Tropedia

  • Before making a single edit, Tropedia EXPECTS our site policy and manual of style to be followed. Failure to do so may result in deletion of contributions and blocks of users who refuse to learn to do so. Our policies can be reviewed here.
  • All images MUST now have proper attribution, those who neglect to assign at least the "fair use" licensing to an image may have it deleted. All new pages should use the preloadable templates feature on the edit page to add the appropriate basic page markup. Pages that don't do this will be subject to deletion, with or without explanation.
  • All new trope pages will be made with the "Trope Workshop" found on the "Troper Tools" menu and worked on until they have at least three examples. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP.

READ MORE

Tropedia
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}[[File:W&G-Preston-robot.jpeg|thumb|420px|link=Wallace and Grommit|[[I Knew It!]]]]
+
{{trope}}[[File:Aprilandroid.jpeg|thumb|288px|link=Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles| [[I Knew It!]]]]
   
 
{{quote|'''Peter''': Man, isn't it amazing ''that's'' what we all look like on the inside? [cue sparking]<br />
 
{{quote|'''Peter''': Man, isn't it amazing ''that's'' what we all look like on the inside? [cue sparking]<br />
Line 154: Line 154:
 
'''Mrs. Weaver:''' I'm sorry to hear I piss you off. ''poke'' [[Bond One-Liner|Believe me, the feeling is mutual.]] }}
 
'''Mrs. Weaver:''' I'm sorry to hear I piss you off. ''poke'' [[Bond One-Liner|Believe me, the feeling is mutual.]] }}
 
* In a ''[[Sliders]]'' episode, the lead researcher for developing [[Mechanical Lifeforms]] wanted to test out a way to transfer a human brain into a robot. He discovered that the procedure was already performed on himself when he was hit by a weapon.
 
* In a ''[[Sliders]]'' episode, the lead researcher for developing [[Mechanical Lifeforms]] wanted to test out a way to transfer a human brain into a robot. He discovered that the procedure was already performed on himself when he was hit by a weapon.
* 1960's ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'' episode "The Joker's Last Laugh". Batman realizes there's something strange about a bank teller. He twists the man's nose and the top of his head blows off, revealing springs and other mechanical parts. The teller was actually one of the Joker's android robots.
+
* In the 1960's ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'' episode "The Joker's Last Laugh", Batman realizes there's something strange about a bank teller. He twists the man's nose and the top of his head blows off, revealing springs and other mechanical parts. The teller was actually one of the Joker's android robots.
   
   
Line 201: Line 201:
 
* From ''[[Axe Cop]]'' [http://axecop.com/index.php/acepisodes/read/episode_5/ episode 5]: "The evil flying book turned out to be a robot and it exploded."
 
* From ''[[Axe Cop]]'' [http://axecop.com/index.php/acepisodes/read/episode_5/ episode 5]: "The evil flying book turned out to be a robot and it exploded."
 
* [[Left 4 Dead|Coach]] if you believe [http://www.vgcats.com/comics/?strip_id=289 this] [[VG Cats]] strip
 
* [[Left 4 Dead|Coach]] if you believe [http://www.vgcats.com/comics/?strip_id=289 this] [[VG Cats]] strip
* ''[[Commander Kitty]]'': [http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/12/05/dont-wait-up/ dialogue] indicates that Zenith is actually a [[Ridiculously-Human Robots|Ridiculously Human Robot]]. The first time we see so doesn't happen until later when we [http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/07/12/well-theres-yer-problem/ see her with a cable attached to her chest].
+
* ''[[Commander Kitty]]'': [http://www.commanderkitty.com/2010/12/05/dont-wait-up/ Dialogue] indicates that Zenith is actually a [[Ridiculously-Human Robots|Ridiculously Human Robot]]. The first time we see so doesn't happen until later when we [http://www.commanderkitty.com/2011/07/12/well-theres-yer-problem/ see her with a cable attached to her chest].
   
 
== Web Original ==
 
== Web Original ==
Line 217: Line 217:
 
{{quote| '''2003 Leonardo''': Robots?<br />
 
{{quote| '''2003 Leonardo''': Robots?<br />
 
'''2003 Michelangelo''':''(enthusiastic)'' ''Exploding'' robots. }}
 
'''2003 Michelangelo''':''(enthusiastic)'' ''Exploding'' robots. }}
  +
** April O'Neil, pictured above.
 
* Inverted in ''[[South Park]]'', in which Cartman's robot disguise (consisting of a couple of cardboard boxes) manages to fool everybody until he gives the game away by farting.
 
* Inverted in ''[[South Park]]'', in which Cartman's robot disguise (consisting of a couple of cardboard boxes) manages to fool everybody until he gives the game away by farting.
 
** Also played straight in the ''[[Trapper Keeper]]'' episode.
 
** Also played straight in the ''[[Trapper Keeper]]'' episode.

Revision as of 00:47, 18 January 2020

WikEd fancyquotesQuotesBug-silkHeadscratchersIcons-mini-icon extensionPlaying WithUseful NotesMagnifierAnalysisPhoto linkImage LinksHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconic
Aprilandroid

I Knew It!

Cquote1

Peter: Man, isn't it amazing that's what we all look like on the inside? [cue sparking]

Salty: It's a robot, you idiot!
Cquote2


So there's this person you've met. They look like a human, they act like a human, they talk like a human, and in your mind, they're very much a human.

Then they get wounded, and instead of bleeding, they're releasing sparks. Or maybe you catch them doing something no human should, like changing stations by blinking, or lifting a car.

Apparently, the human you've been with was one of them cyborgs, Ridiculously-Human Robots, or Mechanical Lifeforms.

At this point, one of two things may happen.

If the character is an enemy, this is the signal for The Hero to go all out in battle. After all, it's Just a Machine, who cares if it gets killed?

However, if the character is a friend, this will lead to much shock and/or angst for everyone as they ask themselves What Measure Is a Non-Human? This may include a Heroic BSOD if even the robot doesn't know.

A specific kind of Glamour Failure. For the alien and other organic creature equalivilant of this trope, see Alien Blood and/or Bizarre Alien Biology. Occasionally appears as a Subversion of Mortal Wound Reveal - the robot should have died, but because of its non-biological nature, it won't die, causing much in the way of Oh Crap moments.

Compare Unrobotic Reveal and Animated Armor.

Spoilers ahoy, so be wary.

Examples of Robotic Reveal include:


Anime and Manga

  • Mazinger Z, does this in the worst way possible. Poor Shiro.
  • In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, one of the characters, Subaru Nakajima, walks out of an explosion, covered in blood and one arm missing a large chunk of flesh, revealing the cybernetics underneath, during her scene of Unstoppable Rage. Interestingly, there's no Artificial Human-related angsting here, partly because most of the Nanoha cast aren't human, and have no problems at all accepting it.
    • And unlike Fate and Erio, Subaru and Ginga had a loving family, and complete knowledge of their origins long before the series even began.
    • Hell, by this point in the series, the Bureau probably has "So you're not exactly what's traditionally considered human, that's okay because you're a person too and we support you" pamphlets. (Probably written by Fate and Nanoha.)
  • Happens in Armitage III Dual Matrix with the titular character, made worse by the fact that it's her kid that sees it and becomes immediately afraid afterwards.
    • Happens to Armitage and D'Anclaude, among others, in the original series; Ross Sylibus' Artificial Limbs are revealed this way, as well.
  • Bartholemew Kuma of One Piece was revealed as a cyborg this way.
  • The MIB chasing after the Crescendolls in Interstella 5555 are revealed to be robots when, after an explosion, parts of their skin burn off and reveal metal.
  • In Bubblegum Crisis 2033, Largo's boomer status - which had been implied before - is confirmed when Leon shoots him in the hand, leaving a small hole with sparking metal visible inside.
    • The first episode has this happen to the kidnapped little girl, who is as surprised as anyone else that she's a Boomer with the Phlebotinum to control the military's Kill Sats.
  • In Dominion Tank Police, Annapuma loses her arm in an explosion, revealing her metallic skeleton. This causes Leona to exclaim, "Mechanical love dolls?!"
  • A variation occurs in Karano Kyoukai when Shiki's arm gets possessed, and we see the skin covering melt off to reveal that it's really a puppet arm. The rest of Shiki is human, but the arm is artificial.
  • Major Montana Max in Hellsing after being shot by Seras.
  • After being on the receiving end of a reflected fire spell, Mubyou in Wagaya no Oinari-sama. is revealed to be a robotic duplicate of the real Mubyou. Since the real Mubyou is always Walking the Earth, she created a few puppet copies of herself to work in the lands she's not currently in. Seems the duplicate Mubyou just wanted to be acknowledged for her work.
  • In the finale of Coyote Ragtime Show, Madame Marciano is injured and revealed to be a cyborg. Then again, being the Truly Single Parent of twelve Robot Girls, is it really that surprising?
  • At the end of one episode of Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's, a flying spinning spike of doom flies towards Rex Godwin. He catches it with his hand seeming to suffer no ill effects to the total shock of everyone watching... turns out his arm is robot. Coupled with the fact he possessed a severed arm in a test tube with a Dragon's Birthmark on it, this led some people to suspect that he may have been the 5th Signer. However, it turned out he wasn't the only one missing an arm...
    • Ghost is revealed to be a robot after it loses to Yusei and crashes. When the lads go to help it, Crow touches it's shoulder, and it's arm falls off.
    • Placido, both when he combines with his D-Wheel, and later when he is blown apart at the waist.
    • Inverted in the Third season of the original Yu-Gi-Oh. The gang meets up with a robot monkey, but don't realize that it's Honda until later
  • Zeo in Beyblade.
  • This occurred in Negima Neo during the re-telling of the battle between Negi and Asuna against Evangeline and Chachamaru. Chachamaru uses herself as a shield to save a group of cats which had gotten caught in the fray, causing her shoulder and upper thigh to spark and a metallic skeleton to show beneath her skin. In the regular manga, she simply showed them her Jet Pack by accident.
    • I'm pretty sure that in the manga, it wasn't even an accident. She never makes any indication that she's attempting to hide her robotic nature; she even has incredibly obvious antenna ears and pulls out the jetpack in a public place to get a kid's balloon out of a tree. Everyone else (except Chisame) is just oblivious.
  • Parodied, like everything else, in Excel Saga. Ropponmatsu II gets shot in the head, and the circuitry underneath reveals she's a robot. Excel is honestly surprised by this, despite obvious signs of it earlier in the episode. Ropponmatsu herself considers it obvious, and asks how many people shoot missiles from their knees.
    • Well, considering how stupid Excel is, it's no surprise she hasn't caught on.
  • In the first Fullmetal Alchemist anime and manga, Ed has an automail reveal when his right arm gets attacked by Cornello's pet chimera. In the Brotherhood anime, the reveal is done by a rogue alchemist trying to freeze his blood in that arm.
    • Izumi also finds out that Al is just an empty suit of armor by throwing him, and concludes that Ed has an automail leg by the fact that his steps sounded different when they were sparring. She's just that good.
  • The Trinity Blood novels drop several hints about Father Tres Iqus not being human, however it is only officially revealed when he is shot through the arm and his circuits are revealed.
  • In the final episode of The Big O it turns out that Big Ear, the mysterious informant who's always reading a newspaper when he's spoken to, is an android.
  • Princess Ixquic in Cyborg 009.
  • Used to chilling effect at the end of a scene in Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence; after Batou and Togusa finish a conversation with a forensics scientist about the nature of the Uncanny Valley, her face flips open to reveal mechanical insides.
    • If you look carefully, you can deduce her cyborg status by noting that she wears short sleeves in extreme cold, and her breath isn't visible even though Togusa's is.
  • In Gall Force, the crew find out about an advanced android when Pony forces the information out of the OX-11, to be confirmed moments later, when Catty makes a Heroic Sacrifice, and her clothes are burned away to reveal the android beneath.
  • In Osamu Tezukas Metropolis, Ken-ichi is the very last person to find out or even consider that Tima was a robot. She was introduced as this at the beginning of the film.
  • In Mobile Suit Gundam 00 half of Lichty's body is revealed to be cybernetic when he saves Christina's life at the cost of his own. Since it adds very little to his character, this was most likely due to the fact that it would have looked really gruesome if a normal human body had been exposed to GN particle beam like that, and wouldn't have passed the censors.


Comic Books

  • The comic's cover showed the new X-Men (Storm, Wolverine, Nightcrawler, Colossus, and Banshee) fighting the original X-Men (Jean Grey, Cyclops, Angel, Beast, and Iceman). The fight actually happened in the issue, with the new X-Men unwilling to fight all-out against their friends. But Wolverine realized that the original X-Men were robots because they didn't smell right. The robots were reduced to scrap metal pretty quickly after that.
    • X-men enemy Arcade makes robots convincing enough that his appearances in comics usually end up being robots. He was so good at this that when he made a double of Nightcrawler, Mystique mistook it for her son and couldn't bring herself to kill it.(Had no problem vaporizing her daughter Rogue though)
  • Anna, from the Gen 13 series. She's a demure maid who cooks and cleans for the group, looking very much annoyed when her carefully cooked breakfast goes ignored in favor of various snacks, junk food and cold pizza. Then she turned out to be an assassin droid with concealable blades and weapons of destruction.
  • Adam Aaronson, Machine Teen, initially believes himself to be an Ordinary High School Student. His robotic nature is revealed when he gets damaged playing football, but he himself is programmed to think of it as a normal injury.
  • In Top Ten: The 49ers the Iron Man Captain Ersatz is revealed, when his armour is damaged, to be a robot passing as a human to escape anti-AI prejudice.
  • Doctor Doom has a battalion of robot duplicates, all programmed to act as if they were him, unless a) there's more than one of them in the room, or b) the real Doom is present.
  • James-Michael's parents in Omega the Unknown.
  • This was supposedly originally going to happen to Sally in the "Endgame" arc of Archie's Sonic the Hedgehog before the Executive Veto.


Film

  • Terminator 2 has the Terminator cut the skin off his arm deliberately to prove he isn't human.
    • In The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Cameron has a more subtle way of revealing herself, simply by lighting up the irises of her eyes. In this case, though, she is talking with someone who already knows Terminators exist.
    • Terminator Salvation pretty much does this in the trailer. While we do not see the entire scene, the gist of the scene explains everything: Medic, trying to patch up a wounded soldier, is horrified when she sees Terminator circuitry, calls over John Connor, who ties him up and interrogates him, before untying him when he sincerely doesn't understand why the hell he's tied up, just so he can see it for himself. Cue the horror.
    • Another prime example was with T-1000 in T2. At first, it seems like it's the soldier the resistance sent back to protect John, until the Terminator shot him multiple times and he reformed afterwards.
  • Beta in The Last Starfighter, when he was wounded in front of Alex Rogan's girlfriend. Moments before, Beta had been trying to convince her that he was a robot. She didn't believe him. He gets shot, shows her his circuits, and says, "See?" before chasing after the attacker.
  • In the 2004 version of The Stepford Wives it's revealed when the main character knocks his head off that Mike Wellington is actually a robot, while it's his wife that's the programmer, an inversion from the original movie.
    • Both film versions have the scene where Joanna confronts the mysteriously changed Bobbie and goes so far as to stab her. The Stepfordized Bobbie acts very strangely for someone with a kitchen knife in her stomach. Maybe Joanna should've done anything now, but the plot seemingly required her to be an idiot.
      • Which makes the 2004 version even more stupid when you find out all the Stepford Wives are human women with microchips. Because microchips make a gut wound all better.
  • Toys: Alsatia, revealed by her accidental decapitation in the climactic battle
  • The 1974 version of Mechagodzilla gets a reveal like this, while impersonating the real Godzilla.
  • Used a number of times in the Alien series.
    • Ash in Alien is revealed as one. By bashing his head off. Specifically, he was designed to bring back the Xenomorph for study. And to consider the crew expendable.
    • And in Aliens: Bishop, thanks to the infamous knife-trick, though it's revealed much earlier than Ash's case. Because of this, Ripley stops trusting him. Fortunately, Bishop turns out to be an innocent android, unlike the former.
    • Annalee Call in Alien: Resurrection. And how! During their escape in the elevator shaft, Wren has trouble opening the shaft door. He asks for Call's gun which she readily provides, not realizing her mistake until Wren shoots her in the chest, knocking her off the ladder and into the water with a very determined xeno on the group's tail. After they take out the xeno, they are suprised when Call opens the shaft door from the other side, soaked with water. Though she doesn't want to talk about what happened, Ripley saw her being hit and her light clothing betray the fact that she doesn't have body armor. She opens her jacket and reveals circuits and synthetic liquid instead of bone fragments and blood. Apparently, androids are illegal so Call hid her own identity to stay alive. Needless to say, the rest of the team (except Ripley) didn't like this one bit until she proved her worth by crashing the Auriga.
  • The film version of I Robot has Spooner getting his arm seriously injured, revealing a cybernetic limb inside. Bonus points, because Spooner absolutely hates robots.
    • More bonus points because the robot attacking him is actually surprised by this.
    • Seriously injured might be the wrong word. He held up his arm to stop a blow from a robot that can easily shatter concrete, and some of his fake skin ripped off. That's it.
  • In Starchaser: The Legend Of Orin, the villainous Zygon turns out to be a robot when Orin cuts his cheek. Although that really shouldn't have been a surprise to him, since the dude was running a robot empire and was strong enough to pick him up and choke him with one hand.
  • In Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey, done three times by the "evil" Bill and Ted robot usses. The reveals lean toward Nightmare Fuel, but the second time, when human Bill punches his twin, is probably the funniest. "Oww! You're metal, dude!"
  • The German silent film Metropolis had one of the first robotic reveals. A Mad Scientist creates a female robot that is identical to Maria, a woman who preaches about peace to the enslaved workers in the city who want to revolt. The real Maria is kept away as the robot inspires lust among men and violence among the workers. When the city falls to pieces, and the people decide that Maria is to blame, they tie her up to a stake and attempt to burn her to death. She laughs as her 'exterior' melts away, revealing that she is a robot.
  • Subverted in the Demon Seed. At first, it seems that Proteus's child is in fact a robot. However, it is actually a human baby wearing a robotic shell as an exterior.
  • In a 2004 Disney Channel Made for TV Movie called Pixel Perfect, a hologram named Loretta is created by a teenager to help his best friend's band. As she is capable of human emotion despite being a hologram, Loretta is thought to be human until the band's second performance, when she starts fading in and out. But, in a slight subversion, everyone loves the holographic lead singer.
  • Police Academy played with it in this scene.
  • Alice in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen


Literature

  • In ETA Hoffmann's 1816 short story, "The Sandman", the main character falls in love with a woman named Olimpia, who's eventually revealed to be a robot.
  • Elijah Baley is told from the start that R. Daneel Olivaw is a robot. He refuses to believe it, however, as robots that advanced don't exist on Earth in his time -- and he has a brilliant theory about the murder of the human in whose image Daneel was built. When Daneel peels the synthetic flesh off his arm to prove himself, Baley faints (for several reasons).
    • And then Elijah pulls off his trick in the sequel.
    • Though Hari Seldon doesn't find out that Dors Venabili is a robot until long after they met.
  • Animorphs did this a little differently. They morph dogs, and just-so-happen to run into an old acquaintance of Marco's as he's passing out fliers for the Yeerks' front organization, and they freak out because... Erek has no scent. Because this might be a new weapon of the Yeerks, they stalk him until he just-so-happens to get hit by a truck and his hologram shorts out for a split-second. It's not until they morph spiders (which see a different wavelength of light) that they can confirm that he's an android[1], however. Erek turns into a fairly important minor character, as the Animorphs' spy inside the Yeerk organization and using his and his friends' holographic abilities to impersonate the Animorphs so that they can go into outer space or something without being missed.
  • In "The Eleventh Voyage" of Ijon Tichy, the main character of The Star Diaries by Stanislaw Lem, this gets totally inverted. Tichy, sent in a robot disguise to a planet inhabited solely by machines that are hostile to all humanity, discovers in the story's finale that there is no single robot around the place. All of the alleged machines are in fact secret agents like himself, who have been exposed one by one, and forced to keep up appearances. Furthermore: the computer mastermind behind this plot shows up to be merely a humble human gofer working for the agency responsible for sending all those people on a mission to that planet. The story is a parable of living in a country, where everybody upholds the official ideology no one actually believes in, which was the case of People's Republic of Poland at the time when Lem wrote the thing.


Live Action TV

  • Red Dwarf: in "Out of Time", Lister gets his arm cut, revealing mechanical parts.
    • Not only mechanical, but of a model inferior to Kryten, which means Kryten technically outranks him! The whole thing is then beautifully subverted when it turns out that Lister's mechanical "nature" is the result of Starbug having hit an "unreality pocket", turning Kryten briefly into a gibbering idiot as he attempts to apologize for his mis-step.
      • So no real change then.
  • Star Trek
    • Star Trek: The Original Series
      • Dr. Roger Korby at the end of the episode "What Are Little Girls Made Of".
      • And Norman at the start of "I, Mudd".
    • Star Trek: The Next Generation
      • In the episode "Thine Own Self", Data is amnesiac because of (nonvisible) damage, and has gone native. An injury shows the circuitry under his skin, much to the shock of all (Data himself included).
      • The episode when Data's creator's wife shows up, and while she's down on the planet she falls and turns out to be an android herself.
  • There was a Stargate SG-1 episode where this was combined with a Tomato in the Mirror...
    • And a sequel to this episode: One of the villain's followers started doubting his godhood because said "god" looked surprised after killing an android.
  • In the series Total Recall 2070, Farve is revealed to be an android when he regenerates his arms' skin after having it burnt/melted by high voltage cables.
  • Power Rangers Operation Overdrive: Red Ranger Mack is revealed to be a robot built by his "father" after a computer virus that infects the Rangers' base afflicts him as well, and he's forced to be taken off-line and disassembled to get at the problem. Needless to say, he wasn't very happy about it.
    • About ten years prior, Power Rangers Turbo had an episode where the Blue Ranger Justin suspects that the other four Rangers have been replaced by robots. As it turns out, he's right. The real sting? Justin HIMSELF is revealed to be a robot like them, when the real Justin shows up to deactivate him.
    • Power Rangers RPM inverts this. Tenaya 7 is convinced she is a machine, until a cut in a fight reveals she bleeds. The camera angles play with this trope, mimicking its straight use and treating the blood as if it was the tell-tale sparking wires. In fact, the straight usage had happened earlier in the same episode to a part of her body that was mechanical, although it was to make the point that Tenaya was( as she thought) a machine. There's also the finale, where it's revealed that around half of the citizens in Corinth are sleeper agent cyborgs, and Venjix is just about to activate them.
  • The Buffy episode "Ted" has Ted revealed as a robot after Buffy clobbers him.
    • We know that the Buffybot is a robot, but it's revealed to a vampire after he injures her, revealing electronic parts (and causing her to bang into walls).
    • Likewise when Glory knocks the Buffybot's head off.
Cquote1

 Glory: "The Slayer's a robot? Did everybody else know the Slayer was a robot?"

Cquote2
    • Unnecessary for April in "I Was Made to Love You". Her behavior makes it perfectly clear to everyone that she's a robot. Which makes it The Not-Secret when her creator Warren tells Buffy something she "couldn't possibly know".
  • In the Angel episode "Lineage", after Wesley kills his father, the latter is revealed as a robotic replica.
  • In Andromeda, Doyle is revealed to be an android when she cuts her hand and bleeds superconductor fluid. As a small twist, it's revealed to us, but not to her, since Harper programmed her with a perception filter that causes her to think it's blood.
  • Doctor Who, "The Android Invasion". Sarah Jane Smith's face comes off to reveal that she's been replaced by a robot.
    • In "Victory Of The Daleks", Professor Edwin Bracewell's hand gets shot off by a Dalek, revealing him to be a robotic creation of theirs, so that in turn the Daleks have proof that Bracewell 'created' them. They also made him as an explosive device.
  • The reimagined Battlestar Galactica finds plenty of ways to reveal that characters are not quite human:
    • As artificial humans in this world are mass-produced, a favourite is simply to reveal that (an)other identical version(s) of a character exist(s). This is done with Boomer, Sharon, D'Anna, Cavil and Gina (in the movie).
    • In the first Season we also get the fact that their spines glow when "getting intimate". This was dropped in later Seasons (probably because it's pretty stupid and provides a simple "Cylon detector" for humanity).
    • Caprica Six simply tells Baltar she's an android; as she knows the world is about to be invaded by her fellow killer robots this is not much of a gamble.
    • Leoben Conoy behaves oddly, is unusually strong and proves vulnerable to exotic radiation.
    • A marooned Aaron Doral is rescued by his fellow androids.
    • Simon is seen talking with another, known, android.
    • Anders, Tyrol, Tory and Tigh are drawn together and mysteriously 'activated' when the Fleet reaches the Ionian Nebula.
    • Ellen is glimpsed by another android in a vision.
    • Subverted with Starbuck. There are many hints that she might be an android but the main thing that suggests this e.g. her resurrection is apparently not due to "downloading".
  • In an episode of Bionic Woman after rescuing a girl from some would be kidnappers the girl discovers the exposed wiring of her arm.
  • In Farscape Aeryn is kidnapped and replaced with a bioloid copy- which is unveiled when Crichton gets wise and shoots her in the head, revealing pulsating organic machinery beneath the ruined face.
    • Sikozu reveals herself to be a bioloid as well by rotating her left eye 120 degrees as a signal to another bioloid.
  • In the second season premiere of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Catherine Weaver seems to be an ordinary Corrupt Corporate Executive who has obtained the Turk and plans to develop it. Then the head of her company's AI division starts badmouthing her in the men's room. As soon as he's alone, a liquid-metal type Terminator peels itself off the urinal and turns into Catherine Weaver, who kills the man with a liquid metal finger-poke and a Bond One-Liner.
Cquote1

 Red Shirt: God that Weaver bitch pisses me off.

Walks up to the urinal and unzips his pants. Mrs. Weaver emerges, scaring the pants off the Red Shirt.

Mrs. Weaver: I'm sorry to hear I piss you off. poke Believe me, the feeling is mutual.

Cquote2
  • In a Sliders episode, the lead researcher for developing Mechanical Lifeforms wanted to test out a way to transfer a human brain into a robot. He discovered that the procedure was already performed on himself when he was hit by a weapon.
  • In the 1960's Batman episode "The Joker's Last Laugh", Batman realizes there's something strange about a bank teller. He twists the man's nose and the top of his head blows off, revealing springs and other mechanical parts. The teller was actually one of the Joker's android robots.


Tabletop Games

  • There are rules governing this reveal vis-à-vis Cyborgs in Deadlands: Hell on Earth and Lost Colony, particularly if the deadbot in question is equipped with the "Infiltrator" package, which makes a normally pallid cadaver-with-metal-in-its-guts capable of breathing normally, bleeding, eating, and other things. When a cyborg takes enough damage, nearby characters can make a check to see if they notice anything unusual in the wound, with the roll being easier if...
Cquote1

 ...Your can is continuing to fight after taking enough damage to drop a bull rhino.

Cquote2


Video Games

  • One of the characters in the first Wild ARMs game is revealed to be not quite what they seem after he cuts off his arm to get away from the Big Bad. When the others treat the injury, sparks fly out, and they discover that his insides were made of the same properties as the Metal Demons.
  • A variant occurs in Super Smash Bros Brawl when The Ancient Minister, who up until this point was considered to be a variant of one of the Big Bad's Mooks, turns out to be a THE R.O.B.
  • In Tomb Raider: Chronicles, in the final level you encounter suited henchmen who seem extremely tough, after causing enough damage it is revealed that they are Cyborgs and must be killed by alternative means to shooting.
  • Dr. Wily at the next-to-last level of Mega Man 3. Although it's kind of easy to tell because they play the regular level-ending song. It did surprise some people because this was only the first game where the bad guy was "Not-Wily".
  • Snatcher has Random - it comes as a surprise to himself as well.
  • Done with a twist in Command and Conquer 3: Kane's Wrath, where it is revealed that the player is a Nod AI named LEGION. Presumably, LEGION was aware of its nature the whole time, but the player doesn't until Kane makes the revelation himself.
  • One of the millions of twists in Ghost Trick is that the Big Bad's assistant is an AI.
  • In Baten Kaitos Origins, the one with robotic innards is Milliarde.
  • In Streets of Rage 3's Stage 5, you fight Mr. X. Why are you only on the fifth stage when you fight him? Well, upon defeating his henchmen, the top half of him burns off to reveal a robotic duplicate. The real Mr. X, who you encounter in Stage 7 (assuming you rescued the General Chief of Police), has been reduced to a brain.
  • Played straight with the final boss of the first Turok game. The Campaigner at first appears to be some sort of barbarian wizard, but as he takes damage his flesh peels off to expose his robotic structure. In some ways there is a subversion of this trope, as the player has already cut down legions of "real" humans by this point.
  • Cave Story: Professor Booster apparently recognizes the protagonist as a robot immediately, but several other characters--particularly Kazuma, and possibly the player--don't realize this until Booster points it out. In their defense, he is a Ridiculously Human Robot.
    • With white skin, inhuman eyes, and antennae for ears.
  • Henry Hatsworth in the Puzzling Adventure's ending has you fighting Weasleby for a while before he suddenly twitches with electricity coming off him and his head falls out. And then Cole pops out from the remains to reveal himself as The Man Behind the Man.
  • Somewhat played with in Metal Gear Solid 4 Guns of the Patriots, right before the final boss fight with him, Ocelot dramatically removes his jacket to reveal that Liquid's arm has been replaced with a bio-mechanical prosthetic, hinting that "Liquid" was artificial.
    • In Snakes Revenge, Big Boss reveals before the final battle that he was turned int a cyborg. After he sustains enough damage, he transforms into a tall cyborg who chases after Snake across several rooms.
    • Inverted in Metal Gear 2 Solid Snake. In an optional radio call during the final battle, Kasler tells Snake that Big Boss underwent an operation to replace his limbs with cybernetic organs. When Snake defeats Big Boss with a makeshift flamethrower, he burns to death like any other person (he did get better).
  • In Wonder Boy in Monster Land, the dragon you've come all this way to slay is revealed to be a robot, possibly from space.
  • In the first Sonic Advance, halfway through the fight with Metal Knuckles, his outer covering breaks off to reveal his metallic body. (Of course the fact that he was a robot was All There in the Manual, but only in the Japanese version.)
  • At the end of Professor Layton and the Curious Village, it's revealed that practically everyone in St. Mystere is a robot, save for a few residents such as Flora and Bruno.
  • Parodied in Strong Bads Cool Game for Attractive People, where in the low-budget Dangeresque Three movie/chapter/game, Uzi Bazooka reveals himself as a robot clone of Dangeresque, Too? after being shot, which is henceforth represented by having a circuit board crudely taped to the actor.
  • Conkers Bad Fur Day, being the Shout-Out-heavy game it is, throws one out to Terminator with the Haybot, who looks like your average musclebound anthropomorphic stack of hay until you stick Frankie's forks in his ass twice, at which point part of him burns away to reveal the ever-familiar image of a robotic red eye. "BUFF YOU, ASSHOLE!"


Web Animation


Webcomics

Web Original

  • In Morenatsu, one non-canon bad ending on Tatsuki's route reveals him to be a robot created by Shigure. He kills both Tatsuki and Hiroyuki, the latter because he now knows this secret.


Western Animation

  • In the Wallace and Gromit short A Close Shave, when Preston is put into the sheep-shearing device, sparks fly, and the Robot Dog emerges stripped to the metal.
  • Oliver, in the Kim Possible episode "Grudge Match", is first pinned to a giant magnet, then has his face pulled off. He was being used as a beard by a supermodel-lookalike robotics expert.
    • Eric, in The Movie, that was acting as a human until he electrocuted Kim while she hugged him, though to be fair, this is more "sack of goo" than "robotic".
  • Sari Sumdac from Transformers Animated, ends up with a chunk of her elbow missing, with Cybertronian circuitry poking out. This one was just as much a surprise to her as everyone else.
  • The titular Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' first encounter with their most common Mecha-Mooks in the first cartoon series. Despite Raphael actually stabbing one, Michelangelo's exclamation seems to imply they had been previously holding back.
    • Turtles Forever, the crossover between the two TMNT cartoons, has a reveal when the 2003 Turtles learn the 1987 Foot Soldiers are robots.
Cquote1

 2003 Leonardo: Robots?

2003 Michelangelo:(enthusiastic) Exploding robots.

Cquote2
    • April O'Neil, pictured above.
  • Inverted in South Park, in which Cartman's robot disguise (consisting of a couple of cardboard boxes) manages to fool everybody until he gives the game away by farting.
    • Also played straight in the Trapper Keeper episode.
  • Every slain enemy in Samurai Jack turns out to be a robot, regardless of how human they looked or behaved, if they were encountered in a cockfighting ring, or even if they appeared to be wild animals.
  • In a few times in Scooby-Doo:
    • Charlie in an episode of "Scooby, Where Are You?"
    • The No-Face Zombie in the "No-Face Zombie Chase" episode of "The Scooby-Doo Show"
    • The Ice Monster from the pilot eposide of "What's New, Scooby-Doo?"
    • The Ghost Monster Trucks in the race episode of "What's New, Scooby-Doo?"
    • The Ninjas in "Scooby-Doo And the Samurai Ghost"
  • An episode of Inch High Private Eye featured a mad dollmaker as the Villain of the Week, who uses robot mannequins to rob department stores. When he's eventually caught, the heroes discover they only captured a decoy. He returns for a second run, with mechanical copies of the titular character and his boss, but this time, they catch him for real.
    • As a matter of fact Hanna-Barbera loves this trope for some odd reason, taking it so far, that sometimes, the main villain of the episode turns out to be one. Nobody seems to question where the robot came from or who built it.
  • Played for Laughs with a robotic duplicate of Leela in the first episode of the Futurama revival. Everybody except her realized that she was a robotic duplicate, until Nibbler bit a chunk off of her arm, revealing circuitry. She spent the rest of the day screaming. Also done with a fry duplicate later that episode.
    • Also spoofed and then immediately inverted in the earlier episode "Insane in the Mainframe", where the trauma of being committed to a robot asylum eventually causes Fry to believe he is a robot. In the episode's conclusion, bank-robbing robot Roberto stabs Fry, but the knife hits a can of oil he put in his jacket pocket earlier, causing Roberto to believe Fry really is a robot. Moments later, Fry snaps out of it when he sees the blood coming from a cut on his arm.
  • In the Gargoyles episode Leader of The Pack, Xanatos breaks The Pack out of jail. During an epic fight on board an oil tanker, Bronx tears off half of his face, revealing that "Xanatos" is actually the robotic duplicate, Coyote. Of course, the whole point of the exercise was to get Xanatos' girlfriend Fox a shot at early parole for her actions during the jailbreak at the start of the episode.
  • In Sealab 2021 Quinn reveals in an episode that he is a robot. This isn't mentioned again afterwards and was thought to just be a wacky joke since there's Negative Continuity. But then a later episode mentioned it again. I guess they don't really seem to care much.
  • The Teen Titans episode "Masks" first introduces Slade's trademark Mooks, who dress decidedly like ninjas. At the end of the first fight with them, though, Robin rips the mask off one of them, revealing the robotic circuitry beneath. Later episodes also had "Slade" being revealed as one of his android doubles, with the real Slade speaking through them from an unknown location. Averted with other Mecha-Mooks later in the series--the robot soldiers that served Brother Blood and the Brain were clearly shown to be machines from their first appearances.
  • The Powerpuff Girls villain Roach Coach is revealed to be a sentient roach, in a Mobile Suit Human.
  • In Young Justice Professor T.O. Morrow is revealed to be a robot when Red Inferno kills him. The real Morrow is dying in hospital, having built a robot duplicate to carry on his work. It subverts Comic Book Time in the prcoess, as Morrow had been active since World War II without seeming to age.
  1. Or maybe more of a cynoid in disguise?