Synthoid
A synthoid is a fictional type of artificial lifeform. The term originated on the television cartoon series G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero, produced by Sunbow in the mid-1980s. It has since been used in other media as well.
As used in G.I. Joe
The term "synthoid" was first seen in the two-part episode "The Synthoid Conspiracy" of the G.I. Joe cartoon show. This stealth replicate technology was developed by Zartan, the master of disguise, in service to the Cobra terrorist organization.
Synthoids seem to be molded from a biomimetic polymer-like material which can be programmed to assume human form, duplicating clothing, voice, and behavioural characteristics of the original subject. (In this respect, the synthoid concept is comparable to the cyborg T-1000 from the 1991 science fiction film Terminator 2: Judgment Day, but predating said movie by six years.) Created for deception and infiltration operations, synthoid units can superficially pass for genuine human beings, exhibiting intelligence and autonomous personality, albeit with loyalties ever acting in Cobra's interests. All synthoids are equipped with a self-destruct mechanism which can be remotely triggered to dissolve their bodies into the formless gray goo of their initial constitution—perhaps suggesting a conceptual origin in literary trappings of nanotechnology.
Cobra first used the synthoids to replace several G.I. Joe military commanders (including Duke, USS Flagg commander Admiral Ledger, Colonel Sharp, General Franks, and General Howe of the U.S. Air Force) in a plot to undermine the team’s fighting capability. With the synthoids posing as Congressional Budget Committee members, the faux commanders proceeded to issue budget cuts and imposed crippling supply restrictions, aiming to eventually disband the Joe Team. Although their resources were strained to desperation, the Joes eventually caught wind of Cobra’s plan and managed to deflate it, rescuing the real committee. As for the synthoids, the one impersonating Duke approached Cobra Commander and gave his identity; when the Commander impulsively decided to dissolve him to verify his identity, however, he initiated the function at far too high a setting, causing all of the synthoids to deactivate and exposing their presence in the U.S. military.
In the two-part episode "There’s No Place Like Springfield", Cobra employed synthoids en masse in a scheme to extract classified information from G.I. Joe team member Shipwreck, who had secret weapons knowledge imparted to him under hypnotic suggestion. Cobra manages to covertly capture Shipwreck, placing him under unknowing surveillance in a mock town peopled with synthoid duplicates of his acquaintances in the hope of coercing the secret information from him. This version was upgraded so that the mass of the synthoid could be reconstituted for repeated use. This was the last instance of synthoids appearing in the G.I. Joe cartoon.
In other media
The synthoid technology later resurfaced in another Sunbow-produced series, The Transformers. In the episode "Only Human", a terrorist named Snake—ostensibly an aging Cobra Commander, leader of Cobra—captures several Autobots and downloads their personalities from their robot form into synthoid bodies.
Synthoids were also seen in Batman Beyond, being artificial lifeforms featuring technical specifications very similar to those of the G.I. Joe counterparts. The most prominent synthoid of the show was Zeta (who also received his own spin-off show), an infiltration unit designed to seek and destroy specific people, and had the ability to holographically disguise himself as any individual he had seen, as well as create custom appearances through mixing physical traits of those individuals. In the show, the term "synthoid" was sometimes used interchangeably with "robot". Whether this usage is colloquial (and thus technologically erroneous) was not revealed.
Incidentally, apropos G.I. Joe, Batman Beyond also featured Kobra; a cult-like criminal organization with a costumed "prince" bearing semblances to Serpentor as depicted in Operation Dragonfire.
A similar technology was created in Kim Possible here called "synthodrone". While apparently created for use as soldiers, it is used for the purpose of distracting the titular character with her ideal boyfriend. Unlike previous examples the synthodrone seems to be an organic goo housed in a special humanoid sleeve, which when damaged by puncture shuts down.
An android technology similar to synthoids were in the pilot of the series Otherworld. The main characters (The Sterlings) find themselves in a different dimension and venture to a provence called "Sarlex" that is entirely inhabited by advanced androids that are indisinguishable from flesh and blood humans. The androids were built to mine a radioactive element called Sarlex as they are immune to the radiation and can trace their lineage back ages (suggested over 600 years ago) to a time when there was just one basic robot model. They were highly intelligent and became bored easily so they recreated themselves in the image of their masters the humans. This recreation became so exacting that they developed a humanlike culture that mimicked their human counterparts in grandiose detail. The synthoid populace lives life like ordinary flesh and blood humans, experiencing emotions, going to school, working jobs, living in houses and even eating meals regularly, they even have lifespans and death. As one of them tells the Sterlings they, are considered "plasmoid creations" so there is probably some part of them that is organic in nature, though they are linked to a greater control mainframe called the "Sarlicon Brain" that stores the collective memories of all the androids. When the human masters of the region wishes to know if an android has experienced anything pertainent to their investigations they perform a "memory audit" with handheld device that scans their internal memory unit and links to the Sarlicon Brain to search their collective memories and displays any relevant data. Though the synthoids could practice a measure of guile it was mentioned by one that they were encoded to tell the truth. They also dare not tamper with the Sarlicon Brain computer as getting caught would be a death sentence. It is unclear whether it is because of the nature of their relationship with humans or if there is some greater detail but there is little respect shown to them by humans. This coupled with the "memory audits" and the fact that they were instruments in which to mine a hazardous mineral makes them akin to a subjugated slave class. The control operations of the androids are maintained and monitored by a small staff that lives underground beneath the main town area of Sarlex due to the radiation of the mineral. There, human biomechanics maintain the bodies of damaged synthoids and monitor the Sarlicon Brain computer mainframe that stores their collective memories. If the mainframe is disconnected or destroyed the androids can still function as they have their individual memories on board constantly. There is also a location device that displays the active status of every synthoid in the provence as a light on a grid of many. One synthoid refers to this light as the representation of her soul. Whether this display is controlled by or independent of the mainframe. In addition to all this it is mentioned by one android that they couldn't cross the forbidden zone surrounding the provence, so perhaps there was some form of punative leash keeping them within the provence.
See also
- Android
- Cyborg
- Humanoid robot
- Nanomorph
- Batman Beyond (The Zeta Project)
- The Sentinel (video game)
- Vision (Marvel Comics)