Florence: Maybe. And maybe the only reason robots exist is to create the lifeform that comes after you. And when that lifeform asks, "where are your creators?", what do you plan to tell it?
Sawtooth: Probably something like "let's go meet the neighbors."
Florence: Better be careful. The moment humans find out they've become grand creators, they're going to spoil your kid rotten.
The act of creating life is a central part of many works. This goes for creating life in general and for intelligent life, biological or otherwise, in particular. The act can be portrayed in many ways.
- Animating Artifact
- Bioweapon Beast
- Born of Magic
- Creating Life Is Awesome
- Creating Life Is Bad
- Creating Life Is Unforeseen
- Creation Myth
- Creation Story
- Deity of Human Origin
- Frankenstein's Monster
- Golem (though sometimes they're more like robots)
- Minions Customized at Creation
Examples that fit squarely in one of these subtropes go on that page only.
The Frankenstein genre of this trope family usually fall squarely in the Creating Life Is Bad camp. Usually, but not always.
Note that this trope only comes into effect when creating new life in a manner other than the old-fashioned way; for that, see Pregnancy Tropes. For a downright archaic way, see Spontaneous Generation.
Super-Trope of Green Thumb (specific to plants).
Examples:
- Qrazy Chocolates:
- Several videos focus on entities known as "Subjects", which are created from bits and pieces of other animals instead of occurring naturally.
- The Chocolate Plankton are made from regular chocolate getting shocked by static electricity.
- Doraemon: A number of the titular robot cat's gadgets are capable of creating artificial life-forms.
- One of them, the Life Creation Kit, plays a key role in Doraemon: Nobita and the Birth of Japan when Nobita uses it to create three mythical "pets" for himself — a pegasus, a gryphon and an oriental dragon.
- In one story, Nobita operates a machine from the 22nd century, which Doraemon is about to send back, to craft a creature from simple items like soap and matches. The result is a baby with psychic abilities, who immediately turns hostile and tries to harm both Nobita and Shizuka. The story concludes with Doraemon using a stopwatch to reverse time, undoing the creation process and turning the baby back into the original ingredients. The 2005 anime adaptation alters the original story, particularly the ending, and expands upon it: the baby, which is now a Grey alien-like creature with small horns and called Newton, starts out aggressive. After Shizuka gives it milk that Nobita fetched, it becomes calmer, but still has a nasty habit of hitting Doraemon with a psychic hammer. Shizuka becomes like a mother to it. The friends take Newton to a library, where it starts to read books, and the episode concludes with Newton becoming more intelligent and teleporting off to seek out others with similar abilities.
- Fairy Tail: One of the most notorious things the Black Wizard Zeref is known for his creation of an entire race of demons that have wrecked havoc across the world for hundreds of years. It turns out Zeref perfected the art as both a method of creating something strong enough to kill him and as the latest in his attempts to raise the dead. The final result of said project, the ultimate demon and the reason he started down his path in the first place, is Natsu Dragneel, his revived younger brother.
- The main character of Gushing Over Magical Girls can imbue life into inanimate object with a strike of her wand, turning them into monsters to do her bidding.
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure:
- Battle Tendency: After becoming the Ultimate Lifeform, Kars demonstrates his new-found power by creating a tiny squirrel from his own hand, which proceeds to brutally devour a nearby soldier in seconds. With mastery over organic life, he can also have feathers thrown from his body and also transform them into piranhas.
- Golden Wind: Giorno Giovanna's Stand, Gold Experience, has the ability to create lifeforms out of nonliving objects. He's usually limited to only plants and small animals. He can also morph the lifeforms back into the original objects. His additional abilities are turning objects into functional flesh, up to whole organs and body parts, as well as sensing lifeforms in a certain area.
- Naruto: The Sage of the Six Paths possessed a godlike technique called the Creation of All Things, which can create a life out of nothing. It's actually a combination of Yin (creating something) and Yang (imbuing something with life) chakra releases. The Sage used this technique to divide the Ten Tails into the nine tailed beasts, all of whom have personality of their own despite originally being a mindless creature. Izanagi (a reality-warping Sharingan technique which allows the user to cheat death) is said to be a pale imitation of the Sage's technique.
- Tokyo Fears Rhapsody: Rodolphe Frankenstein is, as his name would suggest, a Mad Scientist focused on creating monsters. His goal is specifically to scare people, so he creates powerful, destructive frightening beasts to terrorize humanity.
- Fantastic Four (Lee & Kirby): Absolutely downplayed in issue #15. Reed Richards has created a unicellular form of life that lived for some seconds, in his free time... but let's not give it a second thought, because the police just informed about the villain of the week.
- In Doom Patrol (2016), Danny the Ambulance (formerly Danny the Street) has evolved from housing people to creating his own. He's even made a few superhumans.
- In How Luthor Met Superboy, young Lex Luthor manages to create an artificial, protoplasmic lifeform. However, his artificial being gets accidentally destroyed when Superboy puts out a fire consuming his laboratory, Lex convinces himself that Superboy ruined his discovery deliberately, and swears revenge.
Lex Luthor: Wouldn't Superboy be surprised if he knew I am on the verge of discovering the very secret of life itself?!! [...] It's alive! And formula created it... out of chemicals! It's crude protoplasm, but who knows what this stupendous experiment may lead to?!
- Ruin Value sees the small band of survivors creating more ponies to replace the people who died in The End of the World as We Know It. However, they are not meant to replace ponies; they're meant to replace humans.
- "Transition
" has Raven and Jinx gaining godlike power and experimenting with it. Jinx decides that Creating Life Is Bad after her first attempt didn't last very long while Raven thinks Creating Life Is Awesome.
- With Strings Attached: On a quest to restore monsters to Baravada, Brox discovers a spell that will transform inorganic items into living creatures. Later, Paul is unwillingly taught the spell. The "Legendary Life Spell" turns out to be a valuable trade good when the four return to C'hou in The Keys Stand Alone: The Soft World, so Paul casts it a few times to make sure he remembers how, then dumps the resultant little creations into the sewer to (hopefully) thrive there. Also, simply mentioning it intrigues the skahs enough that they actually have a long conversation with the four.
- Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence has an intro sequence detailing the semi-organic creation of a cybernetic organism.
- Spirited Away: If Kamaji's words (when scolding the sprites for refusing to work) are any indication, the sprites were originally created from lifeless lumps of coal.
- Revenge of the Sith: Chancellor Palpatine makes a claim that the Sith Lord Darth Plagueis had the ability to create life.
- Black Legion: Fabious Bile creates dozens upon dozens of forms of life, mostly fusions of xeno, human and daemonic. His crowning achievement is successfully cloning the Primarchs themselves.
- A Certain Magical Index: Magicians are able to conjure living, intelligent beings (though they typically have fairly short lifespans). The act of creating a magical life form is treated as morally neutral. However, the practice has become unpopular among magicians in the modern age because, all things considered, making a nonsentient magical item to increase your own power is simpler and more convenient than creating a servant.
- The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant: The ur-viles and waynhim were artificial living beings created by the Demondim, who were themselves created by the Viles. Their motivations for doing so are explained in detail in the Last Chronicles — the Viles (incorporeal spirits) were manipulated into self-loathing by Lord Foul, and so determined to create the Demondim to be something totally different from themselves (undead beings). The Demondim in turn inherited their progenitors self-loathing, and decided to create creatures entirely different from themselves, with the result being ur-viles and waynhim (corporeal living beings). The two races are physically almost identical, but took radically different approaches to dealing with their artificial nature, something about themselves which they found repellant — the waynhim dedicated themselves to the service of the Land and its people, while the ur-viles teamed up with Lord Foul and dedicated themselves to sharing their misery with the rest of the world (in the hopes that if they did well enough, Foul would destroy them). However, after Foul's defeat in the First Chronicles, the ur-viles decided that this was a poor strategy, and became Wild Cards (in the Second Chronicles) and eventually allies (in the Third).
- Earth's Scariest Monsters!: Dr. Victor Stein constructs the Frankenstein's Monster Frankenstorm from the stolen body parts of dead criminals and later brings him to life using lightning.
- Frankenstein: It is left ambiguous whether creating the creature was actually a bad thing or not. The creature suffers (and subsequently causes suffering to his creator), not because it was created but because the creator abandoned it afterwards. The story can be read in many ways. Is Doctor Frankenstein a bad scientist (who did a bad experiment), a bad father (who abandoned the son he had created), or a bad God (who cast out his creation at first provocation, just like God of The Bible, but unlike God of The Qur'an, who instead forgave Adam and sent him out as a prophet rather than an outcast)? Well, that's something you'll just have to decide for yourself. Most re-tellings of the story will make the choice for you, however, by simply declaring that Science Is Bad, period, and putting Always Chaotic Evil stamps all over the place.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: An alien civilization created at least one sentient supercomputer, Deep Thought, for the purpose of answering philosophical questions regarding the meaning of life, the universe and everything.
- Manifestation: Tock uses her power to animate two toys, after dreaming about doing this with figures made from wood. She's delighted, and thinks of the two as her children.
- Overlord (2012): The main reason why the guardians (formerly player-customized NPCs) are so loyal to Ainz as the last remaining member of the guild is that they refer to the other guild members as their creators. Technically this is true, but it was done through a game mechanic to set their physical and mental attributes, the players never thought of it as creating life. Ainz has no more clue as to why the guardians became sentient beings as to how he ended up incarnated into his game character. One of his last acts as a player was to jokingly rewrite a core aspect of a guardian's personality, and they believe he still has this level of power.
- The Shambling Guides: Zoëtists are humans who can create living things, like zombies, golems or constructs.
- In Stephen Baxter's Titan, NASA ends up doing this. After Earth experienced a Class 6 extinction thanks to humanity, the crew on Saturn's moon Titan, the last humans left, drop a tube of bacteria before their death. Those bacteria develop into insect-like life and escape out of the solar system when the sun explodes — like what NASA is supposed to do. Stephen Baxter has gotten quite a lot of flare for this.
- Worlds of Shadow: Shadow created many monsters and homunculi with magic to serve her.
- In Nomine: One of Eli's attunements, Transubstantiation, allows the transformation of basic material into a more complex organic ones. On the lower end, a basic liquid like water or ammonia might be made into a complex organic mixture like blood or wine. At the higher end, inert matter like glass, sand or soil can be turned into an equivalent amount a "simple organic pattern" such as living insects or fish.
- Space 1889 has artificial life as a possible invention. It is unexpectedly undramatic and is described as having applications for agriculture and simple labour.
- Evolve Idle: Evolve from primordial ooze to a fully sapient race that grows and evolves and advances technologically. Eventually (likely after a few MAD resets) the player's race can build a bioseeder ship to seed a new planet with life of their design to leave behind a lasting legacy.
- This forms the very core of the Geneforge series. Shaping is a branch of magic based entirely on creating and altering life, and the majority of the known lands are ruled over those with the knowledge to Shape, known as the Shapers. As the player, you too have the ability to Shape, creating new party members with more and more creation types opening up as you expand your Shaping skills.
- Luminous Arc 2: The reason Mage Queen Elicia was cast to Arthania is because she attempted to create life to replace the children that she couldn't save while she was working as a nurse.
- Pokémon: Several species of Pokémon were artificially created by humans.
- The Porygon line are Artificial Intelligence created to do a number of tasks. (Which they don't do very well)
- Mewtwo is an altered clone of Mew.
- Castform were engineered to help forecast the weather.
- The Golett Line were made by an ancient society to be their protectors.
- Faba genetically engineered Type: Null to be the ultimate weapon against Ultra Beasts.
- In Quest for Glory IV and Quest for Glory V, scientists create life, Frankenstein style. While the ones in the fifth game falls squarely in the traditional Creating Life Is Bad camp, the one in the fourth game is portrayed as morally neutral. Trying to do the right thing in ways that are sometimes misguided but not overly so.
- Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri: Your civilization will create intelligent life (unless you actively avoid those tech trees), and this is not part of the characterization of your faction. You may be awesome or horrible, honest or hypocrite, religious or unproblematically secular... In either case, you will create sentient life.
- SimLife is all about creating life. The player plays the role of Gaia herself, guiding the force of evolution from single cell organisms to various kinds of civilizations.
- Skully has the titular character, a skull bestowed life by an elemental wizard named Terry.
- Spore takes the concept of Sim Life and gives it a personal touch, allowing players to literally create life in all sorts of weird and wonderful forms, both recognisable and completely eldritch in nature, with all created creatures procedurally animated and usable in game. Seemingly fitting, given that it was originally called Sim Everything.
- Parodied in The Demented Cartoon Movie!: whenever a Romeo or Damsel in Distress dies, they just take out the Auto Romeo/Generic Damsel Maker, press a Big Red Button, and poof, a new Blah!
- DSBT InsaniT: Koden was created by two robots in a factory, as explained in the Special Info Episode.
- Paranormal High School: The newspaper club's advisor reveals this is his unique ability, as shown when he gets into a fight with his car's GPS that he brought to life while he was bringing Hikaru home from a basketball game he was reporting on.
- Charby the Vampirate: Hex and Zeno create Remote Beast out of dead cats and dogs and other things.
- Devil's Candy starts when Kazu creates a living, breathing girl for his biology project.
- In Earthsong (Crystal Yates), planets are sentient and create sentient lifeforms out of the stuff of their cores to populate the surface with "children". The first creation, an "Eve", is awake and sentient immediately after formation and helps the planet in guiding the new people.
- Played for Laughs in El Goonish Shive: "Our goo kinda came to life..." Not so played for laughs when the goo is later revealed to be a monster sent on purpose from an Alternate Universe. Also, in a filler strip
, soap bubbles come to life as Pac-Man-like critters... and promptly attack Tedd.
- Follower: The Chio are a new species created by the U.S. military for use as soldiers.
- Discussion of this and its logical consequences is one of the central themes in Freefall. One comic
has two characters (a terraforming robot and a bio-engineered sapient wolf) take the discussion to the next level, discussing the purpose of life.
- Tower of God: Two characters have the ability to create life, especially intelligent life. One is the sage and blacksmith Macseth, who created one of the three Rulers and his four sons, the other is Enryu, a legendary and rarely seen existence within the Tower.
- Doctor Whooves Adventures has its Doctor, at an unspecified time and place, rescue a filly from a robot that apparently created her to study life.
- Epic NPC Man: "Crafting" spoofs crafting in video games by having a female player crafts an infant from a skull and a potion made of Honeywood flower.
Female player: I don't need no man!
- In Mage Life, it is possible for someone of sufficient knowledge to create feeling, thinking life.
- This is common practice in Twig, since a great mind (implied to be Mary Shelley) unlocked the secrets of genetic manipulation in the early nineteenth century and radically altered the course of history. Helen, one of the main members of the Lambsbridge Gang, was created artificially by being grown in a vat.
- Nilbog, a background villain in Worm, has this as his superpower, being capable of generating bizarre new life. He uses these to kill everyone in his hometown and take it over, where he creates a fantasy kingdom, which the government avoids destroying because he's created monsters that replicate when exposed to fire and they're terrified of what he could do with nuclear weaponry.
- Adventure Time:
- Princess Bubblegum invokes this trope when she tries to create an heir to the kingdom. Despite her mild intentions, her son Lemongrab basically ends up as a brain-damaged stress-case with anger management issues and an inability to read social cues. Although he's not evil, she refers to him as a failed experiment because of his serious mental issues. However, she doesn't seem very willing to treat him with any sort of respect or kindness, so the direct cause of all of his problems remains ambiguous.
- Lemongrab's creation was a complete and wonderful success compared to Princess Bubblegum's next one. Goliad started off as everything Lemongrab was not — mild-mannered, calm, eloquent, intelligent, polite, respectful, sane... But she was corrupted beyond repair, and took advantage of her God-like powers, trying to mind control everyone in the name of Social Darwinism, the weak bowing to the strong.
- However, Bubblegum did have one success: Stormo. Created out of Finn's strand of hair (while Goliad was created from one of PB's baby teeth), he was a griffin-like being who inherited Finn's heroic nature. Goliad offered the chance to rule together, but Stormo refused and locked himself in eternal psychic battle with his sister to protect everyone.
- Throughout the show's run it has been implied a few times that nearly all of the Candy Kingdom citizens were created by Princess Bubblegum and she views them at times as her children. It's eventually outright confirmed that this is true, and that the relatives she mentioned in the past were also created by her.
- Star vs. the Forces of Evil: In The Magic Book of Spells, which was released between the third and fourth seasons, we see Glossaryk's bucket list. One of the items is "create life", which is checked off. Below it is "create competent life", which is not checked off. In the fourth season, it is revealed that Glossaryk created all the members of the Magical High Commission. They view him as their father, but they rarely listen to him and have caused a lot of problems with their Black-and-White Morality.
Glossaryk: [to Meteora] Here's a free extra lesson for you — don't have children.
- Xavier: Renegade Angel: The episode "Weapons Grade Life" has a Child Prodigy create life against the wishes of his father.

