Robotic Angel

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Revision as of 15:12, 4 April 2019 by Looney Toons (talk | contribs) (rewrote description, added example)

[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin}]: Robots who are angels and/or angels who are robots. Can include angels who are Cyborgs as well. Either way, it's very much a case of the Rule of Cool in play.

The origins of a Robot Angel can vary:

On the one hand, Heaven is not often seen as a high-tech setting, but sometimes it can surprise you -- and when it does, this will likely be one of the surprises: the inorganic angel.[1] These are nearly always Badass Automatons of the highest order, and while all but guaranteed to be part of the Armies of Heaven, they can also serve in a host of other roles.

Alternatively, the Robot Angel might be a mortal creation, built either for honest or deceptive reasons. In this case it is likely not be a truly divine being at all, but simply takes the form of one. However, if such a creation is sophisticated enough to have free will and a moral sense, it may find upon the end of its existence that it qualifies for the afterlife, and may even be elevated to true angelic status.

One of the more extreme variations of Our Angels Are Different. May of necessity be a Religious Robot.

Examples of Robotic Angel include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

  • Steel Angel Kurumi has battle gynoids called "steel angels", among them the main character. Although the story is set in an alternate 1920s Tokyo, the gynoids were created in a distant future, and possessed mysterious power sources called "angel hearts" which seemed to be mystical in origin. The title character possessed a Mark II Angel Heart, the use of which was said to be potentially apocalyptic, but which ultimately resulted in Kurumi transforming into a true robot-angel hybrid being.
  • Angeloids in Sora no Otoshimono.
  • The sole inhabitant of the Imaginary Number District in A Certain Magical Index is an artificial angel, definitely of the Holy Hand Grenade sort.

Comic Books

Fan Works

Film

  • Seraph from The Matrix series was created by the Oracle to serve as a "guardian angel".

Literature

Live-Action TV

  • The Messengers on the 2004 Battlestar Galactica.
  • Red Dwarf makes mention of "Silicon Heaven", the afterlife for any device with even the slightest amount of computing power to it. Assuming it actually exists (there is some contention on the issue), it is no doubt amply supplied with Robot Angels.

Music

New Media

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition, Myths and Legends

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

Tabletop Games

Theatre

Video Games

  • A common theme in the Shin Megami Tensei series, especially in depictions of Metatron, who is often depicted as humanoid robot. Other high ranking angels also have partial or completely robot motifs on occasion.

Visual Novels

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation

Other Media

Real Life

  1. Yes, yes, we know. Being purely spiritual beings, all angels are technically inorganic, at least until they take on the form of a mortal. And maybe not even then.