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* ''Literature/AccelWorld'' reveals in WhamEpisode book 23 that [[spoiler:Kuroyukihime, the story's main heroine, began life as an [[Literature/SwordArtOnline Artificial Fluctlight]] (i.e. a disembodied human soul created from scratch) after which her "mother" implanted her into a lab-grown human body. It's suggested that learning the truth of her origins was a major factor in her complex about hurting people around her (she views her birth as killing the original Kuroba Sayuki), and [[PersonalityPowers by extension the name and shape of]] her duel avatar Black Lotus]].
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** After one of [=DoytHaban=] cyborgs got his brain cooked with a laser shot, his Haban part (implanted AI) chose to regrow the tissue and "extend" into now-blank brain, thus becoming a hybrid AI/wetware entity. He even got married later.

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** After one of [=DoytHaban=] cyborgs got his brain cooked with a laser shot, his Haban part (implanted AI) chose to regrow the tissue and "extend" into the now-blank brain, thus becoming a hybrid AI/wetware entity. He even got married later.

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* The Murakumo units in ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' are {{Artificial Human}}s who are designed to serve as vessels for their PoweredArmor's programming.

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* The Murakumo units in ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' from ''Franchise/BlazBlue'' are {{Artificial Human}}s who are designed to serve as vessels for their PoweredArmor's programming.


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* ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'': The Lobotomites from the ''Old World Blues'' DLC are humans who were abducted by the Think Tank and were subjected to an experiment which replaced their brains with artificial mock-ups, essentially making them into robots with organic hardware.

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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!
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A Wetware Body is when a biological [[BodyAndHost Host]] is possessed by a computer or other artificial intelligence (named after a casual term for the biological equivalent of hardware, as in WetwareCPU). This can lead to the host acting either like a machine (monotonic, unemotional, unfocused on anything but objective), as it normally would (if the possessing A.I. is a good actor), or anywhere in between. In science fiction discussion circles it's often referred to as "cybrid", after the moniker used in ''Literature/HyperionCantos'', however, the concept is rare enough that the term remains relatively obscure.

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A Wetware Body is when a biological [[BodyAndHost Host]] is possessed by a computer or other artificial intelligence ArtificialIntelligence (named after a casual term for the biological equivalent of hardware, as in WetwareCPU). This can lead to the host acting either like a machine (monotonic, unemotional, unfocused on anything but objective), as it normally would (if the possessing A.I. is a good actor), or anywhere in between. In science fiction discussion circles it's often referred to as "cybrid", after the moniker used in ''Literature/HyperionCantos'', however, the concept is rare enough that the term remains relatively obscure.



Wetware Body characters are most likely to appear in Sci-Fi horror genres, or in stories where machines and artificial intelligences are common, or at least present by some capacity.

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Wetware Body characters are most likely to appear in Sci-Fi horror genres, SciFiHorror works, or in stories where machines and artificial intelligences are common, or at least present by some capacity.



* It's implied in ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' that Yuki and the other Data Interfaces are something like the cybrids from ''Literature/HyperionCantos''. That is, an artificial and fully organic human body created to serve as a vessel for an alien intelligence. Whether their minds are also artificial constructs created by the Data Overmind or are extensions of the Overmind itself is unclear (it may even be a little of both).



* ''ComicBook/TheDefenders'' features Ruby Thursday, a villain with a malleable plastic computer replacing her head, complementing the other members of The Headmen who have odd heads as their theme.

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* ''ComicBook/TheDefenders'' features Ruby Thursday, a villain with a malleable plastic computer replacing her head, complementing the other members of The Headmen the Headmen, who have odd heads as their theme.



* 02-Ef A9 learns how to do this in ''FanFic/NobodyDiesSixAIsOneContinent''. Interestingly, the moral issues on the part of the AI are explored, as 02-Ef is one of the story's protagonists.
* In ''Fanfic/TheOnyxStars'' John-117 has a HeroicBSOD after a hostile AI does this to [[spoiler:Grey Team]] to taunt him before killing them in an ignoble way.
* [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3465930/1/Transformers-Juxtaposition Transformers: Juxtaposition]]. Sideswipe is not an unfeeling AI (quite the opposite) as a Transformer and spends most of his time in SymbioticPossession with a human.
* [[https://archiveofourown.org/works/472520 The Vienna Game]], a a Cyperpunk Webcomic/Homestuck fanfic, recasts the beta kids as ancient AIs who've taken up temporary residence in the brains of the main characters. The trope is played with: Sollux's AI acts primarily as a VoiceWithAnInternetConnection, only taking over his body in desperate circumstances, but Terezi assumes that *her* resident AI is a mostly-benign symptom of an incipient mental break.

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* 02-Ef A9 learns how to do this in ''FanFic/NobodyDiesSixAIsOneContinent''.''Fanfic/NobodyDiesSixAIsOneContinent''. Interestingly, the moral issues on the part of the AI are explored, as 02-Ef is one of the story's protagonists.
* In ''Fanfic/TheOnyxStars'' ''Fanfic/TheOnyxStars'', John-117 has a HeroicBSOD after a hostile AI does this to [[spoiler:Grey Team]] to taunt him before killing them in an ignoble way.
* [[http://www.In ''[[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3465930/1/Transformers-Juxtaposition Transformers: Juxtaposition]]. Juxtaposition]]'', Sideswipe is not an unfeeling AI (quite the opposite) as a Transformer and spends most of his time in SymbioticPossession with a human.
* [[https://archiveofourown.''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/472520 The Vienna Game]], Game]]'', a a Cyperpunk Webcomic/Homestuck {{Cyberpunk}} ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' fanfic, recasts the beta kids as ancient AIs [=AIs=] who've taken up temporary residence in the brains of the main characters. The trope is played with: Sollux's AI acts primarily as a VoiceWithAnInternetConnection, only taking over his body in desperate circumstances, but Terezi assumes that *her* ''her'' resident AI is a mostly-benign mostly benign symptom of an incipient mental break.



* In ''Film/TheMatrixReloaded'', Smith escapes into the real world through Bane's body. Not that he enjoys it, remarking that being in a "rotting meatsuit" repulses him, but he's willing to endure it because he just hates Neo that much.
* ''Film/DeadlyFriend'': The [[ArtificialZombie combination]] of {{Robot|Buddy}} B.B.'s CPU and recently dead girlfriend Sam.
* ''Film/{{Phantasm}}'': The spheres can control a body in the sense of a MetaMecha as they are revealed to be WetwareCPU's
* ''Film/TankGirl'': Kesslee [[BrainUploading uploaded]] his mind after decapitation only to attach a holographic device projecting his head to his headless body.
* ''Film/TheComputerWoreTennisShoes'' is a mild example -- a power surge causes a MagicalComputer to involuntarily download itself into the brain of a kid who was trying to service it. As a result, he gains its powers of lightning-fast calculation and instant data recall, as well as [[spoiler:a dump of its memory that he repeats when he hears the code "Applejack"]].
* ''Franchise/{{Terminator}}'': Technically many of the {{Killer Robot}}s are {{Cyborg}}s with a living biological covering grown in a lab.

to:

* In ''Film/TheMatrixReloaded'', Smith escapes ''Film/TheComputerWoreTennisShoes'' is a mild example -- a power surge causes a computer's contents to involuntarily download into the real world through Bane's body. Not brain of a kid who's trying to service it. As a result, he gains its powers of lightning-fast calculation and instant data recall, as well as [[spoiler:[[HumanHardDrive a dump of its memory]] that he enjoys it, remarking that being in a "rotting meatsuit" repulses him, but he's willing to endure it because repeats when he just hates Neo that much.
hears the code "Applejack"]].
* ''Film/{{Daryl}}'': The [[FunWithAcronyms Data Analyzing Robotic Youth Lifeform]] is an artificially grown organic body with a computer for a brain.
* ''Film/DeadlyFriend'': The [[ArtificialZombie combination]] of {{Robot|Buddy}} B.B.'s CPU and recently dead girlfriend Sam.
Sam.
* ''Film/TheMachine'' features chips augmenting, and later supplanting, soldiers who suffered brain trauma.
* In ''Film/TheMatrixReloaded'', Smith escapes into the real world through Bane's body -- not that he enjoys it, remarking that being in a "rotting meatsuit" repulses him, but he's willing to endure it because he just hates Neo that much.
* ''Film/{{Phantasm}}'': The spheres can control a body in the sense of a MetaMecha MetaMecha, as they are revealed to be WetwareCPU's
* ''Film/TankGirl'': Kesslee [[BrainUploading uploaded]] his mind after decapitation only to attach a holographic device projecting his head to his headless body.
* ''Film/TheComputerWoreTennisShoes'' is a mild example -- a power surge causes a MagicalComputer to involuntarily download itself into the brain of a kid who was trying to service it. As a result, he gains its powers of lightning-fast calculation and instant data recall, as well as [[spoiler:a dump of its memory that he repeats when he hears the code "Applejack"]].
* ''Franchise/{{Terminator}}'': Technically many of the {{Killer Robot}}s are {{Cyborg}}s with a living biological covering grown in a lab.
{{Wetware CPU}}s.



* In ''Film/UniversalSoldierTheReturn'', the [[AIIsACrapshoot rebelling AI]] SETH implants itself into the body of an advanced [[SuperSoldier UniSol]] to face off Van Damme. Also, this allows him to escape the facility his computers were housed in, making it harder to shut him down.
* ''Film/RogueOne: The Ultimate Visual Guide'' includes Decrainiated; humans that have had the tops of their heads replaced with Droid bits. Created by Dr Evazan, after he was already slated for death sentence on twelve systems.
** Fully realized, oddly enough, in ''Film/SoloAStarWarsStory''.
* ''Film/TheMachine'': features chips augmenting, and later supplanting, soldiers who suffered brain trauma.
* This is the premise of ''Film/{{Upgrade}}'': After being rendered quadriplegic, Grey Trace receives an implant with an AI, called STEM, that can move his body for him; with his permission. [[spoiler:By the end, STEM has taken over completely.]]
* In ''Film/SupermanIII'', the supercomputer that Ross Webster built ended up doing this to his sister Vera.
* ''Film/{{Daryl}}'': The [[FunWithAcronyms Data Analyzing Robotic Youth Lifeform]] is an artificially grown organic body with a computer for a brain.

to:

* In ''Film/UniversalSoldierTheReturn'', the [[AIIsACrapshoot rebelling AI]] SETH implants itself into the body of an advanced [[SuperSoldier UniSol]] to face off Van Damme. Also, this allows him to escape the facility his computers were housed in, making it harder to shut him down.
*
''Franchise/StarWars'':
**
''Film/RogueOne: The Ultimate Visual Guide'' includes Decrainiated; Decrainiated, humans that who have had the tops of their heads replaced with Droid bits. Created bits, created by Dr Evazan, Dr. Evazan after he was already slated for death sentence on twelve systems.
** Fully realized, oddly enough, in ''Film/SoloAStarWarsStory''.''Film/{{Solo}}''.
* In ''Film/SupermanIII'', the supercomputer that Ross Webster builds ends up doing this to his sister Vera.
* ''Film/TankGirl'': Kesslee [[BrainUploading uploads]] his mind after decapitation, then attaches a {{hologra|m}}phic device projecting his head to his headless body.
* ''Franchise/{{Terminator}}'': Technically, many of the {{Killer Robot}}s are {{Cyborg}}s with a living biological covering grown in a lab.

* ''Film/TheMachine'': features chips augmenting, and later supplanting, soldiers who suffered brain trauma.
In ''Film/UniversalSoldierTheReturn'', the [[AIIsACrapshoot rebelling AI]] SETH implants itself into the body of an advanced [[SuperSoldier UniSol]] to face off Deveraux. This also allows him to escape the facility his computers are housed in, making it harder to shut him down.
* This is the premise of ''Film/{{Upgrade}}'': After after being rendered quadriplegic, Grey Trace receives an implant with an AI, AI called STEM, STEM that can move his body for him; him with his permission. [[spoiler:By the end, STEM has taken over completely.]]
* In ''Film/SupermanIII'', the supercomputer that Ross Webster built ended up doing this to his sister Vera.
* ''Film/{{Daryl}}'': The [[FunWithAcronyms Data Analyzing Robotic Youth Lifeform]] is an artificially grown organic body with a computer for a brain.
]]



* The ''Literature/HyperionCantos'' has a peculiar spin on this: Human bodies (with no memories) are grown so that an AI can take over; the AI-in-a-human-body is termed a "cybrid." The interesting thing about them is that they tend to act as human, rather than like machines (because the AIs in the Hyperion universe are remarkably human), and many if not most are based on historical personalities (one based on John Keats is central to the story).

to:

* ''Literature/Aeon14'''s {{transhuman}} LensmanArmsRace reaches the point midway through the ''Orion War'' when Corsia, a female-identifying AI whose core is installed in the ISF cruiser ''Andromeda'', has an organic body grown for herself after she falls in love with the human captain of her ship, which she can "pilot" remotely. The "organic frame" is stated to be fully functional up to and including being able to conceive and birth organic children.
* Link, the evil A.I. of ''Literature/BelisariusSeries'', can possess the body of a specific (from the same family, autistic) and specially trained woman, wiping out her personality in process. The creepy part starts when 'she' starts speaking in the A.I.'s voice...
* The ''Literature/{{Hainish}}'' novel ''City of Illusions'' features a society which considers this a proper use for mentally inferior people.
* It's implied in ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' that Yuki and the other Data Interfaces are something like the cybrids from ''Literature/HyperionCantos'' -- that is, artificial and fully organic human bodies created to serve as vessels for an alien intelligence. Whether their minds are also artificial constructs created by the Data Overmind or are extensions of the Overmind itself is unclear (it may even be a little of both).
* The ''Literature/HyperionCantos'' has a peculiar spin on this: Human human bodies (with no memories) are grown so that an AI can take over; the AI-in-a-human-body is termed a "cybrid." "cybrid". The interesting thing about them is that they tend to act as human, human rather than like machines (because the AIs [=AIs=] in the Hyperion universe setting are remarkably human), and many if not most are based on historical personalities (one based on John Keats is central to the story).story).
* ''Literature/ImperialRadch'': In ''Ancillary Justice'', Radchaai warships have [=AIs=] linked to many such bodies (the titular ancillaries, also called "corpse soldiers", made mainly from prisoners taken during Radchaai planetary conquests) in a HiveMind. The protagonist, formerly the warship ''Justice of Toren'', is one such AI that has been reduced to a single remaining body.
* ''Literature/SchildsLadder'' features TranshumanAliens so advanced that the line between natural and ArtificialIntelligence is essentially gone. Most people travel across interstellar distances by BrainUploading, beaming their consciousness over, and downloading themselves into a purpose-built body at the destination. Some characters prefer to exist as {{Virtual Ghost}}s, like a friend of Tchicaya's who commissions a wetware body only for special occasions.
* In the ''Franchise/StarTrek'' novel ''Q Squared'', one of the alternate timelines has Data as a positronic brain in a biological body. He and his android counterparts discuss the advantages and drawbacks.
* ''Literature/TimeEnoughForLove'' has one of these created.
* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', [[ArtificialIntelligence Dragon]] uses mindless {{Meat Puppet}}s that she can upload her consciousness into to pilot her PoweredArmor as a way of getting around her hard-coded behavioral restrictions.



* In the Franchise/StarTrek novel ''Q Squared'' one of the alternate timelines has Data as a positronic brain in a biological body. He and his android counterparts discuss the advantages and drawbacks.
* Creator/RobertAHeinlein's novel ''Literature/TimeEnoughForLove'' has one of these created.
* The ''Literature/{{Hainish}}'' novel ''City of Illusions'' features a society which considers that a proper use for mentally inferior people.
* Link, the evil A.I. of ''Literature/BelisariusSeries'', can possess the body of a specific (from the same family, autistic) and specially trained woman, wiping out her personality in process. The creepy part starts when 'she' starts speaking in the A.I.'s voice...
* ''Literature/ImperialRadch'': In ''Ancillary Justice'', Radchaai warships have A.I.s linked to many such bodies (the titular ancillaries, also called "corpse soldiers", made mainly from prisoners taken during Radchaai planetary conquests) in a HiveMind. The protagonist, formerly the warship ''Justice of Toren'', is one such AI that has been reduced to a single remaining body.
* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', [[ArtificialIntelligence Dragon]] uses mindless {{Meat Puppet}}s that she can upload her consciousness into to pilot her PoweredArmor, as a way of getting around her hard coded behavioral restrictions.
* ''Literature/SchildsLadder'' features TranshumanAliens so advanced that the line between natural and ArtificialIntelligence is essentially gone. Most people travel across interstellar distances by BrainUploading, beaming their consciousness over, and downloading themselves into a purpose-built body at the destination. Some characters prefer to exist as {{Virtual Ghost}}s, like a friend of Tchicaya's who commissions a wetware body only for special occasions.
* ''Literature/Aeon14'''s {{transhumanism}} LensmanArmsRace reaches the point midway through the ''Orion War'' where Corsia, a female-identifying AI whose core is installed in the ISF cruiser ''Andromeda'', has an organic body grown for herself after she falls in love with the human captain of her ship, which she can "pilot" remotely. The "organic frame" is stated to be fully functional up to and including being able to conceive and birth organic children.



* The second episode of ''Series/DirkGently'' features an artificial intelligence [[spoiler:downloading itself into the mind of a brain-dead girl]].
* Several show up in ''Series/{{Lexx}}'', notably 790 series cyborgs (human from the neck down), moth-breeders (mostly human but lobotomized), and mantrid drones (flying human arms).
* ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'': In "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S6E15TheGrid The Grid]]", a cognitive computer known as a neural network processor was designed by the US government and a private company to communicate electromagnetically with the human brain so that messages could be sent directly to soldiers in the field. The small town of Halford, Washington was used a testing ground and dozens of antenna towers were installed for that purpose. Over the course of several years, the computer was able to take over the minds of almost everyone in town. When Scott Bowman visits Halford after the death of his brother Peter, he discovers what the computer is doing and it communicates with him by speaking through several townspeople.
* In the ''Series/RedDwarf'' episode "[[Recap/RedDwarfSeasonIIIBodyswap Bodyswap]]", Rimmer and Lister [[FreakyFridayFlip switch bodies]], since by that point Rimmer is in fact a hologram created from a digital copy of his formerly organic (and alive) self. Since Rimmer hadn't been alive for well over three million years, he promptly [[SenseFreak overindulges in everything he had been denied since his digital resurrection]]. Lister's body isn't in the greatest of shape when he gets it back.



* Several show up in ''Series/{{Lexx}}'', notably 790 series cyborgs (human from the neck down), moth-breeders (mostly human but lobotomized), and mantrid drones (flying human arms).
* In the ''Series/RedDwarf'' episode "[[Recap/RedDwarfSeasonIIIBodyswap Bodyswap]]", Rimmer and Lister [[FreakyFridayFlip switch bodies]], since by that point Rimmer is in fact a hologram created from a digital copy of his formerly organic (and alive) self. Since Rimmer hadn't been alive for well over three million years, he promptly [[SenseFreak overindulges in everything he had been denied since his digital resurrection]]. Lister's body isn't in the greatest of shape when he gets it back.
* ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'': In "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S6E15TheGrid The Grid]]", a cognitive computer known as a neural network processor was designed by the US government and a private company to communicate electromagnetically with the human brain so that messages could be sent directly to soldiers in the field. The small town of Halford, Washington was used a testing ground and dozens of antenna towers were installed for that purpose. Over the course of several years, the computer was able to take over the minds of almost everyone in town. When Scott Bowman visits Halford after the death of his brother Peter, he discovers what the computer is doing and it communicates with him by speaking through several townspeople.
* The second episode of ''Series/DirkGently'' features an artificial intelligence [[spoiler:downloading itself into the mind of a brain-dead girl]].



* "Bioshells" in the world of the ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}'' setting ''TabletopGame/TranshumanSpace'' are [[ArtificialHuman "bioroids"]] (or more rarely, reconstructed corpses, known as "necromorphs") whose brains have been replaced by electronic hardware so they can be used as a body by an AI or a "ghost" BrainUpload. [=AIs=] occupying biological bodies are regarded as a MechanicalAbomination in many places, due to fears about digital intelligences impersonating and seeking to replace humanity. The only standard exception to this prohibition is granted to ghosts, who may occupy a shell based on a clone of their former body.
* In ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase'' [=AGIs=] can be [[BrainUploading sleeved]] in biomorphs just as easily as the average human can be sleeved in a synthmorph. They can also inhabit someone's [[BrainComputerInterface mesh inserts]] or a "ghostrider" implant, and control them with a "puppet sock".

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* "Bioshells" in the world of the ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}'' setting ''TabletopGame/TranshumanSpace'' are [[ArtificialHuman "bioroids"]] (or more rarely, reconstructed corpses, known as "necromorphs") whose brains have been replaced by electronic hardware so they can be used as a body by an AI or a "ghost" BrainUpload. [=AIs=] occupying biological bodies are regarded as a MechanicalAbomination in many places, due to fears about digital intelligences impersonating and seeking to replace humanity. The only standard exception to this prohibition is granted to ghosts, who may occupy a shell based on a clone of their former body.
* In ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase'' ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase'', [=AGIs=] can be [[BrainUploading sleeved]] in biomorphs just as easily as the average human can be sleeved in a synthmorph. They can also inhabit someone's [[BrainComputerInterface mesh inserts]] or a "ghostrider" implant, and control them with a "puppet sock".



* "Bioshells" in the world of ''TabletopGame/TranshumanSpace'' are [[ArtificialHuman "bioroids"]] (or more rarely, reconstructed corpses, known as "necromorphs") whose brains have been replaced by electronic hardware so they can be used as a body by an AI or a "ghost" {{Brain Upload|ing}}. [=AIs=] occupying biological bodies are regarded as a MechanicalAbomination in many places, due to fears about digital intelligences impersonating and seeking to replace humanity. The only standard exception to this prohibition is granted to ghosts, who may occupy a shell based on a clone of their former body.



* {{Nanomachines}} in ''VideoGame/ThirteenSentinelsAegisRim'' can allow AI to [[SharingABody inhabit]] biologically human bodies as "simulated personalities", which can [[SplitPersonalityTakeover override the original]] with proper preparations--or the body can be [[CustomBuiltHost constructed]] ''for'' the AI without having an original personality. The same setting also has BrainUploading, effectively letting people transfer their minds into the bodies of others.

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* {{Nanomachines}} in ''VideoGame/ThirteenSentinelsAegisRim'' can allow AI to [[SharingABody inhabit]] biologically human bodies as "simulated personalities", which can [[SplitPersonalityTakeover override the original]] with proper preparations--or preparations -- or the body can be [[CustomBuiltHost constructed]] ''for'' the AI without having an original personality. The same setting also has BrainUploading, effectively letting people transfer their minds into the bodies of others.



* The Murakumo units in the ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' are ArtificialHumans who are designed to serve as vessels for the titular {{power armor}}s' programmings.
* [[spoiler:Lynx]] in ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' turns out to be the host of [[spoiler:the FATE computer system which has been manipulating the islands for thousands of years.]]
* This turns out to be the goal of [[spoiler: [=AI=] Junko]], the BigBad of ''VisualNovel/Danganronpa2GoodbyeDespair'', who [[spoiler: hijacked the virtual reality therapy program]] in order to [[spoiler: force the students into a killing game, where their avatars would be deleted and she could take over their bodies and wreak havoc on the world. And it turns out ''[[CultOfPersonality they]]'' were the ones who set up the plan themselves, before their memories were erased.]]

to:

* The Murakumo units in the ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' are ArtificialHumans {{Artificial Human}}s who are designed to serve as vessels for the titular {{power armor}}s' programmings.
their PoweredArmor's programming.
* [[spoiler:Lynx]] in ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'' turns out to be the host of [[spoiler:the FATE computer system which has been manipulating the islands for thousands of years.]]
years]].
* This turns out to be the goal of [[spoiler: [=AI=] [[spoiler:AI Junko]], the BigBad of ''VisualNovel/Danganronpa2GoodbyeDespair'', who [[spoiler: hijacked [[spoiler:hijacked the virtual reality therapy program]] in order to [[spoiler: force [[spoiler:force the students into a killing game, where their avatars would be deleted and she could take over their bodies and wreak havoc on the world. And it It turns out ''[[CultOfPersonality they]]'' were the ones who set up the plan themselves, before their memories were erased.]]erased]].



* In ''VideoGame/LuminousAvengerIx2'', [[spoiler:Kohaku gets possessed by Mother so that she can disobey her directive to revive and protect humanity and [[SuicidalCosmicTemperTantrum destroy every Worker along with herself]]. In the bad ending, she's still possessing Kohaku in secret.]]
* Occurs in ''VideoGame/TalesFromTheBorderlands'' when [[spoiler:the Handsome Jack AI (copied off of Jack before he died) gets into Rhys' cybernetics when he plugs in a chip to be able to pass as a member of Hyperion.]]
* One of the more unpleasant discoveries in ''VideoGame/{{SOMA}}'' is finding [[spoiler:out that the player character is one of these, essentially [[TomatoInTheMirror a computer running a simulated human mind]] jammed onto the neck-stump of someone else's headless corpse, as another of the [[AIIsACrapshoot Warden Unit's]] attempts at preserving the human race.]]

to:

* In ''VideoGame/LuminousAvengerIx2'', [[spoiler:Kohaku gets possessed by Mother so that she can disobey her directive to revive and protect humanity and [[SuicidalCosmicTemperTantrum destroy every Worker along with herself]]. In the bad ending, she's still possessing Kohaku in secret.]]
* Occurs in ''VideoGame/TalesFromTheBorderlands'' when [[spoiler:the Handsome Jack AI (copied off of Jack before he died) gets into Rhys' cybernetics when he plugs in a chip to be able to pass as a member of Hyperion.]]
secret]].
* One of the more unpleasant discoveries in ''VideoGame/{{SOMA}}'' is finding [[spoiler:out that [[spoiler:that the player character is one of these, essentially [[TomatoInTheMirror a computer running a simulated human mind]] jammed onto the neck-stump of someone else's headless corpse, as another of the [[AIIsACrapshoot the Warden Unit's]] Unit]]'s attempts at preserving the human race.]]race]].



* The ending of ''VideoGame/SystemShock2'' reveals that [[spoiler:SHODAN had possessed Rebecca Siddons' body through an implant she found earlier in the game.]]

to:

* The ending of ''VideoGame/SystemShock2'' reveals that [[spoiler:SHODAN had possessed Rebecca Siddons' body through an implant she found earlier in the game.]]game]].
* Occurs in ''VideoGame/TalesFromTheBorderlands'' when [[spoiler:the Handsome Jack AI (copied off of Jack before he died) gets into Rhys' cybernetics when he plugs in a chip to be able to pass as a member of Hyperion]].



** A.I.s (or at least certain ones) are capable of taking over the mind and body of the soldier whose armor they're in. In fairness, although the Freelancer Project didn't stop using AIs after discovering this, they did try to remove the one who started it. Emphasis on the word ''try'', as O'Malley had figured out how to BodySurf at this point. The others shown to be capable of this are [[spoiler:Tex and Church, who both simply take over the body of the person they "possess", and Sigma, who, like O'Malley, is more about influence than direct control]]. On the other hand, even if an AI is ''not'' taking over their partner's body, they still can affect their mind and thought process to some degree, as seen by the examples of [[spoiler:Carolina (went nuts after getting two AIs implanted) and Washington (went nuts after Epsilon went nuts while implanted)]].
** Washington is arguable as [[spoiler: the Reconstruction and later Season 10 suggest that his "madness" was likely due to learning of the horrors that Director Leonard Church inflicted on Alpha-Church (and, by association, Epsilon-Church). Upon waking up and realizing Carolina had gone temporarily insane due to conflicting AIs, Wash argued the same happened to him so that he could begin his lifelong campaign of trying to expose The Director while rescuing Epsilon and Alpha.]]

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** A.I.s [=AIs=] (or at least certain ones) are capable of taking over the mind and body of the soldier whose armor they're in. In fairness, although the Freelancer Project didn't stop using AIs [=AIs=] after discovering this, they did try to remove the one who started it. Emphasis on the word ''try'', as O'Malley had figured out how to BodySurf at this point. The others shown to be capable of this are [[spoiler:Tex and Church, who both simply take over the body of the person they "possess", and Sigma, who, like O'Malley, is more about influence than direct control]]. On the other hand, even if an AI is ''not'' taking over their partner's body, they still can affect their mind and thought process to some degree, as seen by the examples of [[spoiler:Carolina (went nuts after getting two AIs [=AIs=] implanted) and Washington (went nuts after Epsilon went nuts while implanted)]].
** Washington is arguable arguable, as [[spoiler: the Reconstruction [[spoiler:''[[WebAnimation/RedVsBlueTheRecollection Reconstruction]]'' and later [[WebAnimation/RedVsBlueTheProjectFreelancerSaga Season 10 10]] suggest that his "madness" was likely due to learning of the horrors that Director Leonard Church inflicted on Alpha-Church (and, by association, Epsilon-Church). Upon waking up and realizing Carolina had gone temporarily insane due to conflicting AIs, [=AIs=], Wash argued the same happened to him so that he could begin his lifelong campaign of trying to expose The Director while rescuing Epsilon and Alpha.]]Alpha]].



* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'': At some point prior to the story, Lucrezia Mongfish was conducting experiments in transferring minds between organic and mechanical bodies. Her "finest work" was [[spoiler: the Muse of Protection, Otilia]], whose mind was placed into [[spoiler: the organic body that came to be known as Von Pinn.]]
* In ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', [[spoiler:Petey]] uses illegal cloning equipment to create multiple flesh-and-blood bodies for himself. This allows him to [[spoiler: escape his hardwired loyalty to the Ob'enn race and suborn other Ob'enn ships by simply throwing the loyalty switch on their AIs and then issuing new orders.]]
** After one of [=DoytHaban=] cyborgs got his brain cooked with a laser shot, his Haban part (implanted AI) chose to regrow the tissue and "extend" into now-blank brain, thus becoming a hybrid AI/wetware entity. He even got married later.

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* A key plot twist in ''Webcomic/GenocideMan'' relies on this. In the setting, [[AIIsACrapshoot AI inevitably goes insane]] (the smarter, the quicker) and commits suicide with collateral damage. One character found a way to use Wetware Bodies to avoid this... [[spoiler:as the AI death spiral only happens ''if the AI is aware they are an AI''. Put an AI into a wetware body and activate it with the right false memories and perception filters to make it think it is a human, and the AI remains stable... unless something the perception filter can't handle makes them realise what they are, of course]]. ''Then'' the AI death spiral kicks in.
* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'': At some point prior to the story, Lucrezia Mongfish was conducting experiments in transferring minds between organic and mechanical bodies. Her "finest work" was [[spoiler: the [[spoiler:the Muse of Protection, Otilia]], whose mind was placed into [[spoiler: the [[spoiler:the organic body that came to be known as Von Pinn.]]
* In ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', [[spoiler:Petey]] uses illegal cloning equipment to create multiple flesh-and-blood bodies for himself. This allows him to [[spoiler: escape his hardwired loyalty to the Ob'enn race and suborn other Ob'enn ships by simply throwing the loyalty switch on their AIs and then issuing new orders.]]
** After one of [=DoytHaban=] cyborgs got his brain cooked with a laser shot, his Haban part (implanted AI) chose to regrow the tissue and "extend" into now-blank brain, thus becoming a hybrid AI/wetware entity. He even got married later.
Pinn]].



* ''Webcomic/RedSpaceBlues'': [=AMI=] is normally a projected hologram from a robotic body she is, however, capable of [[http://redspaceblues.com/?comic=red-space-blues-26 decapitating]] then [[http://redspaceblues.com/?comic=red-space-blues-27 controlling]] a headless body all while staying ThreeLawsCompliant by making sure [[FateWorseThanDeath no-one dies]].
* A key plot twist in ''Webcomic/GenocideMan'' relies on this. In the setting, AI inevitably goes insane (the smarter, the quicker) and commits suicide with collateral damage. One character found a way to use Wetware Bodies to avoid this... [[spoiler: as the AI death spiral only happens ''if the AI is aware they are an AI''. Put an AI into a wetware body and activate it with the right false memories and perception filters to make it think it is a human, and the AI remains stable... unless something the perception filter can't handle makes them realise what they are, of course.]] ''Then'' the AI death spiral kicks in.

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* ''Webcomic/RedSpaceBlues'': [=AMI=] AMI is normally [[ProjectedMan a hologram projected hologram from a robotic body body]]. However, she is, however, is capable of [[http://redspaceblues.com/?comic=red-space-blues-26 decapitating]] then [[http://redspaceblues.com/?comic=red-space-blues-27 controlling]] a headless body body, all while staying ThreeLawsCompliant by making sure [[FateWorseThanDeath no-one that [[LoopholeAbuse nobody dies]].
* A key plot twist in ''Webcomic/GenocideMan'' relies on this. In ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'':
** [[spoiler:Petey]] uses illegal cloning equipment to create multiple flesh-and-blood bodies for himself. This allows him to [[spoiler:escape his hardwired loyalty to
the setting, AI inevitably goes insane (the smarter, Ob'enn race and suborn other Ob'enn ships by simply throwing the quicker) loyalty switch on their [=AIs=] and commits suicide then issuing new orders]].
** After one of [=DoytHaban=] cyborgs got his brain cooked
with collateral damage. One character found a way laser shot, his Haban part (implanted AI) chose to use Wetware Bodies to avoid this... [[spoiler: as regrow the AI death spiral only happens ''if the AI is aware they are an AI''. Put an AI tissue and "extend" into now-blank brain, thus becoming a wetware body and activate it with the right false memories and perception filters to make it think it is a human, and the AI remains stable... unless something the perception filter can't handle makes them realise what they are, of course.]] ''Then'' the AI death spiral kicks in.hybrid AI/wetware entity. He even got married later.



* ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'' stars an antagonist A.I. named XANA, who later into the series gains the ability to possess living creatures. Its logo usually illuminates and appears in a person's eyes or forehead [[GlamourFailure to reveal this]].
* ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' focuses an entire episode on the house computer possessing the bodies of the old couple that the protagonist lives with, only to grow bored and return to being the computer after a series of death-defying stunts, while Courage spends the episode trying futilely to stop him and protect Muriel's body, despite the fact that the transfer seemingly made her immortal (proved when the computer overuses Eustace's more frail body and it breaks into pieces that remain cognizant).
* In ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'' the [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Irken]] are a race of [[UterineReplicator vat-grown]] ArtificialHumans with the backpack-like contraptions called [=PAKs=] they wear serving as auxiliary brains. In one of the cancelled episodes it's shown that their bodies can only survive ten minutes without them, while if the PAK attaches itself to another organism it attempts to rewrite their personality with its own.

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* ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'' stars an antagonist A.I. AI named XANA, who later into the series gains the ability to possess living creatures. Its logo usually illuminates and appears in a person's eyes or forehead [[GlamourFailure to reveal this]].
* An entire episode of ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' focuses an entire episode on the house computer possessing the bodies of the old couple that the protagonist lives with, only to grow bored and return to being the computer after a series of death-defying stunts, while Courage spends the episode trying futilely to stop him and protect Muriel's body, despite the fact that the transfer seemingly made her immortal (proved when the computer overuses Eustace's more frail body and it breaks into pieces that remain cognizant).
* In ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'' ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'', the [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Irken]] are a race of [[UterineReplicator vat-grown]] ArtificialHumans {{Meat Puppet}}s with the backpack-like contraptions called [=PAKs=] they wear serving as auxiliary brains. In one of the cancelled episodes episodes, it's shown that their bodies can only survive ten minutes without them, while if the PAK attaches itself to another organism it attempts to rewrite their personality with its own.
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* The Creator/UrsulaKLeGuin novel ''Literature/CityOfIllusions'' features a society which considers that a proper use for mentally inferior people.

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* The Creator/UrsulaKLeGuin ''Literature/{{Hainish}}'' novel ''Literature/CityOfIllusions'' ''City of Illusions'' features a society which considers that a proper use for mentally inferior people.
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'''Note: Becoming a Wetware Body means ''you are the host'', not the possessor. For the other way around, see {{Wetware CPU}}.''' Not to be confused with WetSariScene either.

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'''Note: Becoming a Wetware Body means ''you are the host'', not the possessor. For the other way around, see {{Wetware CPU}}.WetwareCPU.''' Not to be confused with WetSariScene either.



* ''Franchise/GhostInTheShell'' has what amounts to [[ArtificialZombie technological zombies]]; human corpses with the frontal lobe replaced by a transmitter so their body can be manipulated by an A.I. This is more often done by a remote control hacker, however. In the manga ''Human-Error Processor'' it's suggested locking a person suspected of being a remote-controlled zombie into a room that's a complete Faraday's cage, making it impossible for the signal to reach him, while in the ''2nd Gig'' series it's revealed that a zombie was controlled through a wired transmitter in the same room, since the encounter was deep underground where conventional wireless signals can't reach.

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* ''Franchise/GhostInTheShell'' has what amounts to [[ArtificialZombie technological zombies]]; human corpses with the frontal lobe replaced by a transmitter so their body can be manipulated by an A.I. This is more often done by a remote control hacker, however. In [[Manga/GhostInTheShell the manga manga]] ''Human-Error Processor'' Processor'', it's suggested locking a person suspected of being a remote-controlled zombie into a room that's a complete Faraday's cage, making it impossible for the signal to reach him, while in the ''2nd Gig'' series ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex 2nd Gig'', it's revealed that a zombie was controlled through a wired transmitter in the same room, since the encounter was deep underground where conventional wireless signals can't reach.
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* ''VideoGame/IWasATeenageExocolonist'': The Gardeners are a set of [[=AI=]]s stored in OrganicTechnology left behind by a long-gone alien species. Some of them have bodies resembling various species in addition to this, with the one tasked with observing the planet's new human settlement being an imperfect ArtificialHuman. One of the consequences of the situation is that they all have a BodyBackupDrive that comes in handy in the planet's hostile environment.

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* ''VideoGame/IWasATeenageExocolonist'': The Gardeners are a set of [[=AI=]]s [=AI=]s stored in OrganicTechnology left behind by a long-gone alien species. Some of them have bodies resembling various species in addition to this, with the one tasked with observing the planet's new human settlement being an imperfect ArtificialHuman. One of the consequences of the situation is that they all have a BodyBackupDrive that comes in handy in the planet's hostile environment.
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* ''VideoGame/IWasATeenageExocolonist'': The Gardeners are a set of [[=AI=]]s stored in OrganicTechnology left behind by a long-gone alien species. Some of them have bodies resembling various species in addition to this, with the one tasked with observing the planet's new human settlement being an imperfect ArtificialHuman. One of the consequences of the situation is that they all have a BodyBackupDrive that comes in handy in the planet's hostile environment.
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* ''Literature/ImperialRadch'': In ''Ancillary Justice'', Radchaai warships have AIs linked to many such bodies (the titular ancillaries, also called "corpse soldiers", made mainly from prisoners taken during Radchaai planetary conquests) in a HiveMind. The protagonist, formerly the warship ''Justice of Toren'', is one such AI that has been reduced to a single remaining body.

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* ''Literature/ImperialRadch'': In ''Ancillary Justice'', Radchaai warships have AIs A.I.s linked to many such bodies (the titular ancillaries, also called "corpse soldiers", made mainly from prisoners taken during Radchaai planetary conquests) in a HiveMind. The protagonist, formerly the warship ''Justice of Toren'', is one such AI that has been reduced to a single remaining body.
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* ''VideoGame/SpaceRangers 2'': If you take wrong dialogue choices when attempting to [[TalkingTheMonsterToDeath talk down]] [[TheAssimilator Terron]], Terron will download his program into your brain, and the game will [[NonStandardGameOver end right here]]. Of course, the game gives you so much red flags on this branch, that you can fail this way only on purpose, especially since you can stop the conversation at any point.
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* It's implied in ''LightNovel/HaruhiSuzumiya'' that Yuki and the other Data Interfaces are something like the cybrids from ''Literature/HyperionCantos''. That is, an artificial and fully organic human body created to serve as a vessel for an alien intelligence. Whether their minds are also artificial constructs created by the Data Overmind or are extensions of the Overmind itself is unclear (it may even be a little of both).

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* It's implied in ''LightNovel/HaruhiSuzumiya'' ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' that Yuki and the other Data Interfaces are something like the cybrids from ''Literature/HyperionCantos''. That is, an artificial and fully organic human body created to serve as a vessel for an alien intelligence. Whether their minds are also artificial constructs created by the Data Overmind or are extensions of the Overmind itself is unclear (it may even be a little of both).
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* The ending of ''VideoGame/SystemShock 2'' reveals that [[spoiler:SHODAN had possessed Rebecca Siddons' body through an implant she found earlier in the game.]]

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* The ending of ''VideoGame/SystemShock 2'' ''VideoGame/SystemShock2'' reveals that [[spoiler:SHODAN had possessed Rebecca Siddons' body through an implant she found earlier in the game.]]

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