Spaceship Girl

""Well, my sister's a ship. We had a complicated childhood.""

- Simon Tam, Firefly

A walking, talking female avatar of a Sapient Ship.

Throughout history, ships and other seafaring vessels have always been referred to as "she", and spaceships are just an extension of the metaphor. Knowing how to treat a ship is like knowing how to treat a woman, The Captain will say; take care of her and she'll take care of you. She may have to be tamed, or she may take a gentle touch. The moderately sexist analogies go on and on. Strangely, this even applies to ships named after men (e.g., the USS Ronald Reagan). It also applies to aircraft. This has been reflected in the appearance of older sailing vessels and many military aircraft—with scantily clad figureheads for the former and scantily clad women painted on the latter.

The tendency to see great vessels as female could have something to do with the crew and passengers feeling that they're being carried in its belly through hostile environment and subconsciously seeing it as motherly. Maybe. Note, however, that the use of the feminine is not universal. Latin did, and thus romance languages directly and English indirectly do the same; on the other hand, in Russian, the word "ship" is masculine.

Nowhere do they go so far, though, as when the ship is a girl. She may be a holographic projection by the ship's computer, or she may be a physical manifestation created by Black Box technology, she may be a Wetware CPU running the ship, or she may simply turn into a human when she wants to; but she is the ship, and thus requires special handling. Spaceship girls range from the deadly serious to the outright wacky, but they are never just machines. Hint: don't make her angry when you're parsecs away from the nearest planet...

Compare with Robot Girl and Sapient Steed. A subtrope of Sapient Ship and often a kind of Genius Loci. Related to I Call It "Vera" and Living Weapon. Psychologically related to Companion Cube. Might become a love interest.

Anime and Manga

 * Arpeggio of Blue Steel
 * Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl: the ship [[media:1143698982844.jpg|Jan-puu]], who crashes into Hazumu, is the ditzy and affectionate type. She considers the crash that killed Hazumu and set the series in motion to be her first kiss.
 * Lost Universe: [[media:1142146262764.jpg|Canal]], Meido-outfitted hologram.
 * Tenchi Muyo!:
 * Ryo-ohki, The Speechless Weasel Mascot, eventually develops a couple of cute girl forms.
 * Also, [[media:1126135980051.jpg|Tsunami]], progenitor of the space trees, and goddess and most powerful warship of Jurai. Yes, there is a reason why
 * Narue no Sekai: Bathyscaphe, Kanaka's ship and guardian, is a serious and matronly type...but she has her softer side.
 * There's another one called Haruna who is actually a deserter from the army who is hiding on Earth. She's really nice, though.
 * In one instance Haruna gets overexcited and summons her ship form to welcome some visitors to the hotel she works at, much to the chagrin of everyone there.
 * Outlaw Star: Melfina, who seems at first to be a shy teenage girl, is soon revealed to be the living navigation system for a very advanced starship. The rest of the ship's functions, however, are controlled by Gilliam II, the ship's male computer system.
 * MAPS: Lipumira is the interestingly dressed avatar of a starship that looks like a giant statue of her. For bonus points, her human-sized self becomes wounded as the ship is damaged.
 * The space train, Galaxy Express 999 gets upgraded with a Spaceship Girl in the second series.
 * However, the trope is inverted with Captain Harlock's Arcadia. Tochiro, Harlock's buddy and the ship's builder, transfered his own consciousness into the spacecraft, making it male.
 * A variation of this was done in Vandread with the character of Bart. Though he just synchronizes with Nirvana, not becomes her.
 * GaoGaiGar's  is a subversion.   Also subverted because, even in his 'old' form,   is some kind of...
 * At least two of the Vaia ships in Infinite Ryvius possess a "Sphix", a physical manifestation of the ship's control system. Unsurprisingly, the titular ship has the Spaceship Girl.
 * Then there's that whole Mecha Musume trend.
 * In Zone of the Enders Dolores, i, the titular Dolores has a ridiculously advanced AI making her a Humongous Mecha girl. She develops a crush on her pilot, and day-dreams of being in storybooks and a waitress, among other things.
 * T-AI of Transformers: Robots In Disguise was an AI for the Autobots' base who took the form of a little girl.
 * Near the end of the first season of Full Metal Panic!,
 * If Epileptic Trees are to be trusted (and ridiculously advanced AI is a qualifying trait for this trope, natch), Yukikaze from Sentou Yousei Yukikaze can be this. That is, minus the human avatar and all.
 * Eve in Megazone 23.
 * Stella of the Huckebein in Magical Records Lyrical Nanoha Force is another example of someone who can synchronize with her ship, to the point where she seems to be able to use her Healing Factor to repair damage on the ship while they're linked..
 * In the 11th Pokémon movie, Giratina and the Sky Warrior, Infi is a holographic projection of the navigational systems for main villain Zero's ship, the Megarig.
 * Kate Rose from Trinity Blood she is the basically the AI of the Flying Ship "The Iron maiden", although she's also a Wetware CPU whose body is commatose, she's been inside the ship for so long that she often refers to the parts of the ship as if they were her own appendages

Comic Books

 * In the Cross Gen title Sigil, a female character remains a hologram tied to the ship's computer throughout the series.
 * In Runaways, when the group gets back together after, Chase insists that the Leapfrog is a he, as there is enough estrogen on the team already, thank you very much.
 * In Power Pack, the kids argue over whether Friday is male or female.
 * The Marvel Comics character Star Lord has a sentient ship with a female persona. At least in the 1980s. Yep, the ship was in love with him. (She once generated a humanoid form to assist him when he was seriously injured.)
 * Wandering Star. The female alien Elli has the ability to physically merge with the Wandering Star's systems and run the ship in a far more efficient manner than when operated manually. She spends the majority of the series this way, within the ship, and communicates with the rest of the crew through the intercom.
 * In the Doctor Who comic miniseries "The Forgotten", in which the Doctor and Martha Jones find themselves in a museum devoted to the Doctor's past lives, Martha . A similar idea would surface in the TV series later on.
 * In the Doctor Who Magazine strip "A Life of Matter and Death", the TARDIS manifests a mental projection of herself in the form of a veiled grey lady.

Film

 * SAL9000 in 2010 (played by Candice Bergen) is almost neuter, but female (and sounds very like Eldon Tyrell's computer in Blade Runner).
 * Older Than They Think; the Harryhausen version of Jason and the Argonauts has the Argo's figurehead of Hera speak to Jason to give him advice. This detail wasn't in the original story, however.
 * Somewhat inverted in Babylon 5: Legend of the Rangers, in a case of the Spaceship Girl NOT being the Voice of the ship. The weapons officer enters a holographic chamber in which she sees everything from the ship's own point of view, and fires weapons by throwing punches.

Literature

 * Dora, Lazarus Long's starship in Robert Heinlein's Time Enough For Love. Dora appears again in later works, especially The Number of the Beast.
 * Another Heinlein example: Gay Deceiver in Number of the Beast and later works.
 * Anne McCaffrey's The Ship Who... Sang, and later related books.
 * The Ship Who Searched by Mercedes Lackey.
 * Another book from that series has a brainship who had gone through a terrible traumatic event; in therapy a counselor had her channel her emotions and frustrations into art, and eventually had her create a self portrait. He expected her to paint a projection of herself as a human, if she hadn't had the genetic defects that landed her in a brainship, but she painted her shipself with some anthropomorphic elements.
 * In the Doctor Who Eighth Doctor Adventures novels, ultra-advanced TARDISes from the future could use their chameleon circuits to take human form. The one we meet appears as an attractive young woman (in an amusing Continuity Nod we're told she was once stuck as a 1960s policewoman). The Doctor's cyborg companion Compassion later takes on characteristics of the TARDIS and became the prototype for the class.
 * And it's implied others followed suit. The Master's timeship combined this with Big Eater in Faction Paradox stories.
 * In the Star Trek: New Frontier portion of the Expanded Universe:
 * Xyon's ship is controlled by a female personality that was apparently a criminal before her death.
 * Later in the series, becomes Excalibur's computer.
 * Darcy in Vampirates "describes herself as "Figurehead by day, figure of fun by night!"
 * Another male example appears in the Revelation Space series, where a cyborg captain is melded with his ship by alien nanomachines. His consciousness is apparently distributed across the ship's systems, but he can still project an avatar of himself when it's useful.
 * Redemption Ark, the second book in the main trilogy also has a Spaceship Boy, though this time in the form of a sentient simulation of a criminal who was saved from termination by one character's father; the character in question is of course the one who owns the ship, and believes that she has an unusually helpful intelligent interface installed.
 * A car, not a ship, but Stephen King's Christine. Which was clearly the source for "Alice" in Star Trek: Voyager, below.
 * Subverted in Robert Jordans Wheel of Time series. The Sea Folk refer to their ships as "he" and are asked about this being different by one of the main characters.
 * Inverted in the Iain M Banks novel Matter; the Special Circumstances vessel 'liveware problem' has a man as its human avatar, and offers to sleep with one of the protagonists.
 * Ships and other structures run by Minds in the Culture series often have thousands of these (which doesn't even begin to test the computing power of a Culture Mind). Some of them are indistinguishable from other humans (this has caused at least one character minor embarrassment the morning after); others are more obviously nonhuman.
 * In Yellow Eyes by John Ringo and Tom Kratman, a US Navy cruiser, the USS Des Moines (CA-134), is converted to serve as a weapon platform for combating the aliens (it's a Sci Fi novel, after all) and has a AID installed to control it. However the AI was left on while shipping to earth, and developed more sentience (and some mental instability, due to sensory deprivation) by thinking the human equivalent of 5000+ years (in real terms a month or so, because AI think fast). the AI then proceeds to buy a cloning device on eBay (a Running Gag in the book is that you can find anything on eBay) and the clothing of a famous actress for DNA, and creates a living avatar for the ship. This is more of a Ship Girl, though, because it is a wet navy ship.
 * The AID's personality, and in The Tuloriad she and several similar entities are rebuilt as starships using materials from the original ships because in the original AID design. Which proves to be of great benefit to humankind.
 * Joked about in the book, The Hunt for Red October, when it stated that American ships are shes, Russian ships are hes, and the intelligence community calls them both its.
 * In Robin Hobb's The Liveship Traders series, there are sentient ships with animate figureheads. Some of them are males, though. They are mostly considered as persons, with one captain actually courting his female ship to the point that his sexual partner and the ship consider each other love rivals. Not played for laughs at all.
 * Some Bolos are quite female and feminine while being space-capable, with male service crews reacting appropriately. A gender inversion (masculine Bolo, a female crewmember's fixation) also occurs.
 * Perhonen, Mieli's Cool Ship in Hannu Rajaniemi's The Quantum Thief manifests as holographic butterflies, but her voice and personality are distinctly female. The protagonist even assumes that she and Mieli are lovers, but Perhonen explains that they are just good friends.

Live-Action TV

 * Andromeda and the titular starship, with her holographic and robotic avatars: Rommie, the ship's AI given an android body. The ship's AI also looks like Rommie, though the two became separate characters to a degree. Most of the High Guard ships of her class seen in the series had female avatars (with the explanation being that humans and a number of other species prefer female avatars), though we have had several on-screen examples of male AIs, usually portrayed by someone who appeared on Stargate SG-1 or Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.
 * The only real difference between Rommie and the ship was that the android avatar experienced emotions. When Rommie is destroyed, Harper creates a new Android named Doyle from the leftover parts, who thus has the same access codes as Rommie. She and Andromeda get into a fight over who should control the ship, thus proving their completely separate identities.
 * And if you're wondering if there was ever an episode where a High Guard captain got Robosexual with his ship's android... Yep. (It wasn't Dylan.)
 * Holly, the AI interface aboard the Red Dwarf, starts off as male but undergoes a virtual-sex change (as part of an Nth Doctor shift) between the second and third series. She disappears after series five along with the ship itself, and the male Holly returns at the end of series seven (twofold! The ship is actually a nanite recreation of the ship and its crew from a time before the accident, so its Holly serves Captain Hollister and has no relationship with the Boys from the 'Dwarf. The version of Holly on the watch Lister found, on the other hand, knows them but is suffering from 'computer senility' and is a bit less useful than Holly of old.
 * In an episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, an "upgrade" to the Enterprise's computer causes it to start talking flirtatiously and calling the captain "Dear". Kirk said that the folks the repairs had been outsourced to thought the computer needed a personality, "so they gave it one." Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Voyager both had female voices for the ships computer- logical, since they were voiced by Gene Roddenberry's wife. The ships were never completely sentient, though.
 * Captain Kirk once bemoaned the fact that although the Enterprise wasn't a woman, it took the place of one in his life: "Now I know why it's called 'she'."
 * In the TOS episode "Elaan of Troyius" the women of the planet Elas have tears that make every man the tears touch fall madly in love with them. Kirk is infected, but okay by the end of the episode. Spock explains what happened: "The antidote to a woman of Elas, Doctor, is a starship. The Enterprise infected the captain long before the Dohlman did."
 * "Alice" in Star Trek: Voyager. To a very uncomfortable extent.
 * There was a similar episode where B'Elanna had to persuade a rogue Interplanetary Missile Girl that it was targeting a noncombatant world. It wasn't just any girl, either - she'd reprogrammed it herself, and given it her own voice (the old voice was a Cardassian male which annoyed her).
 * Subverted in Firefly when River claims to have merged with Serenity—but this turns out to have been a ploy to get the crew out of a rather dire situation.
 * Moya on Farscape is a Leviathan, one of a race of living ships. She even gives birth to a bouncing baby spaceship. Other Leviathans, of both genders, (with mixed-gender pilots, sometimes) also showed up.
 * Except Moya isn't an "avatar" of herself—if anything, Pilot should serve this role, since he generally is the channel through which the crew interacts with Moya. He's also about as far as you can get from a cute girl...
 * In one episode of the original 1978 Battlestar Galactica, Starbuck flew the Recon Viper, which had extra engine power but no weapons. It was fitted with C.O.R.A., an intelligent computer controller that not only talked in a feminine voice, but also acted like an overprotective girlfriend.
 * The Cylon ships in the Re-Imagined Series have Hybrids as their central computer hub. Hybrids take the form of women laying in a cloudy tub similar to a regenerating tub. Hybrids are not supposed to be sentient and generally their speech is a string of ship operations.
 * There was an episode of the Buck Rogers where Col. Deering had to deal with an onboard computer in a criminal's ship with a bitchy female personality, eventually Wilma dealt with the problem by physically tearing out the CPU.
 * In Doctor Who, the Doctor has always called the TARDIS "she" and insisted to companions that she is sentient; the new series in particular has gone full-tilt into Doctor/TARDIS RoboShipping.
 * The episode The Doctor's Wife all but confirms that the TARDIS is indeed sentient and female. (Guess who his "wife" is.) The 'soul' of the TARDIS in the body of a human gets to actually walk around (and it is as Crazy Awesome as you'd expect.)
 * Also, to keep himself focused when dying (exceedingly painfully) from poison, the Doctor has the TARDIS create a holographic interface, which is capable of looking like anyone. He finally settles on the child version of current companion Amy. However, she definitely doesn't act like Amy, speaking more like a standard Computer Voice (but giving one moment of Amy-ness as moral support.) Interestingly, a comic book miniseries involves the TARDIS manifesting holograms of companions, but it's... different. Read above in that section if you dare.
 * In a somewhat darker example, the Controller from "Bad Wolf." She's more of a Satellite Girl, but she controls all the data coming into and going out of the Gamestation. However, is (or was) human, and basically wired up to be part of the computer.
 * Gypsy from Mystery Science Theater 3000, who was directly wired into the Satellite of Love and controlled its higher functions. A more literal example was the Magic Voice.
 * Sandstrom from Hyperdrive.
 * Apparently, one of the ideas for a followup to Stargate Universe would have had Eli becoming a Spaceship Boy...

Radio

 * In the CBC radio comedy series Canadia 2056, the main computer of the ship, the Canadia, starts off having a female voice simply because he captain chooses it, while the French-Canadian Commander Margaux prefers the voice of a French-Canadian man. Latter in the series, the computer becomes sentient do to the interference of a Wish-Granting Sentient-Cloud being, and soon develops a crush on the captain, eventually leading to her crushing an American captain with a car, all because she thought he was trying to steal the captain from her. Actually, not very comedic sounding...

Video Games

 * Arguably, Cortana in the first Halo video game, though the ship in question doesn't last as long as she does (although Master Chief's armor is apparently very similar to a spaceship, and the time she inhabits a Halo ring would probably count).
 * Serena of Halo Wars as well. And in this case the ship lasts as long as the Spaceship Girl.
 * The main character from The Guardian Legend is a female cyborg who can turn from an improbably clothed soldier into a miniature spaceship with her face where the cockpit would be.
 * Karan Sjet from Homeworld. In truth, she is a scientist that sacrificed herself to become the Mothership's core, and is now the Mothership's voice and "soul" through the entire game. In the sequel she continues being the Mothership, but the ship itself changes.
 * Remember that all Bentusi are rather literally bound to their ships, and this suddenly becomes true of all the female Bentusi out there. You'd think there would be some, despite the ubiquitous male narrator.
 * The SNES Widget Series Cho Aniki features a literal spaceship girl as one of the playable characters, a flying steam-driven machine-girl, Mami, with three little crewmen on her back who can be used as weapons.
 * The Japanese PC game Gadget Trial has been described as a fusion of turn based tactics games and mecha musume, and has the player control tank, artillery, and other girls who personify military hardware.
 * the 100-Series Observational Realians on the Durandal from Xenosaga
 * Much like Dolores in the anime, A.D.A. in the main series and Parshti in Fist of Mars both undergo character development into this. In the second game, the new pilot of Jehuty actually teases A.D.A. about her apparent crush on her original pilot.
 * The Aphelion in Ratchet and Clank.
 * System Shock's Shodan is a spacestation girl. The sequel gives us Xerxes, a spaceship guy.
 * Averted in Albion, where the computer of the spaceship Toronto is represented by a masculine android "AI body" known as Ned. Later it turns out there's a whole bunch of armed Neds hidden on the ship in case anyone gets rebellious. At the very end, you see the core AI itself, a very decidedly neuter mechanical thing inside an indestructible black tin.
 * Titania from Starship Titanic, who's sorry about the parrot, really she is.
 * EDI, your new ship's AI from Mass Effect 2. No body or even image of one, but she's got the voice and personality. Her femininity is confirmed by both one of the engineers of the ship, who is afraid of the Estrogen Overload in the level, and by the ship's pilot, who sees the AI as a girlfriend / mother figure...eventually.
 * Now if only her holographic representation wasn't a ball-on-a-stick. This contrasts with all the various non-sentient "VI's" that often do have human(oid) holograms. This was done intentionally to prevent the crew from empathizing too much with a potentially dangerous AI.
 * Given that the VI is voiced by Tricia Helfer, it's understandable.
 * Oddly enough, though, the simple avatar avoids the Uncanny Valley issue and instead becomes Moe Moe.
 * Everyone was afraid she'd end up going rogue, and then  If the designers really wanted to do a creepy AI for Mass Effect 3, they'd make a character similar to EDI but evil, voiced by Ellen McLain!
 * In Mass Effect 3, EDI is
 * EVE Online gives us AURA, the universal AI that acts as the (feminine) voice for your ship. Or rather, every ship, regardless of who is flying it. It's a bit disconcerting to have any ship from a harmless shuttle to a fleet-destroying Titan talk to you in the same calm, female voice.
 * Post-Brain Uploading, Samus' former CO Adam in Metroid Fusion is another spaceship guy, although it takes a little while for her to realise that it's actually him. Made a little awkward by the later revelation in Other M that he was something of a father figure to her when he was alive; now she has a ship for a dad.
 * While we're on the subject of Other M, we have  She built an android body for herself, and she looks exactly like a normal human.
 * Air Rivals has the Akron First Fleet Flagship, which can be owned by the brigade of a certain nation after a war that takes place every 6 days. The main computer of the battleship manifests itself as a hologram of a seemingly female robotic head. The hologram itself doesn't interact with you apart from giving you management options for the base you own, though. Although one has to admit, according to the storyline, the Akron was built by Barkians, and Bark city was destroyed around 140 years prior to the player's timeline, which means that the poor hologram girl has been trapped alone for 140 years, maintaining an abandoned ship that gets some nasty wars between ANI and BCU every 6 days and then it has to cope with brigade members that are possibly not nice people over and over again. I would probably not enjoy it very much.

Web Comics

 * The web comic Krakow parodies this trope mercilessly with the "planegirl" story, starting here.
 * Schlock Mercenary starships have embedded AIs that assist in the running and maintenance of the ship, that normally has a hologram avatar, to give the meatbags inside the ship something to focus on when they're trying to talk. Evidently, "I don't feel comfortable arguing with a disembodied voice" is a common trait that applies to all the sophont species we have seen controlling spaceships so far.
 * Most of these are actually male, probably to instill respect in a male-heavy military environment, but the Athens had Athena, a blue-skinned, red haired human girl. When the characters reunite with Petey and discover that his ears have become prodigious, he informs them that the algorithms determining an AI's hologram avatar are outside the AI's control, but the bigger ears indicate moving up in station, as it were.
 * After his recent mental breakdown, TAG has had a personality reconstruction, courtesy of Ensign Ventura. In a re-inversion of the trope, he is now a she, and she has renamed herself Tagioalisi. As Thurl and Kevyn quickly figure out, it was a good move. Also, after chose a more enthusiastic-looking girl avatar.

Web Original

 * Sheila the tank (later transferred into various other vehicles and structures) from Red vs. Blue.
 * In the Bollywood Halo IGN April Fools parody Cortana is presented as a more literal and straight version of this trope as she is shown as a living human controlling the ship not a hologram. It is also implied in the parody that she has a (possibly) romantic relationship with Master Chief.
 * Fenspace has dozens of Spaceship Girls. And a few Spaceship Animals, too.
 * The Sea Queens greatly expands on this trope.

Western Animation

 * Parodied in the Futurama episode "Love and Rocket", where changing the voice of the ship suddenly turned it female.
 * She was voiced by Sigourney Weaver, no less!
 * Star Trek: The Animated Series revisits the original series plot, with the jealous computer becoming actively hostile toward the women on the ship.
 * SARA from Toonami controls the Absolution, or at least she did until they both inexplicably disappeared.
 * Only tangentially related, but too funny not to mention: Captain Star of Captain Star insists that his ship the Boiling Hell is a he.
 * A.L.E.X., the Xcalibur's AI hologram from The Xtacles, who is constantly fending off advances from her dim-witted crew.
 * Aya from Green Lantern: The Animated Series was originally just the artificial intelligence of the Lantern's Cool Starship until she created a body for herself.

Real Life

 * Americans and British have for hundreds of years referred to their ships as a 'she'. This carried over into the aviation age as well.
 * The Russians dodge it entirely. Russian ships can be female, male or neutral, depending on which grammatical gender the ship's name falls into.
 * As the rule is "use the pronoun (adjective, past tense form) that is grammatically correct", the gender of the ship can vary depending on what you call it. For example, missile cruiser "Moskva" can be denoted with male pronoun if you call it cruiser, or female if you call it "Moskva". Oscar-class submersible cruiser "Tomsk" can be denoted with male pronoun, if you call it submersible cruiser or "Tomsk", and female if you call it submarine. Research vessel "Vityaz" can be denoted with male pronoun, if you call it "Vityaz" or steamship, or neutral, if you call it vessel.
 * With a few exceptions for traditional naming schemes. The longest living and most known one is used for destroyers - a male version of adjective, adjectival participle or present active participle (usually something fit for a warship, like "Fearless", "Raging", "Guarding", etc).
 * Military computers (when required) are almost universally female voiced. It seems sensible that this would continue when we develop AIs and they get personalities and avatars. Research showed that pilots pay better attention to an annunciator when the voice is female. Hence the female voices.
 * Air Force tests also indicate that a female voice is easier to hear and understand under high stress situations (like getting shot at while doing mach 1)
 * There is also research that claims people find a female voice 'safer' because of the male voiced HAL from 2001, a case of culture bleeding strongly into the public psyche.