Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Neuro-Vault

 Neuro-Vault
type
FeatureClass
 Neuro-Vault
label
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault
page
NeuroVault
 Neuro-Vault
comment
You have vital data so dangerous that there must be absolutely no chance of it falling into the wrong hands. Where do you hide that data?
You bury it in someone's mind.
Burying data in a person's subconscious as a result of a post-hypnotic suggestion is a common MacGuffin in sci-fi and spy thrillers. Very often, the person will have no idea of what he's carrying around, usually by design. Also expect that the person will be someone you'd least suspect. Could be a child or a fool; it could even be the hero who was unaware that he was carrying what he sought all along. Frequently used to create the Manchurian Agent.
Compare the various amnesia tropes, such as Criminal Amnesiac and Easy Amnesia. See also Neural Implanting, another method by which this can be done, and also Memory Jar. Contrast Alternate Identity Amnesia.
May result in My Skull Runneth Over. This may be the result of a time delayed Exposition Beam. If you're doing it to yourself, it's usually part of a Memory Gambit.
 Neuro-Vault
fetched
2024-03-22T17:31:40Z
 Neuro-Vault
parsed
2024-03-22T17:31:40Z
 Neuro-Vault
processingComment
Dropped link to BigBad: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Neuro-Vault
processingComment
Dropped link to ColdBloodedTorture: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Neuro-Vault
processingComment
Dropped link to Fanon: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Neuro-Vault
processingComment
Dropped link to MidnightAtTheWellOfSouls: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Neuro-Vault
processingComment
Dropped link to TheMovie: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Neuro-Vault
processingUnknown
MidnightAtTheWellOfSouls
 Neuro-Vault
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Neuro-Vault / int_1c9c6853
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_1c9c6853
comment
Goal from Deponia stores some important codes along with her consciousness in her implant.
 Neuro-Vault / int_1c9c6853
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_1c9c6853
featureConfidence
1.0
 Deponia (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_1c9c6853
 Neuro-Vault / int_1f76648
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_1f76648
comment
Index Librorum Prohibitorum from A Certain Magical Index received her name from the fact that she was forced (using her photographic memory) to memorize 103,000 magical grimoires.
 Neuro-Vault / int_1f76648
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_1f76648
featureConfidence
1.0
 A Certain Magical Index
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_1f76648
 Neuro-Vault / int_222c2051
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_222c2051
comment
This is the whole premise of Chuck — the Intersect is an incredibly comprehensive espionage database so important that it can't be trusted to a computer (or, apparently, spread among many computers), so it's uploaded to the mind of a master-spy. Unless it should accidentally be uploaded into that master-spy's college roommate...
 Neuro-Vault / int_222c2051
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_222c2051
featureConfidence
1.0
 Chuck
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_222c2051
 Neuro-Vault / int_229ba2b8
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_229ba2b8
comment
Jake in the SNES Shadowrun game has some sensitive files in his head computer, which starts off locked until an attempt to repair it sets off a Cortex Bomb. This is, of course, perfectly normal within the confines of the Tabletop Game. It's implied that Jake did not undergo the procedure willingly, as a character met earlier on notes that the head computer and datajack are new additions, and as a shaman, he wouldn't be likely to add cyberware in the first place. Jake himself has complete amnesia, though.
 Neuro-Vault / int_229ba2b8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_229ba2b8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shadowrun (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_229ba2b8
 Neuro-Vault / int_28fe1376
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_28fe1376
comment
In Fringe, William Bell removed pieces of Walter's brain and put them into other people's brains in order to prevent information about how to get to the other universe from falling into the wrong hands.
 Neuro-Vault / int_28fe1376
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_28fe1376
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fringe
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_28fe1376
 Neuro-Vault / int_29085bdd
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_29085bdd
comment
In If This Goes On—, Lyle is told he has been given critical information that he has to get to La Résistance. When he gets there he is put under anesthesia to extract the information. He later asks one of the Resistance scientists what was the nature of the "really important" message. He is disappointed when he is told that it was just lots of routine information. The scientist realizes he made a mistake, the man did have very important information. He also had his resistance credentials, "If they hadn't checked out, you would never have woken up."
 Neuro-Vault / int_29085bdd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_29085bdd
featureConfidence
1.0
 If This Goes On—
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_29085bdd
 Neuro-Vault / int_2af4f467
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_2af4f467
comment
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero: In "There's No Place Like Springfield", plans for a deadly super-weapon are implanted into Shipwreck's head, and can only be retrieved if a certain code word is spoken to him. Cobra conducts an elaborate ruse to try and figure it out. Even then, the code turns out to be a code phrase ("Frogs in Wintertime").
 Neuro-Vault / int_2af4f467
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_2af4f467
featureConfidence
1.0
 G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_2af4f467
 Neuro-Vault / int_33708019
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_33708019
comment
The first half of Operation Double 007 is spent chasing after a woman who had been given sensitive information by a deceased operative. The trick is, it had been given to her while she was under a certain kind of deep hypnosis, and can only be retrieved if she is put back under in the exact same way.
 Neuro-Vault / int_33708019
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_33708019
featureConfidence
1.0
 Operation Double 007
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_33708019
 Neuro-Vault / int_41d5af1a
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_41d5af1a
comment
In Total Recall (2012), Quaid learns that he has the global shutdown codes for the Synth army locked away in his head from his time as Hauser, and must get this back to the Resistance. It turns out that it's actually a tracking signal for Cohaagen to follow back to the resistance base.
 Neuro-Vault / int_41d5af1a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_41d5af1a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Total Recall (2012)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_41d5af1a
 Neuro-Vault / int_50bcf7a6
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_50bcf7a6
comment
Homestuck: The genetic code for the creation of a first guardian is locked away within the minds of one or more players, who end up writing it on their walls and in a book. It winds up being unlocked by some sort of important event. In the kid's session, Rose wrote it in one of her journals, while in the troll's session it was unlocked via the infamous Team Charge debacle, and authored by Tavros, Aradia, Vriska, Terezi, and a doomed timeline Gamzee, who wrote it in their FLARPing manuals and Karkat's ~ATH book.
 Neuro-Vault / int_50bcf7a6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_50bcf7a6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Homestuck (Webcomic)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_50bcf7a6
 Neuro-Vault / int_526d4c5c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_526d4c5c
comment
A variant in Knights of the Old Republic. Your character was getting Force visions and flashbacks of an allegedly-dead Sith Lord named Revan, leading both Bastila and themselves to Star Maps that will reveal the location of the Star Forge. However, it turns out that Revan isn't as dead as everyone thought.
 Neuro-Vault / int_526d4c5c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_526d4c5c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Knights of the Old Republic (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_526d4c5c
 Neuro-Vault / int_535ac0ac
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_535ac0ac
comment
Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World is about a man whose subconscious is used to store classified data in a cyberpunk future.
 Neuro-Vault / int_535ac0ac
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_535ac0ac
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_535ac0ac
 Neuro-Vault / int_5755b96a
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_5755b96a
comment
The Order of the Stick: Redcloak appears convinced the paladins of the Sapphire Guard had pulled this, though he seems to have been wrong. Redcloak himself has his own Neuro-Vault with the divine part of the ritual to 'control', really 'transfer control' of the Gate's position to his deity, imparted to him by the Red Mantle. It qualifies as it was never commited to paper. It's not that far of a stretch for him to expect opposing forces to use the same kind of trick. Torturing O'Chul for information was also Redcloak's excuse for staying in Azure City.
 Neuro-Vault / int_5755b96a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_5755b96a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Order of the Stick (Webcomic)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_5755b96a
 Neuro-Vault / int_5c897f4a
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_5c897f4a
comment
In Schlock Mercenary, the eponymous carbosilicate amorph pulls one of these: since his entire body acts as a "brain", forming a neuro-vault is as simple as collecting all the tissue that stores the information and scooping it out for safekeeping.
 Neuro-Vault / int_5c897f4a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_5c897f4a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Schlock Mercenary (Webcomic)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_5c897f4a
 Neuro-Vault / int_60307354
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_60307354
comment
The 39 Steps (1935): The top-secret information the bad guys are trying to smuggle out of the country is hidden in the mind of the "Memory Man", a showman who has the ability to take in such information.
 Neuro-Vault / int_60307354
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_60307354
featureConfidence
1.0
 The 39 Steps (1935)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_60307354
 Neuro-Vault / int_61028f2
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_61028f2
comment
The protagonist of Johnny Mnemonic is a Courier who carries data securely in a cranial implant.
 Neuro-Vault / int_61028f2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_61028f2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Johnny Mnemonic
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_61028f2
 Neuro-Vault / int_664b5d51
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_664b5d51
comment
In Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, the viewers discover that at the end of the previous movie, Spock placed his soul in Doctor McCoy just before his Heroic Sacrifice.
 Neuro-Vault / int_664b5d51
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_664b5d51
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_664b5d51
 Neuro-Vault / int_70814599
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_70814599
comment
Stargate SG-1: On two separate occasions, O'Neill gets his head packed full of deadly amounts of Lost Wisdom from the Ancients, barely surviving long enough to get it extracted by the Asgard.
 Neuro-Vault / int_70814599
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_70814599
featureConfidence
1.0
 Stargate SG-1
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_70814599
 Neuro-Vault / int_7559ae0b
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_7559ae0b
comment
The distrans of the Dune universe is used to encode messages in the voices of bats and birds. It can be used on humans, but it is frowned upon. So naturally both the protagonists and antagonists make use of human distrans.
 Neuro-Vault / int_7559ae0b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_7559ae0b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dune (Franchise)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_7559ae0b
 Neuro-Vault / int_76686539
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_76686539
comment
In the first game, Matriarch Benezia does this to herself to avoid being completely indoctrinated. It works long enough for her to give vital information to the protagonists, before the indoctrination reasserts itself.
 Neuro-Vault / int_76686539
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_76686539
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mass Effect (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_76686539
 Neuro-Vault / int_7668653b
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_7668653b
comment
Due to both the Prothean Beacon and the Cipher, Shepard has the experience and collective knowledge of the entire Prothean race implanted within their subconscious mind, which leads them eventually to Ilos. It's also the key to waking Javik in Mass Effect 3.
 Neuro-Vault / int_7668653b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_7668653b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mass Effect 3 (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_7668653b
 Neuro-Vault / int_7988cb68
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_7988cb68
comment
Mass Effect:
In the first game, Matriarch Benezia does this to herself to avoid being completely indoctrinated. It works long enough for her to give vital information to the protagonists, before the indoctrination reasserts itself.
Due to both the Prothean Beacon and the Cipher, Shepard has the experience and collective knowledge of the entire Prothean race implanted within their subconscious mind, which leads them eventually to Ilos. It's also the key to waking Javik in Mass Effect 3.
 Neuro-Vault / int_7988cb68
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_7988cb68
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mass Effect (Franchise)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_7988cb68
 Neuro-Vault / int_7d8c61a2
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_7d8c61a2
comment
A relatively minor one, galactically speaking, is Consular companion Felix Iresso in Star Wars: The Old Republic. A Force-insensitive Republic grunt, he and his buddy were captured by the Sith and had a Sith holocron forcibly downloaded into their heads because the crazy Darth did not want to share the contents with the rest of the class. Iresso's pal went insane, but Iresso seems relatively normal. No, he can't access the contents, and doesn't much want to.
 Neuro-Vault / int_7d8c61a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_7d8c61a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Wars: The Old Republic (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_7d8c61a2
 Neuro-Vault / int_7e9e3615
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_7e9e3615
comment
Sebastian Rook does this on himself in Cypher. He overwrote his own personality so he could become the meekly protagonist Morgan Sullivan and steal a specific data file from the vault of a MegaCorp, then reset himself.
 Neuro-Vault / int_7e9e3615
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_7e9e3615
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cypher
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_7e9e3615
 Neuro-Vault / int_90c73dda
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_90c73dda
comment
In Animorphs, Elfangor sends an Exposition Beam to Tobias, possibly also including his hirac delest (the plot of The Andalite Chronicles) and some sort of Genetic Memory; Tobias unlocks the memory when he morphs Ax, but it's never established if he got the hirac delest.
 Neuro-Vault / int_90c73dda
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_90c73dda
featureConfidence
1.0
 Animorphs
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_90c73dda
 Neuro-Vault / int_91209b29
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_91209b29
comment
Xenosaga:
Episode III uses this in an interesting way. The Godwin sisters hold the two parts of the unlock code which opens the Zohar Emulator storage. Both are aware of this, and didn't require any messy mind tricks — their minds already had uplink ports from their previous "jobs" before the Durandal.
The Realian MOMO has the politically and functionally dangerous Y-Data stored in her head.
Xenosaga does this a lot, actually; Canaan, another Realian, likewise has part of the Y-Data dropped into his head; he's blocked from accessing it, which makes him very grumpy. He spends the better part of fifteen years trying to get it out and failing.
 Neuro-Vault / int_91209b29
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_91209b29
featureConfidence
1.0
 Xenosaga (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_91209b29
 Neuro-Vault / int_9b1c2acd
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_9b1c2acd
comment
In Fahrenheit 451, the secret society of readers use Photographic Memory techniques to memorize books so they can be written again once the book-burning government dies in the coming nuclear war.
 Neuro-Vault / int_9b1c2acd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_9b1c2acd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fahrenheit 451
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_9b1c2acd
 Neuro-Vault / int_9ffb41a9
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_9ffb41a9
comment
In Galerians, the protagonist and Macguffin Girl heroine have programs stashed in their heads by their parents. The programs are the key to destroying an A.I their fathers created which slipped its leash to supplant the human race with its own creations.
 Neuro-Vault / int_9ffb41a9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_9ffb41a9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Galerians (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_9ffb41a9
 Neuro-Vault / int_a33d74a4
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_a33d74a4
comment
Sword of Truth:
Richard's adoptive father had him memorise a book, destroying it after he was satisfied that Richard could recite it verbatim. The first book of the series revolves around the Big Bad's attempts to extract this information from him.
There is also another example when Richard prevents himself from going fully mad due to Cold-Blooded Torture by locking away the core of his personality.
 Neuro-Vault / int_a33d74a4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_a33d74a4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sword of Truth
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_a33d74a4
 Neuro-Vault / int_a3fcd166
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_a3fcd166
comment
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Trilogy:
Zaphod buries the location of the man who rules the universe within his brains.
Because in this universe Earth is a supercomputer designed to find the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything, all Earthlings have the Question imprinted in their subconscious.
 Neuro-Vault / int_a3fcd166
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_a3fcd166
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Trilogy
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_a3fcd166
 Neuro-Vault / int_a949e666
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_a949e666
comment
A literal case in Elysium. After Greg Carlyle uploads the reboot code to the space station of the same name to an implant in his brain, encrypts the program, and smashes the computer it came from, several of the characters are feverishly after that code when the protagonist Max steals it from Carlyle, so that the people on Earth can be allowed to go to the station. Unfortunately, the encryption software kills whoever holds the item after transfer, and once it's modified at the end, Max dies.
 Neuro-Vault / int_a949e666
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_a949e666
featureConfidence
1.0
 Elysium
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_a949e666
 Neuro-Vault / int_b1081ba3
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_b1081ba3
comment
Star Trek: Early Voyages: In "Immortal Wounds", Ambassador Toluk determines after mind melding with Dr. Boyce that three members of a psi-adept species called the Julthans or Jultha Free Men transferred their consciousness or siras into Boyce many years earlier when he was a young medic. When their shuttle crashed on the remote medical research outpost to which he was assigned, the Julthans made physical contact with Boyce just before they died. It was brief but there was nevertheless sufficient time to make the transfer. The siras eventually went insane due to the confusion and pain that they experienced. When Dr. Boyce encountered Narten Phayn Drexler, the leader of the Orion raiders that destroyed their colony, the Julthans took control of Dr. Boyce and killed Drexler with a lethal injection of metrazene.
 Neuro-Vault / int_b1081ba3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_b1081ba3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Trek: Early Voyages (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_b1081ba3
 Neuro-Vault / int_b128983d
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_b128983d
comment
Tracer from Floating Point, being a living A.I. in a digital world, was able to install one of these to help him sort and cross-index his memories. Also quite handy for erasing memories he doesn't find pleasant.
 Neuro-Vault / int_b128983d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_b128983d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Floating Point
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_b128983d
 Neuro-Vault / int_b2653c12
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_b2653c12
comment
In Abarat, an important key is hidden in Candy's mind, despite its apparently being a physical object.
 Neuro-Vault / int_b2653c12
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_b2653c12
featureConfidence
1.0
 Abarat
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_b2653c12
 Neuro-Vault / int_bc263630
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_bc263630
comment
In The Jennifer Morgue, Bob Howard has the briefing for the next stage of his mission implanted this way. Unfortunately the circumstances change halfway through the book, so thanks to this trope Bob is forced to endure an Info Dump that's no longer relevant.
 Neuro-Vault / int_bc263630
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_bc263630
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Jennifer Morgue
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_bc263630
 Neuro-Vault / int_bcb32dc6
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_bcb32dc6
comment
Shadowrun has the "Data lock" implant, which is clearly a Shout-Out to Johnny Mnemonic.
 Neuro-Vault / int_bcb32dc6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_bcb32dc6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Shadowrun (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_bcb32dc6
 Neuro-Vault / int_c399cd39
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_c399cd39
comment
Eclipse Phase: "Hidden Knowledge" psychosurgery conceals information somewhere in a character's mind until released with a trigger word. Or more psychosurgery.
 Neuro-Vault / int_c399cd39
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_c399cd39
featureConfidence
1.0
 Eclipse Phase (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_c399cd39
 Neuro-Vault / int_c3e7ab30
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_c3e7ab30
comment
In Perfect Dark Zero, Jack Dark rescues scientist Nathan Ziegler and recovers classified data. Ziegler then downloads that data into Jack's brain before dying, to keep it out of the hands of dataDyne.
 Neuro-Vault / int_c3e7ab30
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_c3e7ab30
featureConfidence
1.0
 Perfect Dark (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_c3e7ab30
 Neuro-Vault / int_c43df4d8
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_c43df4d8
comment
Doctor Who: Donna Noble is a variation on this trope. She has Time Lord knowledge embedded in her brain, and for her own well-being she had to lose all her memories of the time spent with the Doctor. If she were ever allowed to remember him or her adventures all over the universe, it would destroy her.
 Neuro-Vault / int_c43df4d8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_c43df4d8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doctor Who
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_c43df4d8
 Neuro-Vault / int_c6f7e804
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_c6f7e804
comment
Blake's 7: The location of Star One (the Master Computer that runs the Terran Federation) is buried in the mind of the King's Fool on a primitive planet.
 Neuro-Vault / int_c6f7e804
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_c6f7e804
featureConfidence
1.0
 Blake's 7
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_c6f7e804
 Neuro-Vault / int_cf69b21e
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_cf69b21e
comment
In Beast Wars, Blackarachnia purposely downloads the data on the golden disks, which were stolen by Dinobot, and which contain the entry code to the Ark into her own brain and destroys the computer containing the original copy so that Megatron can't use it.
 Neuro-Vault / int_cf69b21e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_cf69b21e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Beast Wars
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_cf69b21e
 Neuro-Vault / int_cfd91008
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_cfd91008
comment
The Amnesia Arc in Eighth Doctor Adventures (and the EDA series itself) ends with the revelation that the Doctor's amnesia was caused by downloading the entire Time Lord matrix into his mind, thereby enabling Gallifrey to be restored from backup at a future date.
 Neuro-Vault / int_cfd91008
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_cfd91008
featureConfidence
1.0
 Eighth Doctor Adventures
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_cfd91008
 Neuro-Vault / int_cffb4c17
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_cffb4c17
comment
Severance (2022) centers on a company whose employees elect to have these surgically implanted. While at work, they have no memory of their home lives and vice-versa.
 Neuro-Vault / int_cffb4c17
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_cffb4c17
featureConfidence
1.0
 Severance (2022)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_cffb4c17
 Neuro-Vault / int_d109f322
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_d109f322
comment
In Harper 2.0 of Andromeda Harper gets the largest library in the universe downloaded into his brain. This slowly begins to burn up his brain until he gets rid of it. It's used for a Continuity Nod later when trying to remember where he hid some of the data.
 Neuro-Vault / int_d109f322
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_d109f322
featureConfidence
1.0
 Andromeda
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_d109f322
 Neuro-Vault / int_d3c9052
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_d3c9052
comment
Asimov, the hero of Mr. Robot, saves his friends from being permanently scrapped by downloading their brainmaps into his system. Conveniently enough, this is also how you add members to your party for hacking missions.
 Neuro-Vault / int_d3c9052
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_d3c9052
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mr. Robot (Video Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_d3c9052
 Neuro-Vault / int_e6267766
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_e6267766
comment
Star Wars Legends:
A variant in Knights of the Old Republic. Your character was getting Force visions and flashbacks of an allegedly-dead Sith Lord named Revan, leading both Bastila and themselves to Star Maps that will reveal the location of the Star Forge. However, it turns out that Revan isn't as dead as everyone thought.
A relatively minor one, galactically speaking, is Consular companion Felix Iresso in Star Wars: The Old Republic. A Force-insensitive Republic grunt, he and his buddy were captured by the Sith and had a Sith holocron forcibly downloaded into their heads because the crazy Darth did not want to share the contents with the rest of the class. Iresso's pal went insane, but Iresso seems relatively normal. No, he can't access the contents, and doesn't much want to.
 Neuro-Vault / int_e6267766
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_e6267766
featureConfidence
1.0
 Star Wars Legends (Franchise)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_e6267766
 Neuro-Vault / int_e7e37776
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_e7e37776
comment
Firefly: River Tam. In this case, it turns out to have been entirely accidental, and those whom the information concerns want to keep it under wraps.
 Neuro-Vault / int_e7e37776
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_e7e37776
featureConfidence
1.0
 Firefly
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_e7e37776
 Neuro-Vault / int_ea787cd1
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_ea787cd1
comment
Forgotten Realms has its share of memory transfers, but specifically in Return of the Archwizards, the wizard spy drops lots of reconnaissance data (for all the audience knows, it could be centuries worth of examining Sealed Evil in a Can while hiding inside the same can) to another guy because he's dying and it's the only way to save priceless knowledge. The carrier uses this memory only to provoke "I just feel it must be so" insights, even after he understands what's going on (which still makes him so valuable that the dead wizard's boss can neither let him go nor kill him, nor even use outright mind control).
 Neuro-Vault / int_ea787cd1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_ea787cd1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Forgotten Realms
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_ea787cd1
 Neuro-Vault / int_eaaef767
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_eaaef767
comment
Flight of the Navigator is about a little boy who has all sorts of star charts from aliens temporarily stored in his brain, and is later picked up for retrieval when the alien robot accidentally loses its own copies.
 Neuro-Vault / int_eaaef767
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_eaaef767
featureConfidence
1.0
 Flight of the Navigator
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_eaaef767
 Neuro-Vault / int_f323730f
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_f323730f
comment
In Citizen of the Galaxy, just before he's captured and executed Baslim hypnotizes his foster son Thorby into memorizing a coded final report to the Space Police, as well as a message to a ship's captain to help Thorby escape off-planet.
 Neuro-Vault / int_f323730f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_f323730f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Citizen of the Galaxy
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_f323730f
 Neuro-Vault / int_f46e4c7e
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_f46e4c7e
comment
In Honor Trip, Enma Daiou has a surprisingly labyrinthine mind that not even Future Cell could crack to obtain knowledge of Otherworld's various barriers.
 Neuro-Vault / int_f46e4c7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_f46e4c7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Honor Trip (Fanfic)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_f46e4c7e
 Neuro-Vault / int_f6a54e75
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_f6a54e75
comment
Kingdom Hearts has Sora, whose memories are nearly constantly used for this.
 Neuro-Vault / int_f6a54e75
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_f6a54e75
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kingdom Hearts (Franchise)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_f6a54e75
 Neuro-Vault / int_f724b70d
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_f724b70d
comment
Code Lyoko: Franz Hopper hid the "keys to Lyoko" that XANA would need to escape inside himself and Aelita.
 Neuro-Vault / int_f724b70d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_f724b70d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Code Lyoko
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_f724b70d
 Neuro-Vault / int_f73f989a
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_f73f989a
comment
In Kyon: Big Damn Hero, Mikuru keeps a collection of recorded memories for reference when she has to return to her own time. Technically, Haruhi does this to herself, locking herself out of the knowledge of her own powers, complete with key.
 Neuro-Vault / int_f73f989a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_f73f989a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Kyon: Big Damn Hero (Fanfic)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_f73f989a
 Neuro-Vault / int_f980cee9
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_f980cee9
comment
Rod Allbright Alien Adventures: The climax of book 3 (The Search for Snout) reveals that the main character has a secret piece of data in his brain that will allow the villain to literally destroy time.
 Neuro-Vault / int_f980cee9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_f980cee9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Rod Allbright Alien Adventures
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_f980cee9
 Neuro-Vault / int_fbf33963
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_fbf33963
comment
The entire mission in Inception is to do exactly this, though instead of information, the goal is to implant an idea. Browning also suggests that Fischer Sr. may have done this to his son in the first dream layer.
 Neuro-Vault / int_fbf33963
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_fbf33963
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inception
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_fbf33963
 Neuro-Vault / int_fdf7a632
type
Neuro-Vault
 Neuro-Vault / int_fdf7a632
comment
In Vampire: The Requiem, a vampire can learn to conceal information inside a messenger's blood.
 Neuro-Vault / int_fdf7a632
featureApplicability
1.0
 Neuro-Vault / int_fdf7a632
featureConfidence
1.0
 Vampire: The Requiem (Tabletop Game)
hasFeature
Neuro-Vault / int_fdf7a632

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Neuro-Vault
processingCategory2
Characters as Device
 Neuro-Vault
processingCategory2
Futuristic Tech Index
 Neuro-Vault
processingCategory2
Memory Tropes
 Neuro-Vault
processingCategory2
Speculative Fiction Tropes
 Psycho-Pass Providence / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Serial Experiments Lain / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Master of Kung Fu (Comic Book) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 What You Already Know (Fanfic) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Deathstalker and the Warriors from Hell / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Inception / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Johnny Mnemonic / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Pokémon Detective Pikachu / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Star Trek III: The Search for Spock / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 BioOfASpaceTyrant
seeAlso
Neuro-Vault
 Citizen of the Galaxy / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Eighth Doctor Adventures / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 If This Goes On— / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Rod Allbright Alien Adventures / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Sword of Truth / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 MyOwnWorstEnemy
seeAlso
Neuro-Vault
 Noaqiyeum
seeAlso
Neuro-Vault
 Hana no Miyako (Manga) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Kamichama Karin (Manga) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Knights of Sidonia (Manga) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Campus Life (Roleplay) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Liquid Coral (Roleplay) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Warhammer Fantasy Divided Loyalties (Roleplay) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Dark Angel / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Severance (2022) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Forgotten Realms (Tabletop Game) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Marathon (Video Game) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Mega Man Legends (Video Game) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Perfect Dark (Video Game) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Phantasy Star Zero (Video Game) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 To Boldly Flee (Web Video) / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault
 Code Lyoko / int_addc723c
type
Neuro-Vault