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  • Machine Empathy: In this strip, Florence mentions the phenomena as she listens to learn how the Savage Chicken sounds in flight.
  • Mad Artist:
  • Mad Bomber: Florence worries about coming across as one in this strip.
    Florence: There'll be time to drop off the [explosive] bolts here first. I need to remember details like that until we know each other better. Some men get so nervous if a lady shows up at the restaurant with a box of explosives.
  • Mad Scientist:
    • Florence is worried that Dr. Bowman may have been one of these, releasing his untested creations.
    • Dvorak the robot is constantly coming up with strange and potentially dangerous inventions.
  • Made of Explodium: Parodied. In this strip, Florence knows there's no logical reason for a desk chair to explode upon collision with a spaceship, but she decides to play it safe anyway by extending her feet to hit the ship before the chair does because it belongs to Sam Starfall.
  • Magic Countdown: And Sam thought it was his fault that a time bomb with a digital countdown timer wasn't able to be reactivated.
  • Magnetic Hero: Florence's strong morals, helpful instincts and plain old friendliness net her a lot of allies over the course of the strip, including most of Jean's robot population in one stroke.
  • The Mall: Distinctive because Jean has a single major city, so there's really no need for more than one. Florence applies her engineered intellect to shopping and discovers Things Man Was Not Meant to Know - at least as far as the woman, a.k.a Niomi, escorting Flo deems them.
  • Man in the Machine: The Police chief was severely injured when fighting a fire in the first robot factory, resulting in him needing a mobility suit to do anything but talk.
  • Maniac Monkeys: The uplifted chimpanzees, meant to be living weapons. The only survivor, Doctor Bowman, managed to quell his aggressiveness by neutering himself. Even so, and in spite of his intelligence and benevolence, he's still psychotic and rage-prone.
  • Mars Needs Women:
    • Parodied here, when Sawtooth grabs a nonfunctional robot to read its memory during the robot war story arc.
    • Lampshaded and gender flipped by Florence here.
      Florence: You've seen the covers of the old science fiction magazines. Non-humans always go for humans. It's the price you pay as a species for being drop-dead sexy.
  • Marilyn Maneuver: Happens with both an anonymous Marilyn look-alike and Helix's pet Emu in this strip.
  • Master of Illusion: An interesting variation. Robots primarily identify each other using transponder info, meaning that pretty much anyone can fool robot senses using false transponders that don't match their body. When factory one robots learn about the trick, they organize a masquerade party.
  • Mathematician's Answer: "Helix, does this symbol mean there's something valuable in there or something in there that will kill me?" "Both!"
  • McNinja: French ninja waiters.
  • Mechanical Lifeforms: How about Mozart birds? Some robots try to fill what they perceive as ecological niches. And this doesn't always end well.
  • Meet Cute: Florence knocks on Winston's door during a hurricane while he is watching werewolf movies.
  • Meaningful Echo: When Winston first nurses Florence back to health and realises he's attracted to her personality and intellect, he reminds himself that romancing a patient, already unethical enough when it's between two humans, is an absolute no-go when the doctor is a veterinarian. They still become a romantic couple nonetheless, but the Chief of Police later warns them that the current colony laws make it illegal for humans to try anything naughty with non-human mammals, so they have to be really careful about what they are doing (and what is seen by other people) together.
  • Metaphorically True: Sam opts to use this when sending a message to Florence's owner.
  • Mildly Military: The Jean planetary military is on vacation during the events of the Gardener in the Dark arc, and Florence is informed that he won't be back until after the weekend.
  • A Million Is a Statistic: Lampshaded.
    Blunt: Let me simplify. Can a. Normally functioning. Robot. Using Dr. Bowman’s. Neural design. Intentionally harm a human?
    Sawtooth: Only if it will prevent greater harm to other humans.
    Blunt: Who decides. Greater harm? What is to stop. Majority humans. From turning us. Against. Minority humans? Harm. Does not have. To be. Direct. We could be. Ordered. Not to assist. A group. Economically. Remove robots. From the equation. And you remove. The problem.
    Sawtooth: (What is it about economics and treating everything as numbers that makes some people so cheerfully sociopathic?)
  • Mind-Reformat Death: The effect of Gardener in the Dark. Affected robots have their neural circuits pruned so aggressively that the original personality is destroyed.
  • Miranda Rights: Amended as appropriate to robot culprits.
    Robot officer: You have the right to data integrity. Should you give up this right, accessed memories can and will be used against you. You have the right to tech support.
  • Mirror Chemistry: Pfouts uses right handed amino acids, while Earth lifeforms use left handed ones. This chemistry is cited as a reason for the Bowman neural uplift package, uplifting native species to sapience on worlds hostile to Earth life.
  • Missing Time: Florence winds up missing a large chunk of a day's memories thanks to a chemical that inhibits the transfer of short term memories to long term storage, during a trip to Ecosystems Unlimited. Between some notes to herself and scents left on her fur she's able to fill in some of the details, however.
  • Mistaken for Afterlife: Clippy the robot is dismantled to prevent him carrying out a plot for world domination ordered by Mr Kornada. When he is reactivated, he believes that he has died and gone to an afterlife, partly because he's in a White Void Room (an electronically isolated secure room, to contain any hostile actions he might take before matters get straightened out) and the first person he sees is his rightful owner, who Kornada had convinced him was dead so that he would accept Kornada's orders.
  • Mistaken for Profound: A robot realizes that Sam is attempting to scam it, and decides that he's trying to teach it a lesson (which it expounds on at length, and which legitimately is an important insight) about human nature, so that it can serve humans better.
    Sam: I appreciate that you think I'm deep and all, but really, I'm just trying to steal from you.
  • Modesty Towel:
  • Moment Killer:
  • Mondegreen Gag: How Tex went from making dishware to a government position in geophysics.
    Tex: Then one day some government folks asked if I knew anything about Tex Tonic Plates. When I told them I built them from scratch, they said "You're our man.", and I've been in geophysics ever since.
  • Moody Mount: Sam tries to ride Polly the emu to escape from an angry mob, but she refuses. He gets her to run by pulling off one of his facial tentacles and putting it on a stick.
  • Mooning: Not shown onscreen, but Helix exclaims "Sam! You just mooned the mayor!" How an alien squid in an environment suit has a recognizeable bottom to moon people with is not explained.
  • Morton's Fork: Invoked by Florence as part of her plan to delay Gardener in the Dark by removing the option of simply undoing her changes to the system.
    Clippy: We can't go back without opening security holes. We can't go forward without introducing unknown code into our programs.
  • Mother Nature, Father Science: Inverted. The closest we get to a Nature Hero is the "male" Stupid Good Ridiculously Human Robot; OTOH, Team Science has the female red wolf engineer who shows signs of Science-Related Memetic Disorder. Winston on the other hand is a male scientist who works with the environment.
  • Motivation on a Stick: Sam uses one of his facial tentacles this way so he can ride Polly and escape an angry mob.
  • Mugged for Disguise: Blunt and Edge will occasionally steal random transponders to pass themselves off as other machines.
  • Mundane Luxury: Since Jean is still being terraformed, some naturally-grown materials are still rather hard to come by. Niomi mentions that until as recently as a year ago, clothing had to be made from plastics, and for a trip to a space station in the asteroid belt, the crew stocks up on valuable trade goods worth several times their weight in gold, like hot sauce and organic spices.
  • Mundane Solution: Florence is fond of these when applicable. On the other end of the spectrum, many robots are so used to using things like transponders and GPS for recognition and navigation that they have honest trouble employing mundane methods in their absence.
  • Mundane Utility:
    • Robots normally only identify each other by their ID transponders. This lets a few robot muggers disguise themselves simply by stealing transponders and turning off the ones they were built with. When the rest of robot society finds out about this, they throw a masquerade ball.
    • When Dvorak gets a hold of the Gardener in the Dark code, he immediately notes that a scaled-back, temporary version could be used to make a robot drunk.
      Maxwell Post: Let's try to solve this crisis before you create a new one.
  • Must Have Caffeine:
    • Florence Ambrose tends to take exception to having her coffee taken away, as only a carnivore can. She also explicitly cited the availability of coffee as a benefit of restoring power to Sam's ship.
    • The coffee maker still brewing is implied to be the reason that the compound where Dr. Bowman is being held wasn't able to reach more than 50% operational readiness in under 60 seconds.
    • While in space, Niomi reveals her specially-made coffee maker - she'd modified a caulking gun so she could have non-instant coffee even in zero-G.
    • Niomi tries to keep Sam out of the maintenance shop of a space station. The local supervisor advises her to just let him in because she's also getting between technicians and their morning cup of coffee.
      Perth Hillman: You may as well let him in. As soon as those technicians realize you're between them and their morning coffee, no force in the universe will keep that door closed.
  • My Car Hates Me: An unusually literal example: Sam's spaceship's AI was trying to kill him for a while. Now it has settled on injury/maiming.
  • My Defense Need Not Protect Me Forever: A common and contagious survival trait.
  • My Eyes Are Up Here:
  • My Instincts Are Showing:
    • The Trope Namer, and especially obvious with Florence, whose instincts resulted in her "burying" a tupperware bowl full of food in the back of the refrigerator under a towel. She also reflexively wakes up upon hearing the distinctive sound of kibble being poured into a doggy dish (Winston feeding his dog Beekay).
    • Despite having a genius-level intellect Dr. Bowman still instinctively sees eye contact as an act of aggression and will immediately attack.
    • Sam too. Being from a race of kleptoparasites, if other people want something, he wants it too.
  • My Life Flashed Before My Eyes: As Dvorak and Qwerty, both robots, are airlifted out of a collapsing building in a hurricane:
    Dvorak: My whole life just flashed before my eyes.
    Qwerty: Mine's still flashing. I've got to buy some faster memory.

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