Ghost Planet

""There are secrets here that were meant to be forgotten.""

- Garrus, Mass Effect

What you get when a Ghost Town is global in scale. Another planet or Another Dimension that, by the time we get to see it, has been left in ruins for a long, long time. There are signs here and there that this world once boasted a civilization, maybe even a great civilization, but all that's left now are a few decaying remnants. The world need not be entirely barren of life, but, generally speaking, if there are enough of the original denizens left to form a town or city, it's not a Ghost Planet.

Please keep in mind, a Ghost Planet should not be a future version of our own Earth (or at least not explicitly so). Only alien worlds which have gone through their own Armageddon (somewhere between Class 2 and Class 5 on the Apocalypse How scale) need apply.

Not to be confused with Space Ghost's home planet, or Ghost World.

Compare Ghost Town and Ghost City. May be a Beautiful Void.

Anime and Manga

 * The Shinigami World from Death Note has hints that things other than shinigami once dwelled in it, or, at least, that shinigami were not always like they now are. There are a few remaining signs that the world once had buildings and maybe even cities, something the dozen or so shinigami we see have neither the energy nor the manpower to do. When you add in the fact that the skulls shinigami gamble with had to come from someone, and Rem's comment that shinigami have "evolved" beyond the need for food, you get the impression that the Shinigami World was once a far less desolate place.
 * The Moon Kingdom from Sailor Moon has sat in ruins for unknown thousands of years by the time it's seen in a non-flashback scene.
 * In the fifth and final arc, it's revealed that most of the planets that hold life in the galaxy have been reduced to ghost planets, thanks to the main villain, Galaxia's, conquest.
 * Two in Kiddy Grade, first the space prison that Alv, Dvergr, Éclair, and Lumière are sent to investigate, and later, a space colony that Éclair and Lumière escape to.
 * One of the planets visited by the Nirvana in Vandread is like this. The only remaining activity is from an automated defense system left by the people who destroyed the colony there.

Comic Books

 * in Calvin and Hobbes, at one point Calvin daydreams about Spaceman Spiff being stranded on one of these. aided by the fact that he missed the lunch bell and is sitting alone in the classroom.
 * The Ghost Planet from Space Ghost wasn't an example of this trope until the Darker and Edgier Continuity Reboot comic published by DC.
 * In Issue 14 of Planetary, Elias Snow visits one of these. Yet another one of the the Four's atrocities.
 * Green Lantern: sector 666, only 5 people survived the slaughter of every living being, all were held in a different sector. Even after the Red Lantern's use one planet in it as home base, it's still ruins as far as the eye can see.

Fan Works

 * Although they have yet to appear "on-screen", dimensional traveler Doug Sangnoir of Drunkard's Walk has made several references to having to survive on "post-human" Earths.

Film

 * The planet Miranda in Serenity..
 * The Hell Planet in Pitch Black. Also, any world the Necromongers visit is left this way.
 * Altair IV in Forbidden Planet.
 * Earth in WALL-E. B&L has trashed the world - literally.

Literature

 * In The Chronicles of Narnia novel The Magician's Nephew, the city/dimension of Charn is one of these by the time Digory and Polly arrive. The buildings, sidewalks, and other examples of human industry are mostly intact, though in a state of ruin. However, except for the witch queen Jadis, every other living thing on the planet (including vines partially pulled down walls) was killed by the Deplorable Word. It's more than a little creepy.
 * Mars in Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles is like this, showing signs of a Crystal Spires and Togas civilization.
 * Jonathan Lethem's Girl In Landscape primarily takes place on a Ghost Planet which is being sparsely colonized by humans. There are still a few lingering aliens, but they have only a passive interest in either the humans or the relics of their ruined civilization.
 * Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds has an archaeologist main character and the plot centers on the mystery behind the dead Amarantin civilization.
 * In Asimov's Earth and Foundation, the characters discover some of the planets where space-faring humans first settled, in ruins and devoid of intelligent life.
 * Mars in H. Beam Piper's short story "Omnilingual." His short story "Graveyard of Dreams," later expanded into the novel The Cosmic Computer, took its title from a poem by a colonist on Mars who was apparently inspired by the planet's ruins.
 * Paul S. Kemp's The Twilight War trilogy set in the Forgotten Realms reveals that
 * The "pit-stop" planet and alien spaceport in Andre Norton's Galactic Derelict. The home planet of the alien spacecraft is still inhabited by two primitive alien tribes who are at war, but it is made clear that they are not the civilization that built the ruined city they dwell in.

Live-Action TV

 * In the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Let This Be Your Last Battlefield", the planet Cheron ended up this way.
 * So was the Time Vortex Planet from "The City On The Edge Of Forever" and "Yesteryear", but for different reasons.
 * San Helios in the Doctor Who episode "Planet of the Dead". Despite no signs of life apart from the planet-destroying stingrays, the city was fine a year a before the story.
 * Skaro, the Dalek homeworld also counts for a large part of the series between the times when the Daleks would abandon and reclaim it.
 * Several examples in the old series, too, including Exxilon in Death to the Daleks.
 * The planet-sized Library has a million million intelligent lifeforms following a catastrophe 100 years prior, though the Doctor and his allies can't seem to find any of them.
 * Carl Sagan's Cosmos (a documentary series) included model shots of a fictional Mars fitting this trope, before going on to describe what Mars is really like.
 * Kobol, Caprica,  in Battlestar Galactica.
 * Technically, New Caprica also becomes one, though only after one year of habitation.
 * Brunnis and TV World in Lexx.
 * become ghost planets in Babylon 5.
 * In the spin-off Crusade, a number of these are also visited.
 * In Firefly this is exactly what happened to Earth. Its resources were used up, so they were forced to terraform other planets and move there. (Also, see the entry for Serenity above.)
 * Happened quite often in Stargate SG-1. Sometimes it was a plague, or technology gone wrong, or something else horrible happened to wipe out life on the planet. It was rarely not spooky.
 * One Mighty Morphin Power Rangers two-parter features a trip to the aptly-named "Deserted Planet."

Tabletop Gmes

 * Several Traveller Classic adventures had planets like this, including Adventure 4 Leviathan and Double Adventure 5 The Chamax Plague.
 * Happens a lot in the Warhammer 40,000 universe. There's a particularly good example in the Ravenor novels.
 * Echo V was home to the Iktomi in Eclipse Phase. Not there's nothing but cobwebs. Literally.

Video Games

 * In Spore, one of the planets in your home system has a crashed alien spaceship on it. Before they died, the survivors left directions to a nearby system, which turns out to be a ruined planet that was devastated by the Grox. Some theories suggest that the ruins may be human in origin, especially when you consider that Earth is deserted when you discover it.
 * LucasArts' old PC adventure game, The Dig. Astronauts end up playing archeologist in the ruins of an alien civilization.
 * Most all of the worlds visited by Samus Aran in the Metroid games.
 * And if they weren't at first, they are when she leaves.
 * If they're still there.
 * In the higher levels of City of Heroes, you get the chance to go dimension hopping, discovering several Ghost Dimensions, including a literal Ghost Dimension where the calamity that wiped out the entire population was you. Needless to say, the ghosts aren't happy to see you.
 * The page quote concerns Ilos from Mass Effect, and the place is appropriately creepy to boot.
 * In the sequel, once you start looking at places off the beaten track you'll notice that there are a lot of dead planets out there. Time and again seemingly empty systems will have burial grounds, ruins or even just million-year-old mass accelerator craters spread across the planet. The phrase "Bombardment was focused on population centres" appears far too often for comfort.
 * Of course, this all makes sense, since every 50,000 years
 * Star Control 2 - the Taalo homeworld (sterilized by mind-controlled Ur-Quan), the Burvixese homeworlds (wiped out by the Kohr-Ah after being betrayed by the Druuge), and the Androsynth's adopted homeworld ("Androsynth are not here. Only Orz is here"). Also, any alien homeworld becomes one once the Kohr-Ah reach it on their Death March.
 * Lh'owon from Marathon was razed by Pfhor slavers. It is mostly a desert, with a few instances of nasty wildlife and aforementioned slavers.
 * In a similar vein, the eponymous ringworlds and other such installations of spiritual sequel Halo are ghost space constructs.
 * The "Forbidden Planet" in Sigma Star Saga takes this trope more literally than most—you'll find yourself under attack from levitating tombstones. Turns out the former inhabitants had(/have) a serious grudge against the aliens you've allied with, and not even death is stopping them from revenge.
 * In a notorious bug, those tombstones are the most lethal enemy in the game; killing one to end the level will instead trap you in purgatory forever.
 * Schizm cribs from Forbidden Planet as well—everyone on the world you're exploring just vanished in what must have been a single day, leaving behind unfinished work and uneaten meals. The initial research team vanished more slowly, and had enough time to leave behind increasingly panicky audio diaries speculating on what the hell was going on. What's left is a rather sinister Beautiful Void.
 * This is the planet Quartia in Tales of Hearts. Everything inhabiting the planet quite literally had the life sucked out of it.
 * This is the planet Quartia in Tales of Hearts. Everything inhabiting the planet quite literally had the life sucked out of it.
 * This is the planet Quartia in Tales of Hearts. Everything inhabiting the planet quite literally had the life sucked out of it.

Web Comics

 * The Dimension of Pain from Sluggy Freelance is eventually revealed to be one of these. It originally just seemed to be a barren, rocky world populated by a smattering of demons. It's not until the end of the "That Which Redeems" arc that we discover the dimension originally belonged to a race of human-like beings, whom the demons overthrew. Over the centuries the demons wiped out all other life in the dimension. They even devoured the original inhabitants' souls and destroyed everything they had built, save for a single, ruined city, preserved as a testament to the demons' victory.
 * It is also implied that these 'demons' were actually mutants created by Nofun labs, and the same could happen to the main dimension as well.
 * In A Miracle of Science, Mars finds many of these when searching for other intelligent life in the universe.
 * Subnormality gives us Wonte IV. "There was something besides oil that came out when the drills got down there and it didn't mix with the human mind and its fuckin' little creations."
 * In Homestuck, Jane's planet, the Land of Crypts and Helium, is almost completely lifeless save for a few plants that have managed to cling to life.

Western Animation

 * Filmations Ghostbusters was fond of ghost planets, featuring at least two or three throughout its 65-episode run.