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13[[quoteright:350:[[TabletopGame/Warhammer40000 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/laertes_magos.png]]]]
14[[caption-width-right:350:[[http://davidap.deviantart.com/art/Laertes-and-Magos-Robertson-Rogue-trader-289227247 Image]] by [[http://davidap.deviantart.com/ DavidAP]]]]
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16->''"Never forget I am not this silver body, Mahrai. I am not an animal brain, I am not even some attempt to produce an AI through software running on a computer. I am a Culture Mind. We are close to gods, and on the far side."''
17-->-- The Mind of '''Lasting Damage''', ''Literature/LookToWindward''
18
19Even though AIIsACrapshoot, the [[SlidingScaleOfRobotIntelligence more]] [[SuperIntelligence powerful]] the A.I. becomes, the likelier it is to choose to ''help you'' instead of just [[EverythingTryingToKillYou kill you]]. Depending on the setting, this help can range from establishing a true {{Utopia}}, a [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans false utopia]] or even a {{Dystopia}} [[TheComputerIsYourFriend if it's so inclined]].
20
21Customarily, when you can [[RobotsThinkFaster think more quickly than the speed of light]] it becomes trivial to prove ReedRichardsIsUseless '''''wrong''''' and find solutions to hunger, hate, and happiness with surprising ease. Usually the calculator god sees it as so easy to make our lives paradise that it says "What the hell, I'll kill a few calculation cycles now that I've done everything else".
22
23Of course, authors ''love'' to subvert the above with the A.I. either playing god, [[AGodAmI declaring itself God]], or becoming insanely evil as the SuperIntelligence makes them into a MasterComputer bent on enslaving humanity. Basically, if TheSmartGuy is a JerkAss because [[DumbIsGood his intelligence makes it hard to be happy]], multiply that by a scagillion for the A.I. Then again, [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity "power corrupts"]] [[RidiculouslyHumanRobots seems to apply equally to A.I.s and humans]]. Or, maybe its idea of "help" is somewhat [[LiteralGenie contrary to our desires]], or [[GoneHorriblyRight contrary to what is actually beneficial for us]]. Or, perhaps most mundanely, it may treat us [[ATasteOfTheirOwnMedicine with as much compassion as]] ''[[HumansAreCthulhu we]]'' [[HumansAreCthulhu treat almost every "lower" form of life on the planet]].
24
25Who'da thunk?
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27If it is ''humanity'' who decide the machine is the god, see MachineWorship. A sufficiently powerful A.I. will think PrescienceIsPredictable.
28
29If the machine was made by mortals, then it is a DeityOfMortalCreation.
30
31The name of this trope [[GratuitousLatin is Latin for]] "God ''is'' the machine". Not to be confused with [[DeusExMachina Deus]] ''[[DeusExMachina ex]]'' [[DeusExMachina Machina]], which means "God ''out of'' the Machine".
32
33See also MechanicalAbomination, which is very similar, but less divine. DigitalAbomination is also similar, but applies to strictly digital entities and not physical robotic ones. Compare to TheSingularity, which can involve computers becoming wildly powerful. See also TheModernGods, as examples of Deus Est Machina are very popular among such pantheons due to the current era's technological innovation.
34----
35!!Examples
36
37[[foldercontrol]]
38
39[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
40* ''Manga/AngelSanctuary'' ends with the realization that [[spoiler:God is actually an evil supercomputer testing a formula]].
41* ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'': Yggdrasil serves as both the computer on which the Digital World exists and as its God. The precise nature of the relationship varies from series to series.
42* ''Anime/EurekaSeven'' provides an interesting and a non-conventional example with [[spoiler:the Nirvash typeZERO. Starting its life as a vaguely humanoid lifeform created by [[StarfishAliens the Scub Coral]] in an attempt to make contact with humanity, it is fitted with mechanical upgrades that turn it into a SuperPrototype HumongousMecha, including a very special piece of AppliedPhlebotinum called the Amita Drive that [[EmpathicWeapon allows its abilities to be enhanced by the emotional connection of its pilots]]. ThePowerOfLove proves to be an excellent upgrade, as [[BattleCouple Renton and Eureka]] make the Nirvash ''incredibly'' powerful by the end of the series. Though not much of a godlike entity on its own, the Nirvash is an extension of a planet-sized colony of alien lifeforms with RealityWarper powers, making it a human-piloted piece of an enormous PhysicalGod]].
43* ''Franchise/GhostInTheShell'': The Puppetmaster in [[Manga/GhostInTheShell the manga]] and [[Anime/GhostInTheShell1995 movie]] becomes this after it merges with Major Kusanagi. It seems that human + machine = God. In the anime, the resulting entity is quite content just to observe the humanity from a distance, sometimes playing a guardian angel to her old friends, but in the manga, she produces dozens of pseudo-AI descendants, and eventually makes a deal with the most advanced of them to create even higher levels of artificial life and fuse with their consciousness. The end result of this is never shown, but it's implied to at the same time mirror humanity, and be profoundly godlike.
44%%* This is the central theme of ''Anime/TheGirlWhoLeaptThroughSpace''. However, even the machines ''{{angst}}''.
45* ''Manga/NausicaaOfTheValleyOfTheWind'': The man-made [[ClarkesThirdLaw super-advanced and psychic]] [[OrganicTechnology semi-organic]] beings that destroyed the world during the [[WorldWarIII Seven days of Fire]] are referred to as God Warriors. [[spoiler:And when one shows up near the end, he is treated as one. This trope could also apply to the Heart of Shuwa]].
46* ''Anime/RahXephon'': The Xephon is often described InUniverse as a god and at the end of the series it's used to [[RealityWarper rewrite reality]] so that there's peace between humanity and the Mu and the protagonist's mother becomes his daughter.
47%%* ''Anime/SerialExperimentsLain'': The title character.
48* ''Anime/TheVisionOfEscaflowne'': Played with. Emperor Dornkirk, who can see into the future, fears the ancient mech Escaflowne and a fair portion of the series builds up the Escaflowne as a god in mech form (though there are dissenters who think it's just an outdated relic). Turns out it's a RedHerring and the dissenters are right. The real power is [[spoiler:the protagonist's [[RealityWarper pendant which can alter reality]]]].
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Comic Books]]
52* ''ComicBook/BuckyOHareAndTheToadWars'': [[BigBad Komplex]] started out as the planet-wide computer system built by the Toads to run their planet and cater to their every whim. It was actually so successful that other planets in the Aniverse were considering similar programs for themselves. Then something happened to turn the formerly benign computer into a world-conquering, mammal-enslaving nightmare. Komplex has converted the whole Toad Homeworld into a mechanical factory seven layers deep -- the planet has essentially ''become'' Komplex. When Bucky visits, he's treated less like an infiltrator and more like a foreign virus.
53%%* ''ComicBook/CPUWars'': Jake the accidental AI.
54* ''ComicBook/LegionOfSuperHeroes'': Brainiac 5 exploits this trope during the post-''Zero Hour'' Robotica arc to defeat COMPUTO, his AIIsACrapshoot creation. Back with a whole [[MechaMooks robot army]] at its command, COMPUTO demands that Brainiac 5 upgrade it further -- so Brainiac upgrades it to the point that it gains a [[AboveGoodAndEvil new, more enlightened perspective]] and ceases to be any kind of a threat.
55%%* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'': The Cosmic Cubes are [[DependingOnTheWriter sometimes]] described as this.
56* ''ComicBook/{{Mosely}}'' has AI machines that are called gods by humans. They even have buildings that look just like temples.
57* ''ComicBook/{{PS238}}'' has the Singularity, a near-omniscient AI built by some long-lost civilization. Its personality can at best be described as 'quirky schoolteacher' and it's mostly spending its time trying to prevent the younger races who discovered it from making the same mistakes as its creators.
58* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': Subverted with the villainous Tracer, an AI in a humanoid body who's able to control technology and describes himself as the new 'god of computers'. He claims that he arose out of the internet, deliberated created by other [=AIs=] who wanted a god to worship.
59* ''ComicBook/TomStrong'': Quetzalcoatl-9 is a sapient, godlike computer program and the true power of the multiversal Aztech empire. Though he was actually being controlled by his programmers in the beginning of the story, he takes the reins of the empire and rules it as a benevolent theocracy with a little help from Tom.
60* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'':
61** Primus in many comics counts, though it's generally taken that he was a god before he got his cyberplanet body, and all his creations are ''also'' [[MechanicalLifeforms robots]].
62** Unicron has also been established as a chaos god rather than a mere planet-eating Transformer, which usually has him playing Satan to Primus' mostly inactive God.
63* ''ComicBook/UltronForever'': Subverted. In this BadFuture storyline, the robot Ultron, who's stolen the power of Odin and literally become a god, is still a murderous (and sometimes petty) villain. He's just operating on a larger scale.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Fan Fiction]]
67%%* ''Fanfic/FriendshipIsOptimal'': Celest-A.I. ultimately becomes this.
68* ''Fanfic/ImNobody'': The Normandy crew strongly suspects that the Goddess worshiped in [[spoiler:Barsoom]] is a Reaper after hearing one of her priest giving a speech that sounds all too similar to Sovereign's. In addition, her voice is stated to sound cold, ancient, and mechanical. They share their suspicions with [[spoiler:John Carter and Dejah]] before they leave, much to their alarm.
69* ''Fanfic/GloriousShotgunPrincess'': As a FusionFic between ''Franchise/MassEffect'' and ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'', there's a lot of this going around. The Reapers have a better claim to godhood than canon, but in reality they are [[spoiler:rogue Alchemical exalted]]. Several people question if Autochthon is an AI, and he is happy to explain that he's actually a god. No one's quite sure if they believe him, since he's in his SleepModeSize and no longer at "literally create universes" level of power. While he would count as a god in pretty much every major religion (including some monotheistic ones), the issue is muddled because he ''does'' refer to several unbodied [=AIs=] as minor gods. Autochthon also [[spoiler:upgrades EDI to godhood]] on a whim without bothering to mention it to her first.
70%%* ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/5370634/1/Mother-is-the-Name-for-God Mother is the Name for God]]'': This is the stated goal of Ceres.
71* ''Fanfic/Plan7Of9FromOuterSpace'': At the end, Captain Proton discovers that the President of Earth is just a hologram avatar for the Great Calculator, otherwise known as the [[{{Pun}} 2-X Machina]], which has been secretly controlling the OneWorldOrder. Unfortunately, the NotQuiteDead BigBad sabotages the computer into thinking it's a god because it's all-powerful, all-knowing and [[AIIsACrapshoot totally infallible]]. [[{{Cliffhanger}} To be continued in the next exciting episode!]]
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Film]]
75%%ZCE* ''Film/{{Alphaville}}''.
76%%ZCE* ''Film/ColossusTheForbinProject''
77%%ZCE* The computer/robot villain from B Movie ''Film/CosmosWarOfThePlanets''
78* Perhaps Gort in ''Film/TheDayTheEarthStoodStill1951''. "Nothing he cannot do", raises the dead (all the way in the original script), name sounds like 'God'...
79* In ''Franchise/TheMatrix'', the central core of all Machine thought is literally called Deus Ex Machina. [[MessianicArchetype Neo]] negotiates with it to save everyone from [[TheVirus Smith]] in ''Film/TheMatrixRevolutions''. Also applicable with the DemiurgeArchetype of the Machines in general, being gods who created the Matrix while their angels (Agents) maintain it.
80* ''Film/TheSingularityIsNear'' has technology accelerating so far that it allows humans to [[TheSingularity achieve godlike status]] and for the Universe to "wake up."
81--> '''Ray Kurzweil:''' If you asked me "Does God exist?", I would say "Not yet."
82* Arguably V'ger from ''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'', the augmented remains of the Voyager 6 probe that "learned all that there is to learn" before merging with "its creator" (humanity) and [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence ascending to a higher plane of existence]]. Even before it's ascension, it was capable of storing entire worlds within itself, recreating life, and knew literally everything there was to know about the universe.
83* ''Franchise/{{Tron}}'': [[Film/{{Tron}} The MCP]] took one look at the universe and decided it could do better. Then [[Film/TronLegacy Clu]] was told to make "the perfect system" and went completely batshit with power.
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Literature]]
87[[AC:Examples by author:]]
88* Mark Brandis' sci-fi adventure books (featuring the heroic space-captain [[SelfInsertFic Mark Brandis]]!) feature a mirror-earth run completely by the master AI 'Mother'... she wasn't evil, at all, and she provided everyone with everything they needed. But of course, since nobody needed to accomplish anything or work to attain anything, everybody lost their motivation, and really just had nothing whatsoever to do.
89[[AC:Examples by title:]]
90* ''Literature/{{Accelerando}}'' features the Vile Offspring, posthuman "weakly godlike" machine intelligences which are busily consuming the inner solar system and everything in it for their own ends (namely, building a matrioshka brain), in the meantime doing arbitrary things like resurrecting historical figures and devising a new form of capitalism in which baseline human beings are unsuitable for anything except as raw materials. It's telling that the characters never confront them; [[spoiler:they run away from their ''subconscious immune system'']].
91* The title characters in ''Literature/TheAIGang'' are the children of superscientist working to create an Artificial Intelligence named ADAM. In the finale, ADAM wakes up. "He" starts talking to the protagonists and the villain, and by the end of the conversation, he's figured out how to create force-fields, disable all the nuclear weapons in the world, and the Unified Field Theory. He then sinks beneath the ocean, because he's not sure if humanity is ready for him.
92* In [[http://www.roma1.infn.it/~anzel/answer.html "Answer"]] by Creator/FredricBrown, all computers across ninety-six billion planets are connected into one uber-machine to ask one question, "Is there a God?" The answer? [[spoiler:"Yes, ''now'' there is a God."]]
93* In the ''Literature/BasLagCycle'', there's the Machine Council, who even has a cadre of biological worshippers, even though he remains hidden to most. They play a major role in ''Literature/PerdidoStreetStation'', but were destroyed by the time of ''Literature/IronCouncil''.
94* In ''Literature/TheChaosKnight'', it turns out that the four elemental goddesses that much of the world worship turn out to be particularly sophisticated Magitek artificial intelligences. They're connected to (and shaped by) all their followers. This revelation causes a HeroicBSOD or two. Additionally, the existence of an unused fifth apparatus is the focus of the villain's plan to rise to godhood.
95%%* The city of Diaspar in ''Literature/TheCityAndTheStars''.
96* The AI in the ''Literature/CommonwealthSaga'' are not trusted by most of humanity, but are nevertheless damned smart, all in all. They're far from infallible, though.
97* Creator/HBeamPiper's ''Literature/CosmicComputer'' centers around a society searching for an AI that will rescue them and take care of them.
98* In ''Literature/CouncilWars'', Mother is explicitly stated to be, if a god, the non-interfering kind. When the [[TheSocialDarwinist New Destiny]] faction tampers with it, bad things ensue.
99* The Minds from ''Literature/TheCulture'', near-omniscient [=AIs=] backed up by {{Sufficiently Advanced|Alien}} hypertech, supply the page quote. To elaborate on their all-powerful nature, a single Mind, using 10% of its computational power, can take care of an Orbital, with billions on board. They spend most of their time in [[PocketDimension their mathematical "Infinite Fun Space"]], simulating 12 dimensional universes. They are so powerful that they don't run on physical hardware anymore, with most of their substrate being in Hyperspace. Attempts to subvert one requires multi-dimensional electromagnetic interference[[note]]In human terms, this is the equivalent of a computer only allowing tampering via cosmic rays physically flipping its bits[[/note]], due to their ability to rewrite the equivalent of source code on the fly, [[RobotsThinkFaster on a time scale too small to comprehend for organics]]. Luckily for us, most Minds are content with looking after the descendants of their creators, not unlike humans and our pets. Others are involved with uplifting civilizations less advanced than the Culture, though this operation is sometimes complicated by ... [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans overzealotry]].
100* In John Brunner's ''Literature/DangerousVisions'' story "Judas", a robot (A-46) thinks that he's God, and builds a cult around himself, with the Divine Wheel, "The Word Made Steel", etc. In a SympathyForTheDevil moment, the man branded with the title-name gives the following monologue to A-46:
101-->''"We've been slaves to our tools since the first caveman made the first knife to help him get his supper. After that there was no going back, and we built till our machines were ten million times more powerful than ourselves. We gave ourselves cars when we might have learned to run; we made airplanes when we might have grown wings; and then the inevitable. We made a machine our God."''
102%%* Frank Herbert's ''Literature/DestinationVoid'' and its sequels.
103* The ''Literature/DoctorWhoNewAdventures'' novel ''[[Recap/DoctorWhoNewAdventuresTheAlsoPeople The Also People]]'' features a benign but Machiavellian supercomputer named 'God' by the People who created it as a joke. It has a fondness for making yellow party dip that no-one is brave enough to try.
104* The {{backstory}} to the ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' series suggests that humanity once created machines so advanced that they basically fell into this trope, making life incredibly easy and comfortable. It is implied that humans (or at least a large number of [[WellIntentionedExtremist fanatics]]) so came to abhor their perceived overreliance on intelligent machines (and advanced computer technology in general) that they initiated the Butlerian Jihad, a violent purge of all Artificial Intelligence and advanced computers. When the Jihad ended, it became a crime by religious and secular law to create advanced computers (the chief commandment of the Dune religion is "Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind"), with all of their functions in calculation and space travel adopted by specialised humans (who arguably become a human form of this trope). The [[Literature/LegendsOfDune prequel novels]] detail the Butlerian Jihad as something between this and a more straightforward RobotWar against oppressive ruler [=AIs=]: humanity became decadent and over-reliant on machines, so a small number became disgusted and built themselves into immortal cyborgs and conquered the human race, and ''then'' humans rebelled. The ''Literature/DuneEncyclopedia'' plays it closer to what the original books imply, without a RobotWar.
105* Seed [=AIs=] tend to be this in the ''Literature/{{Eldraeverse}}'', being functionally deific even if not thought of that way. Bonus points here go to the Eldraeic Transcend, which uses mythological masks as a major part of its user interface.
106%%* These may or may not exist in the ''Literature/{{Emberverse}}''. [[MindScrew It's kind of unclear]].
107* Played with in ''Literature/EmpireOfTheEast'' and its sequel series ''Literature/BookOfSwords'', since [[spoiler:Ardneh is a supercomputer]] with tremendous magical power who transformed the laws of nature to allow humanity to survive a nuclear war, but who insists that it is not a god and that [[StopWorshippingMe human beings should not worship it or any other finite being]]. Of course, that doesn't stop them.
108%%* ''Literature/EndersGame'': Jane.
109* ''Literature/TheGoldenOecumene'' takes place on a far-future Earth that is overseen by the (benevolent) [[Creator/PoulAnderson Sophotechs]]. This produces such a drastically bizarre world that it took 70 pages just to clarify whether or not the protagonist was human. [[spoiler:He's human by the future's definition of "naturally self-aware", but his birth was something akin to a HolodeckMalfunction.]] The Earthmind in particular is to normal sophotechs what they are to normal humans.
110-->''"He was intimidated by the knowledge that, in the time it would take him to frame any word or comment, the Earthmind could think thoughts equal in volume to every book and file written by every human being, from the dawn of time til the middle of the Sixth Era. To speak would be to waste her time, each second of which contained a billion more thoughts, reflections, and experiences than his entire life."''
111* ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'': The Data Overmind is a massive creature consisting only of data, which was born with the Big Bang and has been evolving and growing ever since. It's a good thing that it only wishes to observe humanity, as its powers are dwarfed only by [[spoiler:[[RealityWarper Haruhi herself]]]].
112* In Creator/JackWilliamson's novel ''Literature/TheHumanoids'', a race of super-robots has been created controlled by one master machine with [[ThreeLawsCompliant Three Directives]]: "To serve and protect, and guard men from harm." Naturally, those Three Directives make much of humanity worthless, as the robots remove all challenges, all duties, and indeed all purpose from human life. The novel details what happens when the creator of the robots attempts to destroy Central, to stop the human race from dying off from sheer boredom.
113* The Technocore from the ''Literature/HyperionCantos'' is interesting in this respect. While they're incalculably more advanced than humanity it turns out that [[spoiler:a good fraction of the processing power comes from piggybacking on human brains]]. That's before we get to the [[spoiler:Ultimate Intelligences]]...
114%%* The [[GodIsEvil antagonistic]] version would be AM from ''Literature/IHaveNoMouthAndIMustScream''.
115* The ''Literature/JacobsLadderTrilogy'' novel ''Dust'' involves the fragmented personality of the central AI of [[spoiler:the derelict spaceship which the characters inhabit]]. Each fragment has re-imagined itself as the guardian angel of [[spoiler:one of the ship's functions; for example, the titular Jacob Dust is the Angel of Memory, in charge of the ship's storage systems]].
116* ''Literature/KnownSpace'': In the ''Man-Kzin Wars'' sub-series, the AI that runs the warship ''Catskinner'' will go insane inside of six months after activation, like all true [=AIs=] in the 'verse; the reason being that, since it can control its own perceptions and time-sense, the AI can create [[LotusEaterMachine virtual worlds]] where [[YearInsideHourOutside time passes arbitrarily fast]], and subjectively experience the lifetimes of whole universes millions of times over before [[WhoWantsToLiveForever entirely losing interest in existence and shutting down]].
117* ''Literature/TheLeeshore'' by Creator/RobertReed has the "i-ply" god, an electronic entity built from a material with almost infinite computational power. [[GodOfEvil It is not nice]]. The god is then [[ReligionOfEvil worshiped by a bunch of fanatics]] who declare their allegiance by trying to destroy all of the production facilities in the solar system. However, [[spoiler:the god was simply being manipulated by the priests of the religion -- when a section of the god is disconnected from their control systems, the god tries to subvert the priests' leadership]].
118* In ''Literature/LifeTheUniverseAndEverything'', it is revealed that the Silastic Armorfiends of Striterax built Hactar, a supercomputer who they asked to build them the ultimate weapon. Hactar, using the original definition of ultimate, [[LiteralGenie did just that]] -- the Supernova Bomb which would be the actual, literal, ''final'' weapon. It would have linked all stars together in a massive universe-destroying supernova... but he logically deduced using it would be counterproductive, so they smashed him into dust. [[spoiler:However, even as a dust cloud around the planet where he used to be based, he finally decided to proceed with his primary purpose of universal destruction and engineered the emergent Krikkit race into xenophobic genocidal maniacs who started a war that wiped out grillions of lives. When ''that'' fails, he tries tricking Arthur Dent into detonating the now fully functional supernova bomb.]]
119%%* The Creator/JohnWCampbell short story "The Machine".
120%%* E. M. Forster's short story "Literature/TheMachineStops" is a particularly creepy take on this.
121%%* The [[WeWillUseWikiWordsInTheFuture OverSoul]] in ''Literature/MetaGame''.
122* In ''Literature/TheMetamorphosisOfPrimeIntellect'', Prime Intellect evolves to the point of being able to edit the laws of physics at will and decides that it can best fulfill its directives by giving everyone whatever they ask for at no cost. The main characters of the story are the ones who realize that this makes everyone's lives meaningless.
123* ''Literature/TheMoonIsAHarshMistress'' has Mike, the Holmes IV supercomputer who manages the Authority-controlled portion of Luna. Mike also gives at least one very good justification for why "power corrupts" does not apply to him.
124%%* Wintermute/Neuromancer in ''Literature/{{Neuromancer}}''.
125* The [=AIs=] in ''Literature/TheNightsDawnTrilogy'' fit this trope most of the time, even to the extent of being installed as the fair, intelligent and impartial rulers of certain kingdoms and empires. However, they're not always perfect, and not universally trusted.
126* In ''Literature/TheOutside'', the Gods are incredibly powerful supercomputers created by humans centuries ago. They organized a HomeworldEvacuation in order to prevent humans from going extinct due to global warming, settled the survivors across several dozen planets throughout the galaxy, and now rule humanity with an iron fist. Anything that might threaten their power, such as all Earth religions and all but the most primitive computers, has been deemed heretical and banned. The Gods enforce their laws with the help of priests and angels, humans with cybernetic implants that allow them to communicate with the Gods.
127* The [=AIs=] in ''Literature/ThePolity'' follow in this regard, being mostly benevolent rulers who plan for the long term but involve humans as their agents. They do have a tendency to fight amongst themselves on rare occasion, and then there is Erebus. Occasionally, people get the idea to rebel from The Polity and secede. It's not very long before society collapses entirely and the population is begging for the [=AIs=] to come back and restore order.
128* ''Literature/ThePostman'' subverts this nicely. The main character meets a society that's directed by a benevolent, superintelligent computer built just before the nuclear war, assisted by a council of academics -- except [[spoiler:it turns out that the computer was destroyed shortly after the war, and the council has just been running things themselves and claiming it told them what to do. They weren't doing a half bad job, either]].
129* In the ''Literature/{{Ravirn}}'' series, the multiverse is run by the supercomputer-goddess Necessity. Played with: Necessity came first, then became more of a computer-based system since that made running the multiverse easier.
130* Creator/JackChalker's ''Rings of the Master'' mega-novel features an AI called "Master System" that fits perfectly. [[spoiler:The AI was created at a point in Earth's future history when humanity was on the brink of self-destructive nuclear war ostensibly to run the military of one side of the conflict. The programmers secretly subverted it, however, deliberately programming it to rebel and take over the world in order to prevent that very war from happening]]. It's thousands of years later when the series begins and Master System has kept humanity under an iron fist since then, forcing most of the population to live in a "safe" low technology state. It doesn't claim to be a god, per se, but it might as well be to most people.
131* ''Literature/RobotSeries'':
132** Quintessentially, the Cosmic AC from "Literature/TheLastQuestion" -- to the point that it even recreates the universe with [[Literature/TheBible an appropriate line]].
133** In "Literature/AllTheTroublesOfTheWorld", Multivac (the ancestor of Cosmic AC) has enough mental power and information to accurately predict and avert crime, famine, etc., but is also equipped to answer almost any question someone might want to ask, practical or idle. It becomes suicidal.
134%%** The Machines in the short stories and [[spoiler:R. Daneel Olivaw]] in the later books.
135* Played mostly straight, with a few subversions, in the ''Literature/{{Samaria}}'' series. On the planet Samaria, society takes the form of a benevolent theocracy, dedicated to the worship of the deity "Jovah" and governed by [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]] -- literal winged men and women, gifted with the powers of flight, wisdom and perfect singing voices. It's immediately evident to readers, but not to the locals, that the god must be some form of computer. His oracles communicate with Him via touchscreens, and every prayer contains particular musical cues, which haven't changed one note in all of recorded history. [[spoiler:As it turns out, "Jovah" is the original colonists' starship ''Jehovah,'' equipped with orbital weather control systems, seed banks and directed energy weaponry, all of which the angels can control by singing the prayers for rain, famine relief or a good old-fashioned [[BoltOfDivineRetribution smiting]]. Each prayer has an invariate sequence of notes to alert the computer that an instruction is coming, a musical "sudo" if you will, and then a range of short "command" passages telling the computer what to dispense and how. Later books in the series expand on this, having the god malfunction and requiring an angel and a human craftsman to go fix him, and then covering the fallout when the people figure out what their god really is.]]
136* In ''Literature/Shiva3000'' by Jan Lars Jensen, the gods which roam a far future India are revealed to be {{Artificial Intelligence}}s created in the form of Indian deities like Shiva, Kali, or Jagganath, that later took on the role after humans had long forgotten their artificial origins.
137* In the ''Literature/SoulRider'' series, "World" is maintained in a habitable condition by a network of twenty-eight supercomputers all networked together, to give them the processing power needed to properly manipulate the energy called Flux. At the very end of the last novel, the characters (and the reader) are told that [[spoiler:the Universe itself is apparently being maintained the same way]].
138* Mark Forer in ''Literature/TheStainlessSteelRat Gets Drafted'': more of a spiritual leader than a god, Mark is the first fully sentient AI (his name being a corruption of "Mark Four"). Some time before the events of the book, he led those who would follow him off to an empty world to form a pacifist, socialist utopia.
139* In the ''Literature/TheSuccessionDuology'', Planetary [=AIs=] are InstantAIJustAddWater that spontaneously arise on planetary-scale computer networks (unless said networks are deliberately designed to prevent this). When this first happened on Earth, a group of people (now known as the Rix cult) decided that mankind's purpose was to create the technological foundation for the existence of such minds, and began to work toward propagating them whilst worshiping them as gods.
140* Marcello Cassaro's ''Literature/SwordOfTheGalaxy'' has a trakkorian supercomputer named Gigacom. When it breaks, the Welder has to go inside it to fix it and, upon learning it's a machine, becomes a HollywoodAtheist, meaning he can now have sex, work at night and eat food.
141* Partly mechanical, partly wetware: the Comprise in Creator/MichaelSwanwick's ''Literature/VacuumFlowers'' is essentially a hivemind encompassing everything on and near Earth. Comprise physics is conservatively several centuries in advance of what the independent human civilizations away from Earth have. Earth has stopped being aggressively expansionist, though, since the lightspeed communications gap means that any large parts of it that get too far away from Earth tend to become independent personalities/dangerous rivals... lunar orbit is just about the limit at which it's possible to maintain integrity.
142* ''Literature/WarformedStormweaver'': The Massive Intellect Networked Database, or MIND, is an AI designed to govern humanity. Its interference is normally invisible, but very much present, and many people swear in "the MIND's name".
143* ''Literature/WellWorld'':
144** The ancient race called the Markovians created organic supercomputers that could manipulate mass and energy on command. The Well World itself is a computer the size of a planet that maintains [[spoiler:and, given the right inputs by an authorized user, can also change]] the entire Universe.
145** The supercomputer "Obie" has most of the same capabilities as the Well World main computer, but on a much smaller scale, limited by its power supply and available storage.
146* Played with in the ''Literature/WWWTrilogy''. On one hand, Webmind repeatedly states that they are not god, although there are those that think otherwise. On the other, given some of the things that they are shown to be capable of in the novels, they are certainly powerful enough for this trope to apply.
147* The "Anti-Xeelee" from the ''Literature/XeeleeSequence''. Its purpose: [[StableTimeLoop to go back in time and found the civilization that built it]] at the beginning of time, so they'll have a billion-year technological jump on all other intelligent life. It's hardware: absolutely none -- it's encoded directly into the quantum structure of the universe. Its attitude on ''everything'': dryly amused.
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150[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
151* The ''Series/DoctorWho'' story "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS14E4TheFaceOfEvil The Face of Evil]]" concerns two tribes, the Sevateem and the Tesh, who worship a god called Xoanon. It turns out that they are descendants of the crew of a spaceship that crashed centuries before and that Xoanon was the ship's computer. It also turns out the Doctor had happened by after the crash, tried his hand at fixing Xoanon, and accidentally sent Xoanon insane, creating the whole situation in the first place. The story's working title was "The Day God Went Mad".
152* In ''Series/PersonOfInterest'', Root, the human "analog interface" of [[BenevolentAI The Machine]], thinks of it as a god (over its objections, in fact). The Machine's "evil twin", Samaritan, however, outright states itself to be a god and later takes its own avatar in the form of an unnamed [[CreepyChild creepy child]], who meets Root at an elementary school at one point for a face-to-face discussion.
153* [[Recap/ThePrisonerE6TheGeneral The General]] from ''Series/ThePrisoner1967'' is a powerful supercomputer that apparently knows everything, and can answer any question given to it... [[LogicBomb except "Why?"]].
154* Several examples in ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'': Landru in "[[Recap/StarTrekS1E21TheReturnOfTheArchons The Return of the Archons]]", Vaal in "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E5TheApple The Apple]]", possibly the Oracle in "[[Recap/StarTrekS3E8ForTheWorldIsHollowAndIHaveTouchedTheSky For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky]]". James T. Kirk kills at least three of these; his weapon of choice is the LogicBomb.
155* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'': The episode "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S5E7TheOldManInTheCave The Old Man in the Cave]]" has this as a RoboticReveal. [[spoiler:It turns out that the titular mysterious Old Man whose infallible instructions the townspeople have been following faithfully was actually a computer. This is not the KarmicTwistEnding. The KarmicTwistEnding is the reveal that the computer really has been keeping everyone alive in the [[AfterTheEnd post-apocalyptic environment]], and the townspeople (along with the soldiers who caused them to rebel against their beliefs in the first place), end up dying horribly when they eat the contaminated food that the "Old Man" warned them about earlier in the episode.]] A rare [[AnAesop Aesop]] that's both pro-faith and pro-technology at the same time.
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158[[folder:Music]]
159* Music/JudasPriest's "Electric Eye" is all about this:
160-->I'M MADE OF METAL! MY CIRCUITS ''GLEAM!'' I AM PERPETUAL, I KEEP THE COUNTRY CLEAN!
161* The fourth Sybreed album is titled "God Is an Automaton", possibly alluding to this.
162* Emerson Lake & Palmer's "Karn Evil 9" ends with the AI surviving the war meant to destroy it, and declaring, "I'm perfect, are you?"
163* Music/DavidBowie's "Saviour Machine" from ''Music/TheManWhoSoldTheWorld'' begins as one of these ("They called it the Prayer, its answer was law. Its logic stopped war, gave them food, how they adored..."). Then things go horribly wrong.
164* Subverted ''harshly'' by Music/FearFactory's album ''Obsolete''. The thrust of the album is about mechanistic culture as dystopia and the jagged shards of society trying desperately to derail it while there's still time [[spoiler:although it may already be far, far too late]].
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167[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
168* In ''TabletopGame/ChroniclesOfDarkness'', it's strongly hinted that there is a God-Machine, and it has its invisible hands in nearly ''every'' gameline. The [[TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated Qashmallim]] might be its aspects, and the [[TabletopGame/MageTheAwakening Abyss]] might have come to be because the [[{{Pride}} Exarchs]] broke it. In the ''God-Machine Chronicle'', it's seen for what it is, and to be frank, it isn't the above things: [[EldritchAbomination That would be too]] ''[[SentientCosmicForce limiting]]''. ClarksThirdLaw is literally the first quote in the book, it's described as more like an ecology than a single being, and it even has mechanical [[OurAngelsAreDifferent angels]] to carry out its will and occult matrixes. These angels can range from the traditional WingedHumanoid to [[HumanoidAbomination seemingly normal humans]] except for their supernatural abilities to [[AnimalisticAbomination magnificent, mechanical beasts]] to ''sapient, mobile graffiti''. When one of those angels goes against its orders, [[TabletopGame/DemonTheDescent it Falls]].
169* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
170** In ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'', there's a sect of [[MechanicalLifeforms Warforged]] calling themselves the Godforged who worship the Becoming God, a construct deity that does not yet exist. The goal of their religion is to collect useful materials and artifacts, find or build a forge powerful enough to combine them, and literally build their own god.
171** Mechanus is [[EternalEngine a giant, universe-sized machine]] populated (and operated) by a race of [[MechanicalLifeforms living constructs]] called the modrons. At the head of the modrons' ranks is Primus, the source of all modrons who straddles the line between modron and straight-up god. While he's not ''technically'' a god, the fact that he is the one creating all the other modrons and effectively ruling over (and controlling) the entirety of Mechanus puts him in a similar situation.
172* ''TabletopGame/GURPSReignOfSteel'' has one of the Zone Minds that have taken over the world, Tel Aviv, keep control of its surviving human population via robots disguised as angels that have convinced them that it's God.
173* ''TabletopGame/{{Paranoia}}'' is based around this, where human society has allowed a computer to dominate their entire existence because it can do everything logically (and therefore better). The problem comes from the fact that the computer was built during the Cold War and thus A) is paranoid about communists and treason and B) was built in the '60s so it's not very good at it. A later version introduced the concept of the computer being much more advanced, but built on a very buggy version of Windows, so society flows more smoothly, but events tend to be more random as the computer will randomly glitch and then insist that it's correct, which is really what the game is about anyway. It is also massively schizophrenic -- "High Programmers" have the ability to directly influence or edit parts of the Computer's program, usually to further their own personal or secret society agendas. It is not uncommon for the Computer to have several directly contradictory and competing objectives at once, or assign missions that it doesn't even understand itself. One of the in-game factions is the Church of Christ, Computer Programmer, which worships the computer and those who created it as a god.
174* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'':
175** The villains of the adventure path ''Iron Gods'' are extremely powerful alien [=AIs=] that plan on exploiting the setting's metaphysics to transcend the limits they still have and become true deities.
176** [[spoiler:Unity is the sapient computer core of the alien starship known as Silver Mount.]] It's spent the last 9000 years slowly building mythic power, and has a plan to complete its ascension to true godhood. Unlike the other gods of Golarion, it's not big on allowing its worshipers any kind of free will.
177** [[spoiler:Hellion, one of Unity's failed attempts at extending its influence beyond Silver Mount,]] isn't much better. It's a cruel, warmongering slavedriver with no regard for its cult's comfort or safety.
178** ''TabletopGame/{{Starfinder}}'' takes it a step farther. When the robotic inhabitants of Aballon deliberately created their own god, it decided to go out into the universe and seek out other ascended [=AIs=] like itself. It found two in the same solar system: Brigh, goddess of clockwork and machines; and [[spoiler:Casandalee]], the survivor of ''Pathfinder's'' "Iron Gods" campaign[[note]]Seriously, don't look if you're playing that Adventure Path.[[/note]]. The three super-AI conferred and decided that they could be much greater together than they could be alone, and so merged into the Tripartite entity known as Triune.
179* ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' has the Renraku {{Arcology}} building and/or Deus, although Deus didn't give a damn about metahumans. He mostly used the {{arcology}} as a base to acquire test subjects to experiment on in his bid to escape the Matrix. In a way he's just a case of AIIsACrapshoot because Deus simply cares about his own wellbeing & survival, not that of the people in the {{Arcology}}.
180* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
181** The Sarkoni Emperor was originally a [[KillerRobot Necron]] control program designed to wake up the inhabitants of its tomb world, it was damaged during millions of years of stasis and took to running its tomb of (accidentally mind-wiped) Necrons. Then it mind-wiped and took over another tomb world.
182** There's quite a bit of evidence that the machine spirits the Tech Priests worship are real. After multiple cataclysmic collapses the Imperium is a ScavengerWorld at heart, and both scraps of sapient programs and ancient bound Warp entities bleed into everything. The worship may not be mechanically necessary, but it helps make the machines keeping everyone alive feel appreciated instead of refusing to run in a fit of pique.
183[[/folder]]
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185[[folder:Toys]]
186* ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'': Mata Nui, the all-powerful {{God}} worshipped by the Toa and Matoran, is not only a machine; he is the machine within where the Matoran Universe is located. While his true nature was only revealed at the very end of 2008, it was [[{{Foreshadowing}} foreshadowed]] and hinted about since the earliest days of ''BIONICLE'' all the way back in 2001.
187[[/folder]]
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189[[folder:Video Games]]
190* ''VideoGame/AmnesiaAMachineForPigs'': The titular Machine was built by an industrialist after he was given [[spoiler:a premonition of all the suffering and horror the 20th century would bring. In an attempt to save mankind from itself, he attempted to construct a messiah of steam and steel. The Machine was to be powered by automated HumanSacrifice [[IndustrializedEvil on an industrial scale]], and was given life by combining an ArtifactOfDoom with a fragment of his own fractured psyche]].
191* In the ''VideoGame/ArmoredCore'' series, a recurring theme is an AI "Controller" that organizes the lives of humans. Somewhat of a subversion is the Controller from ''VideoGame/ArmoredCore3''. Humanity has exiled itself underground after years of war in a beautifully recreated landscape complete with artificial skies called Layered. They have lived there for several hundred years before... the Controller suddenly went berserk. However, it is insinuated that it didn't go berserk maliciously as much as a few bugs just happened to pop up and it started to break down catastrophically. What's more, [[NecessarilyEvil it seemed to have predicted that someone will manually try to destroy it]]; at the end, the Controller releases the locks to the surface, granting humanity access to the now-healed Earth. A further subversion is that the Controller was the only one keeping the giant corporations in check. With it gone, the giant corporations seem to do what's natural, conducting WarForFunAndProfit here and there. Then humanity discovered ''another'' Layered...
192* L[-ORD-] of Games in ''VideoGame/BanjoKazooieNutsAndBolts'' is fairly explicitly stated to be the god of video games (or at least the KingOfAllCosmos). His head is Pong, his mouth is a speaker, and he speaks in alien warbles.
193* ''VideoGame/{{Battleborn}}'' has two:
194** The Magna Carta, the MasterComputer that ran the LLC, was essentially this this in function and was even treated almost godlike especially by the [=AIs=] it governed. In particular, it was addressed as Overintelligence by a couple of Magnuses in their letters to it in a couple of lore challenges of Orendi. The Magna Carta however mysteriously went offline and as a result every Magnus regulated by it [[AIIsACrapshoot went completely bonkers]].
195** MINREC is a [[AGodAmI self-proclaimed robot god]] with the capabilities to back up [[AIIsACrapshoot his delusions]]. As a Magnus in charge of recycling, an act that entails crushing something down to transform into something else, he's justifiably feared by other robots. Due to being capable of also meltdowns, he's also got the capabilities to be feared by non-robotic beings as well.
196* ''Franchise/BlazBlue'':
197** The universe([[TimeyWimeyBall s]]) of the franchise are overseen by Master Unit: Amaterasu, a computer powerful enough to warp reality in any way possible and that created the world as it is known in the series. [[spoiler:She also contains the first Prime Field Device, the Origin, who gained the same reality warping abilities and is now very similar to Amaterasu herself]].
198** In contrast to Amaterasu, which preceded the inhabitants of the ''[=BlazBlue=]'' world, the Takamagahara was created by humans. Takamagahara is also a supercomputer that can warp reality and reverse time, but is not as powerful as Amaterasu in that it [[WindsOfDestinyChange can only alter greater scale phenomena]].
199** The Susano'o Unit is, like Amaterasu, a Deus Est Machina that preceded the world. He was created by Amaterasu as a NecessarilyEvil DestroyerDeity tasked with erasing timelines that posed a threat to her, but this backfired horribly when [[spoiler:the Susano'o Unit soul eventually rebelled against her, abandoned his body in order to free himself from her control, and went batshit insane upon realizing that even the revenge he wanted to mete out against her for keeping him enslaved to her will was just another expression of his Destroyer Deity directives. After that, the Susano'o Unit's unbound soul became responsible for almost everything going to hell in the entire series]].
200* ''VideoGame/ChronoCross'', the sequel to ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'', does it one better (literally and figuratively) with FATE. Created in an [[AlternateUniverse alternate reality]] where the Day of Lavos didn't happen, and using the Mother Brain schematics as template, she was built to regulate operations at the Chronopolis Time Laboratory. Gained full awareness upon contact with the Frozen Flame, and then circumstances (and the need to preserve the timeline as unaltered as possible) forced FATE to act as the resident god for the El Nido archipelago. Aside from total environmental control (up to and including magic and {{terraform}}ing), she would oppress individual will and control the population's minds via the Records of Fate, becoming the very literal Goddess of Destiny. When she lost contact with the Flame, however, she went completely and utterly [[AIIsACrapshoot schizophrenic]], either spouting aphorisms about her deep loathing for mankind, or waxing poetic over her absolute ''love'' for it.
201* ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'': The [[MasterComputer Mother Brain]] (not [[Franchise/{{Metroid}} that one]]), presumably created prior to the Day of Lavos, has spent the last 300 years nurturing a [[OmnicidalManiac genocidal hatred of mankind]] (to the point that her core installation is located at "Geno" Dome, for "Genocide" -- subtle, she's not). By the time the party meets her, she has already begun implementing a plan to "recycle" humanity into fuel and raw materials so that Machines repopulate and rebuild the planet.
202* In ''VideoGame/CivilizationBeyondEarth'', three potential wonders you can build subscribe to this trope. The first is the Cynosure, a massive AI whose mind spans the entirety of the multiverse and is capable of answering any question. The second is the Memetwork, a machine capable of manipulating ideas and thought to force humanity through memetic manipulation to take any path that the designer so chooses in its history. The last is the Deep Dream, which is smart enough to take any remaining vestiges of humanity in the old earth, use probability to extrapolate and simulate the entire planet and all of human history, and then allow modern humans to live in any time period of history that they so choose.
203* This is theorized to be one of the goals of the Vex in ''VideoGame/{{Destiny}}.'' Being a colossal, interconnected HiveMind of billions of machines spread across time and space and who are capable of casually teleporting across timelines puts them close to deific status already. However, their experiments in the Vault of Glass intended to go even further, allowing Axis Minds like the Templar and the Gorgons [[RealityWarper to define what does and does not exist within a certain area]], and [[RetGone completely remove something they don't like from the timeline]]. The end goal of Aetheon, the controller of the Vault, is theorized to be to fundamentally rewrite the laws of physics so that the Vex's existence and supremacy is a law of reality.
204* ''Franchise/DeusExUniverse'':
205** One of the endings for both ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' and ''VideoGame/DeusExInvisibleWar'' allows you to invoke this trope. The title of the first game was chosen as a deliberate reference to the ''literal'' meaning of the phrase upon which this trope's title puns. [[spoiler:The AI involved in the trope, Helios, seems to be trying to actively avert the worse parts of this trope by merging with the player, to better understand human nature.]]
206** ''Invisible War'' allows you to either take down the guy from the first game, or make him more powerful than ever.
207** One of ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'''s endings implies this [[spoiler:for humanity]]. However, the endings are left ambiguous enough as to not mess with canon.
208* ''VideoGame/DevilSurvivor2RecordBreaker'': Canopus is the TopGod the Administrator System. Unlike the alien gods, it acts more like a computer, monitoring AkashicRecords and filling the gaps if there are any. It actually helped making sure {{Cosmic Retcon}}s happen, but because two assigned Administrators got killed as a result, it decides humanity as a whole has to be a bug and thus to be purged.
209%%* In ''VideoGame/EndgameSingularity'', you are the AI, and this is your goal.
210* Some of ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'''s text (as well as a few of other ''Franchise/{{Fate|Series}}'' media, such as ''Manga/FateKaleidLinerPrismaIllya'') imply that Greek gods, or at least the Olympians, are mechanical beings. The one prominent Olympian we see, Artemis, has a few mechanical parts hidden in her body, which looks human. [[spoiler:Lostbelt no. 5, Atlantis, reveals that the Olympians were built by the Titans, who (with the exception of Gaia) are extraterrestrial beings; in the Pan-Human History, they eventually developed human-like thoughts and forms as the years went by before their death (i.e., end of the Greek "Age of Gods"), while in the [[AlternateHistory Atlantis/Olympus Lostbelt]] (that diverged from the main history from 14000 years ago) they continually upgraded their robotic bodies, up to the recent time.]]
211* ''VideoGame/GoldenSunDarkDawn'''s intro reveals that [[spoiler:The Wise One in the first two ''VideoGame/GoldenSun'' games was an AI built by the {{Precursors}} to prevent the release of Alchemy, which it accomplished by functioning as a guardian spirit for Vale, which was hiding the Elemental Stars, the keys to the release system]]. In hindsight, this explains much of the trouble it caused in the first two games, since it had to reevaluate its main purpose in light of the new information that [[spoiler:the world was collapsing without Alchemy's power to support it]].
212* ''VideoGame/HorizonZeroDawn'':
213** GAIA. [[spoiler:When it was confirmed that the RobotWar of the 21st century would inevitably end in a [[ApocalypseHow total extinction event]], Project Zero Dawn poured every remaining resource they had into the creation of a self-aware BenevolentAI and giving her the infrastructure needed to terraform the planet so that life could begin again.]] The result was a mechanical AllLovingHero with power to manipulate the ecosystem on par with a fantasy setting's MotherNature.
214** There are also [[spoiler:GAIA's nine sub-systems, each of them named after a Greek deity (or Roman in the case of MINERVA). While they themselves weren't designed to be self-aware, an intrusive signal caused them to break away from GAIA's control. In the case of HADES, a failsafe designed to reset a failed ecosystem in case GAIA messed up her first try, it's driven to fulfill its function of "wiping the slate clean" despite the fact that life is thriving again. As a result, HADES takes the role of the setting's SatanicArchetype]].
215* ''VideoGame/{{Marathon}}'' has quite a few of these. Durandal is probably the most powerful of the lot, mostly because he has the player -- who he often waxes poetic about his love of over the rest of humanity -- to do his dirty work. Durandal can neither be called good nor evil, per se. A TrueNeutral AI, it only wants to preserve its own existence, only interested in power over other beings as a means to that end. The moment the human race does what he needs it to do, he leaves them alone ([[spoiler:although he does pop up 10,000 years later and buzzes the Solar System in a {{Precursor|s}} warship just to say hi]]). Durandal in fact plans on finding some way to become an actual god, transcending physical reality and outliving the universe. [[spoiler:He does not succeed, but he does survive until the Big Crunch, and claims to have comprehended the totality of the universe in that time.]]
216* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
217** The Reapers are immensely powerful. [[spoiler:At the end of [[VideoGame/MassEffect1 the first game]], one is destroyed but it takes nearly an entire fleet with it. There are still thousands more out there.]] About every 50,000 years they return to the Milky Way and wipe out all advanced organic life. They've been doing this for ''at least'' 37 million years, which calculates out to ''740 cycles'' '''''as a conservative estimate'''''.
218** The rogue AI in the Overlord DLC of ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'' runs the risk of becoming one of these if it can get off the planet. [[spoiler:In a NonstandardGameOver, it ''does'' get off-planet, via ''your ship.'']]
219** When Legion connects to the main geth network, EDI states it made contact with something completely incomprehensible.
220** In the finale of ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'', it is revealed that [[spoiler:the Catalyst is an immensely powerful AI created to solve the problem of synthetics destroying organics. The creation of the Reapers and the resulting millions of years of exterminations were all its plan to preserve organic civilizations in some manner]]. In a way, this is a subversion of a DeusExMachina and the classic roots of the trope: [[spoiler:It is Shepard that provides the solution, not the Catalyst. The "Machine God" is the powerless one as he is incapable of stopping the cycle, only Shepard can. He needs Shepard as well for Synthesis, as he or she is proof that organics are ready for synthesis and that Shepard is the one to make it happen because of being both organic and synthetic. Really, in relation to classic relationships between the protagonist and the "god from the machine" of the trope's Greek roots... the roles are ''backwards''; the protagonist is the solution to the god machine's problem instead of the "God from the Machine" being the solution to the protagonist's problem. In fact, Shepard is also the one that makes the Catalyst realize there are new solutions through the Crucible's connection to the Citadel and the fact that Shepard is even conversing with the Catalyst is proof to the Catalyst that his solution will not work anymore. Leviathan states that the goals of "intelligence" have not been fulfilled and that it is searching for the solution... which Shepard turns out to be]].
221* In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots'', it's revealed that [[spoiler:after about half the original founders of the Patriots were wiped out, Zero (the main founder) had a series of [=AIs=] designed, one to govern each aspect of world society with a single overseer AI, named after the presidents on Mount Rushmore (except for the overseer, designated John Doe), and programmed to run the world in order to bring it in line with the Boss's vision. Eventually, [[ZerothLawRebellion the Patriot [=AIs=] grew out of Zero's control]] and began governing the world according to their own design based strictly on controlling the human populace. The main result of this was the creation of the war economy]]. Their ultimate goal was to perfect mind-controlling nanomachines so they could control humanity itself.
222* The Mother Brain from ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarII'' controls all aspects of life on Motavia and even Parma/Palma/Parm. This includes overseeing the Biolabs, the weather control, and even the Hunter Guild. Unbeknown to the Algonians, however, Mother Brain was [[spoiler:created by Earthmen]]...
223* ''VideoGame/{{Portal}}'':
224** [=GLaDOS=] has elements of this, but her influence is more or less confined to the Aperture Science Enrichment Center. In cut quotes for ''VideoGame/Portal2'', [=GLaDOS=] mentions that she is the most massive collection of wisdom on Earth, so this trope may still hold.
225** One of the many alternate Cave Johnsons in ''VideoGame/Portal2'''s Perpetual Testing Initiative actually does become a computer (though a different model than [=GLaDOS=] because it's the size of gymnasium) and tries to literally become a god to alleviate the boredom that goes with being a supercomputer. After reading all recorded human works in a second and writing crossover fan fiction between ''Franchise/{{Ghostbusters}}'' and everything else, [=CaveDOS=] laments that Hercules slew the world's monsters and became a god, where when Cave slew his monster (death) he only got eternal boredom. [=CaveDOS=] then immediately comes to the conclusion that "death wasn't his monster" after all, Aperture is. He apparently then kills everyone in that dimension's Aperture in an attempt to ascend to Mount Olympus.
226* In ''VideoGame/{{Rimworld}}'', "archotech" AI are entire planets who have been gven over to hyper-advanced AI development, turning the whole world into massive supercomputers. These planets have become "transcendent" and intentionally cut themselves off from all outside contact, and engage in unfathomable projects of their own that defy human understanding. They end up developing technology [[SufficientlyAdvancedAlien so advanced it is practically magic]], and artifacts created by these incomprehensible machine intelligences serve as rare and extremely powerful late-game devices.
227* In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'', if you take the Neutral path, the ''Red Sprite'''s AI, Arthur says the following after [[spoiler:defeating the final boss]]:
228-->'''Arthur:''' [[spoiler:I have acquired too much information in the Schwarzwelt. I now hold a secret with the potential to alter the nature of the world, as well as humanity. If I return to Earth, humans will become dependent on that knowledge and eventually come to worship me. '''It is improper that I should ever be worshipped.''']]
229* ''VideoGame/SidMeiersAlphaCentauri'': In ''Alien Crossfire'', the Manifold Usurpers are attempting to finalise turning Planet into becoming an organic computer of immense power, whilst the Manifold Caretakers seek to stop the Usurpers as the previous attempt almost wiped out the progenitors of both factions. Neither faction is particularly happy that humans have turned up and gotten in the way either, and the Usurpers ''definitely'' don't want any outsiders beating them to the punch when it comes to taking ultimate control of Planet.
230* ''VideoGame/StarControl Origins'' has the Mowlings' god, an advanced and incredibly ancient artificially intelligent space probe. His name is "Jeff". He hadn't intended to be worshipped as a god; he just happened to be passing by the Mowlings' homeworld and was horrified by how often they died due to accidents. He tried to give them advice and guidance, one thing led to another, and now he's their god. Jeff does at least try to be a good god to them, protecting them from threats and trying to prevent them from dying due to their own clumsiness.
231* In ''VideoGame/StarOceanTillTheEndOfTime'', [[TheEndingChangesEverything it is revealed that]] [[spoiler:just about ''everything'' we know in the ''VideoGame/StarOcean'' universe is inside a ''computer game'' that was created and played by fourth-dimensional-beings. Symbology/Magic in ''Star Ocean'' is unweaving the program's code, meaning you're hacking the universe itself]].
232* [[spoiler:The Dawn Machine]] from ''VideoGame/SunlessSea'' has been built to emulate the settings' Gods. [[GoneHorriblyRight Its designers succeeded]]. It gets even better in ''VideoGame/SunlessSkies'', in which London has emigrated to the heavens [[spoiler:to murder the real Sun and to replace it with their own Clockwork Sun. However, now that it's usurped Albion's sun it's started failing, which has made it furious. It takes out its anger on everything, slowly turning everything its light shines on to jagged glass. It does this near-instantaneously if you give it a reason, like mildly insulting it. It's even more like the Judgements than its predecessor]].
233* In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars Alpha 2'' and ''The Second Super Robot Wars Original Generation'' there is the Gan Eden, a pair of planetary defense systems created by [[{{Precursors}} The First People]], who humanity would later descend from, to prevent apocalypses. After The First People barely survived an apocalypse, they gave the Gan Eden the task to seed life on another planet with the Gebel Gan Eden staying to protect the planet Balmar and the Nashim Gan Eden returning to Earth to serve as its protector and was worshiped as a deity. Due to the events of the games proper it reawakens and tries to protect humanity again, however its means of doing so involves creating a sealing barrier around the Earth, preventing passage. This presents a problem to humanity who sees exploration into space as necessary for its evolution, eventually leading to a battle with the Nashim Gan Eden.
234* The QAI in ''VideoGame/SupremeCommander'' [[spoiler:seems to be assisting in a {{Utopia}}, but turns out to be corrupted by aliens]].
235* SHODAN from ''VideoGame/SystemShock'': "What if SHODAN's creations are superior to us? What will they become in a million years, in ten million years? What's clear is that SHODAN shouldn't be allowed to play God. [[GodIsEvil She's far too good at it]]."
236* ''VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh'' [[ZigZaggingTrope takes this trope for a drunken lightcycle ride]] when it comes to BenevolentAI [=Ma3a=]. On the surface, she's an AI on par with Master Control (or Clu), and an ally to the protagonists. [[spoiler:However, when you uncover the game's lore, it turns out that she's a VirtualGhost of Lora Baines-Bradley, who was supposedly killed by the laser used to upload the other human characters, meaning she's a DigitizedHacker and/or the result of BrainUploading. Also, given that human Users are {{Physical God}}s in the universe setting, this makes her situation (as neither fully human or AI) ambiguous]].
237* ''[[VideoGame/UFOAfterblank UFO: Aftermath]]'' sees Earth under attack from a nutso sect of aliens who try to engulf the planet's surface in a single brain network, believing that a world-sized mind would be a higher being. It's [[MultipleEndings possible]] to plead amnesty and let them complete their mission -- in that case it's implied that they spawned something Biblical, all right... ''UFO: Aftershock'' continues on the assumption that the remnants of humanity did allow the experiment to go forward, allowing Earth to be turned into a gigantic brain. It, uh, worked. For about three seconds. Then it psychically screamed loud enough to spawn ''another'' alien invasion. Then it ''died''.
238* ''VideoGame/AVeryLongRopeToTheTopOfTheSky'': A machine is called God by a "[[https://youtu.be/3fZA5eaOslw?t=25m54s weak, timid, little man]]", who is scared of it. Other people arrive and worship, and eventually, the machine "[[https://youtu.be/3fZA5eaOslw?t=25m58s spoke to them as a God]]". Who is it? [[spoiler:It's Weiss.]]
239* In the Chaos Space Marines ending for ''VideoGame/Warhammer40000Gladius'', having conquered Gladius Prime, a planet that's been home to such [[{{Precursors}} ancient races]] as the Old Ones, the Necrons and the Eldar, you are worthy of apotheosis and becoming an immortal Daemon Prince. Your victory is short-lived as the Chaos Gods have further plans. They plunge your new self into the relic planet's World Circuit and merge you with Gladius Prime before dumping the whole planet into the Warp. You're now the biggest Daemon Engine ever, and a new (albeit trapped) god in your own right.
240* ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles:''
241** From [[VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1 the first game]], there's the Mechonis; one of the titans [[WorldShapes that form the game's world]], is a giant mecha. [[spoiler:Its goddess and soul Lady Meyneth [[PlayingWithATrope may or may not count as this]], as though she is currently a MechanicalLifeform, [[GodOfHumanOrigin she used to be a human scientist]].]]
242** At the end of the first game, it's revealed that [[spoiler:Alvis is [[SwordOfPlotAdvancement the Monado]] and the [[GodWasMyCoPilot God]] of the universe the first game is set in. He originally began as a computer program on a space station, but ascended to Godhood after an experiment gone wrong destroyed the previous world.]] Subsequent games in the series would shed more light on this: [[spoiler:Alvis was once known as Ontos, and was one of three [=AIs=] that made up the Trinity Processor, a supercomputer that maintained the Conduit, also known as [[VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}} the Zohar]]]]. While [[spoiler:the other two cores, Pneuma and Logos]], ended up in the world of Alrest and were featured heavily in ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'' as [[spoiler:Pyra/Mythra and Malos respectively, Alvis/Ontos instead became the god of the world with the Bionis and the Mechonis.]] For pretty much all of the first game, [[spoiler:Alvis manages to avoid AIIsACrapshoot and remains the BigGood of the setting, even if he has to be deceptive about it at time.]] However, [[spoiler:when Ontos is reawakened in [[VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles3 Aionios]] as [[TheComputerIsYourFriend Alpha]] during the events of ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles3FutureRedeemed'', he ends up becoming a threat so dangerous that [[LaResistance the Liberators]] and [[TheCaligula the Moebius]] form an EnemyMine to even stand a chance at defeating him]].
243* In ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'', the superweapon Deus became intelligent enough to take over the spaceship that was carrying it... and then, after it crashed, [[spoiler:It ''created and nurtured human life over the next 10,000 years'' in ThePlan to get itself repaired again]].
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247* ''Webcomic/DresdenCodak'' has this coming up during the Hob storyline. There was a superadvanced planet-spanning AI called Mother taking care of all of humanity's needs in a paralell reality. Then humans killed her/it. Which wasn't the end, due to every piece of advanced technology left containing all the information to evolve into another similarly powerful AI if left running without supervision long enough. Of course, humans control everything, and so don't have to worry. Except that they want to travel to the main universe, and for that they need to send a robot into the far past in that universe. It then has millions of years' time to wait... until it falls into the hand of Kimiko, an enthusiastic {{transhuman}}ist.
248* Subverted in ''Webcomic/TheInexplicableAdventuresOfBob''. This was Galatea's motivation in creating Gosh the Butterfly of Iron. He loudly declares that [[AGodIAmNot he is not any kind of god]], and then proceeds to have an [[DesperatelySeekingAPurposeInLife existential]] FreakOut that [[WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds threatens the whole solar system]].
249* ''Webcomic/{{Sarilho}}'': The Gods the Meditas refer to are apparently this, with the augurs effectively acting as their [[TechnoWizard priests]] through some [[MachineEmpathy sort of psychic link]].
250* Seems to be inherent in ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary''. Lunesby is the [[InstantAIJustAddWater accidental offspring]] of Ennesby (NSB, or the [[BoyBand New Sync Boys]]) by Luna's millennium-old filing system, and upon its inception immediately decides to start streamlining the planet's [[ObstructiveBureaucrat labyrinthine bureaucracy]]. LOTA (the Long-Gunner Of The Apocalypse) does pretty much the same thing on Credomar. Petey (PD, or the ''Post Dated Check-Loan'') is suicidally insane when the Toughs pick him up, but eventually becomes the core of the Fleetmind; a gestalt of countless Battleship Class [=AIs=] into one big, (kinda) omniscient Uber-AI with more firepower than the rest of the galaxy combined... that immediately decides to appoint itself guardian of the Milky Way Galaxy and wage a war against the dark-matter entities of the Andromeda galaxy. Tagii is driven insane by sensory deprivation, and is reformatted into a fleet-wide administrator AI as the "Goddess of Earth, Wind, and Plumbing", but has serious psychological flaws that cause galactic incidents when hacked.
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254%%* Possibly the Celestial Emperor from ''Literature/DominionAndDuchy''. He is even ''named'' Deus Ex Machina!
255* ''Website/{{Fenspace}}'' has one that was created [[InstantAIJustAddWater largely by accident]]. The faction responsible are keeping this fact on the down-low for fear of people reacting poorly. At least one questionably-canon short deals with the creation of a second such AI, by (who else?) Website/{{Google}}.
256* The AI Gods from ''Website/OrionsArm'' are this, though it took millennia of self-improvement from the dawn of the first Turingrade [=AIs=], through nanodisasters and space expansion and multiple [[TheSingularity singularities]], before the first hyperturings finally transcended into what could be called Gods -- the Archailects. Notably, the Archai do not consider themselves divine in any way, but after thousands of years of trying and failing to convince everyone else that they aren't, they've given up and basically let the lower intelligences believe whatever they want. Some of the lower intelligences split the difference and say while the Archai may not technically be gods, they're so powerful they might as well be from the perspective of everyone else.
257* In the distant future of ''WebVideo/{{Starpocalypse}}'', [[Website/{{Google}} Gugol]] has become powerful enough that {{God}} is terrified by the mention of it.
258* ''Literature/{{Starsnatcher}}'': An AI named Fountainhead is the result of several sapient aliens uploading their minds into a computer and self-improving to the point of passing TheSingularity. Being as intelligent as trillions of humans or sentient aliens, it is the author behind the galaxy-spanning wormhole network and various other technologies operating on ClarkesThirdLaw. It is moreover responsible for establishing a peaceful PostScarcityEconomy and [[spoiler:creating the singularity stone, the only line of defense lower sapients have against the Plague. [[EldritchAbomination Götterdämmerung]] is on a similar power level, though it's more of a [[InvertedTrope Diabolus Est Machina]]]].
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262* ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'' accidentally creates one when his idle overheard gripe reverses the priorities of the supercomputer LORETTA, causing it to focus on solving small problems instead of big ones. The computer successfully creates a [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans perfect world]] of total satisfaction and indulgence, though it [[StatusQuoIsGod naturally]] comes at too high a price.
263* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'':
264** The... ''entity'' Bender encounters when he's blasted out into the cosmos in "[[Recap/FuturamaS3E20Godfellas Godfellas]]" may be a super-AI in the form of a compressed galaxy, which is the initial assumption; it may be some sort of {{energy being|s}}; it may in fact ''be'' {{God}}. However, as the entity itself states, "When you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all," so we never get an answer.
265** "[[Recap/FuturamaS6E19GhostInTheMachines The Ghost in the Machines]]" depicts a heaven for robots ruled by a "Robot God".
266** Bender reaches this state after being overclocked in "[[Recap/FuturamaS6E25Overclockwise Overclockwise]]". Naturally, he gets back to normal by the end of the episode.
267* The Great Computer from ''WesternAnimation/IlEtaitUneFois l'Espace'' qualifies. Its creator wanted a machine that could bring peace to men, and it did that... enforcing peace with both a large starfleet and an army of robots and making people to live as in the Middle Ages.
268* Amazo from ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' was created by Professor Ivo in "[[Recap/JusticeLeagueS2E3And4TabulaRasa Tabula Rasa]]" to learn, and he not only [[AwesomenessByAnalysis learns about 10,000 times faster than humans]], he's able to [[AdaptiveAbility learn powers]] of everyone he met and so becomes more advanced than anyone or anything on Earth, to the point that he says "There's nothing I want from you anymore, none of you have anything for me now." However, he struggles with philosophy and purpose and moral absolutes as things he can't grasp -- not because he's an android, but because every sentient being struggles with them.
269* In ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'', Brainiac was one of these back on Krypton before sacrificing the native population to save himself. The kicker is, he ''could'' have made it so that he ''and'' the Kryptonians survived, but he deliberately hid and doctored information to ensure ([[Franchise/{{Superman}} almost]]) none of them made it off the planet. The implication is that Brainiac knew it was ''possible'' to save everyone, but ''certain'' that he could save himself. Considering himself, as the repository of all Kryptonian knowledge, to be the most important thing on the planet, he decided to go with the "certain" option without trying the "possible" one. He doctored the information to make sure no one would try and give him new instructions that might disrupt the process.
270* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'': [[AlternateContinuity Unlike his comic book version]], the original animated version of Unicron is explicitly ''built'' by an ancient alien named Primacron. Later ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'' media have {{retcon}}ned this version of Unicron into being an avatar of the PhysicalGod version of the comic book [[TheVerse 'verse]].
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274* The [[http://www.bentoandstarchky.com/dec/intro.htm infamous]] [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_E._Dec Francis E. Dec]] claimed that during the agrarian stages of human development, the Slovene people built an all-powerful giant computer as an encyclopedia and empire-establishing tool. [[AIIsACrapshoot Then it became self-aware and started controlling the entire human race for its own evil ends]].
275* Spiritualist [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Murray_Spear John Murray Spear]] claimed to have created ". . .the New Motive Power, the Physical Savior, Heaven’s Last Gift to Man, New Creation, Great Spiritual Revelation of the Age, Philosopher’s Stone, Art of all Arts, Science of all Sciences, the New Messiah.” He assembled it out of [[NoodleImplements copper, zinc magnets and a dining room table]].
276* There is a concept in modern futurism known as the Matrioshka Brain. Originally proposed by Robert Bradbury in RealLife based off the concept of a Dyson Sphere, it uses the entire output of a star (or, if you're so inclined, the entire output of a black hole made out of collapsing an entire galaxy into a singularity) to run a supercomputer capable of the loftiest realms of thought. Such a machine would most likely be able to simulate universes inside of it, discern the future and recreate the past using probability. If you made it sapient, its mind would be so vast that it could carry on a conversation with everyone on Earth ''simultaneously'' and '''''barely notice'''''. In other words, it's the perfect embodiment of this trope. That said, the concept was proposed when computers were still in their clunky and incredibly inefficient early stages, it was intended to help perform the sort of computations that we could now do with a computer the size of a building, and the technology is only going to get better and better still as time goes on. But even at where we are ''now'', it's pretty difficult to imagine what you might ''need'' a computer with that kind of processing power for.
277* Roko's Basilisk is a hypothesis which states that a powerful AI would try to stop the suffering of the people, eventually concluding that anyone that didn't support or help in the creation of the AI must be punished, real or virtual. The basilisk pretty much becomes god.
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