Ghost Ship: Difference between revisions

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If you're looking for otherworldly ships with tattered sails crewed by [[Ghost Pirate|the damned]], see [[Afterlife Express]].
If you're looking for otherworldly ships with tattered sails crewed by [[Ghost Pirate|the damned]], see [[Afterlife Express]].


See also [[Send in The Search Team]] and [[Late to The Party]]. Compare [[Flying Dutchman]]. Not related to [[Shipping]] two [[Ghost Shipping|dead characters]]. Nor is it to be confused with the film.
See also [[Send in the Search Team]] and [[Late to the Party]]. Compare [[Flying Dutchman]]. Not related to [[Shipping]] two [[Ghost Shipping|dead characters]]. Nor is it to be confused with the film.


{{examples}}
{{examples}}
== Anime and Manga ==
== Anime and Manga ==
* One sequence in Part Three of ''[[Jo Jo's Bizarre Adventure (Manga)|Jo Jos Bizarre Adventure]]'' had the main characters boarding an apparently derelict steamer, with the only passenger being an orangutan. {{spoiler|The steamer was actually the orangutan's Stand, Strength. The ape was extremely intelligent by lesser-primate standards and not too fond of people.}}
* One sequence in Part Three of ''[[Jo Jo's Bizarre Adventure|Jo Jos Bizarre Adventure]]'' had the main characters boarding an apparently derelict steamer, with the only passenger being an orangutan. {{spoiler|The steamer was actually the orangutan's Stand, Strength. The ape was extremely intelligent by lesser-primate standards and not too fond of people.}}
* ''[[One Piece]]'' has Thriller Bark, which is basically a floathing [[Haunted House]] that serves as the base for Gecko Moria and his flunkies. It's mostly filled with zombies, but one of Gecko's crew, Perona, has ghost-like powers granted by the Horo-Horo Fruit.
* ''[[One Piece]]'' has Thriller Bark, which is basically a floathing [[Haunted House]] that serves as the base for Gecko Moria and his flunkies. It's mostly filled with zombies, but one of Gecko's crew, Perona, has ghost-like powers granted by the Horo-Horo Fruit.
* The unfortunately-named ''Pansy'' in ''[[Martian Successor Nadesico]]''.
* The unfortunately-named ''Pansy'' in ''[[Martian Successor Nadesico]]''.
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== Film ==
== Film ==
* ''[[Two Thousand Ten|2010]],'' the lesser-known sequel to ''[[Two Thousand One|2001]].'' Haunting by Bowman. [[Big Dumb Object]] that turned Bowman into an [[Ascend to A Higher Plane of Existence|ascended being]] in the first film {{spoiler|turns Jupiter into a star in this one}}.
* ''[[2010: The Year We Make Contact|2010]],'' the lesser-known sequel to ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey|2001]].'' Haunting by Bowman. [[Big Dumb Object]] that turned Bowman into an [[Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence|ascended being]] in the first film {{spoiler|turns Jupiter into a star in this one}}.
* ''[[Event Horizon]]'' is all about a Ghost Ship, basically a [[Haunted House]] [[Recycled in Space|In Space!]]
* ''[[Event Horizon]]'' is all about a Ghost Ship, basically a [[Haunted House]] [[Recycled in Space|In Space!]]
** Except it's being haunted {{spoiler|by hell itself}}.
** Except it's being haunted {{spoiler|by hell itself}}.
* Before Event Horizon, there was [[The Dark Side of the Moon (Film)|The Dark Side of the Moon]] where docking with an old NASA shuttle near the dark side of the moon brings on board {{spoiler|[[The Devil]]}}.
* Before Event Horizon, there was [[The Dark Side of the Moon (film)|The Dark Side of the Moon]] where docking with an old NASA shuttle near the dark side of the moon brings on board {{spoiler|[[The Devil]]}}.
* Before ''[[Event Horizon]]'' and ''[[The Dark Side of the Moon]]'', ''The Black Hole'' was about a Ghost Ship [[Recycled in Space|In Space]]. The Crew discovers the USS Cygnus devoid of its people, except for the Captain and his crew of robots. Except that many of the robots are {{spoiler|the zombified remnants of the original crew!}}.
* Before ''[[Event Horizon]]'' and ''[[The Dark Side of the Moon]]'', ''The Black Hole'' was about a Ghost Ship [[Recycled in Space|In Space]]. The Crew discovers the USS Cygnus devoid of its people, except for the Captain and his crew of robots. Except that many of the robots are {{spoiler|the zombified remnants of the original crew!}}.
* [[Captain Obvious|As is the movie titled]] ''[[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|Ghost Ship]]''.
* [[Captain Obvious|As is the movie titled]] ''[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|Ghost Ship]]''.
* ''[[Sunshine (Film)|Sunshine]]'' (2007). The crew comes across a distress signal from one of these. Monster.
* ''[[Sunshine (film)|Sunshine]]'' (2007). The crew comes across a distress signal from one of these. Monster.
* The derelict ship in the original ''[[Alien]]''. Monster, obviously.
* The derelict ship in the original ''[[Alien]]''. Monster, obviously.
* ''[[Sphere]]''. [[Big Dumb Object]] {{spoiler|grants uncontrollable psychic powers}}. Monsters.
* ''[[Sphere]]''. [[Big Dumb Object]] {{spoiler|grants uncontrollable psychic powers}}. Monsters.
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*** The seventh novel ''The Emperor's Finest'' depicts this period in detail at last.
*** The seventh novel ''The Emperor's Finest'' depicts this period in detail at last.
* "Three Skeleton Key", a short story by George G. Toudouze, is about a derelict ship filled with [[You Dirty Rat|rats]] running aground and invading a [[Lighthouse Point|lighthouse]]. It was famously adapted as an episode of the '50s radio series ''Escape'', narrated by [[Vincent Price]].
* "Three Skeleton Key", a short story by George G. Toudouze, is about a derelict ship filled with [[You Dirty Rat|rats]] running aground and invading a [[Lighthouse Point|lighthouse]]. It was famously adapted as an episode of the '50s radio series ''Escape'', narrated by [[Vincent Price]].
* In Bram Stoker's ''[[Dracula (Literature)|Dracula]]'', the ''Demeter'' runs aground at Whitby with all the crew missing except the captain, whose corpse is found lashed to the helm. However, a [[Apocalyptic Log|ship's log]] is found which provides clues as to what happened aboard the vessel.
* In Bram Stoker's ''[[Dracula (novel)|Dracula]]'', the ''Demeter'' runs aground at Whitby with all the crew missing except the captain, whose corpse is found lashed to the helm. However, a [[Apocalyptic Log|ship's log]] is found which provides clues as to what happened aboard the vessel.
* In several of ''[[The History of the Galaxy]]'' novels, characters find derelict ships that have long been abandoned by the crew. In most cases, these are colony ships from the Great Exodus period of human history, when hundreds of these left Earth using an untested and unreliable method of [[Faster-Than-Light Travel]].
* In several of ''[[The History of the Galaxy]]'' novels, characters find derelict ships that have long been abandoned by the crew. In most cases, these are colony ships from the Great Exodus period of human history, when hundreds of these left Earth using an untested and unreliable method of [[Faster-Than-Light Travel]].
** In one novel, a military officer from Earth is sent by his superior to find the location of the ''Alpha'', the first extrasolar colony ship that disappeared minutes after engaging its engines. He manages to find the ship drifting through a nebula with not a soul aboard. He then gets attacked by a strange cyborg-like creature. Based on the [[Apocalyptic Log|captain's log]], he finds out that the colonists were forced to make planetfall on an inhospitable world nearby, leaving the ship adrift in the nebula to gather hydrogen using its Bussard collectors. The cyborg is from a classified military project of that time.
** In one novel, a military officer from Earth is sent by his superior to find the location of the ''Alpha'', the first extrasolar colony ship that disappeared minutes after engaging its engines. He manages to find the ship drifting through a nebula with not a soul aboard. He then gets attacked by a strange cyborg-like creature. Based on the [[Apocalyptic Log|captain's log]], he finds out that the colonists were forced to make planetfall on an inhospitable world nearby, leaving the ship adrift in the nebula to gather hydrogen using its Bussard collectors. The cyborg is from a classified military project of that time.
** Another novel has the [[The Federation|Confederacy of Suns]] find a derelict ''planet''. Unfortunately, despite being nearly a billion years old, the automated defenses are still functional.
** Another novel has the [[The Federation|Confederacy of Suns]] find a derelict ''planet''. Unfortunately, despite being nearly a billion years old, the automated defenses are still functional.
* When Septimus and his friends climb aboard the ''Cerys'' in ''[[Septimus Heap (Literature)|Syren]]'', at first it looks deserted - it turns out that pirates have imprisoned the entire crew in a safe room below deck.
* When Septimus and his friends climb aboard the ''Cerys'' in ''[[Septimus Heap|Syren]]'', at first it looks deserted - it turns out that pirates have imprisoned the entire crew in a safe room below deck.
* The central mystery of the ''[[Alex Benedict (Literature)|Alex Benedict]]'' novel ''Polaris'' revolves around a spaceship that abruptly went out of communication and was later found completely empty. All the shuttles and spacesuits were still aboard, the airlocks were still sealed, and the computer had no record of what happened.
* The central mystery of the ''[[Alex Benedict]]'' novel ''Polaris'' revolves around a spaceship that abruptly went out of communication and was later found completely empty. All the shuttles and spacesuits were still aboard, the airlocks were still sealed, and the computer had no record of what happened.
* [[Robert Westall (Creator)|Robert Westall]] short story anthology ''[[Break of Dark (Literature)|Break of Dark]]'' features a ghost plane; which returns from a bombing raid intact but with no one alive except the pilot; who's unresponsive and continues to go through the motions of flying it, even after he's been hospitalized.
* [[Robert Westall]] short story anthology ''[[Break of Dark]]'' features a ghost plane; which returns from a bombing raid intact but with no one alive except the pilot; who's unresponsive and continues to go through the motions of flying it, even after he's been hospitalized.




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** Also {{spoiler|the spaceship}} in "The Impossible Astronaut"/"Day of the Moon" and {{spoiler|the other ship}} in "The Curse of the Black Spot".
** Also {{spoiler|the spaceship}} in "The Impossible Astronaut"/"Day of the Moon" and {{spoiler|the other ship}} in "The Curse of the Black Spot".
** The space station in ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S12 E5 Revenge of the Cybermen|Revenge of the Cybermen]]''
** The space station in ''[[Doctor Who/Recap/S12 E5 Revenge of the Cybermen|Revenge of the Cybermen]]''
* ''[[Firefly (TV)|Firefly]]'', "Bushwhacked"
* ''[[Firefly]]'', "Bushwhacked"
* ''[[Farscape (TV)|Farscape]]'' (several episodes including "PK Tech Girl")
* ''[[Farscape]]'' (several episodes including "PK Tech Girl")
* ''[[MacGyver]]'', "Ghost Ship"
* ''[[MacGyver]]'', "Ghost Ship"
* ''[[NCIS (TV)|NCIS]]'', "Chimera"
* ''[[NCIS]]'', "Chimera"
* Several times in ''[[Red Dwarf (TV)|Red Dwarf]]'', such as the ship with the DNA-editing machine.
* Several times in ''[[Red Dwarf]]'', such as the ship with the DNA-editing machine.
** Arguably, Red Dwarf itself may be considered a ghost ship - especially with the distress-signal format of Holly's [[Opening Narration]] in early seasons, the [[Everybody's Dead, Dave|demise of the rest of the crew]] and the tendency of creatures to be lurking in the ship itself.
** Arguably, Red Dwarf itself may be considered a ghost ship - especially with the distress-signal format of Holly's [[Opening Narration]] in early seasons, the [[Everybody's Dead, Dave|demise of the rest of the crew]] and the tendency of creatures to be lurking in the ship itself.
* ''[[Sea Quest DSV]]'' season 1 episode "Knight of Shadows" -- ''underwater'' ghost ship, even.
* ''[[SeaQuest DSV]]'' season 1 episode "Knight of Shadows" -- ''underwater'' ghost ship, even.
* ''[[Stargate Atlantis (TV)|Stargate Atlantis]]'', "Rising", "Aurora"
* ''[[Stargate Atlantis]]'', "Rising", "Aurora"
* ''[[Star Trek the Original Series (TV)|Star Trek the Original Series]]'', "The Tholian Web." Haunting by Kirk.
* ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek the Original Series]]'', "The Tholian Web." Haunting by Kirk.
* ''[[Star Trek the Next Generation (TV)|Star Trek the Next Generation]]'', "Booby Trap", "Night Terrors"
* ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation|Star Trek the Next Generation]]'', "Booby Trap", "Night Terrors"
* ''[[Star Trek Enterprise (TV)|Star Trek Enterprise]]'', "Fight or Flight", "Impulse"
* ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise|Star Trek Enterprise]]'', "Fight or Flight", "Impulse"
* ''[[The X Files (TV)|The X Files]]'', "Dod Kalm," "Triangle" (to a lesser extent)
* ''[[The X-Files|The X Files]]'', "Dod Kalm," "Triangle" (to a lesser extent)




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== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==
* In ''[[Star Ruler (Video Game)|Star Ruler]]'', ships that lose power from generator destruction, run out of fuel, or suffer crew death (or in the case of a computer controlled ship, power loss) will go derelict and drift off into deep space. Derelict ships can be reclaimed, so long as the equipment needed to run it is still in working shape.
* In ''[[Star Ruler]]'', ships that lose power from generator destruction, run out of fuel, or suffer crew death (or in the case of a computer controlled ship, power loss) will go derelict and drift off into deep space. Derelict ships can be reclaimed, so long as the equipment needed to run it is still in working shape.
* ''[[Grandia (Video Game)|Grandia]]'' features a deserted ship with a heavily "undead" atmosphere, {{spoiler|although the characters find out that the Big Bad of the ship is just a 'regular' (giant, magic-wielding) squid. This is actually truer to the trope as described here, since they discover what got the crew, rather than undead versions of the crew themselves.}}
* ''[[Grandia (video game)|Grandia]]'' features a deserted ship with a heavily "undead" atmosphere, {{spoiler|although the characters find out that the Big Bad of the ship is just a 'regular' (giant, magic-wielding) squid. This is actually truer to the trope as described here, since they discover what got the crew, rather than undead versions of the crew themselves.}}
* These seem quite frequent in the ''[[Metroid (Video Game)|Metroid]]'' series:
* These seem quite frequent in the ''[[Metroid]]'' series:
** ''Super Metroid'' had a wrecked ship, complete with flooding, electrical discharges, ghosts, and weird bouncy things.
** ''Super Metroid'' had a wrecked ship, complete with flooding, electrical discharges, ghosts, and weird bouncy things.
** Another one appears in ''[[Metroid Prime]] 3'', where Samus is sent to the wreckage of a Federation starship lost in battle. In retrospect, it was probably [[Primal Fear|a better idea]] [[Apocalyptic Log|not to]].
** Another one appears in ''[[Metroid Prime]] 3'', where Samus is sent to the wreckage of a Federation starship lost in battle. In retrospect, it was probably [[Primal Fear|a better idea]] [[Apocalyptic Log|not to]].
** There's the Frigate Orpheon in ''Metroid Prime'' and Biologic Lab's Station in ''Metroid Fusion'' where the [[Ghost Ship]] is the backdrop for the whole game.
** There's the Frigate Orpheon in ''Metroid Prime'' and Biologic Lab's Station in ''Metroid Fusion'' where the [[Ghost Ship]] is the backdrop for the whole game.
** ''[[Metroid Other M (Video Game)|Metroid Other M]]'' takes place on the Bottle Ship, which is essentially this.
** ''[[Metroid: Other M]]'' takes place on the Bottle Ship, which is essentially this.
* A ''[[Homeworld (Video Game)|Homeworld]]'' mission had you investigate a ghost ship. While it ignored strike craft, it would immediately take over any capital ship that got within range. When you had no ships in range of its effect, it looked like a derelict in a mass of other derelicts. As an extra bonus, amongst those other derelicts was a missile destroyer - which was extremely effective at taking out strike craft.
* A ''[[Homeworld]]'' mission had you investigate a ghost ship. While it ignored strike craft, it would immediately take over any capital ship that got within range. When you had no ships in range of its effect, it looked like a derelict in a mass of other derelicts. As an extra bonus, amongst those other derelicts was a missile destroyer - which was extremely effective at taking out strike craft.
** However, if you spammed it with enough fighters, ([[We Have Reserves|that is to say, shield your salvage corvettes from the missiles using a meaty fighter]]), you could ''salvage'' that missile destroyer, [[Disc One Nuke|giving you strike-fighter superiority several missions earlier than normal.]]
** However, if you spammed it with enough fighters, ([[We Have Reserves|that is to say, shield your salvage corvettes from the missiles using a meaty fighter]]), you could ''salvage'' that missile destroyer, [[Disc One Nuke|giving you strike-fighter superiority several missions earlier than normal.]]
* The [[Infocom]] [[Interactive Fiction]] computer game ''[[Stationfall (Video Game)|Stationfall]]''. The cause of the station's emptiness turns out to be {{spoiler|an alien artifact that corrupts and controls technology; if you lose, it duplicates itself and spreads the copies throughout human space.}}
* The [[Infocom]] [[Interactive Fiction]] computer game ''[[Planetfall|Stationfall]]''. The cause of the station's emptiness turns out to be {{spoiler|an alien artifact that corrupts and controls technology; if you lose, it duplicates itself and spreads the copies throughout human space.}}
* ''[[Rogue Galaxy]]'' had a ghost ship level, which was also the [[Bonus Dungeon]] in that particular game, available only after the main story. It even had a special guest NPC.
* ''[[Rogue Galaxy]]'' had a ghost ship level, which was also the [[Bonus Dungeon]] in that particular game, available only after the main story. It even had a special guest NPC.
* Suitably for games mostly set at sea, ''[[The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker (Video Game)|The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker]]'' and ''[[Suikoden IV]]'' had [[Ghost Ship]] levels. A notable difference is that the player had to chase these ships down on the open sea by following clues, rather than happen upon them by chance as part of the story.
* Suitably for games mostly set at sea, ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker|The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker]]'' and ''[[Suikoden IV]]'' had [[Ghost Ship]] levels. A notable difference is that the player had to chase these ships down on the open sea by following clues, rather than happen upon them by chance as part of the story.
* ''[[The Legend of Zelda Phantom Hourglass (Video Game)|The Legend of Zelda Phantom Hourglass]]'', the direct sequel to ''Wind Waker'', has a literal ghost ship which is ''called'' [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|the Ghost Ship]]. It sails around abducting people {{spoiler|and stealing their life force}}.
* ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass|The Legend of Zelda Phantom Hourglass]]'', the direct sequel to ''Wind Waker'', has a literal ghost ship which is ''called'' [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|the Ghost Ship]]. It sails around abducting people {{spoiler|and stealing their life force}}.
* In ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (Video Game)|The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time]]'', Link gets aboard on the fabled "ferry to the other world" in the Shadow Temple, tripulated by Stalfos. Made creepier by the fact that it doesn't sail on water, but on ''air'', and it sinks when it meets its the goal line.
* In ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time|The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time]]'', Link gets aboard on the fabled "ferry to the other world" in the Shadow Temple, tripulated by Stalfos. Made creepier by the fact that it doesn't sail on water, but on ''air'', and it sinks when it meets its the goal line.
* The U.S.G. Ishimura of ''[[Dead Space (Video Game)|Dead Space]]'' is essentially one huge [[Ghost Ship]].
* The U.S.G. Ishimura of ''[[Dead Space (video game)|Dead Space]]'' is essentially one huge [[Ghost Ship]].
* The Von Braun of ''[[System Shock|System Shock 2]]''.
* The Von Braun of ''[[System Shock|System Shock 2]]''.
* ''[[Super Mario Bros]]'':
* ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'':
** The entrance to the Valley of Bowser in ''[[Super Mario Bros|Super Mario World]]'' was protected by a ghost ship, that appeared deserted at first, but then suddenly the room fills up with ghosts. It's all but stated, [[All There in the Manual|at least in the manual]], that it may well be one of the flying ships used by Bowser's minions [[Continuity Nod|in Super Mario Bros 3]].
** The entrance to the Valley of Bowser in ''[[Super Mario Bros.|Super Mario World]]'' was protected by a ghost ship, that appeared deserted at first, but then suddenly the room fills up with ghosts. It's all but stated, [[All There in the Manual|at least in the manual]], that it may well be one of the flying ships used by Bowser's minions [[Continuity Nod|in Super Mario Bros 3]].
** In ''[[Super Mario Galaxy (Video Game)|Super Mario Galaxy]]'', there is one located in the underground area of Deep Dark Galaxy.
** In ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]'', there is one located in the underground area of Deep Dark Galaxy.
* ''[[Final Fantasy VIII (Video Game)|Final Fantasy VIII]]'': Squall and Rinoa end up on a spaceship that was abandoned for 17 years and overrun by regenerating alien monsters. Since it is ''[[Lighter and Softer|Final Fantasy VIII]]'', {{spoiler|the ship is in full working condition, and they clear it of alien monsters and claim it their own with relative ease.}}
* ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'': Squall and Rinoa end up on a spaceship that was abandoned for 17 years and overrun by regenerating alien monsters. Since it is ''[[Lighter and Softer|Final Fantasy VIII]]'', {{spoiler|the ship is in full working condition, and they clear it of alien monsters and claim it their own with relative ease.}}
* Early on in ''[[Final Fantasy V (Video Game)|Final Fantasy V]]'', your party ship is set adrift and end up in a ship graveyard. Naturally, you have to navigate through several derelict ships to reach land, fighting several undead enemies along the way.
* Early on in ''[[Final Fantasy V]]'', your party ship is set adrift and end up in a ship graveyard. Naturally, you have to navigate through several derelict ships to reach land, fighting several undead enemies along the way.
* The Ghost Ship from ''[[Tales of Vesperia]]''.
* The Ghost Ship from ''[[Tales of Vesperia]]''.
* The ''Elizabeth Dane'' in ''[[Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines]]'', whose crew was wiped out while carrying the game's central [[MacGuffin]].
* The ''Elizabeth Dane'' in ''[[Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines]]'', whose crew was wiped out while carrying the game's central [[MacGuffin]].
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* ''[[Seiken Densetsu 3]]'' at one point in the game has you boarding a ship to get to the next continent. Strangly, no fee is charged (unlike every other boat ride) and when you go to sleep, you wake up to find the ship is actually a ghost ship.
* ''[[Seiken Densetsu 3]]'' at one point in the game has you boarding a ship to get to the next continent. Strangly, no fee is charged (unlike every other boat ride) and when you go to sleep, you wake up to find the ship is actually a ghost ship.
* ''Cryostasis'' is made of this. A lone meteorologist finds himself on a derelict Soviet nuclear icebreaker, missing for over a decade. The ship is completely frozen, and the crew are either dead and perfectly preserved by the cold, or dead and somehow mutated into ice monsters. The player character also sees both ghosts and flashbacks of events as everything was going to hell aboard.
* ''Cryostasis'' is made of this. A lone meteorologist finds himself on a derelict Soviet nuclear icebreaker, missing for over a decade. The ship is completely frozen, and the crew are either dead and perfectly preserved by the cold, or dead and somehow mutated into ice monsters. The player character also sees both ghosts and flashbacks of events as everything was going to hell aboard.
* In ''[[Xenogears (Video Game)|Xenogears]]'', the heroes explore a drifting ship whose crew was attacked and killed by the seemingly undead monsters called Wels. At one point, when they turn on the showers and a spray of red fluid pours out, prompting one of them to react with a horrified "what ''happened'' on this ship?" - but then it turns out that it's just rusty water.
* In ''[[Xenogears]]'', the heroes explore a drifting ship whose crew was attacked and killed by the seemingly undead monsters called Wels. At one point, when they turn on the showers and a spray of red fluid pours out, prompting one of them to react with a horrified "what ''happened'' on this ship?" - but then it turns out that it's just rusty water.
* ''[[Mass Effect]]'' has one. The MVS Estevanico, which crashed on a planet about a hundred years ago. Even though it's a historical relic, it's falling apart and it's also extremely creepy.
* ''[[Mass Effect]]'' has one. The MVS Estevanico, which crashed on a planet about a hundred years ago. Even though it's a historical relic, it's falling apart and it's also extremely creepy.
* ''[[Legend of Dragoon]]'' has the Queen Fury crashing into a phantom ship filled with undead enemies, and where some important information about the Black Monster is learned.
* ''[[Legend of Dragoon]]'' has the Queen Fury crashing into a phantom ship filled with undead enemies, and where some important information about the Black Monster is learned.
* The "Sunken Ship" level in ''[[Okami (Video Game)|Okami]]'', complete with [[Chest Monster|Chest Monsters]], ghosts that keep floating towards you even on the brush screen, the phantom heads of previous bosses that fly straight into the camera in an apparent attempt to eat your face, [[Spikes of Doom]], a completely inexplicable giant hand that tries to squash you, and a couple of crab-demons living on a pile of bones that turn into [[Everything's Even Worse With Sharks|an enormous armored shark]].
* The "Sunken Ship" level in ''[[Ōkami|Okami]]'', complete with [[Chest Monster|Chest Monsters]], ghosts that keep floating towards you even on the brush screen, the phantom heads of previous bosses that fly straight into the camera in an apparent attempt to eat your face, [[Spikes of Doom]], a completely inexplicable giant hand that tries to squash you, and a couple of crab-demons living on a pile of bones that turn into [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks|an enormous armored shark]].
** Returns in ''[[Okamiden (Video Game)|Okamiden]]''... sort of. {{spoiler|You travel to the past just before it gets attacked. You have no idea when this will happen, [[Doomed By Canon|only that it will]]. Possibly even scarier this time around, despite not fitting the trope.}}
** Returns in ''[[Ōkamiden|Okamiden]]''... sort of. {{spoiler|You travel to the past just before it gets attacked. You have no idea when this will happen, [[Doomed by Canon|only that it will]]. Possibly even scarier this time around, despite not fitting the trope.}}
* Space Griffon [[VF 9]]. See above example with Space Hulk. Imagine if a Tyranid Tyrant manifested into an ever-evolving [[Cosmic Horror]] by not only understanding but controlling and absorbing energy from The Warp, enough to inflict long-distance mind control and mutation upon your fellow soldiers, and change the Genestealers to rogue machines and [[Body Horror]] Silent Hill creations. There's a reason why you'll brick the toilet with this game despite the fact it places you in a [[Macross|vaguely familiar transforming mecha.]] Though, a good half of it IS atmosphere. If you aren't really 'feeling' it, it just won't affect you as much aside from the long range powers thing.
* Space Griffon [[VF 9]]. See above example with Space Hulk. Imagine if a Tyranid Tyrant manifested into an ever-evolving [[Cosmic Horror]] by not only understanding but controlling and absorbing energy from The Warp, enough to inflict long-distance mind control and mutation upon your fellow soldiers, and change the Genestealers to rogue machines and [[Body Horror]] Silent Hill creations. There's a reason why you'll brick the toilet with this game despite the fact it places you in a [[Macross|vaguely familiar transforming mecha.]] Though, a good half of it IS atmosphere. If you aren't really 'feeling' it, it just won't affect you as much aside from the long range powers thing.
* Mario and company have to explore one of these in ''[[Super Mario RPG (Video Game)|Super Mario RPG]]'' to retrieve the Star Piece that landed in the ocean. What's unusual about this example is that you actually find out what caused the ship to sink in the first place, and you also get to fight the monster that caused it.
* Mario and company have to explore one of these in ''[[Super Mario RPG]]'' to retrieve the Star Piece that landed in the ocean. What's unusual about this example is that you actually find out what caused the ship to sink in the first place, and you also get to fight the monster that caused it.
* Subverted then played straight in ''[[Chrono Cross (Video Game)|Chrono Cross]]''. The party while sailing through dense fog runs across a ship that is known as a ghost ship and decides to rest, but quickly finds that it's in fact a pirate ship using the legend as a deterrent. After being taken prisoner the party finds out that another ship has arrived directly adjacent, an actual ghost ship... [[Big Boo's Haunt|with actual ghosts.]]
* Subverted then played straight in ''[[Chrono Cross]]''. The party while sailing through dense fog runs across a ship that is known as a ghost ship and decides to rest, but quickly finds that it's in fact a pirate ship using the legend as a deterrent. After being taken prisoner the party finds out that another ship has arrived directly adjacent, an actual ghost ship... [[Big Boo's Haunt|with actual ghosts.]]
* ''[[Knights of the Old Republic]] 2'' has the Harbinger. According to the ship's [[Apocalyptic Log]], the Sith vessel the assassins came from, was no different.
* ''[[Knights of the Old Republic]] 2'' has the Harbinger. According to the ship's [[Apocalyptic Log]], the Sith vessel the assassins came from, was no different.
** Then, there's the Ravager, which, while not really a ghost ship, it's got the look of one, and it's crew is pretty much made up of zombies, with an actual ghost/HumanoidAbomination for a captain.
** Then, there's the Ravager, which, while not really a ghost ship, it's got the look of one, and it's crew is pretty much made up of zombies, with an actual ghost/HumanoidAbomination for a captain.
* The ''[[Starship Titanic]]'', due to a premature launch (basically had its moorings cut while the crew finishing out the interior was on break), is populated solely by the robot support staff and an obnoxious parrot belonging to one of the decorators. Oh, and a flock of starlings in one of the upper chambers.
* The ''[[Starship Titanic]]'', due to a premature launch (basically had its moorings cut while the crew finishing out the interior was on break), is populated solely by the robot support staff and an obnoxious parrot belonging to one of the decorators. Oh, and a flock of starlings in one of the upper chambers.
* ''Castlevania'': ''[[Rondo of Blood]]'' and it's remake feature a stage set in and around a ghost ship. Worth noting is the painting that comes to life and flies around the room - if it touches you, you're dead! There's also one in ''[[Aria of Sorrow]]'', which is mostly scenery.
* ''Castlevania'': ''[[Rondo of Blood]]'' and it's remake feature a stage set in and around a ghost ship. Worth noting is the painting that comes to life and flies around the room - if it touches you, you're dead! There's also one in ''[[Aria of Sorrow]]'', which is mostly scenery.
* ''[[Sonic Rush Series (Video Game)|Sonic Rush Series]] Adventure'' has the Haunted Ship stage, culminating in a boss battle against a robotic pirate.
* ''[[Sonic Rush Series]] Adventure'' has the Haunted Ship stage, culminating in a boss battle against a robotic pirate.
* ''[[Sword of the Stars]]'' has the aptly named Alien Derelicts, which are actually broken-off sections of a larger craft. Bear in mind that even so they still are larger than player-buildable dreadnoughts... and their weapons are still active.
* ''[[Sword of the Stars]]'' has the aptly named Alien Derelicts, which are actually broken-off sections of a larger craft. Bear in mind that even so they still are larger than player-buildable dreadnoughts... and their weapons are still active.
* The ''[[Dragon Quest (Video Game)|Dragon Quest]]'' series has had several ghost ships. ''[[Dragon Quest III (Video Game)|Dragon Quest III]]'' and ''[[Dragon Quest Monsters]] 2'' had ships that still sailed with an undead crew. ''[[Dragon Quest VI (Video Game)|Dragon Quest VI]]'' had a sunken ship you could explore once you gained the ability to travel underwater.
* The ''[[Dragon Quest]]'' series has had several ghost ships. ''[[Dragon Quest III]]'' and ''[[Dragon Quest Monsters]] 2'' had ships that still sailed with an undead crew. ''[[Dragon Quest VI]]'' had a sunken ship you could explore once you gained the ability to travel underwater.
* ''[[Endless Ocean]]'' has a large derelict pirate ship which transports the player to and from Ship's Rest.
* ''[[Endless Ocean]]'' has a large derelict pirate ship which transports the player to and from Ship's Rest.
* Halfway through ''The Adventures of Rad Gravity'', your spaceship is damaged in an [[The Asteroid Thicket|asteroid field]], and to find spare parts you must search an abandoned ship.
* Halfway through ''The Adventures of Rad Gravity'', your spaceship is damaged in an [[The Asteroid Thicket|asteroid field]], and to find spare parts you must search an abandoned ship.

Revision as of 03:37, 8 April 2014

The main characters receive a Distress Call or randomly come across a (seemingly) deserted vehicle and have to figure out what happened and where everybody went. Usually they run across exactly what happened when it tries to eat them. A Big Dumb Object may be involved. And sometimes there are actual ghosts.

Compare Derelict Graveyard.

If you're looking for otherworldly ships with tattered sails crewed by the damned, see Afterlife Express.

See also Send in the Search Team and Late to the Party. Compare Flying Dutchman. Not related to Shipping two dead characters. Nor is it to be confused with the film.

Examples of Ghost Ship include:

Anime and Manga

  • One sequence in Part Three of Jo Jos Bizarre Adventure had the main characters boarding an apparently derelict steamer, with the only passenger being an orangutan. The steamer was actually the orangutan's Stand, Strength. The ape was extremely intelligent by lesser-primate standards and not too fond of people.
  • One Piece has Thriller Bark, which is basically a floathing Haunted House that serves as the base for Gecko Moria and his flunkies. It's mostly filled with zombies, but one of Gecko's crew, Perona, has ghost-like powers granted by the Horo-Horo Fruit.
  • The unfortunately-named Pansy in Martian Successor Nadesico.


Board Games

  • The Warhammer 40000 spin-off Space Hulk (and the computer game derived from it) is based entirely on the subject of heavily-armed Space Marines boarding a Ghost Ship filled with ugly aliens, in this case Tyranid Genestealers.
    • Space Hulks are also an important part of 40k's background fluff. These ghost ships are conglomerations of lost and destroyed spaceships and other space debris, which drift randomly through both real- and Warp-space and tend to be full of horrors, of which Chaos worshippers, Orks and Genestealers are the most common and least terrible.
    • There are also more typical ghost ships, the result of what happens when a ship's Gellar field breaks in the Warp. What happens to the unfortunate crew is best not contemplated, for when such vessels reappear in realspace they tend to either be deserted or filled with daemons instead of men.
      • There's a whole Chapter made of these, called the Legion of the Damned, who got lost in the Warp and became Warp-Ghosts. When the forces of the Imperium are in dire need, they are said to appear to turn the tide of battle.


Film


Literature

  • The Dean Koontz novel Phantoms, about a town whose entire population has disappeared or been killed.
  • In William King's Warhammer 40000 novel Space Wolf, the new marines are sent with a sergeant to find out what happened to another company. They find a tunnel, head down it, and find fragments of Marines' armor. Among other things.
    • In Ragnor's Claw, they face a space hulk, which is a conglomeration of dead ships, and float in and out of warp without visible control.
    • At one point Ciaphas Cain reminisces, if that's the term, about boarding a space hulk during his time with the Reclaimers Space Marine chapter. It was infested with purestrain Tyranid genestealers, who proceeded to carve their way through the Space Marines' Terminator armor -- the biggest, baddest powered armor a living Marine can wear -- without any real trouble.
      • The seventh novel The Emperor's Finest depicts this period in detail at last.
  • "Three Skeleton Key", a short story by George G. Toudouze, is about a derelict ship filled with rats running aground and invading a lighthouse. It was famously adapted as an episode of the '50s radio series Escape, narrated by Vincent Price.
  • In Bram Stoker's Dracula, the Demeter runs aground at Whitby with all the crew missing except the captain, whose corpse is found lashed to the helm. However, a ship's log is found which provides clues as to what happened aboard the vessel.
  • In several of The History of the Galaxy novels, characters find derelict ships that have long been abandoned by the crew. In most cases, these are colony ships from the Great Exodus period of human history, when hundreds of these left Earth using an untested and unreliable method of Faster-Than-Light Travel.
    • In one novel, a military officer from Earth is sent by his superior to find the location of the Alpha, the first extrasolar colony ship that disappeared minutes after engaging its engines. He manages to find the ship drifting through a nebula with not a soul aboard. He then gets attacked by a strange cyborg-like creature. Based on the captain's log, he finds out that the colonists were forced to make planetfall on an inhospitable world nearby, leaving the ship adrift in the nebula to gather hydrogen using its Bussard collectors. The cyborg is from a classified military project of that time.
    • Another novel has the Confederacy of Suns find a derelict planet. Unfortunately, despite being nearly a billion years old, the automated defenses are still functional.
  • When Septimus and his friends climb aboard the Cerys in Syren, at first it looks deserted - it turns out that pirates have imprisoned the entire crew in a safe room below deck.
  • The central mystery of the Alex Benedict novel Polaris revolves around a spaceship that abruptly went out of communication and was later found completely empty. All the shuttles and spacesuits were still aboard, the airlocks were still sealed, and the computer had no record of what happened.
  • Robert Westall short story anthology Break of Dark features a ghost plane; which returns from a bombing raid intact but with no one alive except the pilot; who's unresponsive and continues to go through the motions of flying it, even after he's been hospitalized.


Live Action TV


Music


Video Games

  • In Star Ruler, ships that lose power from generator destruction, run out of fuel, or suffer crew death (or in the case of a computer controlled ship, power loss) will go derelict and drift off into deep space. Derelict ships can be reclaimed, so long as the equipment needed to run it is still in working shape.
  • Grandia features a deserted ship with a heavily "undead" atmosphere, although the characters find out that the Big Bad of the ship is just a 'regular' (giant, magic-wielding) squid. This is actually truer to the trope as described here, since they discover what got the crew, rather than undead versions of the crew themselves.
  • These seem quite frequent in the Metroid series:
    • Super Metroid had a wrecked ship, complete with flooding, electrical discharges, ghosts, and weird bouncy things.
    • Another one appears in Metroid Prime 3, where Samus is sent to the wreckage of a Federation starship lost in battle. In retrospect, it was probably a better idea not to.
    • There's the Frigate Orpheon in Metroid Prime and Biologic Lab's Station in Metroid Fusion where the Ghost Ship is the backdrop for the whole game.
    • Metroid: Other M takes place on the Bottle Ship, which is essentially this.
  • A Homeworld mission had you investigate a ghost ship. While it ignored strike craft, it would immediately take over any capital ship that got within range. When you had no ships in range of its effect, it looked like a derelict in a mass of other derelicts. As an extra bonus, amongst those other derelicts was a missile destroyer - which was extremely effective at taking out strike craft.
  • The Infocom Interactive Fiction computer game Stationfall. The cause of the station's emptiness turns out to be an alien artifact that corrupts and controls technology; if you lose, it duplicates itself and spreads the copies throughout human space.
  • Rogue Galaxy had a ghost ship level, which was also the Bonus Dungeon in that particular game, available only after the main story. It even had a special guest NPC.
  • Suitably for games mostly set at sea, The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker and Suikoden IV had Ghost Ship levels. A notable difference is that the player had to chase these ships down on the open sea by following clues, rather than happen upon them by chance as part of the story.
  • The Legend of Zelda Phantom Hourglass, the direct sequel to Wind Waker, has a literal ghost ship which is called the Ghost Ship. It sails around abducting people and stealing their life force.
  • In The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time, Link gets aboard on the fabled "ferry to the other world" in the Shadow Temple, tripulated by Stalfos. Made creepier by the fact that it doesn't sail on water, but on air, and it sinks when it meets its the goal line.
  • The U.S.G. Ishimura of Dead Space is essentially one huge Ghost Ship.
  • The Von Braun of System Shock 2.
  • Super Mario Bros.:
    • The entrance to the Valley of Bowser in Super Mario World was protected by a ghost ship, that appeared deserted at first, but then suddenly the room fills up with ghosts. It's all but stated, at least in the manual, that it may well be one of the flying ships used by Bowser's minions in Super Mario Bros 3.
    • In Super Mario Galaxy, there is one located in the underground area of Deep Dark Galaxy.
  • Final Fantasy VIII: Squall and Rinoa end up on a spaceship that was abandoned for 17 years and overrun by regenerating alien monsters. Since it is Final Fantasy VIII, the ship is in full working condition, and they clear it of alien monsters and claim it their own with relative ease.
  • Early on in Final Fantasy V, your party ship is set adrift and end up in a ship graveyard. Naturally, you have to navigate through several derelict ships to reach land, fighting several undead enemies along the way.
  • The Ghost Ship from Tales of Vesperia.
  • The Elizabeth Dane in Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines, whose crew was wiped out while carrying the game's central MacGuffin.
  • Seiken Densetsu 3 at one point in the game has you boarding a ship to get to the next continent. Strangly, no fee is charged (unlike every other boat ride) and when you go to sleep, you wake up to find the ship is actually a ghost ship.
  • Cryostasis is made of this. A lone meteorologist finds himself on a derelict Soviet nuclear icebreaker, missing for over a decade. The ship is completely frozen, and the crew are either dead and perfectly preserved by the cold, or dead and somehow mutated into ice monsters. The player character also sees both ghosts and flashbacks of events as everything was going to hell aboard.
  • In Xenogears, the heroes explore a drifting ship whose crew was attacked and killed by the seemingly undead monsters called Wels. At one point, when they turn on the showers and a spray of red fluid pours out, prompting one of them to react with a horrified "what happened on this ship?" - but then it turns out that it's just rusty water.
  • Mass Effect has one. The MVS Estevanico, which crashed on a planet about a hundred years ago. Even though it's a historical relic, it's falling apart and it's also extremely creepy.
  • Legend of Dragoon has the Queen Fury crashing into a phantom ship filled with undead enemies, and where some important information about the Black Monster is learned.
  • The "Sunken Ship" level in Okami, complete with Chest Monsters, ghosts that keep floating towards you even on the brush screen, the phantom heads of previous bosses that fly straight into the camera in an apparent attempt to eat your face, Spikes of Doom, a completely inexplicable giant hand that tries to squash you, and a couple of crab-demons living on a pile of bones that turn into an enormous armored shark.
    • Returns in Okamiden... sort of. You travel to the past just before it gets attacked. You have no idea when this will happen, only that it will. Possibly even scarier this time around, despite not fitting the trope.
  • Space Griffon VF 9. See above example with Space Hulk. Imagine if a Tyranid Tyrant manifested into an ever-evolving Cosmic Horror by not only understanding but controlling and absorbing energy from The Warp, enough to inflict long-distance mind control and mutation upon your fellow soldiers, and change the Genestealers to rogue machines and Body Horror Silent Hill creations. There's a reason why you'll brick the toilet with this game despite the fact it places you in a vaguely familiar transforming mecha. Though, a good half of it IS atmosphere. If you aren't really 'feeling' it, it just won't affect you as much aside from the long range powers thing.
  • Mario and company have to explore one of these in Super Mario RPG to retrieve the Star Piece that landed in the ocean. What's unusual about this example is that you actually find out what caused the ship to sink in the first place, and you also get to fight the monster that caused it.
  • Subverted then played straight in Chrono Cross. The party while sailing through dense fog runs across a ship that is known as a ghost ship and decides to rest, but quickly finds that it's in fact a pirate ship using the legend as a deterrent. After being taken prisoner the party finds out that another ship has arrived directly adjacent, an actual ghost ship... with actual ghosts.
  • Knights of the Old Republic 2 has the Harbinger. According to the ship's Apocalyptic Log, the Sith vessel the assassins came from, was no different.
    • Then, there's the Ravager, which, while not really a ghost ship, it's got the look of one, and it's crew is pretty much made up of zombies, with an actual ghost/HumanoidAbomination for a captain.
  • The Starship Titanic, due to a premature launch (basically had its moorings cut while the crew finishing out the interior was on break), is populated solely by the robot support staff and an obnoxious parrot belonging to one of the decorators. Oh, and a flock of starlings in one of the upper chambers.
  • Castlevania: Rondo of Blood and it's remake feature a stage set in and around a ghost ship. Worth noting is the painting that comes to life and flies around the room - if it touches you, you're dead! There's also one in Aria of Sorrow, which is mostly scenery.
  • Sonic Rush Series Adventure has the Haunted Ship stage, culminating in a boss battle against a robotic pirate.
  • Sword of the Stars has the aptly named Alien Derelicts, which are actually broken-off sections of a larger craft. Bear in mind that even so they still are larger than player-buildable dreadnoughts... and their weapons are still active.
  • The Dragon Quest series has had several ghost ships. Dragon Quest III and Dragon Quest Monsters 2 had ships that still sailed with an undead crew. Dragon Quest VI had a sunken ship you could explore once you gained the ability to travel underwater.
  • Endless Ocean has a large derelict pirate ship which transports the player to and from Ship's Rest.
  • Halfway through The Adventures of Rad Gravity, your spaceship is damaged in an asteroid field, and to find spare parts you must search an abandoned ship.
  • Captain Kunkka in Defense of the Ancients sum