List of fictional military robots

At Last a Perfect Soldier by Robert Minor, first published in The Masses in 1916.

Film

Near future

Land design

Air Models

High futurist

Humanoids

  • Terminator series (1984/1991/2003) - Cyberdyne T-800/T-850 Terminator Endoskeleton
  • Star Wars Episodes I, II, III (1999/2002/2005) - Eos B-1 Battle Droid
  • Star Wars Episodes II, III (2002/2005) - Eos B-2 Super Battle Droid
  • Star Wars Episode III (2005) - Holowan IG-100 MagnaGuards
  • Transformers (2007) - Decepticons
  • Saturn 3 (1980) - "Hector" Model
  • The Black Hole (1979) - S.T.A.R. (Special Troops/Arms Regiment)
  • Battlestar Galactica (1978) - Cylon Centurion (Military androids with silver armor)
  • Fallout (series) (2008) - Protectron (security robot), Mister Gutsy (armed variant of domestic servant robot), Sentry Bot (military combat robot), Liberty Prime (near-indestructible battle robot)

Androids

Other designs

  • The Matrix series (1999/2003) - Sentinels
  • Lost in Space (1998) - B9 "Robot"
  • Star Wars Episodes I,II,III (1999/2002/2005) - Droideka (Destroyer Droid)
  • Star Wars series (1977/2005) - R2-D2 (Astromech droid)
  • The Black Hole (1979) - V.I.N.CENT (Vital Information Necessary CENTralized)
  • The Black Hole (1979) - B.O.B. (BiO-sanitation Battalion)
  • The Black Hole (1979) - Maximilian
  • Fallout series (1997-2010) - General Atomics International "Mister Gutsy" combat droids, among others
  • Halo 1, 2, and 3 (2001-2007) - Sentinels, and Super Sentinels
  • Screamers (1995) - Screamers

Powered Exoskeletons

  • The Matrix Revolutions (2003) - APU (Armored Personnel Unit)
  • Iron Man (2008) - Iron Man Suit (Powered exoskeleton)
  • Avatar (2009 film) (2009) - AMP (Amplified Mobility Platform)
  • M.A.N.T.I.S. (1994) - M.A.N.T.I.S. (Mechanically Augmented Neuro-Transmitter Interactive System)
  • Fallout series (1997-2010) - T-45d and T-51b Powered Infantry Armor (the former's MP-47/A prototype variant even has a basic AI)

Television

Literature

Computer/video games

Portal series

gollark: You see, lots of people are actually really stupid and/or have significantly different values.
gollark: Scarier possibility: what if the people voting for them DO care, a lot, and genuinely think that the people they vote for have better policy or something?
gollark: According to random vaguely plausible things on the internet, our strong reactions to politics are derived from the situation during human evolution, when humans were in small tribes and you could directly affect things and they could strongly and directly affect *you*.
gollark: In local ones you can do more, but nobody cares about those.
gollark: You can vote, but in widescale elections you have a very low chance of shifting the outcomes.
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