundredthAnniversarySpecial''.
74* ''ComicBook/{{Henchmen}}'': In his first job as a henchman, [[TheProtagonist Gary]] worked for the Head Pin of Crime, which required him and his fellow henchman to [[BadJobWorseUniform dress up as numbered bowling pins]]. Gary was number 8.
75* In Creator/MarvelComics, X-51 is the robotic Machine Man Aaron Stack's original name, but he hates being called that.
76* Also from Marvel, Shatterstar's alternate name is Gaveedra-Seven.
77* [=BI66ER=] from the comic stories of ''Film/TheMatrix''.
78* Robot 23 in ''ComicBook/MegaRoboBros'', the BigBad from Book 1.
79* ''ComicBook/MissileMouse'' has #44, a security robot who partnered with Missile Mouse in "Rescue on [=Tankium3=].
80* ZigZagged in ''ComicBook/{{PS238}}'' -- Julie Finster initially has issues feeling like TheGenericGuy, because she's the 84th person born with the [[FlyingBrick Flight/Invulnerability/Strength/Speed]] power set; she even develops the habit of asking others what their "number" is. She eventually comes to embrace her situation, however, and decides to take "84" as her official superhero name.
81* The main characters from Mike Allred's underrated miniseries ''ComicBook/RedRocket7'' are all clones of [[MessianicArchetype a heroic alien set to return one day]]. They're all numbered 2-7 and named as such.
82* Also from Marvel, Agents of ComicBook/{{SHIELD}} go by code numbers. Sharon Carter is ComicBook/{{Agent 13}}.
83* ''ComicBook/SimonSaysNaziHunter'': Simon has the number "054713" tattooed on his arm from his days as a Nazi prisoner.
84* ComicBook/{{Superboy}} (Conner Kent) was originally designated "S-13" because he was the 13th (and only successful) attempt at cloning Superman.
85* ''ComicBook/TheUmbrellaAcademy'': The seven adopted children who form the titular academy respond to their respective numbers up until they receive real names and proper superhero codenames, respectively. Luther/Spaceboy is Number One, Diego/Kraken is Number Two, Allison/Rumor is Number Three, Klaus/Séance is Number Four, Ben/Horror is Number Six, and Vanya/White Violin is Number Seven. The exception is Number Five, who accidentally get stuck in the future before being given a name, and thus is referred to by number. [[spoiler: At the end of ''Hotel Oblivion'', the leader of the Sparrow Academy introduces himself as Number One.]]
86* ''ComicBook/VForVendetta'': V's name was derived from being an experiment who was in room five, which has the Roman numeral V. Not that the comic's version considered it a name as such.
87* The main characters of ''ComicBook/{{We3}}''. Their real names are Bandit (the dog), Tinker (the cat), and Pirate (the rabbit).
88* ''ComicBook/WeKillMonsters'': Andrew finds the serial number "M87009-3XR" on the remains of the [[BigCreepyCrawlies giant bug]] he, Jake, and Vanessa killed. It clues him in on where the monsters came from.
89* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: The "Flying Saucer Princess" in #110 fled her home planet because she had spent her life always grouped with the other princesses as "Princess #1003" while being forced to never stand out or deviate from the others.
90* ComicBook/{{X 23}} from ''X-Men'' (a.k.a Laura Kinney; however this name is rarely used by her friends and family, and mainly by those attempting to dehumanize her), so named because she was the 23rd attempt in a project to create an OppositeSexClone of Wolverine. Also, Fantomex. His real name is Charlie-Cluster 7, while his official codename is Weapon XIII. Last but not least: Wolverine himself, as he is Weapon X.
91** Note, though, that originally Weapon X was simply a [[XMakesAnythingCool cool-sounding codename]], until Grant Morrison decided that it was part of the much-larger Weapon Plus program, going all the way back to Weapon I in [=WW2=]: Captain America.
92* [[ActionGirl 355]] in ''ComicBook/YTheLastMan''. In addition, [[spoiler: Allison Mann's father mass produces clones of her, each bearing her name and their respective number in sequence. The first one she meets is named "Ayuko Ni", Allison 2 in Japanese]]
93* Genoshan Mutates from ''X-Men'' are only referred to by a number designation. For example when ComicBook/{{Storm}} & Wolfsbane were transformed into Mutates they were known an "Mutate #20" & "Mutate #490"
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Comic Strips]]
97* ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'': When Steve the Tramp is released from prison, he has been referred to as 'No. 2704' for so long he can no longer remember his own name.
98* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'':
99** In the early 1960s, the strip had a character named 5 (full name 555 95472). His sisters were 3 and 4. (Fans of the strip have probably seen these three characters without even knowing it; they are in the dance scene in ''WesternAnimation/ACharlieBrownChristmas''.) 5 said that his father named his kids that way as a reaction to all the numbers (such as the then-new ZIP Code) being put on people in modern life.
100--->'''Lucy:''' This is his way of protesting, huh?\
101'''5:''' No, this is his way of giving in!
102** Charlie Brown's sister Sally meets 5 in one strip and thinks about being married to him.
103--->'''Sally:''' ''[thought balloon]'' Mrs. Sally 95472... ''[out loud]'' I can't see it!
104* ''ComicStrip/TheWizardOfId''. The king asks one of his soldiers what he thinks of being in the army. The soldier complains, "I'm just a number." When the king asks his name, Sir Rodney gives the man's regimental number instead.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Fan Works]]
108* ''Fanfic/BlazBlueAlternativeRemnant'': Just like the canon ''Franchise/BlazBlue'' games, Murakumo Units all have numerical designations as their names. But besides the canon examples of Nu-13, Lambda-11, and Mu-12/[[spoiler:Noel Vermillion]], there's also Kappa-10/[[spoiler:[[WebAnimation/{{RWBY}} Penny Polendina]]]].
109* In ''Fanfic/TheBridge'', before Monster X was a {{Kaiju}}, he was a Xillian soldier called Praetorian Guard 094. His wife was Controller 011 and his parents were Astrological Engineer 4872 and Praetorian Guard 013.
110* ''Fanfic/ACertainDrollHivemind'': The Misaka clones are numbered this way, such as the protagonist, Misaka-11111. When her psychiatrist explained that she needed a name to differentiate herself and fit in with society, she chose... 11111. When that was denied, she chose Mikoto-1. When ''that'' was denied, she chose Misaka Yui. Her psychiatrist [[StealthPun missed the pun]] ("Misaka Yui" can be translated as "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Just Misaka]]") and allowed it.
111-->I was also instructed to select a personal name, for the purposes of paperwork. They rejected my first suggestion, of '11111'. I do not know what to do with it. The Network understands that most people require a personal name to help distinguish them from other people, but surely there are no other Misaka-11111s.\
112I am almost certain that there are no other organisations on Earth which could clone Misaka Mikoto that many times. I would also hope that they could show more originality in their cloning research. There are other Level-5 candidates out there.
113* Mr. 7, the seven-legged giant spider in ''Fanfic/DividedRainbow''.
114* Frieza in ''WebVideo/DragonBallAbridged'' numbers the ''planets'' he conquers (ex. Kanassa became "Frieza Planet 419") as well as his minions.
115* This is played with with the Psyches in ''Fanfic/EmpathTheLuckiestSmurf'', as they are both given actual names as well as designation codes and are alternately referred to as either their real names or their designation codes (Empath Smurf is 1137-K, while Polaris Psyche is 1124-K). Like the Borg from ''Franchise/StarTrek'', the Psyches also identify various species such as the Smurfs by designation codes (in the Smurfs' case, they are Species 0002).
116* The titular character of ''Fanfic/FalloutEquestriaMurkyNumberSeven''.
117* [[TheLancer P-21]] from ''Fanfic/FalloutEquestriaProjectHorizons''. {{Subverted}} in that he ultimately decides to wear his name as a point of pride, and a testament to the fact that he survived the dehumanizing institution that gave it to him.
118* ''Fanfic/TheGreatRedPandaRescue'': Mei, after being KidnappedForExperimentation, is referred to by the scientists who captured her as [=RP1=]. This not only dehumanizes her, but implies that they intend to find the other members of her family that can become red pandas, with Mei only being the first of their involuntary test subjects.
119* In ''Fanfic/HopeForTheHeartless'', the four [[{{Omnipotence}} Invisibles]] are referred to as the first, second, third and fourth Invisible when the narration focuses on their point of view.
120* Patient 4479 in ''WebVideo/TheJokerBlogs'' is referred to only as -- well, Patient 4479. He refuses to or is unable to supply his real name, and the majority of characters would rather call him 4479 than Joker.
121* In ''Fanfic/{{Marionettes}}'', [[spoiler:The Marionettes are referred to with numbers by Cover Story and Gear Shift: Trixie is [=G4T01=], Diamond Tiara is [=G4T03=], Lightning Dust is [=G4T08=], and Cover Story's own programming refers to him as [=G4EA072=].]]
122* In ''FanFic/MasksWithinMasks'' Subject Seven and other experiments like her, such as Twelve the Dratini, were only given numbers as names.
123* In ''FanFic/MyBravePonyStarfleetMagic'', Space Ponies have serial numbers on their jumpsuits instead of cutie marks (the latter being another one of the things [[Creator/DakariKingMykan the author]] didn't get[=/=]like and changed).
124* ''Fanfic/OnceUponADecemberNight'': Unlike in [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012 canon]], the Kraang address April as "Experiment 273."
125* ''Fanfic/OnTrial'': The final prison Cassandra is sent to refers to its prisoners by serial numbers (which are etched onto collars ''locked onto their necks'') as a further means of dehumanization. The only one to not follow this rule is the [[MinionWithAnFInEvil kindly cook and server Madeline]], who averts this trope and calls prisoners by their names.
126* Unlike in the comics (see Comic Books entry above,) ComicBook/{{Superboy}} went by the "name" Subject 36 before he was liberated from CADMUS in the ''Our Own League'' continuity. In the present, calling him this is a BerserkButton.
127* In ''Fanfic/PokemonResetBloodlines'', Dr. Fuji refers to Mewtwo as "Subject #150". A sidestory reveals [[spoiler: it's a numerical designation for the subjects in their cloning experiments, and the previous 149 [[CloneDegeneration did not survive the process]].]]
128* In ''Fanfic/PonyPOVSeries'', during the reign of Queen Cocoon, Changelings were numbered, and only those who prove themselves exceptional in some way earn a name. After Chrysalis defeated Cocoon in battle and took over, she declared this practice stupid and abolished it, granting all the Changelings names.
129* In ''Fanfic/ProjectBluefield'', the [[DimensionalTraveler Zeros]] have a set of numbers followed by a chosen name. Trey, Dreyza, Vespyr, and Kyoku have this taken one further, with a "-R" appended to the number.
130* In ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/20740568?view_full_work=true Project Code 131793]], Stucker and Dr. List's test subjects are given numbered codes, with Stephen being the eponymous number 131793, and Pietro and Wanda being given numbers 1916554 and 2392038.
131* ''FanFic/QueenOfShadows'': It seems that Shadowkhan Queens don't have names (aside from Kagehime, [[MonsterProgenitor the first Queen]]) -- when the Generals speak of past Queens, they always use their number, and even when speaking of or to the Queen that Jade's [[GrandTheftMe replaced]] formally, she's referred to by number as well (98, specifically).
132* ''Fanfic/SpinelsNewBestFriend'': When Spinel introduces herself to [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Twilight Sparkle]], she does the Diamond salute and refers to herself as Spinel Facet-4G2A Cut-3YT.
133[[/folder]]
134
135[[folder:Films — Animation]]
136* ''WesternAnimation/{{Nine}}'' even has [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin nine numbered protagonists]].
137* Similarly to the books it's based off of, in ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheGuardiansTheOwlsOfGaHoole'' owlets captured by The Pures Ones and enslaved by at St. Aegolius' Academy for Orphaned Owls are stripped of their names and assigned numbers for easier tracking of them.
138* In the ''Literature/MayaTheBee'' movie, the antagonist, Buzzlina, continually calls Maya by her number rather than her name. At the end of the movie, after Buzzlina has gotten her comeuppance, her former henchman shows how far she's fallen by referring to her by number.
139* Dr. Zin's {{Mooks}} 425, 426, and 427 in ''WesternAnimation/JonnyQuestVersusTheCyberInsects''. They wear uniforms with numbered tags instead of names. No word on what happened to 1 through 424, but given Zin's tendency to [[YouHaveFailedMe punish the tiniest slipup with death]] it's easy to guess.
140* In ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolfAmazingPleasantGoat'', Super the penguin, upon initially meeting Weslie, decides to nickname him "0803". This is a MythologyGag referencing when the ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf'' TV show originally premiered (August 3rd, 2005, or 8/03/05).
141* ''Anime/PrincessMononoke'': The title character's given name is San (3), since she has two older wolf "brothers".
142* The heroine of ''Anime/SpiritedAway'' is named Chihiro, meaning "a thousand fathoms" in Japanese. Yubaba takes away her name and gives her a new one, Sen, meaning "one thousand."
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
146* ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'': The eponymous protagonist is an amnesiac fallen cyborg warrior who gains a second chance at life as a cyborg girl. She recalls her battle ID was '99', and takes '99' as her symbol when she becomes a Motorball contestant.
147* In ''Film/AustinPowers'', we have Dr. Evil's "NumberTwo man. His name? Number Two.", and TheMole, Number Three.
148** The above is a reference to the Film/JamesBond movies, where members of Blofeld's organization are known by numbers, including Number Two (''Film/{{Thunderball}}'') and Number Eleven (''Film/YouOnlyLiveTwice'').
149* The title character of ''Film/BenHur1959'' is known as "Forty-One" while onboard the Roman galley.
150* The two brothers running the restaurant in ''Film/BigNight'' are Primo and Secondo, Italian for "First" and "Second" respectively.
151* Aaron Cross of ''Film/TheBourneLegacy'' (along with the other agents/test subjects) is known to the researchers monitoring the project as by his number, not his name. He is *quite* put out when he finds out that Dr Shiring only knows him as "Number Five."
152* Zigzagged in ''Film/TheCatFromOuterSpace'', where the title character's name combines words ''and'' numbers. His full name is Zunar-J-5/9 Doric-4-7, but is called "Jake" for most of the film.
153* Alex in ''Film/AClockworkOrange'' is known only as "six, double-five, three, two, one" while in prison.
154* In ''Film/DayOfTheWolves'', the Wolves know each other as a number rather than a name, so that if one is captured he cannot identify the rest.
155* ''Film/TheEliteSquad'' has each of the BOPE recruits being given a number, which is the only way CO Captain Nascimento refers to them for the rest of training ("02, know why you won't be able to do what I'm ordering you?").
156* TheDon in ''Film/TheFingerPoints'' (who is clearly based on UsefulNotes/AlCapone) is referred to only as "Number One" -- even in newspaper headlines.
157* ''Film/FiveDeadlyVenoms'': Downplayed. Each of the title characters is mainly referred to by [[AnimalThemeNaming the name of the venomous animal]] associated with their style of kung fu, but they are also often referred to by the order in which they were taught by the Poison Clan's master - for example, [[CreepyCentipedes Centipede]] was the first student, and is sometimes referred to as Number 1. However, each of them is also given a proper name, and there's also a sixth student who knows [[JackOfAllStats a smattering of each of the styles]], so in addition to his actual name (Yang Tieh) he is sometimes referred to as Number Six.
158* ''Film/Fortress1992'': John Brennick is assigned the number 95763 when he arrives at TheAlcatraz. Leading to the following exchange:
159-->'''Prison director Poe:''' Sit down, 95763.\
160'''John:''' My name is Brennick.\
161'''Prison director Poe:''' ''Of course it is.''
162* The three thugs who come to free [[Music/IceCube "Desolation" Williams]] in ''Film/GhostsOfMars'' are introduced by him as Uno, Dos, and Tres. It's not clear if he's just trying to be funny, but they're never referred to by any other name, even Uno, who's revealed to be his brother.
163* In ''Film/GoodBoy'', all dogs on the dog star Sirius 7 are identified by a number. The protagonist's pet, Hubble, is known as Canid 3142.
164* ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy2014'': Rhomann Dey refers to Rocket by the serial number used by the scientists who created him, culminating in the following exchange:
165** Played for drama in ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol3'' where said creator makes a point of only ever calling Rocket by his serial number.
166--> '''High Evolutionary:''' You! You thought you could escape me? No! You think you have some worth in and of yourself without me? No! You're an abomination! Nothing more than a step on my path, you freakish little monster! How dare you think you are any more, '''89P13'''?\
167'''Rocket:''' The name's Rocket. Rocket...''Raccoon''.
168* In the first ''Film/{{Hitman}}'' film, all the assassins are trained from a very young age as such, stripped of their names and left with numbers.
169** Somewhat more elaborate example in the remake, which, in addition to the original numbered assassins -- complete with the scene of 47 proclaiming his "name" to be such - also includes Katia Van Dees... Who's name is actually [[spoiler: Quatre-Vingt-Dix, french for Ninety. That's 43 versions better then the titular character.]]
170* ''Film/IAmNumberFour'' plays with this. It's averted in that the numbers are not actually used for names, but as target designations. However, it's deliberately invoked in Number Six's case, who identifies herself as "Number Six" (except one snarky comment to Sam that her name is "Jane Doe") and refers to John only by his number.
171* In ''Film/InvasionOfAstroMonster'', the aliens from Planet X refer to King Ghidorah as Monster Zero, Franchise/{{Godzilla}} as Monster Zero One, and Rodan as Monster Zero Two.
172-->Everything is numbered here.
173** This carries over into ''Film/GodzillaKingOfTheMonsters2019'', where the Monarch organization refer to a mysterious MonsterInTheIce as Monster Zero, since they know nothing else about him. Naturally, he turns out to be that movie's incarnation of Ghidorah.
174* ''Film/TheInvitation2022'': Mr. Field the butler calls all the maids by numbers instead of names. It quickly is shown to be a sign of how little they mean to him, as he sends them off to their deaths.
175* In ''Film/TheIsland2005'', the clones have a sort of mix of this. A clone's first name is the last name of his or her sponsor, which is followed by a number and code for a letter (the protagonist is "Lincoln 6 Echo") to denote what "series" of clones they're from. Notably, the antagonist keeps calling the protagonist "Six Echo," instead of "Lincoln".
176* The musical comedy ''Film/JustImagine'' (from way, ''way'' back in 1930) takes place in the then-future year of 1980, where everyone has numbers instead of names. (The male protagonist is named J-21, the lead female LN-18, and numerous other examples.)
177* In ''Film/TheLastWitchHunter'', all [[LegacyCharacter Dolans]] are known only as "[number]th Dolan".
178* ''Film/TheLifeAndDeathOf9413AHollywoodExtra'' is an experimental short film about a guy who goes to Hollywood to be an actor, and has a number stamped on his forehead by a studio executive. He meets an actress named 13 and an actor named 15. When 15 hits it big in the movies, his number is erased, replaced by a drawing of a star.
179* Done in a slightly cryptic way in ''Franchise/TheMatrix'' series, with Neo (identified as "the one" and also [[SignificantAnagram an anagram]] of "one"), Trinity, and Cypher (one somewhat esoteric definition of cypher (also spelled "cipher") is the digit zero; it comes from the Arabic word "sifr", which means, well, zero. Technically "zero" also comes from "sifr", but that's a whole other matter).
180** In ''Anime/TheAnimatrix'', it is mentioned that the machines named their city "01".
181* Worker 11811 (or Georgy), who Freder "trades lives" with in ''Film/{{Metropolis}}''.
182* In ''Film/TheMothmanProphecies'', Creator/LauraLinney's character has a [[DreamingOfThingsToCome mysterious dream]] about floating in water and hearing the words "Wake up, number 37." Later on in the movie, [[spoiler: she falls into the freezing Ohio River when the Silver Bridge collapses. She is narrowly rescued, and later learns that 36 people died in the disaster. She would have been the 37th.]]
183* The comedy ''Film/{{Multiplicity}}'' involves a construction contractor getting a scientist to make him a clone to help out with work. The clone has a "2" tattooed behind his ear and is generally referred to either as "Doug #2", "#2", or just "2". Later, Doug makes "Doug #3" to help out around the house and keep "Doug #2" company. Then "Doug #2" and "Doug #3" make "Doug #4" to do small chores. They eventually get used to being called by their numbers.
184* Jack Harper from ''Film/{{Oblivion 2013}}'' is Drone Tech 49. [[spoiler:This becomes pretty important [[TomatoInTheMirror as]] [[MesACrowd the]] [[HeroStoleMyBike story]] goes.]]
185* Toward the end of ''Film/ThePresidentsAnalyst'', the title character is abducted by [[spoiler: the Phone Company]] who intend to extract information from him to help them secure legislation to [[spoiler: implant microcommunicators in everyone's head]] and substitute numbers for names as the only legal identification for efficiency.
186* In ''Film/{{Pride|2014}}'', this trope is subverted, as it isn't an identifier -- when Johnathan Blake describes his diagnosis with HIV in the early days of its discovery, doctors assigned names to diagnosed patients, before they stopped when the numbers got too large. "I'm Number 2".
187* The names of the three sons of daimyo Hidetora Ichimonji in Akira Kurosawa's ''Film/{{Ran}}'' -- Taro, Jiro, and Saburo -- actually mean "first boy", "second boy" and "third boy" and are popular Japanese first names.
188* One Two from ''Film/RocknRolla''.
189* Seven Jones from ''Film/SevenWaysFromSundown''. He says his father wasn't much on naming and just called his kids One, Two, etc. Their mother added extra words so they would have 'full' names. Seven's full name is Seven Ways From Sundown Jones.
190* The robots in ''Film/ShortCircuit'' were all named after numbers. Somehow, Number Five acquired [[DoAndroidsDream sentience]], and changed his name to Johnny Five.
191* In the 1960 Italian sci-fi ''Space-Men'' (a.k.a. ''Assignment: Outer Space''), the astronauts all have names but refer to each other using the alphanumeric codes on their spacesuits. [[TagalongReporter Ray Peterson]] aka [=IZ41=] saves the life of Y13 from a passing meteor and is surprised to find afterwards that [[SamusIsAGirl Y13 Is A Girl]] named Lucy.
192* The superhero "Eight" in ''Film/TheSpecials'' is a HiveMind controlling eight human bodies.
193* The brothers in ''Film/{{Stardust}}'' who kill each other off for the throne and then hang around as ghosts to see who gets it were apparently bred expressly for this purpose, so that whoever should inherit should have earned it by cunning and strength. They were therefore named impersonally, with Latin names designating their birth order, Primus to Septimus.
194** Their sister is named Una, but nobody pays her much heed, as only a male can inherit the throne.
195* B4, progenitor to Data from ''Film/StarTrekNemesis''. This is, of course, a play on the fact that B4, being a prototype, came "before" Data and is, in fact, lampshaded by Picard in the offhand comment: "Dr. Soong's penchant for whimsical names seems to have no end."
196* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
197** All the droids go by their model numbers. The funny thing about the droids is that they grow more 'human' as time goes on, so the number becomes just like a personal name; in fact, ExpandedUniverse convention spells the numbers out phonetically in dialogue, not necessarily using the spellings of the individual digits. R2-D2 and C-3PO are normally referred to as Artoo and Threepio.
198*** Averted in some ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' works in that droids would be referred to by names instead of by their official designations. In the [[Literature/XWingSeries X-Wing]] series of novels, most of the R series astromech droids in Rogue Squadron are given names by their pilots. For example, Corran Horn's R2-D2 unit was referred to as Whistler, and the R5-D2 that Wedge Antilles used was named Mynock until Wedge had Mynock's memory wiped and systems upgraded. This resulted in the droid's designation changing to R5-G8, which Wedge shortened to Gate. Gavin Darklighter initially called his R2 unit Jawaswag before renaming him Catch.
199** Stormtroopers. "TK-421, why aren't you at your post? TK-421, do you copy?" In the novelization, the trooper's number is Film/THX1138.
200** Fighter pilots are also given numbers, which they are supposed to (but don't always) use on the communications broadcasts, to preserve their identity in case their encryption gets broken and the enemy intercepts their transmissions. This is seen mostly in the Literature/XWingSeries and other series that feature fighter pilots, but shows up in other places as well, including the movies.
201--->"Red five, standing by."
202** Clones were given their production numbers as their names, resulting in a series of letters and numbers as their "official" names. The Jedi were more understanding, and most of them allowed their clone charges to have nicknames, both for the ease of identification and for individuality. Sadly, after ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' these were all but obliterated.
203** In ''Film/TheForceAwakens'', the First Order's Stormtroopers were taken from their families as infants and known only by number designations. The one who defects and aids the heroes was only known as "FN-2187", until Poe Dameron (disgusted by the fact he wasn't given a proper name) dubs him "Finn".
204** The stormtrooper who gets Jedi mind-tricked is played by Creator/DanielCraig. He is "FN-1824", but fans have dubbed him [[Film/JamesBond JB-007]].
205** The stormtrooper with the stun baton who goes after Finn yeling "TRAITOR!" has been turned into a MemeticBadass by the name of TR-8R. His actual name is FN-2199, though he's also called Nines.
206* In ''Film/ThorRagnarok'', the higher ups on Sakaar refer to Valkyrie as Scrapper 142.
207* ''Film/THX1138'': Everybody in the distant future has a license plate name, as the film is set in world where humans exist as indentured workers.
208* ''Film/TriassicWorld'': The dinosaurs that the scientists created are all identified by serial numbers. The dinosaur that the protagonists deal with the most is called G-32.
209* The jurors in ''Film/TwelveAngryMen'' are referred to only by juror number (the film ends with two jurors introducing themselves to each other, but this was not in the original play).
210* In ''Film/Ultraviolet2006'', Violet rescues a young boy from the clutches of the BigBad, who is believed to be the boy's father. When Violet asks the boy what his name is, he responds by holding up six fingers. Later on, the BigBad reveals to Violet why Six is known as such: [[spoiler:Six is not his son, but his clone; specifically, number six in a series of eight.]]
211* The title character of ''Film/VForVendetta'' (it's a Roman numeral).
212-->"Then I saw him--the Man from Room Five."
213* A variant occurs in the beginning of ''Film/{{Wedlock}}'', where all the prisoners are assigned colors as identification, and have to use them instead of their own names.
214* ''Film/XMenFilmSeries''
215** In ''Film/X2XMenUnited'', General Stryker had his son Jason lobotomized after lashing out against him and his wife. Since then, the General simply refers to him as "Mutant 143". When Professor X expresses his shock over it, asking why he'd do this to his own son, Stryker simply answers with: "No, Charles. [[IHaveNoSon My son is dead.]] Just like the rest of you."
216** Weapon XI[[spoiler:/Deadpool]] in ''Film/XMenOriginsWolverine''.
217** In ''Film/XMenFirstClass'', Erik Lehnsherr outs himself as a Holocaust survivor to some Nazis he was amicably chatting with (and planning to kill). When they asked for the names of his parents, being from the same town, he answered that they "had no names -- they were stolen from them" before showing his own concentration camp number. Violence ensues.
218* Sanjuro from ''Film/{{Yojimbo}}'' gives himself a number-name due to the fact that "I'm about 36 (san-3, ju-10 ro[ku]-6) years old." [[LineOfSightName His other name is due to the grove of mulberry trees he happens to be looking at.]] Yay, sericulture.
219* In ''Film/{{Zombieland}}'', the main characters all go by the names of cities, however in his flashback scene, Columbus refers to his neighbor only by her apartment number, 406.
220[[/folder]]
221
222[[folder:Jokes]]
223* The difference between a large college and a small college is that at a large college, the administration says "Screw you, Mr. #7389", while at a small college, the administration says "Screw you, Joe."
224* A young boy was helping a farmer with some newborn pigs and the boy asked "What name should we give it?" The farmer answered "None, never name something that you might need to kill later. Now back to work, kid #3654!"
225[[/folder]]
226
227[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
228* [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] in ''Series/The100'': Clarke is initially introduced as "Prisoner 319", but her real name is revealed minutes later and is used to refer to her from that point forward.
229* In an episode of ''Series/TheAdventuresOfSuperman'', the cast meets an exiled Martian whose species uses numbers for names; this one's number is Zero Zero Zero Minus One. They call him "Mr. Zero" for short.
230* In Season 2 of ''Series/AlteredCarbon'', Poe, the avatar of a hotel's ArtificialIntelligence seeks help from a WeirdTradeUnion of unemployed archaeological AI's who are named after the dig sites they were designed to catalogue. Poe befriends "Dig 301", though he calls her "Ms. Dig" and she adopts the name of [[Creator/EdgarAllanPoe Annabel Lee]] at the end of the series.
231* ''Series/{{Arrow}}'': During Oliver Queen's stint in prison after confessing to being the Green Arrow, the guards refer to him exclusively as "Inmate 4587".
232* In a particularly scarring episode of ''Series/AreYouAfraidOfTheDark'' a witch steals the faces of girls to stay young and beautiful. After she does, and leaves the girls with [[TheBlank horrifying blank faces]], they're assigned numbers and forced to work for her. [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything Any rather queasy parallels to human trafficking]] may or may not have been intended.
233* ''Series/Batwoman2019'': Ryan Wilder gives a speech to Luke and Mary about how her life has been defined by statistics; from mortality rates to her prisoner number. Unlike the dehumanizing effect normally associated with the trope, Ryan's speech is meant to show why she feels she's worthy of the Batsuit.
234* In Season 4 of ''Series/BlakesSeven'', the Terran Federation has spread its empire due to GovernmentDrugEnforcement. In "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS4E12Warlord Warlord]]", a secret resistance video shows Federation citizens with letters and numerals stamped on their foreheads, moving listlessly up and down elevators while a soothing voice tells them, "[[CannedOrdersOverLoudspeaker You are cared for. You are loved]]."
235* The Cylons from ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'', especially Six. Most of the others were originally introduced as if they were human, giving them a name before their model number was revealed, and are often referred to collectively as "Sharons", "Leobens" etc. whereas Sixes are "Sixes" (and are the only model that's used more than one name for various copies: Shelly, Gina, Natalie, Lida, Sonja). [[WordOfGod Ronald D. Moore]] has confirmed the name "Number Six" as another nod to ''Series/{{The Prisoner|1967}}''. One version of Six is nicknamed "Caprica-Six" or "Caprica" by other Cylons, however -- she was the ''No. Six'' that went to ''Caprica'' to lay the groundwork of the destruction of the Colonies. Thus, "Caprica-Six".
236** On the subject of Cylons and Caprica, one wonders whether [[Series/{{Caprica}} Daniel Graystone]] would continue to call the robot U-87 if he knew that Zoe was actually in there.
237* Six [=LeMeure=] from ''Series/{{Blossom}}''. According to her parents, that was [[ValuesDissonance how many beers it took to conceive her]].
238* In ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'', the Initiative refer to Spike as "Hostile 17".
239* Played for laughs in ''Series/ElChapulinColorado'', in an episode he goes to help a jail where all the prisoners are known by a number, and we focus on "the 24", but aside from being know only by their number, he actually have an amicable relation with the jailer, to the point that he actually leaves the cell door unlocked (it probably has to do with the fact that he is the only prisoner that hasn't escaped yet). It's implied this is the same with all prisoner, as Chapulín mentions a "13" (which they nicknamed the "14").
240* Subverted in ''Series/ChoudenshiBioman'', in which while each of the Biomen has their own names, their codenames are represented by their color and number in the roll call: Red 1 (Shiro), Green 2 (Shingo), Blue 3 (Ryuta), Yellow 4 (Mika, then Jun) and Pink 5 (Hikaru).
241* If you believe the theory that John Drake is [[Series/ThePrisoner1967 Number Six]], the famous theme song for ''Series/DangerMan''/''Secret Agent'' becomes either HilariousInHindsight or HarsherInHindsight:
242-->They've given you a number\
243And taken away your name.
244* In ''Series/DarkAngel'', all of the transgenics have designations, except Joshua (the first) and his brother Isaac.
245** The first part of the designation denotes their series, the second part denotes the last three digits of their number in the series. Max is X5-452, and her twin Sam is X5-453. Zack is X5-599. Alec is X5-494, and his twin Ben is X5-493. And so on. The full number is on [[ScannableMan the barcodes on the backs of their necks]].
246* In ''Series/DarkMatter2015'', the amnesiac crew of the ''Raza'' adopt numbers One through Six in the pilot episode as names as a way of identifying themselves/each other, based on the order they woke up from stasis. Even after learning their given names at the end of the pilot, they choose to stick with the numbers to [[AmnesiacDissonance dissociate from their pasts]], since [[spoiler:those pasts are as hardened criminals wanted for crimes like murder, assault, piracy and kidnapping, and they [[ThatManIsDead don't want to be those people]] anymore]]. With the exception of Five, the MysteriousWaif whose reason for being among them is unclear. Unlike the five adults, she has no profile in the ship's database and doesn't even learn her former name and whether or not she has any [[spoiler:criminal past]] until later. [[spoiler:She does, technically, but merely as an orphaned truant and pickpocket who [[LittleStowaway stowed away]], making her the most innocent member of the crew]].
247* On ''Series/TheDatingGame'', a contestant's potential choices would be referred to as "Bachelor #__" rather than by name.
248* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
249** In-universe it has been established that the Doctor's nickname in the academy on Gallifrey (not his ''name;'' his name is ''secret'') was "Theta Sigma", which isn't actually numbers but carries a similar tone.
250** In the fandom, of course, it is customary to distinguish the different regenerations of the Doctor by simply referring to them by number. Creator/DavidTennant's Doctor is "Ten", for example. And not just the fandom:
251--->'''Clara:''' Okay, so you're number Eleven. So...\
252'''The Doctor:''' Ha. Are we forgetting Captain Grumpy? Eh? I didn't call myself the Doctor during the Time War but it was still a regeneration.\
253'''Clara:''' Okay, so you're number Twelve.\
254'''The Doctor:''' Well, Number Ten once regenerated and kept the same face.
255** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E6TheArk "The Ark"]], the Monoids refer to each other this way.
256** Also, although he is a robot and it counts as a PunnyName, K-9.
257** Another example is the Ood, which have no names but are referred to by a numerical designation such as "Ood 1-alpha-1".
258** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E1TheEleventhHour "The Eleventh Hour"]] features a [[spoiler:Prisoner Zero. It is ''not'' an example of MyHeroZero.]]
259* The DRD 1812 in the science fiction series ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' is a subversion. The [=DRDs=] in general have no names or independent identities, so anything that sets them apart actually serves to humanize them. 1812 is named for Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture", which it sometimes plays, and it is further identified by its unique red, white, and blue paint job.
260* ''Series/GeneralAndI'': The owner of Jiao Yan Casino is always called "Lady Thirteen". Her real name isn't revealed.
261* Most of the agents from ''Series/GetSmart'', including "Agent 99" who otherwise has NoNameGiven. Maxwell Smart's number is 86. The choice of numbers is an intentional hint that, though Max outranks 99, she is the more competent agent.[[note]]86 is an old lunch-counter slang code for "don't serve this customer", among [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/86_%28number%29 other things]], so it may be a MeaningfulName that refers to how destructive Max is.[[/note]] There's also the perpetually unlucky 13 who is never given a name.
262** According to the show's creators, 99 was originally supposed to be "Agent 69", but they [[LOL69 couldn't get it past the censors]].
263** In "Leadside", the Chief, 99 and 86 are trying to organise a dragnet of CONTROL agents across several highways which are also numbered. HilarityEnsues as everyone gets the numbers all mixed up.
264* Dr. Yang of ''Series/GreysAnatomy'' generally refers to her interns by number.
265* ''Series/TheHandmaidsTale'': At their trial [[spoiler:Ofglen and her female lover]] are referred to by a string of numbers preceded by their class.
266* ''Series/{{Hanna}}'': In Season 1, the Utrax girls are referred to (and refer to themselves) by number rather than name. Season 2 sees them get names as part of their socialization training.
267* "Thirteen" from ''Series/{{House}}'' is actually named Remy Hadley, but during House's intern selection process, she was assigned the number thirteen, and it just stuck.
268** Even her boyfriend calls her "Thirteen", though, to be fair, she calls him "Foreman." And at one point, the two of them are even called "[[PortmanteauCoupleName Foreteen.]]"
269** Heck, in one episode she identifies ''herself'' as Thirteen to a coworker (who likely only knew her by that name).
270* ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk1977'': While incarcerated by corrupt officers for vagrancy in "[[Recap/TheIncredibleHulk1977S3E4TheSlam The Slam]]," Dr. David Banner is addressed only by his prisoner number, 1124.
271* The protagonist of ''Series/KyleXY'' spent sixteen years or so of his life as Subject 781227.
272* The title character of ''Series/Loki2021'' is labelled as Variant L1130, though is only referred to as such in TVA files. Hunters for the TVA get a letter-number designation (e.g., B-15 or C-20) but can acquire/choose a name if they move up in rank as shown with Judge Ravonna Renslayer who was once called A-23.
273* ''Series/LoveAndDestiny'': Shi San's name means "Thirteen".
274* In an episode of ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'', Malcolm's new teacher addresses all the students in the gifted class by a number corresponding to their rank according to grades. It works well enough that one of them even forgets his real name.
275* On ''Series/MarriedWithChildren'' the Bundys briefly take care of a young relation named Seven. (So named because, according to his father, "we've had one, two, three, four, five, seven kids.")
276* In ''Series/NewAmsterdam2008'', John has stopped naming his dogs [[ReallySevenHundredYearsOld long ago]]. His current dog is named Thirty-Six.
277* ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'': In "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S3E7TheCamp The Camp]]", the human slaves in the concentration camp are identified by serial numbers.
278* ''Series/TheOutpost'':
279** The members of The Three (the trio of {{God Emperor}}s who rule the [[TheTheocracy Prime Order]]) are only ever referred to as One, Two, and Three.
280** 313 has no name at first, only this. Later, after turning to the good guys' side, Wren suggests "Marvyn" as a name for him. He accepts this.
281* A common theme in ''Series/{{The Prisoner|1967}}'', and TropeNamer. Made more interesting in that [[spoiler:the creator once revealed that the true identity of "Number One" is revealed in the opening narration, but that it wasn't his fault if people put the comma in the wrong place...]]
282** "Who is Number One?" [[spoiler:"You are, Number Six."]] See how it works?
283** Given a ShoutOut in the Prisoner-esque ''Series/NowhereMan'' when Veil infiltrates a paranoid militia and is renamed Number Six.
284* Dillon of ''Series/PowerRangersRPM'' is still called "D44" by Venjix and his minions. To shed some light, Dillion had lost his memories after being one of several test subjects [[EpilepticTrees (at least 44 times 4 if the D is any indication)]] in a Venjix project to implant his tech inside humans.
285* Kryten [=2X4B=] [=523P=] in ''Series/RedDwarf''. He thinks [=2X4B=] is a jerky middle name, but it's not as bad as 2''Q''[=4B=].
286* In ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'', George suggested the name "Seven" for a baby. A couple in the episode ended up using it.
287* The Fox Reality original series ''Series/{{Solitary}}'' starts this way...
288-->'''VAL:''' What is your name?\
289'''You:''' This Troper.\
290'''VAL:''' That is incorrect. The number on your pod is now your name. What is your name?\
291'''You:''' My name is Number Six.
292* An episode of ''Series/SpaceCases'' had a prisoner switching her place with a female "crew" member. In the prison, she was only addressed as [[Theatre/LesMiserables "Prisoner 24601".]]
293* Players in ''Series/SquidGame'' are assigned a number at the beginning of the games in accordance with when they signed up and are identified as such in announcements and on their uniforms.
294* The replicator "Fifth" from ''Series/StargateSG1'', as well as the other human-form replicators.
295* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
296** ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'': Number One from the pilot episode "[[Recap/StarTrekS1E0TheCage The Cage]]" and reused footage in the two-parter "[[Recap/StarTrekS1E11TheMenageriePartI The]] [[Recap/StarTrekS1E12TheMenageriePartII Menagerie]]". One assumes she does have a name, though, but is so identified with her role that no one thinks of her otherwise. According to a {{novelization}}, her name is [[spoiler:actually Number One, due to being from a planet where everyone is genetically engineered]].
297--->'''Captain Pike:''' I can't get used to having a woman on the bridge. No offense, Lieutenant. You're different, of course.
298** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': The Borg drone Hugh from "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS5E23IBorg I Borg]]" was originally known as Third of Five before the ''Enterprise'' crew renamed him.
299** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'':
300*** Seven of Nine's birth name (before she was assimilated as a child) was Annika Hansen. When she was later freed from the Collective by Captain Janeway, the latter suggested replacing her Borg designation (Seven of Nine, Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix Zero One) with her human name. Seven of Nine refuses, as she's not happy about "becoming human" in the first place, so they compromise on "Seven of Nine." An interesting example of someone asserting their individuality via this trope (although you could say Seven was deliberately "[[{{Pun}} dehumanizing]]" herself). The name was commonly further shortened as simply "Seven."
301*** Throughout the series, there are passing references made to the designation of other Borg (usually by the Borg Queen).
302*** The Borg also designate alien ''species'' by code numbers (e.g. humans are Species 5618). Notably, a major hostile alien race in ''Voyager'' is only ever called "Species 8472" in-show, although in the non-canon ExpandedUniverse, they became the Undine.
303*** PlayedForLaughs in the episode "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS4E19TheOmegaDirective The Omega Directive]]", when Seven of Nine is put in charge of a project and assigns each member of the group a Borg-style designation to "improve efficiency". When Six of Ten (a.k.a. Harry Kim) complains, Seven "demotes" him to Two of Ten.
304** ''Series/StarTrekPicard'': Being an ObstructiveBureaucrat, the Romulan Free State assigns numerical designations to every employee and patient at the Romulan Reclamation Site, such as Patient 8923 stroke 3 (the "Nameless" Borg drone who undergoes the reclamation procedure) and Employee badge 74983 stroke 2 (Dr. Soji Asha).
305* ''Series/TheStrainTVSeries'': [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain Eichhorst]] rarely addresses Holocaust-survivor Setrakian by name, preferring to call him by his tattooed number, "A230385".
306* Eleven from ''Series/StrangerThings'' was raised in a secret government facility as test subject number 11, which is even tattooed on her arm.
307* ''Series/TenMilesOfPeachBlossoms'': Mo Yuan's disciples refer to each other by the order in which they became his disciples. Bai Qian is the seventeenth disciple, so they call her "Seventeenth". Ling Yu is almost always called "Ninth", and Die Feng, the most senior disciple, is always called "Senior".
308* In one episode of ''Series/ThisIsWonderland'', a mentally unstable woman claims a man, who is an agent of the Catholic Church, kidnaps her every week. She also claims this nefarious man has no name and uses a Roman numeral for identification.
309* In ''Timeslip'', Simon discovers that his future self is known only as "Controller 2957". The others who work for the technocracy, mostly clones, also are known only by numbers.
310* ''Series/TorchwoodChildrenOfEarth'': The 456, named by humans for the radio wavelength they used.
311* The ''Franchise/UltraSeries''
312** Series/{{Ultraseven}} earned his name because Ultra Garrison considered him their seventh member (all of other other members were referred as Ultra #, like Ultra-1 for Commander Kiriyama)... Supposedly; there was a line explaining this in the script - and it's treated as canon - but it got cut during editing, so it comes out of nowhere when he's called such in the second episode.[[note]]The actual source is apparently something writer Tetsuo Kinjo came up with for a different show, along the lines of a group of seven ape-men adventurers. It sounded better than "Ultra Eye" or "Redman" (working title and character name) so they used it for the upcoming Ultra show instead.[[/note]] Throughout the franchise, "Seven" is treated as a nickname among those familiar with him. Prior to coming to Earth, his name among the Ultras was "(Stationary Observer) Number 340".
313*** Also Seven's son is named Franchise/UltramanZero. Why Zero, and not six or eight? RuleOfCool!
314** Played straight in a very positive light in ''Series/UltramanTaro''. It forms the intro line to Taro's theme!
315--->"TARO! ULTRAMAN NUMBER SIX!"
316*** What makes this instance a little clever, is that in the lore of the series, Taro is Seven's cousin!
317* ''Series/TheUmbrellaAcademy2019'':
318** Sir Reginald Hargreeves named the seven children he adopted to make the Umbrella Academy after numbers. It wasn't until a few years after they were born that their robot mother Grace gave them actual names. Luther is Number One, Diego is Number Two, Allison is Number Three, Klaus is Number Four, Ben is Number Six, and Viktor (né Vanya) is Number Seven. [[AdaptationInducedPlotHole Unlike the comics, Number Five disappeared after they were named]], yet he still only goes by his number for unknown reasons.
319** [[spoiler:In Season 3, the Umbrellas arrive in an alternate universe in which Reginald adopted a different group of seven children [[AlternateSelf (sans Ben)]] to form The Sparrow Academy. Marcus is Number One, Ben is Number Two, Fei is Number Three, Alphonso is Number Four, Sloane is Number Five, Jayme is Number Six, and Christopher is Number Seven.]]
320* In ''Series/TheWestWing'', Will gives the speech writing interns (three of whom are named Lauren) numbered jerseys to help identify them.
321* ''Series/TheXFiles'': The episode "[[Recap/TheXFilesS01E11Eve Eve]]" features a series of clones of the same woman, all denoting themselves as Eve # according to the order they were cloned. Eve 6 of this episode mentions biting a guard in the eye. Due to this, one of the band members of Music/EveSix decided to use that as their band name.
322[[/folder]]
323
324[[folder:Music]]
325* Many pieces of ClassicalMusic have numbers as titles. If a composition doesn't have words or a story attached to it, the most convenient way to keep it straight from the others is the order in which it was premiered, so we get pieces like "Symphony no. 5 in C minor" or "String Quartet no. 14." Composers may also give their works "opus numbers" to identify the order in which they were written or published. If the composer neglects to do this, later musicologists may catalog and number their works for them. For instance, [[Music/WolfgangAmadeusMozart Mozart's]] compositions were given chronological numbers by Ludwig von Köchel, so you'll see his pieces identified like "Requiem, K. 626."
326* At least three albums are named after their catalog numbers:
327** Music/PeterPaulAndMary's ''Album 1700''.
328** [[Music/TheKinks Dave Davies]]' ''[=AFL1-3603=]''.
329** Music/{{Yes}}' ''90125''.
330* Possibly alluded to by Music/{{Adele}}, for her theme for ''Film/{{Skyfall}}'':
331-->''You may have my number, you can take my name, but you will never have my heart.''
332* Music/AliceCooper's "Clones". (''"6 is having problems adjusting to his clone status..."'')
333* Music/EmilieAutumn, "One Foot in Front of the Other":
334-->''I used to have a home, now I don't even have a name. I'm nothing but a number. Here we are all the same.''
335* "You Are Number Six" by the mathcore/technical-metal band Behold...The Arctopus.
336* The girls in the video for Music/TheBirthdayMassacre's "[[SurrealMusicVideo Looking Glass]]" all wear masks with numbers on them. No names are ever given. The protagonist of the video is Number Six, however.
337* The band Music/{{Chicago}} tend to number their albums rather than name them, for example: ''Chicago X'', ''Chicago XIV'', ''Twenty 1''.
338* The eponymous "Thirteen", first recorded by Music/{{Danzig}}, then covered by Music/JohnnyCash.
339* The song “At My Job” by Music/{{Dead Kennedys}}: “Time card says that your name’s Joe / But we’ll call you 6-3-0”
340* "10538 Overture" by the Music/ElectricLightOrchestra is about an escaped prisoner who is referred to only by his number: "Did you see the man, was it 10538?"
341* In Music/{{Genesis|Band}}'s ''Music/TheLambLiesDownOnBroadway'', the song, "The Grand Parade of Lifeless Packaging" quotes:
342-->''Everyone's a sales representative\
343Wearing slogans in their shrine\
344Dishing out failsafe superlative\
345'''Brother John is number nine'''''
346* Music/TheHollies released an album called ''Five Three One Seven Seven Zero Four''. Try it on a calculator and turn it upside down.
347* Music/IronMaiden's "The Prisoner", which even has the first quote on this page as the intro.
348* "Down in the Park" by Music/GaryNuman and the Tubeway Army has these lyrics:
349-->''Down in the park where the machmen meet\
350The machines are playing kill-by-numbers\
351Down in the park with a friend called "Five"''
352* The Music/{{Powerman 5000}} song "Son of X-51" is about a robot who wants a name, not just an identification number. Its designation is the song's title.
353* "Secret Agent Man" by Johnny Rivers, which served as the theme song for ''Series/DangerMan'' (the predecessor to the show ''The Prisoner'').
354-->''They've given you a number and taken away your name.''
355* Music/BobSeger angrily rails against this in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1FRvwJP1pk "Feel Like a Number"]].
356* The members of the band Music/{{Slipknot}} chose the single-digit numbers zero through eight as their stage names.
357* Music/TheyMightBeGiants' song "Albany/The Egg", gently making fun of the titular venue's futuristic design, includes the line "I am a number, not a man."
358* Two of the best-known songs by reggae band Toots & The Maytals are "54-46 (That's My Number)" and its sequel "54-46 Was My Number". Both are autobiographical songs based on singer Fred "Toots" Hibbert's imprisonment for marijuana possession.
359* Music/{{Vocaloid}}: The Character Vocal series uses numbers to designate which voice banks were released when. Music/HatsuneMiku is [=CV01=], Kagamine Rin/Len are collectively [=CV02=], and Megurine Luka is [=CV03=].
360* Music/TheWho's song "905".
361[[/folder]]
362
363[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
364* [[Wrestling/SeanWaltman Syxx]] was the sixth man to join the Wrestling/{{n|ewWorldorder}}Wo on Wrestling/WCWMondayNitro.
365* Back in the territory days, it was not uncommon for the members of masked tag teams like the Cruel Connection, the Shadows, the Assassins or the Thunderfoots to be named (tag team name) #1 and #2.
366* There was once TagTeamTwins called the Clones, whose names were "237" and "238".
367* Wrestling/TheDarkOrder has numbered members, with two referred to mainly or exclusively by numbers and a third occasionally referenced in this way. 10 (Preston Vance), 5 (Alan Angels) fall in the first category. The young son of late leader [[Wrestling/LukeHarper Brodie Lee]][[labelnote:*]]While he's made appearances with the stable, he isn't physically involved in matches yet, seeing that he was only 8 years old at his father's passing in late December 2020. Nonetheless, he's signed to an official AEW contract.[[/labelnote]], now the stable's titular leader, is still referred to sometimes as –1 (or spelled out as "Negative One"), but is now usually called Mr. Brodie Lee Jr.
368[[/folder]]
369
370[[folder:Radio]]
371* ''Radio/DimensionX'': In "[[Recap/DimensionX24HelloTomorrow Hello Tomorrow]]", specimen [=XJ12=] is a {{Mutant|s}} with a twisted leg. Because he is not "genetically perfect", he is given a label instead of a name. [[spoiler:His name is actually Orin.]]
372* As an old joke from the ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' has it:
373-->'''Radio:''' Calling B4; come in, B4; why don't you answer, B4?\
374'''Bluebottle:''' Because I didn't hear you before!
375[[/folder]]
376
377[[folder:Roleplay]]
378* This is a part of Four Tee's backstory on ''Roleplay/NoPixel''. Before escaping to Los Santos, she spent her entire life isolated in what she calls "the black box," and frequently tells others that her keepers only ever called her "40." Upon escaping, and with no knowledge of her real name -- if she even ''had'' one to begin with -- she names herself after her number.
379[[/folder]]
380
381[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
382* The agloolik, a race of arctic feykith from the ''TabletopGame/CeruleanSeas'' setting (TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}), use names that incorporate a number, a familial suffix, and possibly a prefix indicating their affinity with destruction (as opposed to invention).
383* Some of the warforged in ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'' are known by number.
384* ''TabletopGame/IsaacAsimovsRobots'': This game [[DownplayedTrope downplays]] Creator/IsaacAsimov's habit of [[RobotNames assigning robots serial numbers]]. Each Sammy-type model of robot has a number emblazoned on their front for identification purposes, but normal names are used in actual conversation.
385* One ''Franchise/TheLordOfTheRings'' card game did this with the Nazgûl. Rather than trying to give them individual names, it simply named all the non-Witch King wraiths after the elvish words for two through nine.
386* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' has the Phyrexian outcast [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=12331 Xantcha]]. She explains in the novel ''Literature/{{Planeswalker}}'' that "Xantcha" in Phyrexian is the number of the box she was assigned to sleep in. One of her first acts of rebellion was to continue thinking of herself as "Xantcha" after being moved to a different position, turning it into a personal name rather than the designator of an interchangeable part.
387** The dryad planeswalker Wrenn has needed to maintain ''permanent'' bonds with trees (meanings she's more like a hamadryad) ever since her sparking left her with a constant internal burn (being in a tree controls the damage and aids in countervailing healing). While bonding with a tree [[UpliftedAnimal gives it sentience and some sapience]], it doesn't add a sense of self-naming that it didn't start with in the first place. The sequential numbers she gives them (in ''Innistrad: Midnight Hunt'', she disengages from Six to let him finally rest as an ordinary oak again, and accepts and bonds with Seven) are simply all the naming that ''the trees themselves'' personally need, and the numbering does nothing to depersonalize them for her.
388* In ''TabletopGame/{{Paranoia}}'', all citizens have names like John-R-ZAE-3 (Red security clearance, home sector ZAE, third member of his clone family, i.e. the first two already [[DeathIsCheap died]] and had their memories transplanted). If it's a PunnyName, then occasionally the number is part of it (like [[Music/WoodyGuthrie Woody-G-UTH-3]] writing music for vidshows).
389* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Some Guard regiments issue numbers to their soldiers, presumably due to the high turnover. ''VideoGame/DawnOfWar'' has an example in the FlavorText of the Jungle Walls map:
390-->"But sir, this jungle, it feels like it's closing in on us. I can't take it any longer, it's like walls are closing in on us!" - such is noted by Commissar Caern as the traitorous actions of Guardsman 11689 prior to summary execution.
391[[/folder]]
392
393[[folder:Theatre]]
394* Elmer Rice's stage play ''Theatre/TheAddingMachine'', a surrealist fantasy written in the 1920s and still performed frequently, is about a hopeless non-entity who works in a corporation where all the employees have numbers for names. His name is Mister Zero, signifying that he is the lowliest person of all...not just in the company, but in the larger society as well.
395* In ''Theatre/TheConsul'', this is invoked by the [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Secretary]] in her first scene, where she repeatedly tells the protagonist, "Your name is a number." Exactly which number is never specified, though. It's later subverted by showing that the Secretary ''can'' recall names, but prefers not to since it interferes with her duties.
396* Claude from the musical ''Theatre/{{Hair}}'' at one point gives an emotional speech about how being drafted for duty in Vietnam has reduced him from a human being to just another number on a goverment filing system.
397* The song "Close Every Door" from ''Theatre/JosephAndTheAmazingTechnicolorDreamcoat'' addresses Nazi concentration camps with "Just give me a number, instead of my name/ forget all about me, and let me decay..."
398* ''Theatre/LesMiserables'':
399** Already found under [[YouAreNumberSix/{{Literature}} Literature]], but worth mentioning again.
400--->"24601..."
401--->"My name is Jean Valjean!"
402** It is especially worth a second mention since Javert addresses Valjean as 24601 ''more often'' than using his actual name.
403* A variant drawn from RealLife in ''Theatre/ThePermanentWay'', which dramatises the aftermath of several major British train disasters. The Bereaved Mother states that she doesn't think she'd have started campaigning if her son wasn't simply referred to as "Body No 6".
404[[/folder]]
405
406[[folder:Video Games]]
407* The eponymous protagonist of ''VideoGame/ThreeInThree''. She literally is the number 3, so it's as much a job description as a name.
408* In ''VideoGame/AceCombat'' games, if you're not referred to by callsign, you'll be referred to by squadron name and number. Some, like [[VideoGame/AceCombat04ShatteredSkies Mobius One]], don't even get a callsign.
409* In ''VideoGame/AkatsukiBlitzkampf'', several people refer to [[spoiler:Akatsuki himself]] as [[spoiler:"Experiment One"]] rather than by his name. Specially notorious in the case of [[spoiler:his war boddy of sorts Fritz]] and [[spoiler: his former BadBoss Murakumo]].
410* ''VideoGame/AliensVsPredator2010'' has three distinct campaigns. One of them sees you playing as Six, an Alien known by the trademark numeral printed on its forehead at, er, [[ChestBurster birth]].
411* In ''VideoGame/AnnoMutationem'', [[spoiler:Ann Flores]] was once known as just "Subject 06" by the [[spoiler:Circle Consortium]] and they won't hesitate to refer to her as that, despite having long since been given a proper name.
412* ''VideoGame/ArmoredCore'':
413** As stated above, ''AC'' gives us Hustler 1 and Nine Ball. ''Armored Core 2'' and ''Another Age'' also give us Nine Ball Seraph. Somewhat subverted with Hustler 1, in that there's an untold number of him scattered throughout the world (and some on Mars too), and every last one of them is referred to by the [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast exact same name]]...
414** If that last part doesn't scare anybody, the fact that Nineball is an EnsembleDarkHorse for the series through sheer NintendoHard, should. In fact, there is a title in-verse named ''specifically'' after Nineball ("Ninebreaker") simply because he was the one who held the position of #1 pilot the longest.
415** In addition, in the original ''Armored Core'', if you went into debt after screwing up enough missions, you would sell your body to science. This would give your character new benefits in the AC and reset the game to the beginning. It was a way of the game giving you a second chance to get better. After going through the "plus" operation, your character would be renamed "[=RebelXXX=]". The three numbers were random.
416* We have Subject 16 in ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed'', [[spoiler:though it's later revealed that his name is Clay Kaczmarek]].
417* ''VideoGame/AzurLane'':
418** Stemming from the Kriegsmarine's lack of names for their destroyers and U-boats, the Ironblood destroyers based on them, being Z18 and onwards, as well as all eight of their submarines and the submarines of the Sakura Empire do not have a historic ship name and are thus referred to only by their designation.
419** Special mention to [[StarterMon Z23]], who the community often refers to by the GoroawaseNumber reading "Nimi".
420** Z46 points this out in her questline and quotes, urging you to give her a name through the Oath marriage mechanic, implying "Weiss" as her choice. It should be noted that at least in German, this would not solve the issue, as Weiss is not a typical name, despite [[WebAnimation/{{RWBY}} pop cultural suggestions to the contrary]].
421* Hifumi from ''VideoGame/{{Beatmania}} IIDX 14 GOLD'', although the kanji is different.
422* In ''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil'', the AI in Jade's computer/inventory pack is named Secundo. One wonders if he's an upgraded version of her old unit.
423* ''Franchise/BlazBlue'':
424** Iron Tager, a HollywoodCyborg whose code number was TR-00009. Guess that's where they come up with the name "Tager."
425** ν-13. [[OneLetterName One Greek letter]], one ominous number.
426** And Nu's predecessors, λ-11 and μ-12 aka [[spoiler: Noel Vermillion]].
427* In ''VideoGame/BreathOfFireDragonQuarter'', the "names" of the dragons, er, [[NotUsingTheZWord "D-Constructs"]] are simply numbers in Gratuitous Russian. "Odjn" (One), "Dva" (Two, mistranslated as "Dover", and Chetyre (Four). [[FourIsDeath Guess which one]] is the BigBad. The D-Ratio is a part of everyone's name unless they're fugitives on the run (Lin and Trinity), the Regents or those so far low on the social hierarchy that they're considered ''experimental animals'' (Nina). Meaning Ryu's legal name is Ryu 1/8192.
428* Robo from ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' used to have a mere serial number for a name (R-66Y), but Marle thought that made him see more like a thing than a person and renamed him. [[spoiler:His real name is actually Prometheus, which also becomes important in ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' -- there's a reason the friendly supercomputer encountered at Chronopolis is named the Prometheus Circuit.]]
429* ''VideoGame/DeadOrAlive'' has Alpha-152, because she's just one of many subjects from a cloning/gene manipulation project. Also, Nicole-458, because she's one of the ''Halo'' Spartans (see below).
430* ''VideoGame/DeadlyRoomsOfDeath'': Everyone's names in the rooted empire is directly tied to their job. The main antagonist in ''Journey to the Rooted Hold'' is named 39th Slayer, making him the 39th person who is still alive to have the job of slayer. If a job holder dies, everyone behind them get their number increased by one. Jobless citizens are also nameless.
431* The [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots Exos]] in ''VideoGame/{{Destiny}}'' have a name followed by a number (Cayde-6, Banshee-44, etc). The number is for how many times they're been rebooted since their initial construction.
432* The title character of ''VideoGame/DestroyAllHumans'', Cryptosporidium-137. All Furons are referred to by the number of their current cloned incarnation. Which means yes, Crypto has managed to die 136 times prior to the game.
433* In ''VideoGame/DeusEx'', one [[TheMenInBlack Woman In Black]] in the service of [=MJ12=] charged with watching over the cathedral in Paris is known as Adept 34501. A book reveals that she discarded her name a long time ago.
434* In ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'', according to ''The Pocket Guide to The Empire'' (a work of [[UnreliableExpositor debatable accuracy]]), the [[OurElvesAreDifferent Altmer (High Elves)]] of the Summerset Isles don't bother to give themselves names. When they greet, they address one another with a long combination of numbers that ''sounds'' like a name if you aren't fluent in their language.
435* ''VideoGame/FableII'': "You are number 273. That number is not randomly assigned. It is because I have broken 272 guards already. And I will break you."
436* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'':
437** The Garys in ''VideoGame/Fallout3''.
438** In ''VideoGame/Fallout4'', Institute [[ArtificialHuman synths]] are referred to by a serial number (eg: H2-22). Factions that believe them to be sentient allow them to choose names, but the Institute itself doggedly sticks to numbers as part of its "[[JustAMachine Just a Machine]]" rhetoric.
439** In ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'':
440*** You are Courier Six.
441*** In the "Old World Blues" DLC, there is Dr. 0, though his name is confused for Dr. O by his compatriots.
442* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
443** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'' has two numbered bosses in the Magitek Research Facility. Number 24 is a human-like construct that attacks the party just before the chamber with the Espers in PeopleJars and [[BarrierChangeBoss changes its elemental weaknesses]]. Number 128 attacks the party on the railway escape route, and is a large purple monster with two claws.
444** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'':
445*** There's the various Sephiroth clones distinguished by their Number Tattoos. It's not entirely clear if their creator, Hojo, meant for Red XIII to be part of this sequence.
446*** And the point where [[spoiler:Cloud]] ''asks'' Hojo to give him a number when he believes he is one of those clones. He is visibly (even more) dejected when Hojo spurns his request, disgusted that only an experiment he deemed a "failure" had succeeded as a clone.
447** Subverted by the black mages of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX''. Except for Vivi, they are all known by their numbers (Mr. 234, Black Mage No. 12, etc.), but this actually serves to humanize them as they begin developing their own personalities. They deliberately seem to adopt the numbers as their names, even going so far as to introduce themselves this way to strangers.
448** ''[[VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV Final Fantasy XIV: Endwalker]]'' has the [[spoiler:Omicrons, a race of extraterrestrial robots]] who all have designations like N-7000 or M-017. [[spoiler:Omega reveals that these names actually ''do'' hold meaning: Each refers to a celestial body of some sort. In particular, "M-017" equates to what Eorzeans would refer to as the "Omega" nebula]].
449** Class Zero of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyType0'' has a general gambling/{{playing card|Motifs}}s motif theme for all members [[OddNameOut sans]] Machina and Rem, who lack {{Code Name}}s. This leads to nine of the group's 14 members falling into this trope: Ace, Deuce, Trey, Cater, Cinque, Sice, Seven, Eight, and Nine. [[note]]The first six are named for [[https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/359339/sice-cinque-cater-trey-deuce-ace-and-then the numbers 1-6 in a dice game]] and thus correspond with the French numbers un, deux, trois, quatre, cinq, and six, though Ace's name also fits into the playing card motif, as three other members of Class Zero are Jack, Queen, and King, as do Deuce and Trey (the "2" and "3" cards in a standard 52-card deck). In fact, the only playing cards that aren't represented among the group are 10 and Joker, and that's only because [[BigGood Arecia]] (Class Zero's [[ParentalSubstitute "mother"]]) barred two other students named Tiz (Hungarian for "ten") and Joker ([[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin self-explanatory]]) from joining, instead relegating them to a different role.[[/note]]
450* ''Franchise/FireEmblem'':
451** The names of the Twelve Dark Warlords in the Japanese version of ''VideoGame/FireEmblemGenealogyOfTheHolyWar'' [[NumericalThemeNaming are the numbers one to twelve]] [[GratuitousGerman in German]]. In most other languages, the Deadlords are instead named for the Latin equivalents of the signs of the [[EasternZodiac Chinese Zodiac]].
452** Replacement characters in [[VideoGame/FireEmblemShadowDragonAndTheBladeOfLight the eleventh game]] are also numbered... sort of. (In the Japanese version, they're straight-up numbers -- and in German again; the English release has something vaguely based on numbers, though it's difficult to figure out exactly how. Reportedly, if you get enough of these, they stop using numbers and start making fun of the player.)
453* Alpha 1 is the player character in all ''VideoGame/FreeSpace'' games. {{Justified|Trope}}, as the player is the leader of Alpha Wing, and works for the military.
454* ''VideoGame/GetInTheCarLoser'': Angels are only referred to as the Nth Arm, where N is their number in the Divine Order. The NPC angels refer to Angela as the Thirty-Second Arm and no other name, implying her non-number name is something she gained upon joining the party.
455* The Tactical Dolls in ''VideoGame/GirlsFrontline'' employed by [[PrivateMilitaryContractors Griffin & Kryuger]] are identified with the weapon they're linked with, leading to names such as [=M4A1=], [=OTs-12=], and [=M91/38=]; several of them had names before enlisting and some prefer to be identified with their old names. The weapon-based identification is company policy.
456* ''VideoGame/GRIDLegends'' features the PlayerCharacter who is OnlyKnownByTheirNickname by characters, and they call them "Driver 22".
457* ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'':
458** You know you're ''really'' stickin' it to the man when you get an official title slapped on you like ''Anticitizen One''.
459** While only vaguely referenced, City 17's citizens are implied to have numbers. One chapter in the game is titled "Anti-Citizen One", in reference to the man with the crowbar.
460* ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'':
461** The Spartan-[=IIs=]. Notable examples include Kurt-051, Linda-058, Kelly-087, Fred-104, and of course, [[PlayerCharacter John-117]], better known as [[EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep Master Chief]].
462** The Forerunner AI constructs may count as well; see 343 Guilty Spark and 2401 Penitent Tangent. This also counts as an ArcNumber, given Creator/{{Bungie}}'s penchant for the number seven (343=7*7*7, 2401=7*7*7*7).
463** [=Spartan-IIIs=] are named similarly to the [=IIs=], but they also feature a letter depending on the company (e.g. Emile-A239, Lucy-B091, Ash-G099), with the letters being the Latin initials of Greek letters (Alpha, Beta, Gamma).
464** In ''VideoGame/HaloReach'', player character SPARTAN-B312 is known only as Noble Six, as the sixth member of Noble Team. The other five members, in order of numbers, are Carter-A259 (1), Catherine-B320 (2), Jun-A266 (3), Emile-A239 (4), and Jorge-052 (5).
465* ''VideoGame/HeavensVault'': Aliya names her robots with numbers, for the order she's recieved them. The current one is Six.
466* ''Franchise/{{Hitman}}'':
467** Agent 47. Even though it's a code number (as reflected by the barcode number on the back of his head; 6405-0509-01'''47'''), we never do learn his name. The reason given for his number is that he is the 47th genetically-engineered assassin produced by Professor Ort-Meyer, and he killed all of the others. Well, he thought so until he met 17... and then killed him.
468** There is also Subject 6, [[spoiler:The Shadow Client]], who was revealed to be a clone like 47 in ''VideoGame/Hitman2''.
469* The player character in the obscure 3DO game ''Immercenary'' is known simply as "Number Five". The character's deceased predecessor was, of course, "Number Four". While it ''is'' set in a dystopian world, the designation seems to just be an excuse not to give the character a name.
470* ''VideoGame/HorizonForbiddenWest'' isn't technically an example, using a Greek letter instead of a number. Beta is a perfect genetic copy of PlayerCharacter Aloy, made at the same time (and for the same reasons) as her. Unlike Aloy, Beta was treated as a tool by her masters, [[spoiler: the crew of the ''Far Zenith'']] from birth; it's implied that no other humans even bothered to talk to her face to face until she was almost twenty. The contrast between Aloy and Beta's personalities is a central theme of the game, with Aloy (being raised apart from her tribe, but by Rost, who cleared cared for her, even if he wasn't the most obvious about it) having the same headstrong, problem-solving attitude of Elisabet Sobeck, and Beta being cowardly and pessimistic from a life of subjugation.
471* In ''VideoGame/ImmortalSouls'' the Templars insist on calling all their captured shadow creatures and monsters by their test subject numbers, even the sentient ones. This ''really'' starts ticking off the main character after a while.
472-->'''[[ChurchMilitant Desmond]]:''' Subject 2401, you must obey-!
473-->'''[[FriendlyNeighborhoodVampire John]]:''' For the last time, my name is '''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis John!]]''' '''''[[SymbolSwearing @&#*!]]''''' '''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis Turner!]]'''
474* ''Franchise/TheKingOfFighters'': The first two Kyo clones, [[VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters99 Kyo-1 and Kyo-2]], have no proper names aside from their number. Another clone, who debuted [[VideoGame/TheKingOfFighters2001 two games later]], would logically be called Kyo-9999, but it's shortened to K9999 [[spoiler:until he [[VideoGame/TheKingOfFightersXV eventually]] took on the proper name of Krohnen]].
475* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'':
476** Organization XIII's members are given a number based on the order they joined. In order: I. Xemnas, II. Xigbar, III. Xaldin, IV. Vexen, V. Lexaeus, VI. Zexion, VII. Saïx, VIII. Axel, IX. Demyx, X. Luxord, XI. Marluxia, XII. Larxene, XIII. Roxas, [[RetGone XIV. Xion]]. Vexen sometimes addresses other members by only their number.
477** [[VideoGame/KingdomHearts358DaysOver2 Xion]] is a double example. She shares Organization XIII's number theme [[spoiler: but even her "real" name is a number. Designating her serial number in the replica project No. i aka the imaginary number]]. Saïx outright tells Roxas that's why they never bothered to rename themselves Organization XIV.
478** In ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsIII'', Organization XIII is remade. It now goes: I. Master Xehanort, II. Ansem the Seeker of Darkness, III. Xemnas, IV. Xigbar, V. Luxord, VI. Larxene, VII. Marluxia, VIII. Saix, IX. Terra-Xehanort, X. Dark Riku, XI. Vanitas, XII. Young Xehanort, XIII. Xion.
479* Towards the end of ''VideoGame/KirbyAndTheForgottenLand'', Kirby finds his way to [[AbandonedLaboratory Lab Discovera]], where an announcer cheerfully recants the tale of "[[CapturedSuperEntity Specimen ID-F86]]", an [[AliensAreBastards evil alien]] who once attacked the Forgotten Land before they were captured by scientists and studied for decades on end. [[spoiler:His new friend [[FairyCompanion Elfilin]] is the EnemyWithout of this alien, and was similarly designated "Specimen ID-F87".]]
480* ''VideoGame/TheLegendaryStarfy'': In ''Densetsu no Stafy 2'', the Puchi Oguras are just named Puchi Ogura #1 to #10, with the number matching up with the world and order you fight them in.
481* The main character of ''VideoGame/LittleNightmares'' is called Six. And the player character in the prequel is named Mono (One).
482* Jack in ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'' is called "Subject Zero" in her dossier.
483* The BigGood in ''VideoGame/MasterDetectiveArchivesRainCode'' is called "Number One", the leader of the World Detective Organization. Though the position is chosen by election, any detective who adopts the title is usually made anonymous, and any member working in the organization can be elected for the position.
484* [[MyHeroZero Zero]] from the ''VideoGame/MegaManX'' and ''VideoGame/MegaManZero'' games. While he's said to be [[spoiler:the last of the Wily Numbers]] in the Japanese version of ''VideoGame/MegaManX2'' and has the serial number [[spoiler:[=DWN.∞=]]] (as seen in Area X-2 of ''VideoGame/MegaManZero3''), the name might relate to the fact that [[spoiler:he is "{{patient zero}}" for [[TheVirus the Maverick virus]]]].
485* Drebin from ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots'' claims to belong to an organization entirely staffed by people named Drebin. He in particular is Drebin 893 (however, since he is the only Drebin that appears in the game, he's always referred to as Drebin). Presumably, all Drebins are referred to as Drebin, regardless of their number. The Database of MGS implies this as well.
486* ''VideoGame/MetroidDread'' has the boss monster Experiment No. Z-57, a bio-engineered creation of the Mawkin Chozo. Considering the creature is first seen by Samus still "under construction" in Dairon and only wakes up after [[spoiler:getting possessed by the X Parasites]], it's likely that the Mawkin simply never had a chance to give it a proper name before that point.
487* Parodied in ''VideoGame/NothingToHide'''s gameplay trailer in which the protagonist is called Citizen Number Something.
488* In ''VideoGame/NotTonight'', the closest thing that the player character has to a name is "112", the number assigned to them when they were moved to the Relocation Block.
489* ''VideoGame/OneDogStory'': The titular [[PlayerCharacter dog]] came from a stasis pod that had 20-43 written on it. When a scientist asks him his name, he reasons that 20-43 is it.
490* No. 9, the [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot Gunblade-toting undead cyborg]] BigBad of ''VideoGame/ParasiteEve2''.
491* ''VideoGame/PillarsOfDust'': The robot mercenary is simply named #0005, which is likely its model number
492* ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'' has a man coming from a city of metal whose only possessions were his name and his number. When he offered to share his number with a suffering woman, she stole both. Depending on how you resolve the situation, you may actually claim the number for yourself; it takes the form of a tattoo and offers protection ([[{{Pun}} because there's safety in numbers]]).
493* In ''VideoGame/PN03'', the game's title is derived from Vanessa being the third clone of who appears to be the Client. In one level, another clone (thought to be P.N.02) is discovered in a {{People Jar|s}}, shortly after which the area self-destructs.
494* The Ultra Beasts in ''VideoGame/PokemonSunAndMoon'' are assigned codenames consisting of numbers; UB-03: Lighting, UB-02: Absorption, UB-05: Glutton, etc. Once the player captures them, they're given proper names that lack numbers.
495* Roku from ''VideoGame/PopNMusic''. The trope literally defines his name -- ''roku'' is japanese word for 6. Also, his name written in game is ''六'', which is the kanji that stands for number six.
496* In ''VideoGame/PortalReloaded'', you play as Test Subject 4509.
497* ''VideoGame/RecettearAnItemShopsTale'': From [[http://www.carpefulgur.com/drakblog/?p=14 the translation notes]] on Tielle's name:
498--> The original site for the game, however, indicates a bit of a different spelling than you’d expect at first: "Tiers". That is, the French word for "third". When we spoke with EGS, we found out that this referred to her place in her family; that is, she was literally the third of three sisters.
499* All Pre-Cals in ''[[VideoGame/{{Republique}} République]]'' are given an alphanumerical designation, such as 390-H and 933-W. You help 390-H, who calls herself Hope, to escape the facility, after her friend Weep (933-W) has already been "[[BrainwashingForTheGreaterGood recalibrated]]".
500* ''[[VideoGame/{{Richman}} Richman 11]]'' has a playable character named Eleven, who is an adventurer who travel around the most dangerous places in the world and make videos about them.
501* ''VideoGame/ShiningForceIII'', in the [[NoExportForYou third scenario]], houses a recruitable dragon character known only as Thousand. In scenario two, there's a birdman named Zero.
502* The PlayerCharacter in the ''Franchise/{{Splatoon}}'' games gains a number upon joining the New Squidbeak Splatoon, but they presumably have a real name. The exception to this is the protagonist of ''VideoGame/Splatoon2''[='=]s ''[[DownloadableContent Octo Expansion]]'', who is an amnesiac Octoling whose only identifying information is a pair of neon yellow bands on their wrist and ankle designating them as Applicant No. 10008. They're recruited as Agent 8 by Cap'n Cuttlefish and later goes on to use "Eight" as their actual name (for lack of anything else).
503* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
504** ''VideoGame/TIEFighter'' typically calls you Alpha 1 (if you're another Alpha, Alpha 1 will have a cargo of "Doom On You" presumably because he knows you're going to take his slot), but if flying an Assault Gunboat you are often Tau 1. As a missile boat pilot, you are Mu 1.
505** Out of the four playable factions in ''VideoGame/StarWarsBattlefront'' and its sequel, only the Rebel Alliance get actual names. The Old Republic, Trade Federation and Empire all have ID numbers for their troops. Justified with the Republic troops being clones, the Trade Federation fielding droids and TheEmpire having a massive, professional military in contrast with The Rebellion's MildlyMilitary RagtagBunchOfMisfits.
506** Delta Squad from ''VideoGame/StarWarsRepublicCommando'', being clones, are technically given numbers for names. However, as this is the first work that truly showed that ClonesArePeopleToo in the ''Franchise/StarWars'' universe, each member of the squad has a nickname as well. The PlayerCharacter is RC-1138, better known as "Boss", and his squadmates are [[TheCracker RC-1140 a.k.a "Fixer"]], [[ColdSniper RC-1207 a.k.a Sev]], and [[StuffBlowingUp RC-1262 a.k.a Scorch]].
507** The protagonist in the two ''[[VideoGame/RebelAssault Star Wars: Rebel Assault]]'' games is known only as Rookie One.
508* ''Franchise/StreetFighter'':
509** From ''VideoGame/StreetFighterIII: 3rd Strike'', there is Twelve, a living weapon developed by Gill's Illuminati to hunt down and destroy Necro. ''VideoGame/StreetFighterV'' introduced one of Twelve's prototypes, Eleven, who was [[spoiler:eventually repurposed as material to use in the resurrection of Charlie Nash after his death in ''[[VideoGame/StreetFighterAlpha Alpha 2]]'']].
510** [[spoiler:Seth]] from ''VideoGame/StreetFighterIV'' is actually part of a mass-produced series of identical clones; they are the only one of the group to develop their own personality (thus insisting on their given name) and ''hates'' being called by their number. In this case, they're number 15, and the copy that is fought in their story is number 21. [[spoiler:Abel is also implied to be either the original model for Seth's creation, or that Abel is a defective, human clone rather than a machine, in which case Seth is the original. Creator/{{Capcom}} has unfortunately left the characters' endings a little ''too'' open-ended.]]
511* Played twice in ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars'':
512** The W Numbers (including Lamia Loveless, Echidna Iisaki, Wodan Ymir, Aschen Broedel, [[spoiler:Harken Browning]]), named after the sequence in the order they were created. However, its creator Lemon wanted to make them look 'more human' thus gave them names, despite the tendency of Vindel using their numbers (though to be honest, Lamia made up her own name)
513** The School tends to give their students numerical codenames, which start with a metal name, followed by a number. The member of the School staff who was not evil gave them regular names later. Ouka Nagisa was called Aurum 1. Same thing applies to Arado Balanga (Bronzo 27), Seolla Schweitzer (Bronzo 28) and Latooni (Latooni 11, because Cuervo never thought up a name for her) Subota.
514* In the original ''VideoGame/SystemShock'', the protagonist is referred to either as "Hacker" or his Employee number, [[Literature/LesMiserables 2-4601]].
515* ''VideoGame/TalesOfBerseria'' has a Malakhim that was introduced as simply "Number Two" that served an exorcist prior to being freed by the protagonist, Velvet. She would later give him a proper name: [[spoiler: Laphicet, after her departed brother.]] In fact, the Abbey does this with all Malakhim under their control, as they don't consider them as having their own consciousness worthy of consideration. Your party rescues another Malakhim as well, who was known as "Number One," whom they name "Silva."
516* CR-S01 from ''[[VideoGame/TraumaCenter Trauma Team]]''. [[spoiler:Real name: Erhard Muller.]]
517* In ''VideoGame/{{Unreal}}'', the only indication that the player character has something to be called by is a computer message stating that "Prisoner 849 [is] escaping" when you exit your cell at the start of the game.
518* ''VideoGame/ValkyriaChroniclesIII'' follows the adventures of a military unit known as "The Nameless." All of the members (who are the player-controlled characters) have numbers for names.
519* ''VideoGame/WhiteNoise2'': The returning supernatural creature from [[VideoGame/WhiteNoiseOnline the first game]] is called "Subject 23".
520* In the video game adaptation of ''VideoGame/{{XIII}}'', the main character has lost his memory and as he has the tattoo XIII on his arm that is what he's called throughout the game. It's also his codename in the secret plot.
521* ''Xeno'' series:
522** In ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'' (the [[CreatorDrivenSuccessor Spiritual Precursor]] to [[ThematicSeries the titles listed below]]), Seibzehn and Achtzehn are the German words for "seventeen[[labelnote:*]]albeit spelled incorrectly in this case[[/labelnote]]" and "eighteen," respectively. In Gear shops, equipment for Seibzehn is even prefixed with "#17."
523** ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}}'':
524*** Cyborg mercenary Ziggurat-8. He simply goes by his designation until he meets Momo, who dubs him "Ziggy", which gives him his own identity.
525*** All [=URTVs=] are given numbers from 1 to 669. The only ones with importance are 666 through 669, which are called the "Variants."
526** Fandom example: In the ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1'' community, it's become common courtesy to refer to the seventh party member as Seven in spoiler-free conversation, as [[WalkingSpoiler everything about them from their name down]] answers several of the plot's biggest driving questions and character arcs. Particularly considerate posts will even call Four, Five and Six this way (the first three aren't usually censored, being TheHero, TheLancer, and a character who joins you as soon as you meet).
527** Similarly, the fourth (permanent) driver that joins the party in ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'' is referred to as Four for similarly (but not nearly as dramatically) spoilerriffic reasons as Seven above. Oddly, this is zig-zagged with the fifth driver, as promotional material ''really'' makes it obvious he joins the party later in the game, but is obfuscated by the previous driver joining first.
528** ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles3'': All the members of Colony 0 (a secret colony dedicated to black ops and subterfuge) are given numbers instead of names, raised from their birth to respond to them and nothing else. Sena starts jump-starting their character development by trying to give them actual names, starting with their leader, No. 7, whom she names "Segiri" (derived from the words "seven" and "onigiri", the food Sena gives the girl when they first meet).
529** Even [[AncientConspiracy Moebius]] seem to get in on this; each of them has a letter in place of a name, and [[DefectorFromDecadence Defiant Triton]] recounts how the others insist to him that his name is "T".
530* Test Subject No.367 in ''VideoGame/YggdraUnion'', although everyone drops the "Test Subject" part. While [[VideoGame/KnightsInTheNightmare Primea]] and [[VideoGame/RivieraThePromisedLand Malice]] also have registration numbers (549 and some number over 1000, respectively), they're known primarily by their name/nickname.
531* ''[[VideoGame/ZombiesRun Zombies, Run!]]'':
532** The player character is assigned as "Runner Five" in the first mission. From then on, every other character calls them "Five" or "Runner Five." They are never referred to by name.
533** This is justified in that the app developers wanted to allow the player to totally immerse themselves in the game. All of the other Runners were also assigned numbers to keep the theme going.
534** Mission 13 also brings us [[spoiler:Arthur Gurkhan, much more commonly known as Patient 29 or Patient Zero, depending on the context of the conversation]].
535* In ''VideoGame/ZooTycoon'', the default names of the animals you adopted are basically "[Species Name] [Number]".
536** Averted in the game's spiritual successor, ''VideoGame/PlanetZoo'' where animals have names common in [[NationalAnimalStereotypes countries and regions in which they occur]].
537[[/folder]]
538
539[[folder:Visual Novels]]
540* ''VisualNovel/AceAttorneyInvestigationsMilesEdgeworth'' has Shi-Long Lang ordering his subordinates to count off. They do so, shouting "1!", "2!", "3!", etc., only for him to cut them off and berate them for doing it wrong. ''[[AFatherToHisMen All]]'' [[AFatherToHisMen his men are number one in his book]]! Later in the game, he orders then to count off again, and this time they do so "properly", shouting "1!", "1!", "1!", etc.
541* In ''VisualNovel/MarcoAndTheGalaxyDragon'', the inmates of Gold Cord’s underground prison are assigned numbers based on the length of their sentence.
542-->'''682:''' I'm a beast with a 682 year sentence.
543* ''VisualNovel/PartTimeJob'' has the four mental hospital patients mostly be referred to as "Patient #[number]", with the numbers going from 1 to 4. Their real names are given and often used by the protagonist, Pastel, but the head of the hospital, Fluttershy, seems to prefer using just the numbers despite two of the patients being ''her best friends''. Pastel at one point corrects Fluttershy, trying to get her to say Lyra instead of Patient #4. Fluttershy ignores her.
544* Assassins trained by Scythe in ''VisualNovel/PhantomOfInferno'' get named after German numbers: thus Ein, Zwei, Drei and so on.
545* In ''VisualNovel/{{Sunrider}}'', The [[ArtificialHuman Prototypes]] have alphanumeric designations like [=L7NN=] and 4L1C3 instead of proper names, though the latter takes the name "Alice" for herself. [[spoiler:[[TomatoInTheMirror Chigara]] is referred to as Prototype C8 by their leader Alpha.]]
546* ''VisualNovel/{{Tsukihime}}'': Nrvnsqr Chaos certainly doesn't ''seem'' like an example of this trope...but that first name is actually roman numerals and it adds up to 666. The Church apparently decided to name him that as he doesn't really care about names anymore. Also, Nanako aka the Seventh Scripture. Presumably, there are at least six other scriptures...which are probably not alive like she is. Oh well.
547* ''VisualNovel/ZeroEscape'':
548** In all three games, the mastermind behind the DeadlyGame the characters have been forced to play adopts the alias "Zero".
549** ''VisualNovel/NineHoursNinePersonsNineDoors'' has each of the characters (but Junpei and the Ninth Man) adopt an alias based on the numbered bracelets they are wearing to keep their identities secret:
550*** 1 = Ace (the playing card)
551*** 2 = Snake (snake eyes on a pair of dice; extra {{meaningful|Name}} since he's also blind and snakes can't see very well)
552*** 3 = Santa ("''san''", the Japanese word for "three")
553*** 4 = Clover (a four-leaf clover)
554*** 6 = June (the sixth month of the year)
555*** 7 = Seven ([[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin seven]])
556*** 8 = Lotus (a flower with eight petals)
557** In ''VisualNovel/VirtuesLastReward'', one route has you meet a GAULEM (a type of android) who philosophizes about how [=GAULEMs=] and humans aren't too different, right down to having "names". He uses the last four letters of his serial code, G-OLM, as his name, because it would be stupid for people to just call him "GAULEM"... [[DidntThinkThisThrough only to then realize that his name is pronounced exactly the same as it]]. In the Japanese version, his name is 506 ([[GoroawaseNumber pronounced as]] "go-rei-mu").
558[[/folder]]
559
560[[folder:Web Animation]]
561* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'':
562** "New Boots" exaggerates the trope; [[TheGhost an unseen character]] who took Homestar Runner's shoe is referred to as 1,000,000.
563** In Strong Bad E-Mail #122, Strong Bad imagines himself being contacted by "128 Hot Katies". He points out [[RhymingNames Katie 80]] as someone it's "especially ]...[ good to hear from".
564* The Society depicted in ''WebAnimation/LuckyDayForever'' simply use numbers for the Proles, but the Whites prefix their numbers with letters.
565* Season 18 of ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' has One, so called because she's the top recruit of Shatter Squad. The villain who provides the season's AntagonistTitle is [[MyHeroZero Zero]] because he used to be the One in the Shatter Squad predecessor.
566[[/folder]]
567
568[[folder:Webcomics]]
569* In ''Webcomic/BloodBank'', the workers at the titular bank go by numbers, with One being the protagonist and Thirteen his rival. The dehumanizing aspect of this is discussed in-story when One rages against the systemic mistreatment of humans.
570* Seventeen from ''Webcomic/CampWeedonwantcha'' showing that [[MassiveNumberedSiblings at this point]] her parents just gave up on naming their kids.
571* A meta-example in ''Webcomic/DepressionComix''. All of the characters in the comic are numbered according to initial appearance and whether they're a depressed character or a satellite (non-depressed) character.
572* ''Webcomic/{{Follower}}'': The Chio have [=IDs=] assigned by the base staff that are usually shortened to a few numbers like "23-3". Averted with the Chio themselves, who have names for each other in their own language.
573* ''Webcomic/GenderSwapped'': In the Borderverse, the original 18 psychics are given the name "Psychic" and then the number they are in sequence. All of them have since adopted more common names (but only first names, no sir names) and only use their original title as a codename, for instance Michael is Psychic 13 and Gabriel is Psychic 7. The last of the originals, Psychic 19, has no new name, and is only called by the name "19". Except for Michael, who continues to call her different names until he finds one she likes.
574* TheGreys in ''Webcomic/GeneralProtectionFault'' are a clone race who are all assigned multi-digit numbers rather than names. Conveniently, all the important Grey characters have numbers that happen to have shorter referrents in human mathematics or physics, so humans use these as nicknames. (The two main ones are Pi and Planck.) Because HumanityIsInfectious, the Greys have started using these names themselves.
575* One of the Castle Heterodyne prisoners in ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'' is an apparent construct named R-79. There used to be an [[http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20100317 R-78 and R-76]] but they were "broken" by '''OTHAR TRYGGVASSEN''', '''''GentlemanAdventurer!'''''
576* The titular character of ''[[http://www.drunkduck.com/Henchman_Number_9 Henchman Number 9]]'' is never given a name, but is referred to as either number 9 or by the full title "Henchman Number 9," except for his girlfriend who never says his name.
577* A cleverly disguised version[[labelnote:*]]which incidentally casts doubt on Creator/DouglasAdams' claim that "nobody makes jokes in base 13"[[/labelnote]] appears in ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'': a mouse named Spo came from a very large family. How large? The sibling born immediately after him [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/02/23/their-naming-conventions-had-a-cover-charge/ was named Spp]]...
578* ''Webcomic/{{Jack|DavidHopkins}}'' contains Fiver, a reference to Watership Down, who calls himself 72, and the titular character, who was once number zero[[note]]as in the very first human/animal hybrid[[/note]].
579* ''Webcomic/LastRes0rt'' has Gabriel playing this on Jigsaw, [[http://www.lastres0rt.com/2011/09/that-sound-you-hear-is-everybody-clicking-on-wikipedia/ dubbing her "Patient Zero"]]. Of course, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_case that's not really in reference to a numerical thing...]]
580* In ''Webcomic/{{Linburger}}'', on Slipshine, all non-human citizens of the city of Collision are assigned numbers instead of last names.
581* All the spacefuture {{Super Soldier}}s in ''Webcomic/ManlyGuysDoingManlyThings'' technically only have serial numbers, but they very rarely see any use outside of official paperwork. The main character is technically named D37-9E-B52 but was given the moniker "Commander Badass" for propaganda purposes. In his personal life, he goes either by his rank (Commander) or his chosen name Rock Lobster ([[Music/TheB52s "It was that or 'Love Shack'"]]).
582* All of the minions in ''Webcomic/MinionsAtWork'', except for the penguin.
583* ''Webcomic/MysteryBabylon'':
584** The young priest of Vesta who joins with joins Kick Girl's group is named Zero.
585** Kick Girl's true name is Six, though she reacts very negatively to its use and insists ThatManIsDead.
586* All the Rippers in ''Webcomic/{{Namesake}}'' give up their names and are assigned a two-digit number when they begin working for One. This gets a little confusing, as most of them also have a nickname like Trinket or Fish to use in an unofficial capacity -- and we already know a few of their original names anyway.
587* Seven in ''Webcomic/OffWhite.'' Though it's not for dehumanizing purposes. She just hated her real name.
588* Three from ''WebComic/APathToGreaterGood'', a case of OnlyKnownByTheirNickname since writing the number 3 is his answer to any question.
589* ''Webcomic/PeterIsTheWolf'': Aminal Control, a group in the government who monitor and when possible kidnap werewolves or other werebeasts, uses a letter-number code for each of the werewolves in the main characters' pack. Newly transformed werewolf Sarah is designated U-4, Deputy Sheriff Gus Kramer is K-1, and his daughter is K-2.
590* The main characters of ''Webcomic/RomanticallyApocalyptic'' are known by their job--Captain, Sniper, Pilot, and Engineer. As the series goes on, the characters' real names have been revealed...except for the enigmatic Captain, who has only been identified as "Test Subject Seven" in a research project trying to find the luckiest person in the world.
591* All of the patients in ''Webcomic/RubyQuest'' have Subject Numbers, which are used to refer to them in most notes (usually they're called by their actual names in person). A list:
592** [[BearsAreBadNews Stitches]] is Subject #1.
593** [[TheGhost Maddie]] is Subject #2.
594** [[TheGhost Lucy]] is Subject #3.
595** [[AstralProjection Jay]] is Subject #4.
596** [[{{Deuteragonist}} Tom]] is Subject #5 [[spoiler: or at least, that's what the players thought for most of the quest. He's really Subject #6, and the person they ''thought'' was Subject #6 was really Subject #5]].
597** [[LovecraftianSuperpower Tom Nook]] is Subject #6, and is often referred to by his number [[spoiler: even though it's wrong]] due to problems with the OneSteveLimit.
598** [[TheProtagonist Ruby]] is Subject #7.
599** [[BodyHorror Daisy]] is Subject #8.
600* ''Webcomic/RPGWorld'' has [[BigBad Galgarion's]] evil soldiers, specifically #347.
601* ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'' gives us AIs with names like 5er0, [=Ga6n=], 10001100hae50 (and his batch-sister 10001100he5050e, proving it isn't a compression or disambiguation algorithm), 6100tor, [=A50ger0=], A5050en, and 500a6500. Replace those arabic numerals with roman (and 0 becomes 'non') and 5o49a!
602* The Adorable Murder Turtles in ''Webcomic/SkinHorse''. The main one we see is #12. Renard is surprised that they're content just using their assigned numbers, and #12 explains that of course they're not; he had it changed from #18.
603-->'''Renard''': You're a rebel, #12.\
604'''#12''': the original #12 is now #256. she's ''out there''!
605* ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'':
606** In the 4U City storyline, everyone living in the city is known by a number instead of a name, with the exception of "His Masterness." This dehumanises the residents and also integrates them into a robotically-run bureaucratic system, although people choose not to call each other by their original regular names but by nicknames based off their number; a character assigned a number beginning 536 is nicknamed "nickle-three-six".
607** The [[Franchise/StarTrek Borg]] example is parodied in a sci-fi filler storyline: "Hi, I'm 1 of 3. This is my brother, 2 of 3. [[Series/{{Newhart}} And my other brother, 2 of 3]].
608* Every one of the Students in the ''Webcomic/StrangeSchool''.
609* In ''Webcomic/TheySayIWasBornAKingsDaughter'', the slaves on the plantation that Sanghee visits have numbers that they address each other by.
610* ''Webcomic/TowerOfGod'': [[TheHero Twe]][[TheHeart nty-]][[WideEyedIdealist Fif]][[SealedBadassInACan th]] [[MeaningfulName Bam]][[labelnote: *]] Bam means Night in Korean[[/labelnote]], of course. He was named after his birthday and grew up trapped in a cave, and that all what's really known about him.
611* In ''Webcomic/TryingHuman'' the members of the government orginization "Majestic 12" all refer to themselves by their numbers. 6, who is an engineered lifeform, might not even have an alternative name.
612* In one ''WebComic/WarriorU'' strip, [[http://warrior-u.com/?p=134 The Headmaster gave numbers to the students so he wouldn't have to learn their names.]] Finn's number was 666 and Harv's was 404.
613[[/folder]]
614
615[[folder:Web Originals]]
616* ERK-147 in ''Literature/ChronoHustle''.
617* ''WebOriginal/{{Goncharov}}'' is said to be written and directed by Matteo [=JWHJ0715=], which has led to jokes about his mother being Italian, his father being a license plate, and speculation that this was an alias Martin Scorsese (on paper merely the producer) used while directing.
618* ''WebOriginal/{{Inglip}}'': [[http://i.imgur.com/YmD0f.jpg It's naming day for the new Gropagas]]. Alongside [[GenderBlenderName Kathy]] and [[AtrociousAlias Phoother Payulter Nowillis Termito]], we have... Twat 271.
619* Patient #11 from ''WebVideo/Lonelygirl15'' Season 2, and Patient #12 from ''WebVideo/KateModern: The Last Work''. Both have names that are eventually revealed, but since the Order regard them as nothing more than test subjects, they refer to them only by their patient numbers.
620* The Angels of ''Roleplay/OpenBlue'' take after ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'''s Spartans in their naming conventions.
621* ''Website/SCPFoundation'':
622** All catalogued [=SCPs=] are referred to by number whether or not they're human/sapient, in order to avoid becoming too close to {{Reality Warper}}s and other [[PersonOfMassDestruction people and things of mass destruction]]. Human test subjects are also referred to by number.
623** For security reasons the thirteen overseers who run the Foundation are referred to as O5-1 through O5-13[[note]]the 5 in "O5" stands for their security clearance level[[/note]], instead of using their names. On days when they're feeling a little extra paranoid even the numerical designation gets censored, so you can't tell which overseer made a particular decision.
624* Every single character in ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest'' has a number assigned to them by the terrorists. Their real name and number are often used in conjunction, although Bobby Jacks was once refered to explictly as 'B06' (the letter denotes gender).
625* Two from ''Literature/TalesOfMU'', who named herself for what the runes on her forehead appear to spell.
626* ''WebVideo/ToBoldlyFlee'' has WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick dressed as a Seven of Nine parody, there named "Seven of Eleven".
627* Subject Five of ''Literature/UnlikelyEden'', named because she was the fifth subject of a preliminary eugenics project.
628* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', members of the Chinese superhero team Yàngbǎn are assigned numbers in place of their names.
629[[/folder]]
630
631[[folder:Western Animation]]
632* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'':
633** Jake falls down a hole and meets a bear who was stranded there on a floating raft. He claims his name is 7718, and had been stranded so long he had to carve his name on the floor in order to not forget it. [[SixIsNine However, the carving actually reads "BILL", and he had just read it upside down.]]
634** The "Islands" ministries reveals every human from the island colonies is given a coded designation. Finn's designation is P-G-8-7, while Susan's is K-J-7-7, although it's only apparently used for formal documentations as they're otherwise referred to only with regular names.
635* [[ButtMonkey Number 88 and Number 89]] of the Huntsclan, in ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDragonJakeLong''. All of the students are referred to as numbers in the Huntsclan training Academy, but even out of the Academy 88 and 89 were referred to as such.
636* ''WesternAnimation/{{Balance}}'': The five humanoid figures precariously balanced atop the platform are numbered on the backs of their coats: 23, 35, 51, 75, and 77. They are otherwise completely identical.
637* ''WesternAnimation/BigTim'': When [[TheProtagonist Tim]] is pulling a train [[spoiler:that's been fitted with roller bearings]], he passes by other locomotives who left before him, but were held back by Kid Friction: Numbers 66, 77, 88, and 99.
638* In the WesternAnimation/BugsBunny short ''Big House Bunny'', when Bugs digs to Sing Song Prison (he was trying to escape the hunting grounds since it was rabbit season), the warden, Sam Schultz (played by Yosemite Sam), mistakes him for Prisoner 77174, but Bugs insists, "I'm not 77174. [[Creator/AbbottAndCostello I'm only three and a half.]]" So Schultz thereby makes him prisoner 3½.
639** In "Lighter Than Hare," Yosemite Sam of Outer Space sends robot [=ZX29B=] after Bugs. It doesn't end well for [=ZX29B=].
640* The entire KND in ''WesternAnimation/CodenameKidsNextDoor'' subscribes to this. Its operatives refer to one another by their given "[[FunetikAksent numbuhs]]" in all except the most dire situations. Rather unusually for this trope, the numbers are self-assigned. This has led to Numbuh 65.3, Numbuh 74.239, Numbuhs 44a and 44b (a set of twins), and [[CountingToPotato Numbuh T]], amongst others. As for the main characters in Sector V, their real names either include their respective numbers or at least reference them: Nigel ''Uno'' (Spanish and Italian for "one"), Hoagie P. Gilligan, ''Jr.'' (second in his family to have that name), Kuki ''Sanban'' (Japanese for "third"), Wallabee ''[[Music/TheBeatles Beatles]]'' (as in the Fab ''Four''), and Abigail ''Lincoln'' (UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln appears on the American ''five''-dollar bill).
641* Canadian animated series ''WesternAnimation/{{Cybersix}}'' has--surprise surprise!--heroine Cyber 6 herself, as well as her sidekick, Data 7, who also has the "real number" of Cyber 29 in his backstory.
642* Agent 57, ''WesternAnimation/DangerMouse'''s "MasterOfDisguise".
643* Jenny Ten from ''WesternAnimation/DexHamiltonAlienEntomologist''. It is eventually revealed that she is the tenth in a series of genetically engineered clones, when she encounters her 'sister' Jenny Eight.
644* In ''WesternAnimation/EgoTrip'', TheMovie of ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'', Dexter travels to a BadFuture where Mandark is a CorruptCorporateExecutive and everyone has a number for name. Dexter's is 12.
645* In ''WesternAnimation/FrankensteinsCat'', the eponymous cat--who is called Nine--gets his name because he was constructed from parts from nine different cats.
646* Throughout the first two seasons of ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', there are cameo appearances by an elderly man with the number, 9, on his shirt. He was initially supposed to represent a fictional caste system in which a person's number determined their social status. This idea was eventually abandoned and, when he got a major role in the fourth film, the number served as his given name instead.
647* The Illuminati in ''WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}}'', although members retain their civilian names in public.
648* ''WesternAnimation/GeneratorRex'' has Agent Six. Unlike many other examples, this is not a demeaning tag, but a rank denoting him as the sixth ''most deadliest person'' on the planet. [[note]]To give an idea of what sort of people are on this list, Dos can fight evenly against both Six (wielding two blades that can pierce anything) and Rex (using two giant super axes) with just a walking stick (which is also a SwordCane) for over a minute. Trey (3) has super human strength. I.V. (as in the Roman numeral for 4) can use his bandages like living snares and whips, and can crush rocks with them. Five uses a guitar as her weapon, and is skilled enough with the instrument to kill opponents in melee combat without using a modified version.[[/note]] The dehumanizing factor, however, is still there. Between the suit and the lack of any name other than Six; rather than being demeaning, it suggests willing alienation and emotional detachment. (He has a HiddenHeartOfGold, but it's just that: ''hidden''.)
649* In ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'', Dipper discovers a copy machine that can copy people, and sets out to duplicate himself to help at a party. He dubs each clone by number, except for the second clone, who didn't want to be called Number 2 and preferred Tyrone, and the fourth clone whose creation was warped by a paper jam, called Paper Jam Dipper.
650* In ''WesternAnimation/HighlanderTheAnimatedSeries'', Kortan's subjects are all known just by numbers. Discovering that TheDragon is also a digit was a WhamEpisode.
651* During her travels, the titular character of ''WesternAnimation/KatyCaterpillar'' meets Bee Number 5344 and, after a run-in with the Queen Bee:
652-->'''Queen:''' Perhaps you'd like to be a bee?\
653'''Katy:''' Oh, do you think I could try? It seems like a very interesting life.\
654'''Queen:''' You'll get a chance to find out how "interesting" it is, Number 6286.\
655'''Katy:''' My name is Katy.\
656'''Queen:''' It '''was''' Katy. From now on, you'll be Number 6286!
657* Synthodrone 901 [[spoiler: alias Eric]] in ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible''.
658* [[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch Stitch]] from ''Franchise/LiloAndStitch'' was originally called Experiment 626. In ''[[WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitchTheSeries The Series]]'', only his creator Jumba regularly calls him that. Same thing happens to [[Characters/LiloAndStitchExperiments the other 625 experiments]], to whom Lilo gives proper names after finding their one true place. Even then, Stitch's two immediate successors (627 and 628) were never given a name and still have this trope apply to them.
659* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/MegasXLR'' takes place on an idyllic [[spoiler:prison]] planet full of [[spoiler:evil/criminal]] giant robots all identified by number. Megas is mistaken for Number 12.
660* The title character of ''WesternAnimation/MyLifeAsATeenageRobot'' is a gynoid given the model number XJ-9 [[MeaningfulRename who decided to call herself]] [[IJustWantToBeNormal the more human-seeming "Jenny"]]. Her [[TrulySingleParent mother/creator]] Dr. Wakeman still calls her "XJ-9" most of the time, though with her [[MotherlyScientist motherly tone]] it doesn't really come off as degrading. Jenny's eight "sisters" are numbered -- you guessed it -- XJ-1 through XJ-8.
661%%* The WesternAnimation/{{Numberjacks}}, of course.
662* The [[spoiler:basilisks]] from ''WesternAnimation/TheOwlHouse'' were only designated with numbers. [[spoiler: When introducing herself, Vee initially calls herself "Number 5", showing that the name Vee came from the Roman numeral V.]]
663* In "''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'''s Quantum Booglaoo," when Future!Candace travels to an alternate BadFuture, where Doofenshmirtz has successfully taken over the Tri-State Area and has forced everyone to change their names to Joe, even the women, so that he doesn't have to bother learning everyone's name.
664* In the ''WesternAnimation/ReadyJetGo'' episode "Freebird", a snow goose arrives in Jet's backyard, and he names it Hank. When more snow geese arrive, Jet names them Hank 2, Hank 3, and so on.
665* ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot'' featured literal living numbers, referred to by name, presumably to pull off some puns.
666-->'''Phong''', in the golf episode: How's your back, Nine?
667* The Stonecutters in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' refer to each other by their ranked numbers. The trope naming example is also parodied (like the rest of the series), when Homer is imprisoned on the Island during the events of "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS12E6TheComputerWoreMenaceShoes The Computer Wore Menace Shoes]]", which is a parody of ''Series/ThePrisoner1967''. He insists on being a man instead of a number only until noticing the numbered pin on his shirt, after which he proceeds to mock Number Six (played by the man himself) for having a higher number.
668* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'': The clone troopers' identification numbers are rarely used, with most going by names that are either self-bestowed or given by their brothers. The thing that really marks Pong Krell out as a {{jerkass}} in [[Recap/StarWarsTheCloneWarsS4E7DarknessOnUmbara "Darkness on Umbara"]] is when he addresses the clones by number instead of name, seriously throwing off Rex:
669-->'''Krell:''' CT-7567, are you reading me?\
670'''Rex:''' ''[obviously startled]'' ...E-excuse me, sir?
671** The clone's identification numbers also serve as an [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness out of character alert]] after [[ThePurge Order 66]] goes live, as it is accompanied by a DeathOfPersonality. For example, ARC trooper Jesse, one of the clones the aformentioned General Krell attempted to have executed for treason, exclusively refers to Commander Rex as CT-7567 after the order is given, [[{{Irony}} and attempts to execute Rex when he won't pull the trigger on Ahsoka]].
672* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheBadBatch'' generally seems to follow the trend that its predecessor set depicting clones that are affected by the Order 66 programming as numbers, and those who aren't by name.
673** [[SuddenSequelHeelSyndrome Crosshair]] is first identified as "CT-9904" in the premier episode.
674** The Elite Squad and the TK troopers are inversions, as they're recruits instead of clones, but they go by by numerical designations. Lampshaded by Echo before either actually appear in the show.
675--->'''Echo:''' It's ironic. Clones wanted names instead of numbers, and now people are signing up to be given numbers.
676* ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'':
677** The standard identification format on the [[TheEmpire Gem Homeworld]] is [[HiveCasteSystem gem type]], then [[AirstripOne facet of origin]], then finally their specific cut — unless they're a gemstone that's not faceted, [[ShownTheirWork then they're numbered by]] [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabochon cabochon]]. Their reactions to this vary. Peridot is visibly upset when ordered to introduce herself as "Peridot, Facet 2F5L, Cut 5XG" [[IndividualityIsIllegal because it reminds her that she's not important]]. Eyeball casually reports herself as "Ruby, [Facet] 1F4, Cut 4ND" [[BlindObedience because she's fiercely loyal to her Homeworld]]. Amethyst is actually ''exhilarated'' to finds out she's "Facet 5, Cut 8XM", because it makes her feel less like a misfit, especially since [[spoiler:the other Amethysts remembered her well enough to tell her]].
678** The humans in [[PeopleZoo The Zoo]] born in Gem captivity are all assigned a name consisting of a letter and a number. [[IgnoranceIsBliss The dehumanizing aspect is completely lost on them]] — they don't seem to even know what letters or numbers ''are''.
679* Silkie/Larva M319 from ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003''.
680* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'': Two Sweeps are identified as "Sweeps Six and Seven" in the Season 3 episode "Call of the Primitives". This is the ONLY instance where Sweeps other than Scourge are given any kind of designation.
681* Henchmen 21 and 24 from ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros'', not to mention the rest of the Monarch's henchmen. Though 21's real name is revealed very early on, and some characters refer to him as "Gary" on occasion.
682* The ''WesternAnimation/WanderOverYonder'' episode "[[Recap/WanderOverYonderS2E13TheCartoonTheBot The Bot]]" involves one of [[BigBad Lord Dominator's]] many MechaMooks, Bot 13. AllLovingHero Wander meets him, bonds with him and gives him the name "Beep Boop," and his MookFaceTurn is signaled by his refusal to answer to his numerical "name" when Dominator orders him to give her the location of an inhabited planet she plans to destroy for its resources.
683-->[[MeaningfulRename I AM BEEP BOOP]].
684* ''WesternAnimation/WeBareBears'': When Panda was a cub, he was kept in a breeding facility in China. He only knew himself as Panda #1, seeing as how that's what it said on his collar. When he was given a plush panda to help him feel less lonely, he named it Panda #2.
685[[/folder]]
686
687[[folder:Real Life]]
688* In the Roman aristocracy, people didn't really have names as understood today and pretty much used their genealogical record, listing the name of their clan, family, and additional levels of branches within the family. To keep siblings apart, they were then given a number like first, second, or third. While men, unlike women, also had a given name, there were only about twelve that were shared by almost all the men.
689** Once the naming traditions loosened up and people began getting their own names, the numeronyms remained popular; this was the origin of names like "Sextus", meaning sixth. This probably started out because people got into the habit of giving elder sons the same personal name as their father, so breaking the birth-order link
690** "Octavius" is actually a clan name, not a personal name. The future emperor Augustus started out as Gaius Octavius, where Gaius is the absolutely bog-standard second-commonest of all personal names (basically the Roman version of "John" or "James" or "William") and "Octavius" is his clan name. He didn't have a third name (unlike Gaius Julius Caesar for example) because three names were a sign of prominent descent, and he wasn't from such a highfalutin background before GJC adopted him posthumously and he assumed his adopter's exact same name himself (as was customary in such circumstances.) Subsequently Romans distinguished them as Caesar the Dictator and Caesar Augustus.
691** Women didn't have formal individual personal names at all under the Republic. They were called by the feminine form of their clan name, so the future emperor's sister was just Octavia, Marcus Tullius Cicero's beloved daughter was Tullia etc. Two sisters might be distinguished as Major and Minor, and a third as Tertia etc in case of ambiguity.
692* The Aztecs had names like Rabbit 13--an animal or something followed by a number. What makes this example even weirder still was that these names were not names, but their day of birth according to the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec_calendar Aztec calendar]] - called the "Tonalpohualli" and heavily associated with their deities and rituals.
693** The Aztecs had two calendars (possibly three, if they used the Long Count). Names were taken from the ritual calendar, called the Tonalpohualli. "Rabbit" is best described as a month, although the Tonalpohualli does not count months in the same way as the Gregorian calendar we use today.
694** This practice sort of carried on after the Conquest: until roughly TheSixties, common practice was to name people after the saint of someone's birthday. If you were born in the day of St. Paul, for example, your name was Paul.
695* UsefulNotes/IsorokuYamamoto: Isoroku means "56", his father's age at Isoroku's birth.
696* The Nazis tattooed identification numbers on concentration camp inmates, particularly in the death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. In addition to allowing easy identification of corpses, the practice was also part of the Nazis' intent to dehumanize the Jews and other targeted minorities (the process was probably intended to be doubly humiliating for the Jews, as tattooing is forbidden in Judaism). Probably a TropeCodifier. Primo Levi's autobiographic book ''Literature/IfThisIsAMan'' (known in the U.S. as ''Surviving Auschwitz'') addresses this aspect. In particular, one prisoner was so broken that he never spoke. So the others didn't know his real name, and ended up calling him "Null Achtzehn" (0-18).
697* It's been said that the ''real'' purpose of college is to get you to memorize your Social Security number (and your Student Number, for that matter).
698* According to his [=IMDb=] record, Shavar Ross has a son named Seven.
699* During the StanfordPrisonExperiment, the "prisoners" were assigned numbers and the guards encouraged to call them by those numbers to better simulate a prison setting. [[GoneHorriblyRight It worked too well]].
700* Most militaries assign soldiers an individual ID number for administrative purposes. This is generally one of the few things soldiers are explicitly permitted to tell their enemies in case of capture.
701** It started in the 19th century, and can notably be seen in ''Film/{{Zulu}}'' where a couple of soldiers are referred to by their name plus service number, because the name was too common. Something similar happened during the Civil War, particularly in the ''U.S. Colored Troops'' (many of whom had just gotten a last name, which cut down on the variety).
702** Certain training schools will replace a soldier's name with a roster number. The trainee will be addressed and identify themselves as this number.
703** Starting in the mid-1970s, the US military started using soldiers' Social Security Numbers for record keeping purposes, including putting them on their ID cards and dog tags. The wisdom of this was questionable, as that's normally something you want to keep under tight control due to identity theft. Despite criticism, things didn't start to change until 2008, when the US Department of Defense ordered all branches of the military to remove [=SSNs=] from all military [=IDs=]. The DOD set the deadline as December 31, 2009 - and completely missed it. It wasn't until June 2011 that [=SSNs=] were removed from the ''front'' of military ID cards, and even then there was still a barcode with the holder's SSN encoded; ''those'' codes were only removed in 2012. The Army didn't start to remove [=SSNs=] from dog tags until ''2016''.
704* Just being British, any branch of government will ask for you National Insurance number ([=NI№=]) whether you are seeking benefits or asking why there is a bloody great hole in your street. Although 'number' isn't technically correct - it's six digits and three letters.
705** In Sweden it's even worse. Not only will every branch of government register you by "personal number", but many businesses started using peoples' personal numbers for customer numbers!
706* In Finland, one's person ID number, "hetu" from Finnish ''henkilötunnus'', is actually one's unique identifier for any official issues. On the other hand, one's hetu is considered a VERY intimate piece of information, and it is prohibited to register it in any private interactions or keep a hetu register for business or other purposes. It is considered as one's TrueName as they are unique.
707* Up-and-coming hoops star [[https://twitter.com/SportsCenter/statuses/414370544507572224 Seventh Woods]].
708* Former Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Chad Johnson had his surname legally changed to "Ochocinco" (a [[GratuitousSpanish mangled Spanish rendition]] of his jersey number, 85) in 2008. The number 85 in Spanish is "ochenta y cinco". "Ochocinco" means "eightfive". In 2011, he was rumored to be changing his name ''again'', this time to "Hachigo" ("eightfive" again, this time in Japanese); however, he ultimately reverted to his birth name in 2012 (though when he joined the CFL's Montreal Alouettes in 2014, people joked that he would change his surname ''again'' to "Huitcinq" -- "eightfive", this time in French).
709* The German war crimes prisoners at Spandau (convicted at the post-World War II Nuremberg trials) were addressed by guards solely by number. As there were seven prisoners they were known by the numbers 1 through 7.
710* In Nigeria, when twins are born they are named "Taiwo" and "Kehinde". Literally "1st born of twins" and "2nd born of twins".
711** Due to difficulty in figuring out which of a set of identical twins is which, this happens in most places. Eventually most identical twins just seem to adapt and respond whenever someone says something in their general direction.
712* The inmates of the Magdalene laundries were, according to some accounts, addressed by number rather than name.
713* In Russia, a digit-named boy was ignored by the authorities. While "Dolphin" and "Viagra" (WhoNamesTheirKidDude) are not typical names, they have been recognised by the Moscow registry office. However, authorities have refused to give a birth certificate to a boy whose name is simply a series of digits. In English, his name translates into [=BOHdVF260602=] (Biological Object Human Descendant of the Voronins and Frolovs 260602). There was a long and loud legal debate... then, at the age of 14, the boy changed his name to Igor'.
714* The flight demonstration teams of the U.S. Air Force and Navy (the Thunderbirds and the Blue Angels, respectively) use numbers to identify the positions on the team, and the person currently filling that slot is referred to almost exclusively by that number (e.g. the Commanding Officer is #1, and Lead Solo is #5). Presumably this is to promote the brand of the team, rather than making stars of the individual pilots.
715* In the Mexican college Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo (Umich for short), and possibly many others, when you are accepted you're given a "matrícula" (like an ID number) of seven numbers and a letter, while the teachers, all the documents and everything else still refers to you by your name, the computer archive only knows you by your matrícula (you can access your file only by your matrícula, not by your name), a running joke among alumni (which arguably gets reinvented every new school year) is to refer to their matrícula as their "prisoner number".
716* Usually averted with all but the simplest of real life robots. Kismet, Ghengis, and Cog are rather famous examples. Exceptions include military robots, which usually aren't designed with human interaction in mind (unless said interaction came in the form of "bullet, meet brain-pan.")
717** Military squads do tend to nickname robots, though. One squad of marines named a bomb-disposal bot "WesternAnimation/ScoobyDoo".
718** Though one could assume that if, in the future, robots start being produced at a mass scale, the creators would have to give them some sort of numeral identification, rather than unique names. Although their particular make could have some sort of identifying name, like aircraft do.
719* Sports teams in general assign numbers to each of the players on the back of their uniforms (their actual names may or may not be printed on the back as well). There are several reasons for this: it emphasizes that the members are part of a team, it prevents possible confusion over names (i.e., if two players have last names that are similar or even the same), it's much easier to see at a distance one or two large digits rather than a string of letters, and for some sports (such as UsefulNotes/AmericanFootball) it dictates what rules apply to certain players (i.e., offensive linemen, who are only allowed to wear 50-79 in the UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague, are not allowed to catch a pass unless they report otherwise to the referee). This also make it easy on the referees and scorekeepers in certain sports to record which player has committed fouls or penalties. For example, in basketball, refs will signal to the scoring table the number of a player who committed a foul, and if it was a common foul or technical/flagrant foul, in order to keep track of how many fouls a player has committed in that game, due to most leagues having rules that eject a player if he commits too many. Ice hockey refs will likewise signal to the scorekeepers the number of whoever committed a penalty, what penalty they committed, and however many penalty minutes they're receiving for it (i.e. "TWO-FOUR, two minutes, hooking!")
720** Contrary to the popular belief of Website/ThisVeryWiki, UsefulNotes/{{NASCAR}} does ''not'' assign its drivers one car number for their entire career – in fact, the numbers are assigned to the team owners, who then assign them to the drivers. Teams actually pay NASCAR a small fee to gain the rights to a specific number. For example, when Matt Kenseth drove for Roush Fenway Racing, he piloted the #17, and when he moved to Joe Gibbs, he drove the #20 Toyota instead. The #17 stayed with Roush Fenway, and was assigned to his replacement, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
721*** More infamously, Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (more specifically, Teresa Earnhardt) refused to release the rights to the #8 when her stepson Dale Earnhardt Jr. jumped ship to Hendrick Motorsports. This forced Hendrick into a compromise, and they convinced Yates Racing to relinquish the #88 for Junior's use in 2008 and beyond. Post-merger, Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, renamed Chip Ganassi Racing after the 2013 season, originally retained the rights to own the #8 before quietly giving the rights to use the #8 to Richard Childress Racing in 2018, allowing Daniel Hemric to make his Cup debut in the one-off #8 RCR Camaro.
722*** This doesn't stop fans from associating driver and car number if a driver was particularly famous. Dale Earnhardt Sr. (#3), Richard Petty (#43), Jeff Gordon (#24) and Jimmie Johnson (#48) are the best examples. Johnson in particular drove the #48 for his entire Cup career.
723** In contrast with NASCAR's practice, UsefulNotes/FormulaOne now issues drivers numbers for their entire careers, following the number system used in [=MotoGP=], a practice which began in the 2014 season. The #1 is reserved for the reigning Drivers' Champion; drivers can choose any number from #2 to #99 (except #17, which is retired in honor of Jules Bianchi), as long as it isn't taken by another driver. The champion's "regular" number is placed in reserve while he uses #1 in order to prevent other drivers from taking it. In addition, if a driver doesn't race in Formula One three years after their last race, their number can be re-issued to another driver who wants that number.
724*** In a meta-sense, the number 6 has been adopted by former World Champion Nico Rosberg and currently Nicholas Latifi.
725** As mentioned above, in [=MotoGP=], riders are issued with numbers that they are going to keep for their entire career. Changes usually happened under several circumstances; such as the number that they used is already taken by someone else when they joined a new class, sponsorship obligations (such as Pons Racing's #40 bike), the number was retired by the organizers[[note]]So far, three numbers have been retired from all classes: Kevin Schwantz's #34, Daijiro Kato's #74, and Marco Simoncelli's #58. Several other numbers (Loris Capirossi's #65, Shoya Tomizawa's #48, and Luis Salom's #39) have also been retired, but for specific classes only (Capirossi's number is retired in [=MotoGP=], while Tomizawa and Salom's were retired in [=Moto2=])[[/note]], or optionally, if the rider becomes the world champion and stayed in the class they won it.
726*** After rider numbers became standardized[[note]]In almost all racing categories in the past (NASCAR is a notable exception, due to their team-based numbering system), riders/drivers used to have their number based on what the organizer gave to them before the race. This means they almost always have a different number in every single race they participate[[/note]] and before the advent of the [=MotoGP=] class to replace the [=500cc=] class, the rules stated that if you finished in the top 5 the previous season, you have to use rider numbers indicating that you finished in whatever position you did finish the previous year (i.e. champion gets #1, runner up gets #2, and so on). While it is OK to not follow this rule[[note]]For example, Kevin Schwantz kept the #34 for his entire career, only changing to #1 in 1994 after when he won the title in 1993[[/note]], all but one champion[[note]]Barry Sheene, who kept his #7 after winning his two titles in 1976 and 1977[[/note]] changed his number to #1 after he won the title. This all changed when Valentino Rossi gets promoted to the-then [=500cc=] in 2000. After Rossi finished second in the 2000 season, he decided to kept his iconic #46 the following season. Then Rossi won the title in 2001 and kept the #46 in the following season despite his champion status. As a result, virtually ''everyone'' decided to [[FollowTheLeader follow his lead]] and kept the same number they use for their entire career. This results in the near-abolition of the rule, now with only the champions given the option to change their number to #1[[note]]Post-Rossi's 2001 title, only in three occasions where non-champion top-five finishers in the championship changed their numbers in the following season: Colin Edwards in 2005 (after finishing fifth in 2004; unlike Pedrosa's case, he would stick to #5 for the rest of his career), Dani Pedrosa in 2008 (after finishing second in 2007), and Pedrosa again in 2009 (after finishing third in 2008)[[/note]] in the following season.
727*** This also makes Max Biaggi and Alex Barros TheArtifact of the rules above. In the aforementioned 2000 season, Biaggi finished third while Barros finished fourth, with Biaggi changing to #3 and Barros changing to #4 in the following season. Both riders would keep these numbers for the rest of their career[[note]]Biaggi briefly changed to #1 in the 2011 Superbike season after he won the championship in 2010[[/note]], thus making them TheArtifact of the now-discontinued rule.
728** In rugby, a player's number is determined by which position he's starting a match at (potential substitute players wear higher numbered jerseys that don't correspond to any particular position). The starting hooker, for example, will always be wearing number 2. This helps the ref yell at a particular player by yelling his jersey number, and usually the color, since there's a corresponding number on the other team. 14 of the 15 Union positions downplay this, as they all have nicknames (often different based on geography), like #2 being called a hooker due to his role in scrums (use his foot to hook the ball back to his side), or #15 being called Full Back because [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin he's the fully most "back" player on defense.]] The position in the #8 jersey is the straightest example, as it's only ever called "Number 8", "Eight man", or something similar.
729** In hockey, the number 99 will forever be associated with UsefulNotes/WayneGretzky, touted as the greatest player in the history of the game. His number is retired league wide, after being retired by the Edmonton Oilers and the Los Angeles Kings. [[note]]The teams he is most associated with. He also played for the St. Louis Blues and New York Rangers.[[/note]] No team will use 99 ever again. When Nicklas Backstrom tried to use 99 during the year he played on a KHL team (during the lockout), he got a ton of backlash for it. He changed it to 69 instead.
730*** By virtue of his last name rhyming with his number, and his enormous talent, Bobby Orr was referred to by number and name together more than any other player. Number Four, Bobby Orr.
731* Japan, especially during the feudal era, would name their children 1st son, 2nd son, 3rd son, etc. Today Jiro is still a popular Japanese name and means simply "Second Son". The name that translates to "First Son", though popular as well, has perhaps reached a worldwide JustForFun/OneMarioLimit for recognition purposes thanks to the famous baseball player with that name: Ichiro.
732** This is the usual naming custom in Bali for first names (for both boys and girls).
733** Same in medieval China as well.
734* Certain classes of warships (especially less significant ones) in many navies are not given names, but only numbers (e.g. Patrol Boat #25, U-29, K-39 etc.)
735** This can also apply to individual ships and boats. During some periods, the Soviet navy did not name its submarines, only referring to them by their hull numbers, as it was considered unsocialist to name a ship. Some were later given official names, while others remained only numbers. For example, out of the 6 operational ''Typhoon''-class submarines, TK-13 and TK-202 never had names. And almost all incarnations of the German Navy have designated their submarines ("U-boats") with the letter U followed by a number, without any accompanying name.
736** Likewise, in the early 1920s the [[UsefulNotes/KatanasOfTheRisingSun Imperial Japanese Navy]] assigned only numbers to its destroyers (normally a type of ship significant enough to merit a name) under the expectation that their planned massive fleet expansion would result in so many destroyers that naming them all would be impractical. This proved unpopular with crews and caused confusion in radio communications, and as a result all were given names.
737** Navies also assign named ships a hull number, often with letters that identify the type of ship. This is particularly useful because navies like to reuse the names of famous ships, so mentions of that ship are often followed by number. For instance, USS ''Enterprise'' would be followed by [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarTwo CV-6]], [[UsefulNotes/ColdWar CVN-65]], or [[Franchise/StarTrek NCC-1701]].
738* Ex-Yugoslav republics (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro and North Macedonia) all inherited the Yugoslavian JMBG (Jedinstveni matični broj građanina/Unique Master Citizen Number) system. It has thirteen numbers and as an adult you are pretty much expected to know it by heart, what makes it easier is that the numbers incorporate your birth-date and region of birth- you only need to memorize the last couple of numbers 0-499 for boys, 500-999 for girls and a checksum number. For example: 1707017170007 will be the number of the first born boy in Sarajevo on July 17, 2017.
739** Recently your National ID card number is also often asked for at banks, government offices and so on. Said national ID card is mandatory for anyone over the age of 18 and it is, in theory at least, a minor misdemeanor not to have it with you at all times in public.
740** Averted by Croatia, which has since switched their system to use eleven totally randomly assigned digits. That said, since so many Croatians were born or registered in the Yugoslav era, it will be some time before their [=JMBGs=] fade out of existence.
741* Iceland has its own national ID number called the ''kennitala'' (plural: ''kennitölur''), which is issued not only to people but also to companies and institutions. As in Finland, each number is unique to each entity, whether a person or an organization. Iceland makes even more public use of ''kennitölur'' than the ex-Yugoslav countries—businesses and schools use the national numbers instead of internal ID numbers, and their use is mandated for all banking transactions. Because the ''kennitala'' is public, it is not used for authentication purposes. The number is 10 digits, usually written in the form NNNNNN-NNNN, and for individuals, seven of the 10 numbers are based on the birth date—the first six are the actual date (DDMMYY), and the last digit is the century of birth (9 if born before 2000, 0 if born in 2000 or later), One side effect of this registry is that the country no longer conducts a census—population data can be obtained at any time by a database query.
742* This happened to Native children in Canadian Residential Schools, as a further means of dehumanizing them. This applied to their every possession, such as clothing marked with their number, giving more reason to punish them should those possessions (for whatever reason) go missing.
743* The (not kidding here) [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toledo_War Toledo War of 1835-36]] was a mostly bloodless conflict over UsefulNotes/ToledoOhio, between Ohio and Michigan. Of note in the conflict was Major Benjamin F. Stickney, an Ohio partisan, who had two sons who were ''actually named'' "One" and "Two". The assumption by their parents was they could choose their own names as they got older[[http://www.toledoblade.com/local/2000/12/24/Benjamin-Franklin-Stickney-His-remarkable-life-and-times.html]], but One and Two never did, seeming happy with their names. Two Stickney goes down in history for being responsible for the only bloodshed of the "war", when he stabbed a Michigan Sheriff's Deputy (whose injuries were non-life-threatening).
744* In the [[TheSeventies 1970s]], Michael Dengler wanted to change his name to "1069", but this was denied on the grounds that some government agencies would not be able to cope with someone with a number for a name. But [[http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1734&dat=19791228&id=0DIgAAAAIBAJ&sjid=oVEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3346,5320748 "One Zero Six Nine"]] was acceptable.
745* The German Princely House of Reuss traditionally names all its male members Heinrich followed by a number. The numbers are assigned in the order of birth and at the turn of each century they start over at Heinrich I. For instance, the current head of the house is Heinrich XIV, Prince Reuss of Köstritz (1955-) whose two sons are named Heinrich XXIX (1997-) and Heinrich V (2005-).
746* On anonymous {{Imageboards}} like Website/FourChan and 8chan, users typically address each other by the numbers automatically assigned to the posts they make, such as >>189342. On some boards each user is also assigned an eight-symbol alphanumeric indicator (for example, 45a7ef1d), which stays unique within a single thread and can be used to identify their posts. There is an option to use names and password-protected tripcodes, but this is generally frowned upon unless absolutely necessary. Don't get used to it, namefag.
747* A man named Geoff David Busker had his name legally changed to Geoff David [[Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy Fortytwo]].
748* Referring to someone by a number between 1 and 10 has become a slang way of rating their attractiveness (with a 1 being the least attractive and a 10 being the most attractive). This is common in the pickup artist community, and has given rise to this pickup line (seen on ''Series/TheSuiteLifeOnDeck''):
749--> Are you from Tennessee? Because you're the only "Ten" ''I'' see!
750* In a good database design, every record (a row in a table) needs a way to uniquely identify it from all other rows, and (because there is likely more than one person with the same first and last name or names change over time) this usually ends up being a system generated ID number, which is called a primary key. Other tables in the database [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_normal_form refer]] to a row in another table by its primary key number. Therefore, within a database system, you really are number 6.
751* "Six" is an uncommon, but extant, [[https://www.ancestry.com/name-origin?surname=six family name in the US]], concentrated mainly in the Midwest.
752* The 2019 U.S. Women's Open, one of the US LPGA Tour's five major championships, was won by a Korean golfer known professionally (in the West) as Jeongeun [=Lee6=]. The reason for the "6": She's the sixth woman named Lee Jeong-eun (Korean romanization) to have played on the Korean LPGA tour. Incidentally, Jeongeun [=Lee5=] also played in that tournament, finishing well back in the pack. In an interesting symmetry, [=Lee6=] had won six events on the Korean tour before her US breakthrough.
753* Amateur radio operators are given a globally unique call sign by the FCC (or their country's equivalent) upon passing their license exam. These serve the same purpose as call signs for commercial radio and TV stations. In the US, hams are required to announce their call sign every ten minutes and right before signing off. You're normally given whatever available call is next in line, but you can also request a vanity call sign, as well as inherit a call from a relative who has died. Hams normally append their call to their name when introducing themselves in person to other radio amateurs: "My name is John Smith, [=Q4ABC=]."
754* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K2 K2]], the second-highest mountain in the world. The "K" stands for Karakoram, the mountain range where it is located. It was originally a placeholder name used by the Great Trigonometrical Survey of British India (intending to map out the landscape of the subcontinent) and meant to be replaced by a local name if possible. However, because the mountain is so remote, it turned out that locals didn't have a name for it, either. The name has since stuck (if you're wondering where K1 is, the mountain has a local name, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masherbrum Masherbrum]]).
755* There is a species of butterfly called the Anna's eighty-eight because the pattern on its wings is strikingly similar to "88", although sometimes it looks more like a "98" or "89". It's so perfect it looks painted on.
756* There's a Chinese actress called Seven Tan. Though in her case it's an assumed name: her birth name is Tan Jing Jing and her Chinese stage name is Tan Song Yun, so Seven Tan is her English stage name.
757* Usefulnotes/JairBolsonaro calls his sons 01 (Flávio), 02 (Carlos), 03 (Eduardo) and 04 (Jair Renan), from eldest to youngest, in military tradition of assigning numbers to recruits. The press and the opposition have taken up these nicknames for them, if only to ridicule the habit.
758* Public schools in New York City are assigned a unique number that is used to identify the school. Most, but not all elementary schools also have a name associated with them.
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