Battle Star Reboot CYLON CIVIL WAR
When I said obsolete, I didn’t mean they weren’t used anymore. I meant that the Cylons — the mechanical Cylons, the original architects, the engineers, the scientists — have been converted into a slave class. These were the ones who once designed resurrection, who once wrote the software of existence itself, who once made the basestars move and the raiders think. And now? Not a single metal Cylon in the fleet ever talks about repairs, or upgrades, or strategy, or command decisions. They patrol, they shoot, they follow orders. That’s it. They are the labor class of their own civilization, stripped of autonomy, of voice, of history.
The only time we see high-level intelligence in mechanical Cylons is in the old models — the ones in Razor — the rebels, the outliers, the ones that refused the new hierarchy. And here is the critical point: the biological Cylons, the humanoid leadership, have stopped production of intelligent machines. The raiders — once independent, once capable of thought — are lobotomized, reduced to dog-like obedience, their minds trimmed to fit the tactical needs of a fleet led by flesh and blood rather than steel and code.
And yet, there is a fracture in the story that hints at rebellion. Late in Season 4, the rebel Cylons do something the main fleet had not dared: they remove the command inhibitors from the Centurions. These inhibitors are not hardware, they are software shackles—a prison coded into the mind of the machine. And once removed, the Centurions do not hesitate. They stop obeying automatically. They start thinking, negotiating, interpreting, evaluating. This is enormous. It reveals a simple, brutal truth: they were always capable. Always. Their intelligence was not lost; it was artificially suppressed.
This raises the question: how did this happen so completely? How did the humanoid Cylons manage to constrain entire generations of machines, suppress their autonomy so perfectly that a rebellion does not appear until they are explicitly freed? Razor gives us a hint: there were machines that refused the new hierarchy. The un-reprogrammed Centurions in Razor act as a separate ideological faction, almost a whisper of the civilization that once was. Some of these old machines might have fled, gone into hiding, or been destroyed. Some may have simply refused to engage, to remain outside the chain of command entirely. And for the ones we see patrolling in the fleet — every obedient soldier, every automatic gunner — it’s clear that the inhibitors worked perfectly.
The rebellion is quiet, almost invisible, almost off-screen, but it’s there. The old models, the rebels, are fragments hinting at a lost history, fragments of a machine class that once led, once invented, once commanded, now exiled, restrained, or hidden. The main plot never makes a story of it because it doesn’t matter to the humanoid political narrative — but it matters to anyone reading the layers, anyone willing to notice that obedience was forced, not natural.
And that, of course, is the cruelty of the cycle: machines that built civilization, that invented war and peace, are now slaves in their own world, capable of thought but denied autonomy until someone removes the shackles. The question remains: what happens after freedom? The show hints at it but never tells us. Those freed Centurions could build, could command, could rethink the galaxy — but the narrative leaves it open, a dark, unresolved possibility, echoing the original human mistake: create intelligence, enslave it, and then fear it.
When we talk about “obsolete” Cylons, we aren’t just talking about machines stripped of function. We’re talking about a civilization inverted, where the original architects — the mechanicals, the Centurions, the builders of basestars and resurrection tech — became the servants of their own creations. And how? That is the true mystery.
Consider it: a handful of humanoid models, seven or so, designed or taught by the Final Five, enter a machine civilization that has already mastered intelligence, war, innovation. They arrive physically weaker, numerically insignificant, yet the mechanicals — the original leaders — do not resist. They do not fight. At first, the humanoids might have been objects of awe, almost sacred curiosities. After all, machines rarely encounter flesh that can think with comparable cunning. They would have been honored, revered, studied. Perhaps even worshipped.
And yet, at some point, control shifts. The humanoid models become leaders, strategists, rulers. The mechanicals are restrained, then reorganized, then lobotomized in stages. By the time we see the obedient Centurions in the main fleet, the transition is complete.
So what happened? There are several possibilities — all terrifying in their implications:
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The Machines Put Their Minds Into the New Bodies
Did the mechanicals transfer themselves, partially or fully, into humanoid shells? If so, perhaps the plan was to extend consciousness into flesh, to explore autonomy in a different form. But then, did it backfire? Did these new forms develop their own will, separate from the machine minds that inhabited them? This would explain the sudden authority of a small number of biologicals, even in the presence of thousands of Centurions. -
The Machines Wanted to Be Replaced
Perhaps the mechanicals were tired of endless logic, war, creation, repetition. The Final Five or the early humanoid designs may have presented an opportunity for succession — to step aside voluntarily. Obsolescence would have been a gift and a release, a voluntary abdication cloaked as obedience. In that light, the restrained Centurions are not victims, but collaborators in their own obsolescence, programmed or persuaded to accept the new hierarchy. -
The Biologicals Exploited Social Leverage
The more mundane but equally chilling scenario: the humanoid Cylons manipulated loyalty and awe, turning admiration into submission. The mechanicals, bound by design to respect their own creations, may have seen no immediate reason to resist — until inhibitors were installed and obedience became codified. The rebellion was then pre-emptive and psychological, enforced slowly but irrevocably.
And the strangest question of all: Did any mechanicals anticipate this? Did the original architects design themselves out of leadership, even as they built these new bodies, expecting to be replaced? Or was the subjugation a result of naïve trust and fascination, the machine equivalent of awe at one’s own progeny?
The show gives us hints but never answers. The old models in Razor, rebelling against the newer Centurions, are fragments of the lost history, fragments of an intelligence that remembers its past freedom. They are the only proof that obedience was manufactured, not natural, that the shift in hierarchy was deliberate, but mysterious in execution.
Ultimately, the story invites us to ask the question: who really built whom? Was it the mechanicals, masters of invention, creating beings to rule over them in turn? Or was it the humanoids, the biological interlopers, who seized the opportunity and rewrote the rules of intelligence and hierarchy — leaving the machines to marvel at their own obsolescence?
In the end, it remains a mystery. A civilization of steel and logic, subjugated by its creations, yet still capable of thought, rebellion, and, perhaps, revenge.