

He manages to set the Gunslinger on fire with a torch and drops it from a staircase into the dungeon, where it sparks and shuts down. Peter then lures it into the castle at Medieval world, where he uses heat from wall torches to mask his infrared signature. He hides among a group of deactivated robots, and when the Gunslinger gets close, he splashes it in the face with a jar of hydrochloric acid. Acting on advice from one of the last surviving staff members, Peter turns the tables on the Gunslinger. Somehow Peter finds an entrance to the maintanance tunnels and arrives at a repair facility for the robots. In Westworld, the Gunslinger, now using infared sight and enhanced hearing, forces Peter on a sadistic cat-and-mouse chase through all three parks. They also seal the control center and shut down the air supply, suffocating the technicians. In a panic, the staff attempts to shut down power and the androids, but the robots reveal they now have their own power cores and continue to slaughter the guests and outside staff. In Westworld, the robot gunslinger challenges Peter and John yet again, and when John accepts, the Gunslinger disables the sensor on his pistol and shoots John down. In Roman World, the robots turn en masse on their guests and butcher them. A scripted duel between the Medieval World guest and a Black Knight results in the guest being run through and killed. Without warning, however, chaos erupts throughout the resort the next morning. The management agrees to halt incoming guest traffic until the problems are corrected. John is later bitten by a robotic snake in Westworld, and a guest in Medieval World is slapped by a robot serving girl after making advances on her. A robot gunslinger which Peter shot down on his first day tracks Peter down and attacks him and John in their hotel. The technicians running Delos notice problems are beginning to spread among the androids, but the park managers dismiss the incidents, maintaining confidence in the safety of the resort. Peter remarks that Delos thought of everything. Androids have a low body temperature, but the pistols do not fire if they detect a certain heat range, in which case they will not activate near the high body temperatures humans are known for. John explains that the pistols have heat-sensitive trackers. John challenges Peter to shoot him, but when Peter does so, his pistol fails to discharge. John says they can use their guns to kill androids, but Peter expresses concern about who is who, considering the androids look identical to guests (with exception of small indentations on the hands). In Westworld, Peter sees that Delos is strict about historical accuracy, right down to the artifacts having been made in the actual years. Much of the film is shown with Peter and John in Westworld, although it intersperses with some of the other parts of Delos.

The guests are attired in clothing appropriate for their chosen period and sent down a tunnel which surfaces in the respective "world".

Guests are segregated by color-coding, through yellow (for Roman World), red (for Medieval World) or blue (for Westworld). The hovercraft disembarks at an underground processing facility. He and a friend, John Blane, a return visitor, are taken by hovercraft to Delos' resort in the middle of the desert.
#WESTWORLD IDMG TV#
The film begins with a TV commercial where a Delos employee is interviewing people at the airport who just returned from Delos and are pleased with their stay, and the employee announcing "Boy, have we got a vacation for you!" Guests are encouraged to do anything they feel like, including killing any of the androids or having sexual intercourse with the gynoids (feminine robots).
#WESTWORLD IDMG ANDROID#
People pay to indulge in adventures in each of the worlds where they interact with the android population. The resort's three "worlds" are populated with lifelike androids that are practically indistinguishable from human beings, each programmed in character for their assigned historical environment. In the near future, there is a high-tech, highly realistic adult amusement park called Delos that features three themed "worlds" - Westworld (the American 'Wild West' from the 1880s), Medieval World (medieval Europe), and Roman World (pre-Christian Rome).
