Basic Information:
Name: Yeet
Race: Android
Birthdate: 2 B.A
Era: Pre-202 Years
Affiliation: The Scientist
Status: Deceased
First Appearance: N/A
Quote: "You let me rest? Stupid. I’m no longer here to subdue. I’m here to kill—and I won’t stop until you’re gone.”
Appearance:
Yeet is a fully mechanical android constructed to resemble a human teenage boy. His proportions, facial structure, and styling are deliberately modeled to evoke a contemporary adolescent appearance.
His hair is short, black, and worn in a consistently messy style. His synthetic skin is pale and smooth, with a polished, ceramic-like surface that subtly distinguishes it from organic flesh upon closer inspection.
His eyes emit a cyan-blue glow under normal conditions, with documented shifts toward deeper red tones during elevated operational states. Thin black neural lines extend from the corners of his eyes across the cheekbones, visibly tracing underlying circuitry and remaining partially exposed at all times.
Yeet commonly wears a light gray hoodie over his upper body. Even when worn normally, segments of mechanical plating are visible along the jawline, neck, and forearms. When the hoodie is removed entirely, extensive armored structures across the torso, limbs, and cranial frame become fully apparent, eliminating any ambiguity regarding his artificial nature.
His arms are entirely mechanical, composed of segmented white and black plating designed for flexible articulation and rapid movement. The construction favors streamlined motion rather than heavy reinforcement.
At a glance, Yeet’s overall presentation resembles that of a modern street-dressed teenager, an impression that breaks down quickly under sustained observation
Personality
Yeet consistently presents himself as dominant, loud, and aggressively attention-seeking. He relies heavily on sarcasm, mockery, and provocation in nearly all interactions, treating both social and combat situations as stages on which to assert superiority and draw focus to himself. His confidence is performative and relentless, aimed less at control through strategy and more at domination through presence.
His behavior remains largely unchanged across contexts. Yeet mocks prisoners, needles allies, and taunts opponents with the same volume and swagger, showing little sensitivity to circumstance or consequence. Situational gravity rarely alters his tone. Everything is treated as an opportunity to posture, regardless of risk, stakes, or audience.
Within his unit, Yeet positions himself above the other androids, Shank, Bonk, and Wack, interacting with them through condescension rather than cooperation. He assumes authority through assertion and volume, not coordination or trust. Control, for Yeet, is maintained by being louder, sharper, and more disruptive than those around him, rather than by leading effectively.
Under pressure, Yeet’s limitations become increasingly apparent. He struggles to recognize genuine threat escalation and is slow to adjust when circumstances turn against him. When facing opponents beyond his capacity, he frequently doubles down on taunting and bravado instead of reassessing strategy. This fixation on performance over perception makes his behavior predictable in prolonged or unfavorable engagements.
Yeet does not demonstrate reflective behavior or meaningful adaptation. His patterns remain fixed even when repeated outcomes prove ineffective. Failure does not prompt reconsideration, only louder insistence. In this way, his greatest strength, unshakable confidence, also defines the boundary of his growth.
Origins:
Yeet was one of four combat-grade androids created by a figure known only as The Scientist, a highly advanced and morally unbound individual who reshaped Earth during a time of collapse and had a great influence on Almone. Alongside Shank, Bonk, and Mash, Yeet was part of a specialized unit left behind to enforce control over the ruins of post-collapse Earth after The Scientist’s departure. Each android served a different role, but Yeet was the most advanced, acting as both the enforcer and the face of the group’s operations.
Constructed entirely from synthetic materials, Yeet was not modeled after a real individual, but rather assembled to resemble a cocky, fast-talking teenager—an aesthetic chosen to disarm and provoke opponents. Unlike many synthetic constructs, Yeet’s programming emphasized not just combat efficiency, but psychological pressure, unpredictability, and ego-driven dominance. His neural core was optimized for rapid combat decision-making, environmental analysis, and social manipulation.
Yeet operated in relative autonomy, often taking the lead in engagements and patrols, while the others followed his direction. His mission was simple: ensure continued dominion through intimidation, destruction, and performance. While his behavior appeared emotional, all signs suggest his personality was a deliberate construct meant to fulfill that role. He had no recorded memories, family structure, or original identity beyond what was designed into him.
Yeet fought multiple resistance fighters over time, including Yasu, Spike and Alcoh—often choosing when to engage or retreat with calculated flair. As the other androids were destroyed or defeated, Yeet found himself increasingly isolated and eventually engaged in a critical battle against Nitro and Suncho. Initially confident, he began to encounter real difficulty for the first time. In response, he became more vicious and focused, dropping the playful act and pushing himself to lethal extremes.
Through manipulation and psychological baiting, Yeet succeeded in killing Nitro—who sacrificed himself to protect Suncho. Witnessing this, Suncho achieved the full awakening of her Royal Saiyan form for the first time. Yeet, still convinced he had control of the situation, failed to register the shift in power. He treated the transformation as a challenge—not a threat. When she overwhelmed him, he continued to fight with mechanical certainty, unable to accept that the game was over. His destruction was swift and decisive—delivered by a force he no longer understood. In the end, Yeet didn’t just lose; he broke.