Transhuman Aliens: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|''We WAH like you ONCE but now we ah di-FER-ent... SAH-tain WEAK-nesses have been RE-moved.''|'''[[AcCENT Upon the Wrong SylLABle|A Sai-BAH-man]]''', '''''[[Doctor Who]]''''', "The Tenth Planet"}}
{{quote|''We WAH like you ONCE but now we ah di-FER-ent... SAH-tain WEAK-nesses have been RE-moved.''|'''[[AcCENT Upon the Wrong SylLABle|A Sai-BAH-man]]''', '''''[[Doctor Who]]''''', "The Tenth Planet"}}


Related to the [[Planet of the Apes Ending]], and sort of like [[Was Once a Man]] for an entire species, this is where a group of alien/future creatures (typically those encountered by normal humans) are revealed to be the [[Hollywood Evolution|future evolutionary path]] of humanity. These creatures are often monstrous in appearance and behavior and this idea generally has a strong element of [[Humans Are Bastards]]. Compare with [[Theyre Not Even Human]]; in this case, they are worse because they are. Note, that there are occasional instances of uplifted humans who having experienced [[The Singularity]] are benevolent and god-like.
Related to the [[Planet of the Apes Ending]], and sort of like [[Was Once a Man]] for an entire species, this is where a group of alien/future creatures (typically those encountered by normal humans) are revealed to be the [[Hollywood Evolution|future evolutionary path]] of humanity. These creatures are often monstrous in appearance and behavior and this idea generally has a strong element of [[Humans Are the Real Monsters]]. Compare with [[Not Even Human]]; in this case, they are worse because they are. Note, that there are occasional instances of uplifted humans who having experienced [[The Singularity]] are benevolent and [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien|god-like]].


Compare/contrast with [[Human All Along]] and [[Human Subspecies]]. Not to be confused with [[Ultraterrestrials]]. See also [[No Transhumanism Allowed]] and [[Transhuman]].
Compare/contrast with [[Human All Along]] and [[Human Subspecies]]. Not to be confused with [[Ultraterrestrials]]. See also [[No Transhumanism Allowed]] and [[Transhuman]].


{{examples}}
{{examples}}

== Anime and Manga ==
== Anime and Manga ==
* The Abh from [[Crest of the Stars]] and sequels. Engineered to be space explorers they have a third eye and some modifications to the brain so they can navigate better in three dimensions. Also longer life and adaptions to cope with extended periods of microgravity with periods of high acceleration since they were created before the in universe discovery of [[Faster-Than-Light Travel]] and [[Artificial Gravity]].
* The Abh from ''[[Crest of the Stars]]'' and sequels. Engineered to be space explorers they have a third eye and some modifications to the brain so they can navigate better in three dimensions. They also possess longer lifespans and adaptions to cope with extended periods of microgravity with periods of high acceleration since they were created before the in-universe discovery of [[Faster-Than-Light Travel]] and [[Artificial Gravity]].
* Possibly true at the end of ''[[Ergo Proxy]]'' {{spoiler|the Proxies were created by humans with the intent that they would make Earth habitable again. When this does occur at the end of the series, you see a bunch of spaceships descend from the sky intent on killing the human survivors from the domes. While the viewer isn't shown what they look like, they are alien invaders who were/are human- see ''Man After Man'' below}}
* Possibly true at the end of ''[[Ergo Proxy]]'': {{spoiler|The Proxies were created by humans with the intent that they would make Earth habitable again. When this does occur at the end of the series, you see a bunch of spaceships descend from the sky intent on killing the human survivors from the domes. While the viewer isn't shown what they look like, they are alien invaders who were/are human -- see ''Man After Man'' below}}



== Comic Books ==
== Comic Books ==
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* The many races of [[Marvel Comics]]' [[Micronauts|Microverse]] are all descended from a [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/earthswordinthestar.htm future humanity] which fled through time, space and dimensions to escape a genocidal war.
* The many races of [[Marvel Comics]]' [[Micronauts|Microverse]] are all descended from a [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/earthswordinthestar.htm future humanity] which fled through time, space and dimensions to escape a genocidal war.
* [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[The Books of Magic]]'' features a vision of a dying Earth where the surviving humans have evolved into tall, translucent-skinned hunter-gatherers with drastically reduced intelligence. Their bodies produce chlorophyll to help cope with the lack of nutrients left on the planet.
* [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[The Books of Magic]]'' features a vision of a dying Earth where the surviving humans have evolved into tall, translucent-skinned hunter-gatherers with drastically reduced intelligence. Their bodies produce chlorophyll to help cope with the lack of nutrients left on the planet.



== Film ==
== Film ==
* The robotic alien creatures at the end of ''[[A.I.: Artificial Intelligence]]'' are a rare positive example of this. Being robots with biological components in a world where humans are extinct, the implication is either they are robots who won the [[Robot War]] with evil humans or else uplifted humans who learned the error of their ways. In either case, they are a [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien]].
* The robotic alien creatures at the end of ''[[A.I.: Artificial Intelligence]]'' are a rare positive example of this. Being robots with biological components in a world where humans are extinct, the implication is either they are robots who won the [[Robot War]] with evil humans or else uplifted humans who learned the error of their ways. In either case, they are a [[Sufficiently Advanced Alien]].
* A borderline example in ''[[The Descent (film)|The Descent]]'' with the cave creatures who evolved from homo sapiens or an earlier ancestor.
* A borderline example in ''[[The Descent (film)|The Descent]]'' with the cave creatures who evolved from homo sapiens or an earlier ancestor.
* ''[[Pandorum]]'', the creatures are at first assumed to be aliens that somehow got aboard the ship. It's revealed {{spoiler|that they were humans that, like everyone on board, were exposed to an agent to accelerate their evolution and evolved to life on the ship.}}
* ''[[Pandorum]]'', the creatures are at first assumed to be aliens that somehow got aboard the ship. It's revealed {{spoiler|that they were humans that, like everyone on board, were exposed to an agent to accelerate their evolution and evolved to suit life on the ship.}}



== Literature ==
== Literature ==
* ''[[The Time Machine]]'' is an early example with the Morlocks and Eloi as future humans and neither presenting that pleasant an outcome for the species.
* ''[[The Time Machine]]'' is an early example with the Morlocks and Eloi as future humans and neither presenting that pleasant an outcome for the species.
* ''Man After Man'' is all about this in a heavily [[Humans Are Bastards]] way. Much of the book is about various genetically engineered species of humans all heavily dehumanized (and [[Crippling Overspecialization|cripplingly overspecialized]] to boot). The book ends with an alien species coming to earth and destroying all life on land. They are the evolved remnants of the humans who went into space at the beginning of the book.
* ''[[Man After Man]]'' is all about this in a heavily [[Humans Are the Real Monsters]] way. Much of the book is about various genetically-engineered species of humans all heavily dehumanized (and [[Crippling Overspecialization|cripplingly overspecialized]] to boot). The book ends with an alien species coming to earth and destroying all life on land. They are the evolved remnants of the humans who went into space at the beginning of the book.
* [[Isaac Asimov]]'s Solarians eventually genetically re-engineered themselves into a race of hermaphrodites with psychic powers in the name of their world's social code, opposing any physical contact between human beings.
* [[Isaac Asimov]]'s Solarians eventually genetically re-engineered themselves into a race of hermaphrodites with psychic powers in the name of their world's social code, opposing any physical contact between human beings.
* The [[Belisarius Series]] by [[David Drake]] and Eric Flint features in its backstory two opposing factions in a far-future war. One faction is made up of Transhuman Aliens, humans evolved or genetically engineered to live on alien worlds, some even evolving into gigantic [[Space Whale|Space Whales]]. Others scuttle about on crab-like legs that are modified ribs. The opposing faction fancies themselves the original, pure-blood humans, and [[Fantastic Racism|wants to wipe out]] all the evolved and engineered subspecies of humanity. Of course, this far in the future, they aren't recognizably human any more, either.
* The [[Belisarius Series]] by [[David Drake]] and Eric Flint features in its backstory two opposing factions in a far-future war. One faction is made up of transhuman aliens, humans evolved or genetically engineered to live on alien worlds, some even evolving into gigantic [[Space Whale]]s. Others scuttle about on crab-like legs that are modified ribs. The opposing faction fancies themselves the original, pure-blood humans, and [[Fantastic Racism|wants to wipe out]] all the evolved and engineered subspecies of humanity. Of course, this far in the future, they aren't recognizably human any more, either.
** More precisely, the [[Space Whale|Great Ones]] are so different as to be made of non-organic crystals and forcefields, but think like human beings; whereas the New Gods resembe impossibly perfect humans, but have lost all compassion for those not like themsleves to the point where they seem less human than the Great Ones. The ideology of the conflict is whether humanity should be defined by your mind or by your biology. This is why one faction is trying to alter the past into a meritocratic society, and the other into a caste-based eugenic society.
** More precisely, the [[Space Whale|Great Ones]] are so different as to be made of non-organic crystals and force fields, but think like human beings; whereas the New Gods resemble impossibly perfect humans, but have lost all compassion for those not like themselves to the point where they seem less human than the Great Ones. The core of their conflict is whether humanity should be defined by your mind or by your biology. This is why one faction is trying to alter the past into a meritocratic society, and the other into a caste-based eugenic society.
* The [[Miles Vorkosigan]] series has three examples in the Cetagandans, the "Quaddies", and the Betan Hermaphrodites. The Cetagandans are an [[Evilutionary Biologist]] race who are continually experimenting with genetics so as to "perfect" themselves. They still look human now but it's hard to say what the future holds for them. The Quaddies are a people specifically engineered for zero gravity with a second set of arms instead of legs. Normal humans shunned them so they fled and set up their own society after the invention of artificial gravity precluded any real need for their services. The Betan hermaphodites are described as "Betan egalitarinism gone mad" and are relatively normal except for the obvious. They're also a minority even on their home planet though they're much in demand as sex therapists.
* The ''[[Miles Vorkosigan]]'' series has three examples in the Cetagandans, the "Quaddies", and the Betan Hermaphrodites. The Cetagandans are an [[Evilutionary Biologist]] race who are continually experimenting with genetics so as to "perfect" themselves. They still look human now but it's hard to say what the future holds for them. The Quaddies are a people specifically-engineered for zero gravity with a second set of arms instead of legs. Normal humans shunned them so they fled and set up their own society after the invention of artificial gravity precluded any real need for their services. The Betan hermaphrodites are described as "Betan egalitarianism gone mad" and are relatively normal except for the obvious. They're also a minority even on their home planet though they're much in demand as sex therapists.
* A group of Sauron [[Super Soldiers]] of the [[CoDominium]] universe invade Haven. The natives blame everything from [[Space Pirates]] to supernatural monsters. Having the Saurons rule most of the planet for several centuries does nothing to clear up the matter for most people.
* A group of Sauron [[Super Soldiers]] of the ''[[CoDominium]]'' universe invade Haven. The natives blame everything from [[Space Pirates]] to supernatural monsters. Having the Saurons rule most of the planet for several centuries does nothing to clear up the matter for most people.
* Several ''[[Star Trek]]'' [[Expanded Universe]] novels have the crew meeting "aliens" who turn out to be heavily modified humans.
* Several ''[[Star Trek]]'' [[Expanded Universe]] novels have the crew meeting "aliens" who turn out to be heavily modified humans.
* The Homo Ludens in the [[Strugatsky Brothers]] ''[[The Time Wanderers]]'' are essentially {{spoiler|a select group of human beings that have [[Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence|ascended to a higher level of existence]] and left the Earth, having lost all interest in their old lives, friends and relatives, but also having promised to defend their lesser brethren if need be. They're benign, just rather detached}}.
* The Homo Ludens in the [[Strugatsky Brothers]]' ''[[The Time Wanderers]]'' are essentially {{spoiler|a select group of human beings that have [[Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence|ascended to a higher level of existence]] and left the Earth, having lost all interest in their old lives, friends and relatives, but also having promised to defend their lesser brethren if need be. They're benign, just rather detached}}.
* In ''Fall of Hyperion'', {{spoiler|the Ousters have modified their DNA to varying levels; the more extreme variants have massive wings and are capable of flying unassisted in space.}}
* In ''Fall of Hyperion'', {{spoiler|the Ousters have modified their DNA to varying levels; the more extreme variants have massive wings and are capable of flying unassisted in space.}}
* In ''[[Poul Anderson|The Avatar]]'', {{spoiler|the Others seen to fit this trope, and actually invite Caitlín to become one of them.}}
* In ''[[Poul Anderson|The Avatar]]'', {{spoiler|the Others seen to fit this trope, and actually invite Caitlín to become one of them.}}
* Lots and lots in [[Alastair Reynolds]] works, notably ''Revelation Space''. The Ultras vary from human-seeming to animated works of art; the Skyjacks are permanently adapted for life in space; the Stoners are heavily augmented humans who go so far as swapping sexes and appearances the way most people choose hairstyles - Zebra, in Chasm City, has horselike legs, zebra stripe skin pigmentation, a mohawk that runs all the way down her spine, horselike ''eyes'', and [[Gender Bender|hasn't always been female]]. Not that any of that gives the hero a moment's pause before bedding her. In Zima Blue, outside of the Revelation Space universe, an artist who appears to be a transhuman turns out to be {{spoiler|a pool-cleaning robot who developed sentience and modified itself repeatedly over the centuries.}}
* Lots and lots in [[Alastair Reynolds]]' works, notably ''Revelation Space''. The Ultras vary from human-seeming to animated works of art; the Skyjacks are permanently adapted for life in space; the Stoners are heavily augmented humans who go so far as swapping sexes and appearances the way most people choose hairstyles - Zebra, in Chasm City, has horselike legs, zebra stripe skin pigmentation, a mohawk that runs all the way down her spine, horselike ''eyes'', and [[Gender Bender|hasn't always been female]]. Not that any of that gives the hero a moment's pause before bedding her. In Zima Blue, outside of the Revelation Space universe, an artist who appears to be a transhuman turns out to be {{spoiler|a pool-cleaning robot who developed sentience and modified itself repeatedly over the centuries.}}
** Even more so in ''House of Suns'', where we have a galaxy of staggeringly diverse beings, from sea-life to giant space-dwellers to semi-sentient weather, all of which are in fact evolved or modified human stock. The only reason the central characters are remotely recognizable as human comes of their spending the eons since the original diaspora flitting around at relativistic speeds and thus have passed much less subjective time in the meanwhile.
** Even more so in ''House of Suns'', where we have a galaxy of staggeringly diverse beings, from sea-life to giant space-dwellers to semi-sentient weather, all of which are in fact evolved or modified human stock. The only reason the central characters are remotely recognizable as human comes of their spending the eons since the original diaspora flitting around at relativistic speeds and thus have passed much less subjective time in the meanwhile.
* In [[Jack Vance]]'s 1962 story, ''[[Literature/The Dragon Masters|The Dragon Masters]]'', a human colony is plagued by alien kidnappers. After fighting back and taking captives, the story shifts ahead many years, and the captive aliens have been bred into [[Our Dragons Are Different|Dragons of many breeds with many purposes]]. When the alien slavers return, its revealed that they have [[Body Horror|done the same with their human captives.]]
* In [[Jack Vance]]'s 1962 story "[[The Dragon Masters]]", a human colony is plagued by alien kidnappers. After fighting back and taking captives, the story shifts ahead many years, and the captive aliens have been bred into [[Our Dragons Are Different|Dragons of many breeds with many purposes]]. When the alien slavers return, its revealed that they have [[Body Horror|done the same with their human captives.]]



== Live-Action TV ==
== Live-Action TV ==
* Lots of examples in ''[[Doctor Who]]''
* Lots of examples in ''[[Doctor Who]]''
** [[Cybernetics Eat Your Soul|The Cybermen]] from the page quote are not technically humans, but a nearly-identical humanoid race from Earth's long-lost twin planet Mondas, though there was an alternate universe where the Cybermen were indeed humans. Regardless they often forceably convert regular humans into more Cybermen, and presumably other humanoid species, so at least some members of the Cyber-Race fit this trope perfectly.
** [[Cybernetics Eat Your Soul|The Cybermen]] from the page quote are not technically humans, but a nearly-identical humanoid race from Earth's long-lost twin planet Mondas, though there was an alternate universe where the Cybermen were indeed humans. Regardless they often forceably convert regular humans into more Cybermen, and presumably other humanoid species, so at least some members of the Cyber-Race fit this trope perfectly.
** In the episodes with John Simm's Master, his minions, the "Toclaphane" are refugees from a decayed far future. They are a race of cheerful psychopaths which normally look like flying silver basketballs. Inside these "balls" are [[Brain In a Jar|human heads]], revealing their true species.
** In the episodes with John Simm's Master, his minions, the "Toclaphane" are refugees from a decayed far future. They are a race of cheerful psychopaths which normally look like flying silver basketballs. Inside these "balls" are [[Brain In a Jar|human heads]], revealing their true species.
** ''[[Doctor Who]]'' also had Daleks that were partially built from human DNA in "The Parting of the Ways" as well as a human being converted into a human-Dalek hybrid in "Daleks in Manhattan/ Evolution of The Daleks".
** ''[[Doctor Who]]'' also had Daleks that were partially built from human DNA in "The Parting of the Ways" as well as a human being converted into a human-Dalek hybrid in "Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of The Daleks".
* Nietzscheans and the Castalian fish-people from ''[[Andromeda]]''. Nietzscheans are humans genetically engineered to be superior [[Ubermensch|Ubermenschen]] by a literal [[Nietzsche Wannabe]] [[Mad Scientist]] a thousand years or so before the events of the series. They can eat almost anything organic, have nanobot-enhanced immune systems, and [[Spikes of Doom|bone spikes]] growing out of their forearms (in addition to the usual [[Super Strength]] and other enhanced physical abilities). The Castalians are humans genetically engineered with gills to live underwater and breathe water rather than air. They've got nifty water-tank backpacks with tubes to their neck gills for when they have to come out of the water to meet others. Nietzscheans are pretty much neutral, Castalians generally fairly good guys, although they've done some nasty things to survive in the [[Crapsack World]] after the fall of the [[The Federation|the Commonwealth]].
* Nietzscheans and the Castalian fish-people from ''[[Andromeda]]''. Nietzscheans are humans genetically engineered to be superior [[Ubermensch]]en by a literal [[Nietzsche Wannabe]] [[Mad Scientist]] a thousand years or so before the events of the series. They can eat almost anything organic, have nanobot-enhanced immune systems, and [[Spikes of Doom|bone spikes]] growing out of their forearms (in addition to the usual [[Super Strength]] and other enhanced physical abilities). The Castalians are humans genetically engineered with gills to live underwater and breathe water rather than air. They've got nifty water-tank backpacks with tubes to their neck gills for when they have to come out of the water to meet others. Nietzscheans are pretty much neutral, Castalians generally fairly good guys, although they've done some nasty things to survive in the [[Crapsack World]] after the fall of the [[The Federation|the Commonwealth]].
** There are a few less obvious examples. For example, Dylan's enhanced strength ans a few other traits are due to his mother being a high gravity worlder. Becca has a number of enhancements such as enhanced reaction time that make her a better spacer (and were reverse-engineered by the time-traveling creator of the Nietzcheans). The crew had only one un-altered human (until they started to get a bigger crew in later seasons), and it was mentioned a few times that more than 80% of humans have some kind of engineered genetics.
** There are a few less obvious examples. For example, Dylan's enhanced strength ans a few other traits are due to his mother being a high gravity worlder. Becca has a number of enhancements such as enhanced reaction time that make her a better spacer (and were reverse-engineered by the time-traveling creator of the Nietzcheans). The crew had only one un-altered human (until they started to get a bigger crew in later seasons), and it was mentioned a few times that more than 80% of humans have some kind of engineered genetics.
* ''[[Babylon 5]]'' season 4 finale, "Deconstruction of Falling Stars" had a human from a million years into the future revealed as a trans-human [[Energy Being]] that uses an encounter suit much like the Vorlons earlier in the series did.
* "Deconstruction of Falling Stars", the season 4 finale of ''[[Babylon 5]]'', had a human from a million years into the future revealed as a trans-human [[Energy Being]] who uses an encounter suit much like the Vorlons earlier in the series did.
** Jason Ironheart becomes one after an experiment at creating telekinetics turns him into an [[Energy Being]].
** Jason Ironheart becomes one after an experiment at creating telekinetics turns him into an [[Energy Being]].
* The third season ''[[Blake's Seven]]'' episode "Moloch" featured one of these, although it was [[Justified Trope]], more or less, since said being was the result of a computer simulation made flesh by an [[Applied Phlebotinum|ultra-sophisticated replicator]].
* The third season ''[[Blake's 7]]'' episode "Moloch" featured one of these, although it was [[Justified Trope]], more or less, since said being was the result of a computer simulation made flesh by an [[Applied Phlebotinum|ultra-sophisticated replicator]].
* It's suggested (the crew can't really go look; finding Earth is one of the series' goals, though hardly ever really worked toward) that humanity is extinct in ''[[Red Dwarf]]'' due to the 3 million year difference between when Lister left Earth and the current time frame. They don't really know what happened, but in the first episode it is suggested that if 3 million years could turn a house cat into Felis Sapien, Lister compared to "modern" humanity might as well be the slime that crawled out of the primordial sea.
* It's suggested (the crew can't really go look; finding Earth is one of the series' goals, though hardly ever really worked toward) that humanity is extinct in ''[[Red Dwarf]]'' due to the 3 million year difference between when Lister left Earth and the current time frame. They don't really know what happened, but in the first episode it is suggested that if 3 million years could turn a house cat into Felis Sapien, Lister compared to "modern" humanity might as well be the slime that crawled out of the primordial sea.
** The various species of GELFs (Genetically Engineered Life Forms) the crew encounters are all of human creation, but they serve very much the same role in the plots that aliens would in a more conventional space opera.
** The various species of GELFs (Genetically Engineered Life Forms) the crew encounters are all of human creation, but they serve very much the same role in the plots that aliens would in a more conventional space opera.
** Basically, ''every'' "alien" in [[Red Dwarf]] is a human creation, fast-forwarded three million years. Many shows have [[The Precursors]]; here, we're it.
** Basically, ''every'' "alien" in ''[[Red Dwarf]]'' is a human creation, fast-forwarded three million years. Many shows have [[The Precursors]]; here, we're it.
* The ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise]]'' episode "Terra Nova" has the Enterprise encounter a colony wiped out by radiation, and an [[Aliens Speaking English|English-speaking]] primitive group of underground-dwelling bumpy-skinned humanoids, all under a certain age. Guess what, they're {{spoiler|the surviving kids and their descendants, having been hidden away in a shelter when their parents died}}. Why the Enterprise crew don't make the connection sooner is [[Idiot Ball|just par for the course]] for that series.
* The ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise]]'' episode "Terra Nova" has the Enterprise encounter a colony wiped out by radiation, and an [[Aliens Speaking English|English-speaking]] primitive group of underground-dwelling bumpy-skinned humanoids, all under a certain age. Guess what, they're {{spoiler|the surviving kids and their descendants, having been hidden away in a shelter when their parents died}}. Why the Enterprise crew don't make the connection sooner is [[Idiot Ball|just par for the course]] for that series.
** [[Star Trek: The Next Generation]] [[Inverted Trope]] this trope {{spoiler|when it was revealed that ALL humanoid species, including humans themselves, were descended from ancient humanoids that thrived billions of years ago. The first humanoids had explored the galaxy and found [[Absent Aliens|no beings like themselves]].}}
** ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' [[Inverted Trope|inverted]] this trope {{spoiler|when it was revealed that ''all'' humanoid species, including humans themselves, were descended from ancient humanoids that thrived billions of years ago. The first humanoids had explored the galaxy and found [[Absent Aliens|no beings like themselves]].}}
* The "ascended beings" in [[Stargate SG-1]] - at least, the ones who were human before they ascended.
* The "ascended beings" in ''[[Stargate SG-1]]'' - at least, the ones who were human before they ascended.
* An episode of ''[[The Outer Limits]]'' has a group of college students board an ancient alien starship. When they land, they find a skeleton of a human-like figure with bat wings, which they assume to belong to the aliens who sent the ship. Then it is revealed that the planet is [[Planet of the Apes Ending|actually Earth in the future]], meaning the skeleton belongs to a human who has either evolved or has been genetically modified to have wings.
* An episode of ''[[The Outer Limits]]'' has a group of college students board an ancient alien starship. When they land, they find a skeleton of a human-like figure with bat wings, which they assume to belong to the aliens who sent the ship. Then it is revealed that the planet is [[Planet of the Apes Ending|actually Earth in the future]], meaning the skeleton belongs to a human who has either evolved or has been genetically modified to have wings.
* {{spoiler|The Observers}} of [[Fringe]] are revealed to be this, albeit coming from one possible future of humanity. Using their unique mastery of time, they are free to interact with the past (including our present).
* {{spoiler|The Observers}} of ''[[Fringe]]'' are revealed to be this, albeit coming from one possible future of humanity. Using their unique mastery of time, they are free to interact with the past (including our present).



== Tabletop Games ==
== Tabletop Games ==
* Some role-playing-games use the term "Evolutionary Offshoots" for such creatures
* Some role-playing-games use the term "Evolutionary Offshoots" for such creatures
* The Therians from AT-43. They're more Well-Intentioned Extremists than villains, as they're the descendants of humanity, but found that the universe would collapse in a trillion years in its current state. To prevent this, they seeded worlds with life which would strip their homeworlds of resources, allowing their conversion into a gigantic Dyson sphere. All the other factions in the series were seeded by them.
* The Therians from ''AT-43''. They're more [[Well-Intentioned Extremist]]s than villains, as they're the descendants of humanity, but found that the universe would collapse in a trillion years in its current state. To prevent this, they seeded worlds with life which would strip their homeworlds of resources, allowing their conversion into a gigantic Dyson sphere. All the other factions in the series were seeded by them.
** [[Sliding Scale of Silliness Versus Seriousness|As is befitting AT-43]], they are also huge nerds. The [[MMORPG]] is the basis for their society, and [[Fora|forums]] are considered cities.
** [[Sliding Scale of Silliness Versus Seriousness|As is befitting ''AT-43'']], they are also huge nerds. The [[Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game|MMORPG]] is the basis for their society, and [[Fora|forums]] are considered cities.
* "Transhumanity" in ''[[Eclipse Phase]]'' is ''mostly'' composed of humanity and its descendants, though except for flats, almost everyone is genetically enhanced to some degree and virtually immortal. It also includes uplifted animals and [[A Is]] though, who are not that different from humanity anymore (and can slip into each other's bodies).
* "Transhumanity" in ''[[Eclipse Phase]]'' is ''mostly'' composed of humanity and its descendants, though except for flats, almost everyone is genetically enhanced to some degree and virtually immortal. It also includes uplifted animals and [[A Is]] though, who are not that different from humanity anymore (and can slip into each other's bodies).
* An early ''Dragon'' article for the ''[[Gamma World]]'' RPG (several editions ago, and [[Retcon|no longer canonical]]) justified the unrealistic physical hardiness of its "pure strain humans" by revealing that they're descended from genetically-engineered superhumans. Untampered humans' descendants are all mutants; "pure strains" only ''think'' they're the original human type because they closely resemble the humans in ancient pictures.
* An early ''Dragon'' article for the ''[[Gamma World]]'' RPG (several editions ago, and [[Retcon|no longer canonical]]) justified the unrealistic physical hardiness of its "pure strain humans" by revealing that they're descended from genetically-engineered superhumans. Untampered humans' descendants are all mutants; "pure strains" only ''think'' they're the original human type because they closely resemble the humans in ancient pictures.
* ''[[Continuum (game)|Continuum]]'' plays this a number of ways- every Spanner, whether Continuum or Narcissist has been at least partially uplifted by future technology to give them the ability to [[Time Travel]]. Aquarian humans from after 2222 AD or so are benevolent, slightly weird telepaths (and get weirder the further Up you go) as a result of the same sets of technology, while past 2400 the world belongs to the Exalted and the [[The Greys|Inheritors]]. The Inheritors have apparently managed to colonise and fill the rest of the universe, so a portion of UFO sightings are spotting them taking a break en route to their colonies in the Earth's past (the rest are spotting them [[Set Right What Once Went Wrong|cleaning up someone's attempt to mess with causality and cause vigintillions of Inheritors to never have existed]]). The monstrous side of the trope is played straight by {{spoiler|[[Eldritch Abomination|the Scorpiod Kings of Antedesertium]] who all started out as ''human'' Narcissists}}.
* ''[[Continuum (game)|Continuum]]'' plays this a number of ways -- every Spanner, whether Continuum or Narcissist has been at least partially uplifted by future technology to give them the ability to [[Time Travel]]. Aquarian humans from after 2222 AD or so are benevolent, slightly weird telepaths (and get weirder the further Up you go) as a result of the same sets of technology, while past 2400 the world belongs to the Exalted and the [[The Greys|Inheritors]]. The Inheritors have apparently managed to colonise and fill the rest of the universe, so a portion of UFO sightings are spotting them taking a break en route to their colonies in the Earth's past (the rest are spotting them [[Set Right What Once Went Wrong|cleaning up someone's attempt to mess with causality and cause vigintillions of Inheritors to never have existed]]). The monstrous side of the trope is played straight by {{spoiler|[[Eldritch Abomination|the Scorpiod Kings of Antedesertium]] who all started out as ''human'' Narcissists}}.



== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==
* The Abh from ''[[Crest of the Stars]]'' and the Androsynth from ''[[Star Control]]'' are both genetically engineered humans.
* The Abh from ''[[Crest of the Stars]]'' and the Androsynth from ''[[Star Control]]'' are both genetically engineered humans.
* The Veruni of ''[[Wild Arms 5]]'' are believed to be aliens by the inhabitants of the Filgaia they conquered. However, it later comes to light that centuries ago they fled Filgaia by spacecraft and then returned a few decades ago. However, their alternate path of evolution has made them unfit to survive on Filgaia and they are dying out.
* The Veruni of ''[[Wild ARMs 5]]'' are believed to be aliens by the inhabitants of the Filgaia they conquered. However, it later comes to light that centuries ago they fled Filgaia by spacecraft and then returned a few decades ago. However, their alternate path of evolution has made them unfit to survive on Filgaia and they are dying out.
** Also ''[[Wild Arms 1|Wild ARMs]]'', where the evil alien robots turn out to be robots from the future after mankind has replaced organic parts with machine parts.
** Also ''[[Wild ARMs 1|Wild ARMs]]'', where the evil alien robots turn out to be robots from the future after mankind has replaced organic parts with machine parts.
* [[Half-Life|Combine Overwatch]] soldiers are substantially modified humans touted as "transhuman" and the [[Evolutionary Levels|next stage]] in the human species' evolution, according to Dr. Breen, and are referred to by Dr Kleiner as the "post-human allies" of the Combine in one of his broadcasts. The [[Complete Monster|Combine]] will uplift you to the next stage of evolution ''whether you like it or not''.
* [[Half-Life|Combine Overwatch]] soldiers are substantially modified humans touted as "transhuman" and the [[Evolutionary Levels|next stage]] in the human species' evolution, according to Dr. Breen, and are referred to by Dr Kleiner as the "post-human allies" of the Combine in one of his broadcasts. The [[Complete Monster|Combine]] will uplift you to the next stage of evolution ''whether you like it or not''.
* [[Scary Dogmatic Aliens|The Rikti]] from ''[[City of Heroes]]'' are mutated humans from an [[Alternate Universe]]. They're disfigured to the point of being unrecognizable as human, but they also have [[Cursed with Awesome|advanced technology and]] [[Psychic Powers]].
* [[Scary Dogmatic Aliens|The Rikti]] from ''[[City of Heroes]]'' are mutated humans from an [[Alternate Universe]]. They're disfigured to the point of being unrecognizable as human, but they also have [[Cursed with Awesome|advanced technology and]] [[Psychic Powers]].
* Each of the three factions of the Korean MMO RF Online are this: The Bellato are short Heavy Worlders, the Cora are space elves with psychic powers, and the Accretians are cyborgs with Landmate-sized bodies.
* Each of the three factions of the Korean MMO ''RF Online'' are this: The Bellato are short Heavy Worlders, the Cora are space elves with psychic powers, and the Accretians are cyborgs with Landmate-sized bodies.
* Lunarians from [[Touhou]] were humans that moved to the earth in ancient times. They also have the most advanced technology in the series, live on the source of Gensokyo's magic, and include a pair of [[Mary Sue|Mary Sues]] that systematically defeat many of the main characters.
* Lunarians from ''[[Touhou]]'' were humans that moved to the earth in ancient times. They also have the most advanced technology in the series, live on the source of Gensokyo's magic, and include a pair of [[Mary Sue]]s that systematically defeat many of the main characters.
* The Omar in ''[[Deus Ex: Invisible War|Deus Ex Invisible War]]''.
* The Omar in ''[[Deus Ex: Invisible War]]''.
* {{spoiler|The Reapers}} in ''[[Mass Effect]]'', although {{spoiler|they're more along the lines of Trans''alien'' Aliens.}}
* {{spoiler|The Reapers}} in ''[[Mass Effect]]'', although {{spoiler|they're more along the lines of Trans''alien'' Aliens.}}
* {{spoiler|In ''[[Achron]]'' it is not stated outright, but can be inferred that the Vecgir are in fact the decendants of humanity that have been enslaved and modified by the Coremind in a loop that has been going on for millions of meta-years.}}
* {{spoiler|In ''[[Achron]]'' it is not stated outright, but can be inferred that the Vecgir are in fact the descendants of humanity that have been enslaved and modified by the Coremind in a loop that has been going on for millions of meta-years.}}



== Web Comics ==
== Web Comics ==
* The world of ''[[Drowtales]]'' contains both normal humans and "Rift Halmes", who have changed due to living underground.
* The world of ''[[Drowtales]]'' contains both normal humans and "Rift Halmes", who have changed due to living underground.
** Venusians in Triquetra Cats, using cybernetics and genetic manipulation to adapt themselves to Venus, humans from that planet end up looking like cyborg Grey Aliens
* Venusians in ''[[Triquetra Cats]]'', using cybernetics and genetic manipulation to adapt themselves to Venus, humans from that planet end up looking like cyborg Grey Aliens



== Web Original ==
== Web Original ==
* Many, many kinds of [[Transhuman Aliens]] in ''[[Orion's Arm]]''. Generally positive in portrayal.
* Many, many kinds of transhuman aliens in ''[[Orion's Arm]]''. Generally positive in portrayal.



== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* The Gobots from ''[[Challenge of the Go Bots]]'' are descended from [[Human Aliens]] rather than humans per se, but they're still a race of [[Cyborg|Cyborgs]].
* The Gobots from ''[[Challenge of the Go Bots]]'' are descended from [[Human Aliens]] rather than humans per se, but they're still a race of [[Cyborg]]s.
* In "End Sinister," the last episode of ''[[Aeon Flux]],'' {{spoiler|Aeon learns too late that the "aliens" are future humans, and that by killing them, she has exterminated the entire human race, except [[Adam and Eve Plot|for her and Trevor]].}}
* In "End Sinister," the last episode of ''[[Aeon Flux]],'' {{spoiler|Aeon learns too late that the "aliens" are future humans, and that by killing them, she has exterminated the entire human race, except [[Adam and Eve Plot|for her and Trevor]].}}


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Latest revision as of 12:53, 8 October 2020

We WAH like you ONCE but now we ah di-FER-ent... SAH-tain WEAK-nesses have been RE-moved.
A Sai-BAH-man, Doctor Who, "The Tenth Planet"

Related to the Planet of the Apes Ending, and sort of like Was Once a Man for an entire species, this is where a group of alien/future creatures (typically those encountered by normal humans) are revealed to be the future evolutionary path of humanity. These creatures are often monstrous in appearance and behavior and this idea generally has a strong element of Humans Are the Real Monsters. Compare with Not Even Human; in this case, they are worse because they are. Note, that there are occasional instances of uplifted humans who having experienced The Singularity are benevolent and god-like.

Compare/contrast with Human All Along and Human Subspecies. Not to be confused with Ultraterrestrials. See also No Transhumanism Allowed and Transhuman.

Examples of Transhuman Aliens include:

Anime and Manga

  • The Abh from Crest of the Stars and sequels. Engineered to be space explorers they have a third eye and some modifications to the brain so they can navigate better in three dimensions. They also possess longer lifespans and adaptions to cope with extended periods of microgravity with periods of high acceleration since they were created before the in-universe discovery of Faster-Than-Light Travel and Artificial Gravity.
  • Possibly true at the end of Ergo Proxy: The Proxies were created by humans with the intent that they would make Earth habitable again. When this does occur at the end of the series, you see a bunch of spaceships descend from the sky intent on killing the human survivors from the domes. While the viewer isn't shown what they look like, they are alien invaders who were/are human -- see Man After Man below

Comic Books

  • The Sheeda from Grant Morrison's Seven Soldiers series were a future posthuman species that robbed the past to support their resource-poor civilization.
  • The many races of Marvel Comics' Microverse are all descended from a future humanity which fled through time, space and dimensions to escape a genocidal war.
  • Neil Gaiman's The Books of Magic features a vision of a dying Earth where the surviving humans have evolved into tall, translucent-skinned hunter-gatherers with drastically reduced intelligence. Their bodies produce chlorophyll to help cope with the lack of nutrients left on the planet.

Film

  • The robotic alien creatures at the end of A.I.: Artificial Intelligence are a rare positive example of this. Being robots with biological components in a world where humans are extinct, the implication is either they are robots who won the Robot War with evil humans or else uplifted humans who learned the error of their ways. In either case, they are a Sufficiently Advanced Alien.
  • A borderline example in The Descent with the cave creatures who evolved from homo sapiens or an earlier ancestor.
  • Pandorum, the creatures are at first assumed to be aliens that somehow got aboard the ship. It's revealed that they were humans that, like everyone on board, were exposed to an agent to accelerate their evolution and evolved to suit life on the ship.

Literature

  • The Time Machine is an early example with the Morlocks and Eloi as future humans and neither presenting that pleasant an outcome for the species.
  • Man After Man is all about this in a heavily Humans Are the Real Monsters way. Much of the book is about various genetically-engineered species of humans all heavily dehumanized (and cripplingly overspecialized to boot). The book ends with an alien species coming to earth and destroying all life on land. They are the evolved remnants of the humans who went into space at the beginning of the book.
  • Isaac Asimov's Solarians eventually genetically re-engineered themselves into a race of hermaphrodites with psychic powers in the name of their world's social code, opposing any physical contact between human beings.
  • The Belisarius Series by David Drake and Eric Flint features in its backstory two opposing factions in a far-future war. One faction is made up of transhuman aliens, humans evolved or genetically engineered to live on alien worlds, some even evolving into gigantic Space Whales. Others scuttle about on crab-like legs that are modified ribs. The opposing faction fancies themselves the original, pure-blood humans, and wants to wipe out all the evolved and engineered subspecies of humanity. Of course, this far in the future, they aren't recognizably human any more, either.
    • More precisely, the Great Ones are so different as to be made of non-organic crystals and force fields, but think like human beings; whereas the New Gods resemble impossibly perfect humans, but have lost all compassion for those not like themselves to the point where they seem less human than the Great Ones. The core of their conflict is whether humanity should be defined by your mind or by your biology. This is why one faction is trying to alter the past into a meritocratic society, and the other into a caste-based eugenic society.
  • The Miles Vorkosigan series has three examples in the Cetagandans, the "Quaddies", and the Betan Hermaphrodites. The Cetagandans are an Evilutionary Biologist race who are continually experimenting with genetics so as to "perfect" themselves. They still look human now but it's hard to say what the future holds for them. The Quaddies are a people specifically-engineered for zero gravity with a second set of arms instead of legs. Normal humans shunned them so they fled and set up their own society after the invention of artificial gravity precluded any real need for their services. The Betan hermaphrodites are described as "Betan egalitarianism gone mad" and are relatively normal except for the obvious. They're also a minority even on their home planet though they're much in demand as sex therapists.
  • A group of Sauron Super Soldiers of the CoDominium universe invade Haven. The natives blame everything from Space Pirates to supernatural monsters. Having the Saurons rule most of the planet for several centuries does nothing to clear up the matter for most people.
  • Several Star Trek Expanded Universe novels have the crew meeting "aliens" who turn out to be heavily modified humans.
  • The Homo Ludens in the Strugatsky Brothers' The Time Wanderers are essentially a select group of human beings that have ascended to a higher level of existence and left the Earth, having lost all interest in their old lives, friends and relatives, but also having promised to defend their lesser brethren if need be. They're benign, just rather detached.
  • In Fall of Hyperion, the Ousters have modified their DNA to varying levels; the more extreme variants have massive wings and are capable of flying unassisted in space.
  • In The Avatar, the Others seen to fit this trope, and actually invite Caitlín to become one of them.
  • Lots and lots in Alastair Reynolds' works, notably Revelation Space. The Ultras vary from human-seeming to animated works of art; the Skyjacks are permanently adapted for life in space; the Stoners are heavily augmented humans who go so far as swapping sexes and appearances the way most people choose hairstyles - Zebra, in Chasm City, has horselike legs, zebra stripe skin pigmentation, a mohawk that runs all the way down her spine, horselike eyes, and hasn't always been female. Not that any of that gives the hero a moment's pause before bedding her. In Zima Blue, outside of the Revelation Space universe, an artist who appears to be a transhuman turns out to be a pool-cleaning robot who developed sentience and modified itself repeatedly over the centuries.
    • Even more so in House of Suns, where we have a galaxy of staggeringly diverse beings, from sea-life to giant space-dwellers to semi-sentient weather, all of which are in fact evolved or modified human stock. The only reason the central characters are remotely recognizable as human comes of their spending the eons since the original diaspora flitting around at relativistic speeds and thus have passed much less subjective time in the meanwhile.
  • In Jack Vance's 1962 story "The Dragon Masters", a human colony is plagued by alien kidnappers. After fighting back and taking captives, the story shifts ahead many years, and the captive aliens have been bred into Dragons of many breeds with many purposes. When the alien slavers return, its revealed that they have done the same with their human captives.

Live-Action TV

  • Lots of examples in Doctor Who
    • The Cybermen from the page quote are not technically humans, but a nearly-identical humanoid race from Earth's long-lost twin planet Mondas, though there was an alternate universe where the Cybermen were indeed humans. Regardless they often forceably convert regular humans into more Cybermen, and presumably other humanoid species, so at least some members of the Cyber-Race fit this trope perfectly.
    • In the episodes with John Simm's Master, his minions, the "Toclaphane" are refugees from a decayed far future. They are a race of cheerful psychopaths which normally look like flying silver basketballs. Inside these "balls" are human heads, revealing their true species.
    • Doctor Who also had Daleks that were partially built from human DNA in "The Parting of the Ways" as well as a human being converted into a human-Dalek hybrid in "Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of The Daleks".
  • Nietzscheans and the Castalian fish-people from Andromeda. Nietzscheans are humans genetically engineered to be superior Ubermenschen by a literal Nietzsche Wannabe Mad Scientist a thousand years or so before the events of the series. They can eat almost anything organic, have nanobot-enhanced immune systems, and bone spikes growing out of their forearms (in addition to the usual Super Strength and other enhanced physical abilities). The Castalians are humans genetically engineered with gills to live underwater and breathe water rather than air. They've got nifty water-tank backpacks with tubes to their neck gills for when they have to come out of the water to meet others. Nietzscheans are pretty much neutral, Castalians generally fairly good guys, although they've done some nasty things to survive in the Crapsack World after the fall of the the Commonwealth.
    • There are a few less obvious examples. For example, Dylan's enhanced strength ans a few other traits are due to his mother being a high gravity worlder. Becca has a number of enhancements such as enhanced reaction time that make her a better spacer (and were reverse-engineered by the time-traveling creator of the Nietzcheans). The crew had only one un-altered human (until they started to get a bigger crew in later seasons), and it was mentioned a few times that more than 80% of humans have some kind of engineered genetics.
  • "Deconstruction of Falling Stars", the season 4 finale of Babylon 5, had a human from a million years into the future revealed as a trans-human Energy Being who uses an encounter suit much like the Vorlons earlier in the series did.
    • Jason Ironheart becomes one after an experiment at creating telekinetics turns him into an Energy Being.
  • The third season Blake's 7 episode "Moloch" featured one of these, although it was Justified Trope, more or less, since said being was the result of a computer simulation made flesh by an ultra-sophisticated replicator.
  • It's suggested (the crew can't really go look; finding Earth is one of the series' goals, though hardly ever really worked toward) that humanity is extinct in Red Dwarf due to the 3 million year difference between when Lister left Earth and the current time frame. They don't really know what happened, but in the first episode it is suggested that if 3 million years could turn a house cat into Felis Sapien, Lister compared to "modern" humanity might as well be the slime that crawled out of the primordial sea.
    • The various species of GELFs (Genetically Engineered Life Forms) the crew encounters are all of human creation, but they serve very much the same role in the plots that aliens would in a more conventional space opera.
    • Basically, every "alien" in Red Dwarf is a human creation, fast-forwarded three million years. Many shows have The Precursors; here, we're it.
  • The Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Terra Nova" has the Enterprise encounter a colony wiped out by radiation, and an English-speaking primitive group of underground-dwelling bumpy-skinned humanoids, all under a certain age. Guess what, they're the surviving kids and their descendants, having been hidden away in a shelter when their parents died. Why the Enterprise crew don't make the connection sooner is just par for the course for that series.
  • The "ascended beings" in Stargate SG-1 - at least, the ones who were human before they ascended.
  • An episode of The Outer Limits has a group of college students board an ancient alien starship. When they land, they find a skeleton of a human-like figure with bat wings, which they assume to belong to the aliens who sent the ship. Then it is revealed that the planet is actually Earth in the future, meaning the skeleton belongs to a human who has either evolved or has been genetically modified to have wings.
  • The Observers of Fringe are revealed to be this, albeit coming from one possible future of humanity. Using their unique mastery of time, they are free to interact with the past (including our present).

Tabletop Games

  • Some role-playing-games use the term "Evolutionary Offshoots" for such creatures
  • The Therians from AT-43. They're more Well-Intentioned Extremists than villains, as they're the descendants of humanity, but found that the universe would collapse in a trillion years in its current state. To prevent this, they seeded worlds with life which would strip their homeworlds of resources, allowing their conversion into a gigantic Dyson sphere. All the other factions in the series were seeded by them.
  • "Transhumanity" in Eclipse Phase is mostly composed of humanity and its descendants, though except for flats, almost everyone is genetically enhanced to some degree and virtually immortal. It also includes uplifted animals and A Is though, who are not that different from humanity anymore (and can slip into each other's bodies).
  • An early Dragon article for the Gamma World RPG (several editions ago, and no longer canonical) justified the unrealistic physical hardiness of its "pure strain humans" by revealing that they're descended from genetically-engineered superhumans. Untampered humans' descendants are all mutants; "pure strains" only think they're the original human type because they closely resemble the humans in ancient pictures.
  • Continuum plays this a number of ways -- every Spanner, whether Continuum or Narcissist has been at least partially uplifted by future technology to give them the ability to Time Travel. Aquarian humans from after 2222 AD or so are benevolent, slightly weird telepaths (and get weirder the further Up you go) as a result of the same sets of technology, while past 2400 the world belongs to the Exalted and the Inheritors. The Inheritors have apparently managed to colonise and fill the rest of the universe, so a portion of UFO sightings are spotting them taking a break en route to their colonies in the Earth's past (the rest are spotting them cleaning up someone's attempt to mess with causality and cause vigintillions of Inheritors to never have existed). The monstrous side of the trope is played straight by the Scorpiod Kings of Antedesertium who all started out as human Narcissists.

Video Games

  • The Abh from Crest of the Stars and the Androsynth from Star Control are both genetically engineered humans.
  • The Veruni of Wild ARMs 5 are believed to be aliens by the inhabitants of the Filgaia they conquered. However, it later comes to light that centuries ago they fled Filgaia by spacecraft and then returned a few decades ago. However, their alternate path of evolution has made them unfit to survive on Filgaia and they are dying out.
    • Also Wild ARMs, where the evil alien robots turn out to be robots from the future after mankind has replaced organic parts with machine parts.
  • Combine Overwatch soldiers are substantially modified humans touted as "transhuman" and the next stage in the human species' evolution, according to Dr. Breen, and are referred to by Dr Kleiner as the "post-human allies" of the Combine in one of his broadcasts. The Combine will uplift you to the next stage of evolution whether you like it or not.
  • The Rikti from City of Heroes are mutated humans from an Alternate Universe. They're disfigured to the point of being unrecognizable as human, but they also have advanced technology and Psychic Powers.
  • Each of the three factions of the Korean MMO RF Online are this: The Bellato are short Heavy Worlders, the Cora are space elves with psychic powers, and the Accretians are cyborgs with Landmate-sized bodies.
  • Lunarians from Touhou were humans that moved to the earth in ancient times. They also have the most advanced technology in the series, live on the source of Gensokyo's magic, and include a pair of Mary Sues that systematically defeat many of the main characters.
  • The Omar in Deus Ex: Invisible War.
  • The Reapers in Mass Effect, although they're more along the lines of Transalien Aliens.
  • In Achron it is not stated outright, but can be inferred that the Vecgir are in fact the descendants of humanity that have been enslaved and modified by the Coremind in a loop that has been going on for millions of meta-years.

Web Comics

  • The world of Drowtales contains both normal humans and "Rift Halmes", who have changed due to living underground.
  • Venusians in Triquetra Cats, using cybernetics and genetic manipulation to adapt themselves to Venus, humans from that planet end up looking like cyborg Grey Aliens

Web Original

  • Many, many kinds of transhuman aliens in Orion's Arm. Generally positive in portrayal.

Western Animation