WALL-E


Picture this. You begin looking at a piece of media on a screen. A classic, relaxing tune straight out of a 1950's nostalgia trip is playing on the screen. As the camera pans, you realise all is not as well as it seems when it hits you... why are these ''ruins'' here?!

Wait, don't you mean Fallout?


Fortunately, not this time. You're zooming in, not out. Finally you see a lone robot, cleaning up garbage and taking care of a pet cockroach, literally the last two things moving on the planet.

And at first you're, like, "How is this a kid's movie?" until it turns out the people aren't dead, they just... went on vacation, apparently... and "forgot" to come back. Or did they?

WALL-E in WALL-E


WALL-E, short for Waste Allocation Load Lifter: Earth Class, is one of the many products once sold by Buy'n'Large.

WALL-E in Glitch Techs x RP


WALL-E, short for Waste and Litter Loader Engine (instead of the acronym used in the movie because reasons) is one of the many products ever sold by Buy'n'Large. Think "you can buy a roomba at WalMart" if that sounds strange.

The WALL-E model was built to be a more affordable competitor to the Cyberdyne Systems Model 319. Sadly, the Urbanoid Incident also affected compatible devices such as the WALL-E units, though in the case of Cyberdyne Urbanoid-compatibles the ProgErr013 accidentally killed the battery of most WALL-E units due to an incorrectly "forced" voltage specified by the updated (corrupted) drivers that wiped out Quill-based Urbanoid-compatibles like the WALL-E.

A handful of Urbanoid-compatibles survive, as not all batteries were damaged. For the WALL-E series in particular, however, their rarity at the time (released two days before the Urbanoid Incident) means third-party replacement batteries are non-existent and first-party replacement parts have been entirely consumed. Tech Support and hobbyists could keep them functioning long after Buy'n'Large stopped producing the WALL-E, but to date the only remaining working example is Erwin's Wall-E.