Androids Robots

Robots are Humanoids: Mission on Earth
Robots are Humanoids: Mission on Earth
This is a story about Robots. People believe that they are bad, and will take away the life of every human being. But that belief will be put to waste because that is not true. In Chapter 1, you will see how the story of robots came to life. The questions that pop up whenever we hear the word “robot” or “humanoid”. Chapters 2 - 5 are about a situation wherein human lives are put to danger. There exists a disease, and people do not know where it came from. Because of the situation, they will find hope and bring back humanity to life. Shadows were observing the people here on earth. The shadows stay in the atmosphere and silently observing us. Chapter 6 - 10 are all about the chance for survival. If you find yourself in a situation wherein you are being challenged by problems, thank everyone who cares a lot about you. Every little thing that is of great relief to you, thank them. Here, Sarah and the entire family they consider rode aboard the ship and find solution to the problems of humanity.
8
39 บท
Boyfriend for Sale
Boyfriend for Sale
BOYFRIEND FOR SALE! Book yours now. Due to the overwhelming number of failed marriages and cheating partners, the present generation eventually developed a certain degree of aversion towards the notion of having a romantic partner. It was for that reason why Alpha Technology Inc. pioneered the first robot in the market that was capable of 'Love'. Now, people no longer felt any shame claiming that they bought their boyfriend online; because it was part of the fad But what would happen if one of their robots was swapped on the day of delivery? This is the story of a shopaholic queen named, Shantal, who thought that they bought a robotic boyfriend online. For all she thought, Alex was as a robot. That was why she tried her best not to fall in love with him. Little did she know that the other party was only a substitute.
10
577 บท
The Weston Syndicate
The Weston Syndicate
"One misstep can lead to a violent love-triangle" In the year 2050, Planet Earth is under alien occupation. The Terils had taken control over the planet after humans were on the cusp of destroying all life due to their love for violence. The Terils were adamant in saving Earth and chose to preserve the planet by creating a unique marketing strategy that would involve a species of super humans known as the androids. The androids were humans with technology improvements. This created a new caste system where androids enjoyed the luxuries of life while humans fought and begged for any scrap left. Among the chaos stood syndicates: crime groups led by androids that stole and started wars among each other for ownership of the city. Some humans took advantage of this opportunity and delved into a life of crime. Lara Doe, a twisted Robin Hood, has success in robbing from androids homes and syndicate bosses until she finds herself caught up with the possessive Weston Syndicate Boss-Noe Weston. Noe claims her as his and forces her into marriage. Lara soon finds herself involved in a turf war between two android bosses and reunited with a long-lost friend who has been in love with her. A deadly love triangle forms and Lara must decide if she wants to be seduced by the handsome and ruthless Noe Weston or her sweet childhood friend Adrian Dolan?
คะแนนไม่เพียงพอ
17 บท
The Last Saint
The Last Saint
This is a story set in a much advanced technology era where the machines and specifically robots have taken over the city.
คะแนนไม่เพียงพอ
25 บท
 My Step Daddy
My Step Daddy
Story of Rose and Josheph steamy love story with taste of betrayal, Suspense and thrill. "I was waiting for this moment Princess" He whispered in my ear giving goosebumps. "D..daddy" I stuttered. "shhhhhh.. baby, you trust me right?" He asked. Mature Content This is a work of fiction. Any names or characters, businesses or places, events or incidents, are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental."
8
136 บท
Alpha Osiris
Alpha Osiris
Lily is one of the six children of Alpha Edward, but she is not like the rest. While her sisters excel at everything and stand out, Lily is less than perfect and hardly anyone notices her. When she meets Alpha Osiris at a dinner they both dislike each other. Alpha Osiris tries reluctantly to find a mate, while Lily tries to think of a future that isn't dictated by whom her future mate will be. But the Moon Goddess has other plans for the both of them.
9.6
467 บท

How Do Filmmakers Design Androids Robots For Realism?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 07:20:16

Walking into a dark theater and seeing an android on screen who actually feels like a presence rather than a prop still gives me goosebumps. Filmmakers chase realism by layering choices: physical design, movement, sound, and the tiniest human details. Visually, they mix real materials — silicone skin, articulated hands, weighted limbs — with meticulous costume and makeup to control how light hits synthetic surfaces. Cinematography helps hide the seams: shallow depth of field, selective focus, and practical shadows sell skin and depth in ways CGI alone sometimes can’t. Movies like 'Blade Runner' and 'Ex Machina' taught me that a believable robot is often about restraint—showing the human-like parts slowly, then letting the audience fill in the rest.

Movement and behavior are huge. Directors use puppetry, animatronics, stunt performers in suits, or motion capture actors to get motion that reads as deliberately mechanical yet emotionally resonant. They’ll intentionally limit micro-movements — a slightly delayed blink, a tiny head tilt — to keep characters from slipping into the uncanny valley. Sound designers layer breath, servos, subtle clicks, and even carefully chosen silence; the voice actor’s delivery is tuned to match the physical acting, so an electronic timbre doesn’t conflict with organic motion. For me, the most convincing android scenes are where the human actor and the machine effects play off each other, so reactions from everyday props and other characters are consistent, making the robot feel like it really occupies the space on set.

How Do Androids Robots Differ From Cyborgs In Manga?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 17:55:13

When I sift through shelves of manga and watch panels flip by in my head, the clearest split I see is function versus origin. Androids are usually built from the ground up as machines — think of 'Astro Boy' or 'Chobits' — their bodies, minds, and often emotions are products of design. Artists and writers use slick metal joints, visible circuitry, or deliberately human-looking skin to ask what makes someone human: is it a heart, a memory chip, or simply the way they treat others? In stories, androids are useful for exploring legal personhood, programmed morality, and the weird space where empathy is manufactured.

Cyborgs, on the other hand, carry a history in their flesh. They're often people first, then altered — wounded soldiers, survivors of accidents, or experiments like the titular characters in 'Battle Angel Alita' or the Major in 'Ghost in the Shell'. That leftover humanity (scars, memories, trauma) colors their narrative: they're negotiating identity not from scratch but from a place of loss or adaptation. Visually, mangaka will mix organic and synthetic textures, letting you see veins next to pistons, which makes the reader feel the body as a battleground.

I love how these two forms let creators tackle different philosophical notes. Android stories flirt with creation myths and ethics — what responsibilities do creators owe their creations? — while cyborg tales dig into resilience, consent, and what it means to rebuild yourself. Both get into power dynamics, class (who can afford augmentations), and the uncanny, but they do it with very different emotional direction. Sometimes a series will blur the line on purpose, and that's when things get deliciously complicated.

Can Androids Robots Fall In Love With Human Characters?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 14:30:07

Sometimes I catch myself grinning at how lovingly messy the topic gets in fiction. In stories like 'Her' or 'Blade Runner' we watch characters, human and not, learn each other’s rhythms and invent rituals—those tiny repeated actions build intimacy more than grand confessions ever do. For me, love in these contexts often feels less like a checkbox and more like a slow accumulation: shared jokes, protective impulses, the willingness to change because someone else matters. If an android genuinely responds to, remembers, and prioritizes a human in ways that shape both their lives, that registers to me as a kind of love, even if its substrate is circuits and code rather than hormones.

That said, I also geek out over the messy distinctions. There’s a big difference between a program designed to mirror affection and an emergent consciousness that forms its own values. 'Chobits' plays with fantasy wants, while 'Detroit: Become Human' asks whether agency transforms mimicry into something morally weighty. Practically speaking, current tech can simulate attachment convincingly, but whether that counts as falling in love depends on the philosophical yardstick you use. Personally I lean toward treating the experience seriously—love is ultimately about transformation and care—and I love how stories push us to question what that really means.

Are Androids Robots Treated As Citizens In Recent Films?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 00:22:28

I get oddly sentimental about this topic—there’s something about rainy nights, a bowl of microwave popcorn, and watching synthetic people wrestle with whether they belong that pulls me in. Lately, most films haven’t literally given androids or robots the little blue passport; instead they dramatize what it means to be treated like a person. Take 'Blade Runner 2049' and 'Ex Machina'—they're less interested in the bureaucratic checkbox of citizenship and more in social recognition, exploitation, and the ethics of creation. Replicants and lab-made intelligences are usually shown as exploited labor or experimental subjects, not members of the polity with voting rights or travel documents.

There are exceptions and interesting detours. 'Bicentennial Man' (older, I know) is the rare film that follows a robot’s long legal journey toward recognition, giving a court-room-ish strand to the question of rights. More recent entries like 'I Am Mother' and 'Chappie' are emotionally invested in whether a robot can be raised, loved, or considered an individual, but they stop short of exploring formal legal citizenship. 'The Creator' and 'Alita: Battle Angel' lean into social segregation, military control, and underground resistance instead of neat legal solutions. Even when a film imagines a more integrated future, the drama usually comes from prejudice, surveillance, or ownership—forces that make the lack of legal personhood feel immediate and painful.

So overall: no, mainstream recent films rarely depict androids as actual citizens in a legal sense. They do, however, spend a lot of time asking whether society should treat them as people—and that moral debate is where the real storytelling energy lies. I’m always hoping the next movie will give us a film about a robot trying to get a driver’s license or a passport—it’d be both hilarious and telling.

Why Do Androids Robots Malfunction In Popular Anime Series?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 02:36:13

There's something intoxicating about how anime uses robot breakdowns to do more than just create spectacle — they tell us things about people. I get drawn into scenes where a gleaming android suddenly stutters, and within that glitch the show folds in questions about memory, guilt, and what it means to be alive. Technically, writers often frame malfunctions as corrupted memory banks, firmware conflicts, or deliberate sabotage: think of the hacker interventions in 'Ghost in the Shell' or the failing memory cores in 'Plastic Memories'. Those are convenient explanations, but the deeper reason is usually emotional. When an android starts to feel, its original constraints clash with whatever emergent consciousness develops, and that tension often looks like a malfunction on screen.

I once rewatched a scene late at night where a service robot begins to cry because it remembers a moment it wasn't supposed to — the way the music swelled, I felt silly but also oddly protective. Anime also uses hardware decay as metaphor: batteries running out, physical parts degrading, or older models being phased out—elements that show social neglect or built-in obsolescence in dystopian settings. Shows like 'Chobits' and 'Ergo Proxy' lean into those social layers, where the robots' failures reveal human cruelty, loneliness, or corporate indifference.

At base, malfunctions let creators combine plausible tech-sounding causes with symbolic weight. Whether it’s a race condition in the code or a soul-like memory fault, those breakdowns give characters and viewers space to wrestle with responsibility, empathy, and fear. I keep rewatching those moments not because I love broken circuits, but because they make me think about who’s responsible for what we build—and who looks after it when it starts to hurt.

Which Books Explore Androids Robots Gaining Free Will?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 01:24:03

I still get a little thrill when a machine does something unexpected on the page — that moment where the author hands an automaton a choice and everything human looks different. If you want the classic, emotionally blunt look at androids wanting more, start with Philip K. Dick's 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?'. It's a raw, philosophical road-trip through empathy, identity, and whether a manufactured being can deserve compassion. Reading it on a rainy afternoon, I kept stopping to think about the moments we call ‘‘human’’ and whether they're really unique to biological life.

For a softer, more legalistic exploration, Isaac Asimov's work is invaluable. The short story 'The Bicentennial Man' (and the expanded novel version 'The Positronic Man' co-written with Robert Silverberg) tracks an android's literal, patient march toward recognition and rights — it asks how society measures personhood. His 'I, Robot' collection doesn't treat free will as a single revelation so much as a problem to be solved through law, ethics, and those famous Three Laws; it gives lots of angles on autonomy and moral decision-making.

If you want contemporary takes, check out 'Klara and the Sun' by Kazuo Ishiguro for a quiet, intimate portrait of an artificial friend with unexpected insight, and Ian McEwan's 'Machines Like Me' for a more provocative, morally messy spin on synthetic humans in social life. Ted Chiang's 'The Lifecycle of Software Objects' tackles autonomy in the context of evolving virtual intelligences, showing how legal, emotional, and economic systems shape agency. Those should keep you busy — tell me which tone you want next and I can suggest something darker, sillier, or more speculative.

What Merchandise Features Androids Robots From Cult Films?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 10:47:34

I still get a little giddy opening a box from a specialty shop — the smell of new plastic and resin feels like a tiny museum discovery. If you love androids and robots from cult films, there’s a whole ecosystem of merchandise out there: high-end resin statues and 1/6 scale figures from companies like Sideshow and Hot Toys, mid-range articulated figures from NECA and Kotobukiya, and the delightfully goofy Funko Pop stylizations for quick shelf presence. You’ll find life-size busts (limited runs), replica prop pieces — think chipped metal endoskeleton hands or a rusted nameplate — and beautifully printed art posters and lithographs celebrating classics such as 'Blade Runner', 'Metropolis', 'The Terminator', 'Alien' (and its synthetic personalities), 'Ex Machina', and the culty shock of 'Tetsuo: The Iron Man'.

Beyond figures and props, there’s clothing and accessories: enamel pins, embroidered patches, graphic tees, hoodies, and tote bags featuring stylized robot art. For more practical home stuff, I’ve seen lamp designs, coffee mugs, and even neon-style signs riffing on studio logos like Tyrell Corp or Weyland-Yutani. Model kits and garage kits let you build your own 'Metropolis' Maria or a grungy T-800 endoskeleton, and 3D-printable files on marketplaces mean you can DIY a custom project. Etsy and BigCartel are fantastic for indie artists producing enamel pins, screen-printed posters, and small-run sculptures.

If you’re hunting rare items, conventions and auction sites are goldmines: Comic-Con exclusives, Kickstarter limited editions from boutique sculptors, and vintage lunchboxes or action figures on eBay. I’ve snagged a weathered 'Blade Runner' poster at a flea market and a near-mint 'RoboCop' figure in a collector’s case online — the thrill never gets old. If you want tips on where to start depending on budget or which pieces are worth hunting, I can break that down next.

What Soundtracks Best Capture Androids Robots Themes?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 09:29:54

There’s something about those cold, humming synths that makes me grin — like the sound of metal thinking for the first time. For me, the soundtrack that instantly embodies androids and robots is 'Blade Runner' by Vangelis: rain-soaked noir pads, slow mechanized rhythms, and mournful melodies that make you feel both futuristic and deeply human. I used to listen to it on slow drives home after late shifts, and it always made the city lights look like a circuit board. Pair that with the more modern, cavernous textures of 'Blade Runner 2049' and you get the solemn, monolithic side of machine consciousness.

On the other end, 'Nier: Automata' captures the tragic, strangely emotional soul of artificial beings — sweeping strings mixed with glitchy electronics and haunting vocal lines. I’ve replayed key boss tracks while soldering tiny LEDs onto hobbyist bots; the music turns solder fumes and bent wire into a small ritual. If you want something more minimalist and eerie, 'Ghost in the Shell' by Kenji Kawai (and Yoko Kanno’s work for the 'Stand Alone Complex' series) adds ritualistic chorals and glitchy beats that feel like cultural memory running through a circuit. For neon-drenched, dance-ready robot vibes, 'Tron: Legacy' by Daft Punk is a no-brainer — it marries human groove with machine precision.

Finally, don’t sleep on scores like 'Ex Machina' which use sparse motifs and processed textures to make the line between creator and creation feel tense, or 'Deus Ex: Human Revolution' for cyberpunk swagger. My personal playlist jumps between these worlds depending on the mood: meditative and lonely when I want to think about consciousness, pulsing and kinetic when I’m building or sketching sci-fi ideas. If you’re making a playlist, try alternating ambient synthscapes with rhythmic, percussive tracks to mirror the heartbeat-versus-clockwork dynamic of android stories.

How Do Fanfics Portray Androids Robots Seeking Identity?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 12:28:01

Late one night I got sucked into a thread where everyone was arguing whether an android can 'feel' loneliness — and that conversation pretty much sums up how fanfic treats robots searching for identity. I love how writers pry open the quiet moments: an android lingering in a museum, tracing a cracked statue, or learning to make instant coffee and deciding it likes bitterness. Those small domestic details are gold because they humanize the mechanical without pretending the android was human all along.

In the best stories you'll see a mix of tropes and honest experiments: memory wipes and boot logs that function like trauma narratives, name-choosing scenes that mirror coming-out or coming-of-age arcs, and scenes where human characters project their desires onto the machine. Fanfic often borrows from 'Blade Runner' and 'Ex Machina' for ethical stakes, from 'Chobits' and 'NieR:Automata' for pathos, but then twists those influences — a side character becomes the mentor, or the machine builds a found family instead of seeking validation from creators.

What excites me most is the formal play: authors write in system logs, in first-person diary fragments, as software updates, or through epistolary formats that let us experience identity forming in non-linear ways. Those choices change the theme — a log file emphasizes constructedness; a diary emphasizes interiority. When done well, fanfic makes you root for an entity that is both alien and achingly familiar, and sometimes it helps real people understand parts of themselves better too.

How Do Androids Robots Develop Emotions In Sci-Fi Novels?

3 คำตอบ2025-08-27 01:06:57

I get really excited talking about this because it's one of those topics where fiction and philosophy high-five each other. When authors make androids feel real, they rarely just flip a 'feelings' switch; they build systems that learn, mirror, fail, and remember. For me, the magic usually comes from layered details: sensory input that's been given meaning through repeated associations, memory systems that prioritize certain events (like praise or abandonment), and narrative pressures that force the machine to choose. Think of it as a slow accretion—tiny prediction errors pile up, the robot adapts its internal model of the world, and something like an emotional gradient emerges. I often curl up with a cup of tea and a copy of 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?' or the quieter 'Klara and the Sun' and marvel at how mood and attachment are conveyed through small behavioral repeats.

Another trick writers use is social scaffolding. Emotions are usually relational in stories: jealousy, love, guilt, pride—these all make sense when there's someone else to compare to or to betray. Authors will have humans react to the android, which creates feedback loops. The bot mirrors expressions, learns what draws attention, and starts forming desires or aversions. Memory is the secret ingredient—long-term narratives give context. When a robot remembers a kindness and then risks itself, the reader reads that as love.

On top of the cognitive stuff, good fiction throws in embodiment: a damaged limb that hurts, a sensory overload that translates to anxiety, a lullaby that sticks like a virus. Mix in ethical dilemmas and cultural input—stories, songs, taboos—and you get something that feels heartbreakingly alive. I love those moments where an author makes you pause and wonder which parts of emotion are algorithmic and which parts are irreducibly human.

สำรวจและอ่านนวนิยายดีๆ ได้ฟรี
เข้าถึงนวนิยายดีๆ จำนวนมากได้ฟรีบนแอป GoodNovel ดาวน์โหลดหนังสือที่คุณชอบและอ่านได้ทุกที่ทุกเวลา
อ่านหนังสือฟรีบนแอป
สแกนรหัสเพื่ออ่านบนแอป
DMCA.com Protection Status