Cartoons With 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 Chapters
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 Chapters
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.
Not enough ratings
|
25 Chapters
Marked As the Substitute Mom
Marked As the Substitute Mom
I was prepping the ceremonial cloak for our seventh mating anniversary. The front door suddenly banged open. My son rushed inside, tears streaming down his face. "The teacher yelled at me," he sobbed. He shoved the wrinkled drawing into my hands before burying his face in my shirt. I smoothed out the paper to see what the drama was about. It was a sketch of a faceless woman titled: The Substitute Mom. My heart stopped as I read the scribbles underneath. "Daddy said she is the backup." "She does the chores but gets no wages." "The Real Mom is responsible for being beautiful and guarding the treasury." My fingertips turned ice-cold against the paper. My mate, Ethan, had just returned from a patrol. He kissed my forehead. "What did our pup draw?" The next second, his smile froze when he saw the content. His voice tightened, and he reached out to snatch the book. "He watches too many cartoons! He's writing nonsense!" I stared at the man I had shared a den with for seven years. He looked like a stranger now. If I was the substitute. Who was this beautiful real mother? And where had my true son been all these years?
|
10 Chapters
Billionaire's Second Wife: Bound To Him By Vows
Billionaire's Second Wife: Bound To Him By Vows
My groom was attacked a few hours before our wedding, and I was forced to marry his elder brother instead. They said that it was for everyone's good, but what about me? We took vows like robots reciting a statement: no emotion, no expression, just some unwilling words coming out of our mouths. Just like this, I was thrown in an abyss of marriage with no hope for the future. Above all, I became the stepmother of a three-year-old child who became excited when told that he now has a mother. I couldn't even muster the courage not to let that child enter my world. What do I do now? My marriage was a big deal for me. Even if it was an arranged business marriage, I tried to make it work with my first groom, but what about now? My husband - cold, indifferent, still grieving his first wife, and unapproachable to me in every way. What I wished for and what I got. What should I do now? What does destiny hold for me??
10
|
12 Chapters
Alpha Brock
Alpha Brock
SIX PACK SERIES BOOK FOUR ~ BROCK : I don't believe in happy endings. I stopped believing in them right around the time the woman I loved left me for another man. Love nearly destroyed me once, and when I picked myself back up, I swore I'd never be that stupid again. If you never give someone your heart, they can't break it- so for years, I've closed myself off; never opening up, never feeling. Growing more bitter as everyone around me finds their happy endings. Then I met Astrid. She's annoyingly perky, infuriatingly beautiful, and seems convinced that her cheerful little-miss-sunshine act can melt the ice around my heart. Worst of all, though, is some part of me wants her- and a girl like that is dangerous in my hands. She'll give me every piece of herself, only for her to break when I can't give her anything in return. ~ ASTRID : My whole life, I've gone with my gut. I get feelings about things and people that others don't get, and I've been told that it's a special gift; that I'm an 'intuitive'. I've also been accused of being an eternal optimist, which is why I'm thrown for a loop when I get hit with a gut feeling about the moodiest, broodiest guy I've ever met, like we're supposed to be something to each other. Like we're connected somehow. Trusting my gut has never let me down before, but the more time I spend with Brock, the more I wonder whether my 'gift' has gone haywire. This guy has built walls around his heart a mile thick, and he's not letting anyone through. He's living his life in the darkness, and I'm a little afraid that if I let myself get too close to him, he'll steal my light.
10
|
44 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More

Where Can I Stream Cartoons Featuring A Heroic Cartoon Rat?

4 Answers2025-11-06 09:12:09

If you love scrappy underdog heroes who happen to have whiskers, start with 'Ratatouille' — that's the big one. I usually find it on Disney+ (it's a Pixar film, so that’s the most consistent home) and it's exactly the kind of heroic-rat story that delights: Remy hustling for his culinary dreams. For a more sewer-city, fast-paced rodent romp check 'Flushed Away' (it pops up on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video for rent depending on region).

If you want the mentor/wise-rat vibe, look for the various 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' shows or movies — Splinter is a huge rat presence there and many seasons live on Paramount+ or on platforms that carry Nickelodeon catalogues. For older, darker animated rat-and-mouse tales like 'The Secret of NIMH', search Max (or rent on Prime/iTunes) or keep an eye on free ad-supported services like Tubi/Pluto — classics tend to rotate. Personally, I adore how Remy proves that a tiny hero can change a kitchen (and my mood) in one go.

What Upcoming Mature Cartoons Release Dates Should Fans Watch?

4 Answers2025-11-05 19:40:46

I’ve been stalking release calendars like a detective lately — there’s so much juicy stuff on the horizon for grown-up cartoons. If you’re into brutal worldbuilding and emotional gut-punches, keep an eye on 'Invincible' (new episodes expected in late 2024 through 2025). The show’s pacing suggests big, cinematic drops, so mark those months on your calendar if you loved the comic’s intensity. For fans of visual storytelling that doesn’t hold back, 'Primal' is usually announced with shorter lead times; anticipate new bursts sometime in 2024–2025 depending on festival reveals and Adult Swim scheduling.

Netflix and streaming platforms are also prepping anthologies and experimental projects — think more volumes of 'Love, Death & Robots' and smaller, mature miniseries slated around mid-to-late 2024. There’s also buzz about darker reinterpretations of classic IPs getting adult animated treatments (watch industry panels and Comic-Con season for exact dates). Personally, I’ve got reminders set and I’m bracing for long, messy binges with snacks ready — nothing beats discovering a show that makes you laugh, cringe, and tear up all in one episode.

Which Artists Created Famous Progressive Era Political Cartoons?

6 Answers2025-11-05 20:00:28

Flip through any collection of turn-of-the-century political cartoons and you’ll see fingerprints from a handful of brilliant artists who shaped public opinion during the Progressive Era. I get excited thinking about how these illustrators mixed wit and outrage: Joseph Keppler at 'Puck' was a master of dense, allegorical scenes lampooning political machines and corporate greed, while his son Udo Keppler carried the torch into the early 1900s with similarly pointed satire. Clifford Berryman drew the little moment that spawned the 'Teddy Bear' image and repeatedly caricatured presidents and policy debates in a way ordinary readers could grasp.

Where Can I Find Archives Of Progressive Era Political Cartoons?

4 Answers2025-11-05 15:07:34

If you like the visual drama of editorial cartoons, there's a real treasure trove online — I go straight to the big digital libraries first. The Library of Congress Prints & Photographs collection and its Chronicling America newspaper archive are my go-to starting points; I can spend hours pulling up issues of 'Puck' and 'Judge' and flipping through late-19th/early-20th-century cartoons. The New York Public Library Digital Collections and the Smithsonian's online catalogs also have high-resolution scans and useful metadata so you can track dates, artists, and original publication venues.

Beyond those, I use aggregators like the Digital Public Library of America and the Internet Archive to cast a wider net across university special collections. HathiTrust and Google Books sometimes host scanned bound volumes or anthologies of cartoons, which is great when I'm checking for context or accompanying articles. Whenever I find a promising image I check its rights statement — many Progressive Era cartoons are in the public domain, but it's smart to confirm. Hunting through metadata and publication dates is half the fun; I always come away with a few eyebrow-raising political zingers and a better picture of the era.

How Did Progressive Era Political Cartoons Shape Public Opinion?

5 Answers2025-11-05 14:54:23

Ink and outrage were a perfect match on those broadsheet pages, and I can still picture the black lines leaping out at crowds packed around a newsstand. Back then, cartoons took complicated scandals—monopolies gobbling small towns, corrupt machines rigging elections, unsanitary factories—and turned them into symbols everyone could grasp. A single image of a giant octopus with 'Standard Oil' on its head sinking tentacles into the Capitol or a bloated boss devouring city streets could do the rhetorical heavy lifting that a 2,000-word editorial might not.

Those pictures also shaped who people blamed and who they trusted. Cartoons humanized abstract issues: they made a face for 'the trusts' and a body for 'the machine.' That visual shorthand helped reformers rally voters, fed into speeches and pamphlets, and amplified muckraking exposes in 'McClure's' and other papers. But I also notice the darker side—caricature often leaned on xenophobia and gendered tropes, so cartoons sometimes stoked prejudice while claiming moral high ground.

Overall, I feel like these cartoons were the era's viral content: memorable, portable, and persuasive. They bent public opinion not just by informing but by feeling, and that emotional punch still fascinates me.

How Did Kiss Cartoons Change Portrayals Of Romance?

3 Answers2025-11-06 23:43:44

You could blame my late-night binge sessions for this, but I really noticed how easy access to tons of shows changed the way romance plays out on screen. Back when I had to hunt DVDs or wait for late TV airings, romantic beats were paced like clockwork: meet-cute, misunderstanding, grand confession, repeat. Seeing dozens of series back-to-back on sites that aggregated cartoons exposed me to different storytelling rhythms. Suddenly I was watching a gentle slow-burn in one series and a whirlwind teen melodrama in another, and my expectations for romance in each type shifted. That made me more appreciative of subtlety in 'Sailor Moon' alongside the gut-punch honesty of 'Your Name'.

Beyond pacing, the community around those streaming hubs rewired romance portrayals. Fans would clip scenes, make montages, ship characters, and write fanfiction that pushed queer pairings or long-term domestic comfort, which edged mainstream conversations toward richer, more diverse relationships. Couple this with subtitles and different dubs floating around, and you get multiple interpretations of the same moment — a glance in one subtitle becomes an explicit line in a fan edit. That multiplicity encouraged creators to either double down on subtext or, in some cases, be clearer to avoid misreading.

Personally, I started rooting for relationships that weren’t in the spotlight — the sidekicks, the childhood friends who grew up together — and I love that. Those streaming changes made romance feel less like a single scripted arc and more like a living thing fans could tinker with, cheer for, and reinterpret in endless, comforting ways.

Which Actors Star In Robot Movie 2024 And Who Voices Robots?

2 Answers2025-10-13 16:23:28

What a fun question — robot movies always make me giddy. If you mean big robot-centric films that popped up around 2024, there were a few high-profile projects that people talked about, and the way credits are handled can vary a lot between live-action and animated productions. For example, 'The Electric State' got a lot of buzz as a neon-drenched road story with huge production names attached, and another streaming tentpole around that time was 'Atlas', which leans into AI-and-robot themes. In those kinds of films the headline human actors usually carry the promotion — you’ll see familiar live-action names front-and-center — while the robots themselves are sometimes performed by motion-capture artists, sometimes voiced by well-known actors, and sometimes rendered with purely designed sounds from a sound designer.

When it comes to who actually voices robots, there are a few common patterns. Big studio live-action projects often credit a named actor when a robot has a distinct personality — sometimes the same actor who physically plays the role will provide the voice, or they’ll hire a recognizable actor to lay down vocal performance. Other times the robot voice is more of a sound-design job handled by a designer (think of classic droid beeps or layered mechanical tones). In animated or largely-CG films, established voice actors or character actors are frequently brought in. Historically, names like Alan Tudyk (who’s done charismatic droid/robot-like parts before), Peter Cullen (iconic robotic voice work) and sound designers such as Ben Burtt have been associated with memorable robot sounds, so that’s the kind of talent studios tap when they want a robot to feel distinct.

If you want exact cast lists for a specific 2024 robot movie, the fastest route is the official credits or IMDb page for the title — that’s where the listings show both the on-screen leads and the credited voice roles or sound designers. I always love seeing the end credits scroll: sometimes the coolest robot contributions are tucked into motion-capture and ADR credits, and spotting a favorite actor listed as 'voice of' or a legendary sound designer listed for 'robot effects' is a neat thrill. Honestly, hearing a familiar actor give a machine soul never stops being cool to me.

How Do Townhall Political Cartoons Influence Voter Turnout?

3 Answers2025-11-07 04:18:07

Townhall cartoons have this sneaky way of compressing a whole political conversation into one quick, punchy image, and I find that fascinating. I've seen a simple sketch pinned to a community board that made half the room chatter about a policy for the rest of the meeting. Packed with symbols, stereotypes, and a clear narrative, those drawings act like cognitive shortcuts — they let people grasp a stance without wading through a long speech. That matters because turnout shifts when people feel something: outrage, amusement, shame, pride. Emotion is a motor for action, and cartoons are engineered to provoke it fast.

Beyond emotion, there’s the social ripple. At townhalls the cartoons become shared artifacts: someone points at one, a neighbor laughs or frowns, and a micro-discussion is born. That social proof can normalize attending and speaking up — it signals that politics is part of everyday life rather than an elite activity. On the flip side, cartoons that mock a particular group too harshly can alienate potential voters, especially those on the fence. I’ve watched folks walk away from debates because the tone felt like an attack rather than an invitation.

Visually, cartoons also lower the activation energy for participation. They’re easy to repost, doodle variations of, or use on flyers and social feeds. Campaigns that harness that shareability — turning a townhall sketch into a gentle GOTV nudge — can convert curiosity into votes. All that said, their influence isn’t uniform: context (who draws it, where it’s displayed) and audience (age, media habits, partisan leanings) shape whether a cartoon mobilizes, polarizes, or simply entertains. For me, that mixture of art, rhetoric, and community dynamics is why those little images punch above their weight.

What Techniques Do Townhall Political Cartoons Use To Sway Opinion?

3 Answers2025-11-07 11:54:57

I get a kick out of how townhall political cartoons act like a tiny theater on the op-ed page — they pack a whole argument into one frame and expect you to catch the cue. I notice first how caricature and exaggeration set the emotional tone: making politicians larger-than-life, stretching features into grotesques, or shrinking them to pathetic proportions instantly signals who the cartoonist wants you to root for or ridicule. That sort of visual shorthand bypasses long logical reasoning and goes straight to gut feeling.

Labels, symbols, and visual metaphors do a lot of heavy lifting. A cartoon that shows a politician fighting a hydra labeled 'spending' or dragging a chained 'economy' uses simple symbols so readers don’t need pages of explanation. Juxtaposition and sequence — putting past promises next to present actions, or showing a two-panel before/after — create contrast that feels like proof. I’m always struck by the clever use of composition and negative space: putting the figure of power in a tiny corner or towering over others changes the whole impression.

Humor and irony are the hooks: a clever caption or an absurd visual twist makes the point stick and gets people to share it. But cartoons also exploit cognitive shortcuts — selective framing, omission, and appeal to stereotypes — which can oversimplify complex issues. I’m fond of them because they force me to think quickly, but I’m also wary; a great cartoon persuades by style as much as by substance, and that mix can be intoxicating or misleading depending on who’s drawing it. I still love seeing how a single panel can shift a conversation at my local coffee shop.

How Did Big Chin Characters Become Popular In Cartoons?

3 Answers2025-11-07 08:30:13

For me, the oversized chin in cartoons feels like a visual drumbeat — it hits instantly and tells you something about a character before they even speak. The practice really springs from the long tradition of caricature, where exaggerating a single facial feature makes a personality readable at a glance. Back in the 19th century, political cartoonists emphasized noses, chins, or foreheads to lampoon public figures, and that shorthand carried over into comic strips and early animation. When comic books and animated shorts took off, artists leaned on that language: a pronounced jaw suggested confidence, stubbornness, or plain old cartoonish bravado.

By the mid-20th century, Hollywood’s leading men — the ones with cleft chins and square jaws — hammered the association into public imagination. Artists translating superheroes like 'Superman' or caricaturing macho types doubled down on chin size to telegraph heroism or swagger. Later, creators began to play with the trope: 'Johnny Bravo' turned it into a joke by exaggerating machismo to ridiculous levels, while other shows used the big chin to satirize or subvert expectations.

Beyond symbolism, there are practical reasons I appreciate: clear silhouettes are everything in animation, and a big chin separates a character from the background, especially on small screens or in fast-moving scenes. It’s also wonderfully adaptable — depending on style it can read as imposing, goofy, or vulnerable, which keeps the device fresh. Personally, seeing a wildly oversized chin still makes me smile, because it’s such a clever, old-school bit of visual shorthand that keeps evolving with new artists and new jokes.

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status