Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Well, of all the fictional technology on TV, it turns out this stuff is real!
Although some fictional technology has come to pass, most onscreen science is still pure fiction.
It primarily focuses on future and fictional technology that inspires many movies we see today.
Equipment and weaponry is similarly varied, often incorporating various fictional technologies.
Warp Technology is fictional technology created within science fiction.
This episode introduces the fictional technology that allows preserved heads to be kept alive in jars.
These are fictional technologies unique to Sky Girls.
Unstable molecules are a piece of fictional technology featured in Marvel Comics.
Hyperspace travel is nevertheless a fictional technology.
The fictional technology of the Magneto drive uses the Earth's magnetic field to counteract gravity.
Fictional technology is proposed or described in many different contexts for many different reasons:
Several fictional technologies are utilized in the Robotech adaptation of three Japanese animated series.
Examples of such fictional technologies are:
Axlotl tanks are a fictional technology in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert.
Fictional technologies, or technologies only theoretically possible in the real world, are present in the Wildstorm Universe.
A significant piece of fictional technology that occupies nearly a third of the album, the Carreidas 160 is a prototype supersonic business jet.
Forge is a fictional technology created by D.A.D.O.
Although fictional technologies seems to carry no real-life significance, these technologies are referred to in almost all of the series of Universal Century.
In science fiction, such as the television series Star Trek, a fictional technology known as the "Force shield" is often used as a device.
Black Technology is a fictional technology in the Japanese light novel, manga and anime series Full Metal Panic!
Simulation of reality is currently a fictional technology, and non-fictional examples are limited to reality TV or computer simulations of specific events and situations.
Armacham Technology Corporation, a fictional technology developer in the video game F.E.A.R.
In these productions the Stargate functions as a plot generator, allowing the main characters to visit alien planets without the need for spaceships or any other fictional technology.
Star Trek: The Next Generation featured androids with "positronic brains" giving Asimov full credit for "inventing" this fictional technology.
The concept car utilizes fictional technology in addition to Nike technology that exists in their current products such as Nike Shox technology for the seat suspension.