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==Comics/graphic novels== ===Before 1980=== * '''Orak''', ruler of the Phants in the ''[[Dan Dare]]'' story "[[Rogue Planet (Dan Dare)|Rogue Planet]]" (1955) * '''[[Brainiac (character)|Brainiac]]''', an enemy of [[Superman]], sometimes depicted as a humanoid computer (1958) (DC Comics) * '''Batcomputer''', the computer system used by [[Batman]] and housed in the [[Batcave]] (1964) (DC Comics) * '''[[Cerebro]]''' and '''Cerebra''', the computer used by [[Professor X|Professor Charles Xavier]] to detect mutants (1964) (Marvel Comics) * '''[[Computo (comics)|Computo]]''', the computer created by [[Brainiac 5]] as an assistant, which becomes homicidal and attempts an uprising of machines (1966) (DC Comics) * '''[[Ultron]]''', AI originally created by [[Hank Pym]] to assist the superpowered team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]], but Ultron later determined that mankind was inferior to its intellect and wanted to eradicate all mankind so that machines could rule the Earth. Ultron created various versions of itself as a mobile unit with tank treads and then in a form that was half humanoid and half aircraft, and then it fully evolved itself into an android form. (1968) (Marvel Comics) * '''[[Mother Box]]''', from ''[[Jack Kirby's Fourth World]]'' comics (1970β1973) (DC Comics) ===1980s=== * '''Fate''', the Norsefire police state central computer in ''[[V for Vendetta]]'' (1982) (DC Comics) * '''[[Minor characters in Bloom County#Banana, Jr. 6000|Banana, Jr. 6000]]''', from the comic strip ''[[Bloom County]]'' by [[Berke Breathed]] (1984) * '''Max''', from ''[[The Thirteenth Floor (comic strip)|The Thirteenth Floor]]'' (1984) * '''[[AIDA (comics)|A.I.D.A.]]''' (Artificial Intelligence Data Analyser), from ''[[Squadron Supreme]]'' (1985) (Marvel Comics) * '''[[Kilg%re]]''', an alien AI that can exist in most electrical circuitry, from ''[[Flash (DC Comics character)|The Flash]]'' (1987) (DC Comics) * '''Project 2501''', a.k.a. "The Puppet Master", a government computer that becomes so knowledgeable it becomes sentient and transplants itself into a robot, from the [[seinen manga]] ''[[Ghost in the Shell (manga)|Ghost in the Shell]]'' (1989) * '''Yggdrasil''', the system used by the gods to run the Universe in ''[[Oh My Goddess!]]'' (1989) ===1990s=== * '''[[The Hacker Files#Digitronix PC|DTX PC]]''', the Digitronix personal computer from ''[[The Hacker Files]]'' (1992) (DC Comics) * '''Beast666''', Satsuki Yatouji's organic/inorganic supercomputer in [[Clamp (manga artists)|Clamp]]'s manga ''[[X (manga)|X]]'' (1992) * '''[[H.O.M.E.R.]]''' (Heuristically Operative Matrix Emulation Rostrum), Tony Stark's sentient AI computer from ''[[Iron Man]]'' (1993) (Marvel Comics) * '''The Magi''', from the anime series ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion]]'' (1995) * '''Toy''', from [[Chris Claremont]]'s ''[[Alien vs. Predator (comics)|Aliens vs. Predator]]: The Deadliest of the Species'' (1995) * '''Virgo''', an artificial intelligence in Frank Miller's ''[[Ronin (DC Comics)|Ronin]]'' graphic novel (1995) (DC Comics) * '''Praetorius''', from ''[[The X-Files]]'' comic book series "One Player Only" (1996) * '''Erwin''', the AI from the comic strip ''[[User Friendly]]'' (1997) * '''AIMA''' (Artificially Intelligent Mainframe Interface), from ''[[Dark Minds]]'' (1997) * '''Answertron 2000''', from ''[[Penny Arcade]]'', first comic appearance<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2000/01/28 |title=Move over, Hell! |publisher=Penny Arcade |access-date=2014-08-16}}</ref> (1998) * '''iFruit''', an [[iMac]] joke in the comic ''[[FoxTrot]]'' (1999)<ref>{{cite book|last=Amend|first=Bill|author-link=Bill Amend|title=Assorted FoxTrot (pp. 228)|publisher=Andrews McMeel Publishing|year=2000|location=Kansas City|isbn=0-7407-0532-6|url=https://archive.org/details/assortedfoxtrot00andr}}</ref> * '''LYLA''', short for LYrate Lifeform Approximation, [[Spider-Man 2099]]'s assistant (1992) * '''Mr. Smartie''', a teacher for [[Astro City|Astra Furst]] (1995) ===2000s=== * '''Ennesby''', '''Lunesby''', '''Petey''', '''TAG''', the '''Athens''', and many others from ''[[Schlock Mercenary]]'' (2000) * '''Melchizedek''', center of quantum-based grid computer of the Earth government in ''[[Battle Angel Alita: Last Order]]'' (2000) It has served as a government system and virtual dream world of people. It was designed to be named [[Melchizedek]] because the Earth government is a space town named Yeru and Zalem (original name). * '''Merlin''', quantum computer which is the core and original of Melchizedek. It was built for the purpose of future prediction. Currently it still an active program inside Melchizedek, along with many systems which are named for legends of the round table. From ''[[Battle Angel Alita: Last Order]]'' (2000) * '''Normad''', a missile's artificial intelligence placed within a pink, stuffed, tanuki-like doll, created to destroy a sentient giant die in space named Kyutaro, from the series ''[[Galaxy Angel]]'' (2001) * '''Aura''', the ultimate AI that governs ''[[The World (.hack)|The World]]'' from ''[[.hack//Legend of the Twilight]]''. The story revolves around Zefie, Aura's daughter, and Lycoris makes a cameo. (2002) * '''Tree Diagram''', from the [[light novel]] series ''[[A Certain Magical Index]]'' and its related works, such as the spin-off comic ''[[A Certain Scientific Railgun]]'' and the anime and games based on them (2003) * '''Europa''', a [[Cray]]-designed AI supercomputer used for research and worldwide hacking by the Event Group in author [[David Lynn Golemon]]'s ''Event Group'' book series (2006) * '''Terror 2000''' from [[Terra Obscura]] (2001) * Multiple from the [[Schlock Mercenary]] webcomic (2000-2020), with [[Schlock Mercenary#Main characters|Ennesby]] and [[Schlock Mercenary#Main characters|Post-Dated Check Loan]] ("Petey") being some of the most prominent ones. ===2010s=== * Multiple from [[The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys]] comic series (2013-2014) by [[Gerard Way]] and [[Shaun Simon]], including the android prostitutes '''Blue''' and '''Red''', as well as the robot messiah '''DESTROYA'''. ===2020s=== * '''Aloni''', the "most intelligent artificial intelligence" from ''Thirty Seven'' (2024)
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