Roboticization
From Sonic Retro
Revision as of 16:42, 13 October 2019 by Black Squirrel (talk | contribs)
Concept
In the Japanese manual of Sonic the Hedgehog, it is explained that Dr. Eggman (Robotnik) has imprisioned Sonic's friends in robot shells in order to track down the Chaos Emeralds[1]. In the West, however, Robotnik is loosely established as capturing animals in order to make robots, either destroy Sonic and mechanise the planet mobius[2], or as the game's manual suggests, just because he's evil[3].
In most of the video games, the process of creating robots from animals is not named, however in the US television series produced by DiC (and the comic book series by Archie Comics) the process was known as "roboticization". Here, rather than just trapping animals in shells, the roboticization process causes flesh to turn into metal, essentially turning living beings into robots, robbed of their own free will and forced to serve Dr. Robotnik.
Several characters in the TV and comic book series are affected by the roboticization process, be it members of Sonic's family (such as Uncle Chuck who invented the device) or series regular Bunnie Rabbot who is partially roboticized. Much of the story involved stopping Robotnik and producing a de-roboticizer to undo the damage. Roboticization was also a focus in Sonic Underground, as well as other Western Sonic material, although Robotnik is usually depicted as more concerned with badnik production - capturing the citizens of Mobius to use as "organic batteries" for his robot army.
Video games
Roboticization is not thought to have ever been an official term when it was popularised by the TV shows and comics, and many later games see Robotnik or Eggman seek other methods of achieving his aims, such as waking ancient destructive creatures or producing planet-altering weaponry. Sonic the Hedgehog CD was the first game to not use captured animals as motivation, as the enemies in that game run on plants (the Game Gear and Master System games being discounted due to the technical limitations showning animals being freed from enemies).
The term is, however, used in Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood, where Tails discusses it in Mystic Ruins (Chapter 3), after defeating a squad of "Robodillos".