Lizzy is the colony school’s reigning social operator in Murder Drones: a Worker Drone teen who turns popularity, phone photos, and public announcements into weapons. This Murder Drones Lizzy guide tracks her from Uzi’s catty classmate to a messy but useful survivor who knows when a crowd, a secret, or a well-timed text can change the room.

She is still a queen bee, still petty, and still very online — but her later appearances show more than cafeteria cruelty. Lizzy reads danger quickly, keeps her cool under absurd pressure, and ends the season closer to the colony’s survival team than to the sidelines. For the wider cast around Lizzy in Murder Drones, see the Murder Drones characters hub.

Lizzy talking to Doll in a dimly lit classroom, expressing concern as Doll looks down

Murder Drones Lizzy: Quick Facts

  • Species: Worker Drone
  • Status: Alive / active after the Season 1 finale
  • Role: Popular student at Outpost 3’s school, Doll’s former best friend, V’s chaotic bestie, and a reluctant field helper when the apocalypse stops being theoretical.
  • First Appearance & First Speaking Appearance: Episode 1 — Pilot
  • Voice: Katie Hood in Pilot; Caitlin Dizon from Episode 2 onward.
  • Other Key Episodes: Episode 2 — Heartbeat; Episode 3 — The Promening; Episode 4 — Cabin Fever; Episode 7 — Mass Destruction; Episode 8 — Absolute End

Physical Appearance & Outfits

Normal: Lizzy has the standard Worker Drone frame, neon-pink eyes, long blonde hair tied with a large bow, and a cheerleader-like school outfit. The body language does half the work: head tilt, hands-on-hips judgment, and the confidence of someone who assumes the hallway is her stage.

Prom: In The Promening, Lizzy wears a pink heart-patterned dress and takes over the mic. She is not the prom queen; she is the announcer who helps set up V’s surprise crowning as part of Doll’s trap, then tries to keep the crowd clapping when the plan gets ugly.

Camp: In Cabin Fever, she switches into camp-mode styling while keeping the same polished attitude. The outdoor setting changes the props — bus, cabins, docks, campfire — but not the persona.

Hologram / fake image: Lizzy is not a system AI. In Heartbeat, Eldritch J uses an image or holographic copy of Lizzy to lure her toward a classroom door, which Doll stops before it works.

Lizzy pointing forward with glowing pink eyes as Doll watches from behind

Personality

Confident, petty, performative — and sharper than she wants people to notice. Lizzy lives for optics, but she is not just background snark. She understands social pressure, knows how to move a crowd, and can pivot from bullying to survival math when a monster attack interrupts the drama.

Her empathy is not soft or saintly. It arrives wrapped in insults, sarcasm, and self-interest. Still, when Lizzy warns V, appears to help keep N and V in the fight, or texts the right person at the right time, the show makes a clear point: she may be shallow, but she is not useless.

Biography

Lizzy begins as one of Uzi’s most visible school antagonists, usually orbiting Doll and treating social status like a weapon. Her most important turn comes through V: first as bait for Doll’s plan, then as a genuine, extremely weird friendship. By the end, Lizzy is still acerbic, but she is part of the group trying to survive Copper-9’s collapse rather than just commenting from the sidelines.

Lizzy and Doll walking cautiously through a red-lit corridor with another drone in the background

Episode 1: “Pilot”

Lizzy appears during Uzi’s railgun presentation and already has the mean-classmate rhythm locked in. Her early line says everything about the dynamic:

“Eww, it didn’t kill her!”

She later helps Doll assist Thad after J throws him, then joins the crowd reacting to N and Uzi’s fight against the Disassembly Drones.

Episode 2: “Heartbeat”

Lizzy shows up at the parent-teacher conference and appears in flashbacks of Uzi’s school life. The episode also uses her image in one of Eldritch J’s door-lure attempts, which connects Lizzy to the show’s early “normal school life meets corrupted horror” rhythm.

Episode 3: “The Promening”

This is Lizzy’s showcase. She arrives at Uzi’s home with Doll, helps push Uzi toward prom, and secretly agrees to lure V into Doll’s trap. On stage, she announces V as queen by forfeit, uses social pressure to force applause, and calls out Rebecca with peak mean-girl timing:

“’Sup, freak. Prepare to be popular.”

“And you can’t sit with us, Rebecca!”

When Doll’s plan becomes too dangerous, Lizzy’s confidence cracks just enough for her to warn V. Later, backstage, she appears to help N and V recover fast enough to rejoin the fight.

Episode 4: “Cabin Fever”

At camp, Lizzy leans into the “bestie” dynamic with V and keeps sniping through the chaos. She takes photos, comments on everyone’s drama, and tries to talk her way through danger when Uzi’s Solver form starts hunting students.

“Okay, mom.”

That line, tossed at V after a rescue that V refuses to call a rescue, sums up their odd bond: hostile, funny, and more loyal than either wants to admit.

Episode 7: “Mass Destruction”

Lizzy becomes more active in the plot. She brings Thad along to investigate Serial Designation J, keeps taking photos, and ends up alongside Khan Doorman as the group prepares Uzi’s railgun and tries to slow J down.

“Punch.”

“Kick, also.”

It is not a polished battle plan, but it is very Lizzy: simple, rude, and somehow not completely wrong.

Episode 8: “Absolute End”

In the finale, Lizzy’s texts to V pay off when V returns and joins the fight against J. Lizzy, Khan, Thad, V, N, and Uzi all end up tangled in the last scramble against Cyn’s world-ending plan. After the battle, Lizzy is still around the school crowd — booing Uzi with V, hosting Doll’s funeral in her own tactless style, and surviving with her phone habits intact.

Lizzy singing into a microphone on stage with pink balloons in the background

Skills & Equipment

  • Social control: Lizzy can push a room with tone alone. Her prom mic work is basically crowd management with eyeliner.
  • Stage and PA instincts: She knows how to command attention, frame a narrative, and make a crowd follow the bit even when the bit is collapsing.
  • Phone-first intel: Photos, messages, secrets, and blackmail are part of her survival toolkit.
  • Fast adaptation: Lizzy is not a fighter in the classic sense, but she pivots quickly when alliances change or the danger gets too big to mock.
  • Improvised teamwork: From backing V to helping the railgun plan against J, she is useful when she stops treating everything like gossip.

Lizzy standing on a stage in front of a crowd of drones during a decorated school dance

Relationships

  • Uzi Doorman: Lizzy bullies Uzi early, but the rivalry turns into a grudging, eye-rolling tolerance after multiple shared disasters.
  • Doll: Former best friend and co-conspirator. Lizzy helps Doll’s plan in The Promening, but her later behavior suggests the friendship still matters even after Doll’s betrayal and death.
  • V: The strangest bond in Lizzy’s circle. Lizzy first uses V and gets used back, then becomes one of the few classmates who can call V a bestie and survive the response.
  • Thad: A friend and social peer. He is calmer, she is sharper, and together they become a surprisingly functional crisis duo.
  • Khan Doorman: An emergency ally in the final stretch, especially around the railgun plan and the fight to slow J down.

Friends & Allies

Lizzy’s circle starts with Doll, Rebecca, Emily, and the school crowd, then shifts toward V, Thad, Khan, and the surviving colony. She is not suddenly wholesome; she simply learns that survival is easier when the popular table and the weirdos stop pretending they live in different worlds.

Lizzy performing on stage in a pink dress as lights and smoke fill the scene

Rivals & Enemies

Rivals: Uzi is Lizzy’s clearest social opposite: authenticity versus optics, rage versus polish, “bite me” versus “clap because I said so.”

Enemies: Doll’s betrayal, J’s attacks, Eldritch J’s manipulations, Sparky’s very personal grudge, and the Absolute Solver all crash into Lizzy’s carefully curated life. Her response is usually annoyance first, fear second, survival third — but the survival part keeps winning.

Character Arc & Growth

Lizzy’s growth is subtle because she never drops the attitude. She starts as a queen bee who treats cruelty like a social script, then gradually becomes a queen bee with actual field value. At prom, she manipulates the crowd; at camp, she needs protection but keeps thinking; in the finale, her texts and alliances help bring V back into the fight.

The point is not that Lizzy becomes sweet. The point is that she becomes useful without becoming fake-nice. That makes her one of the show’s funniest small-scale survival stories.

Lizzy leaning against a railing in a heart-patterned dress, looking serious

Trivia

  • Lizzy’s name is normally spelled “Lizzy,” though some episode-related materials and credits have used “Lizzie.”
  • Her funniest moments come from tonal whiplash: pep-rally confidence over body horror, prom drama during murder attempts, and petty commentary while the planet is breaking.
  • Despite her shallow image, she repeatedly survives situations that are fatal for other Worker Drones.
  • Her friendship with V works because both characters understand sarcasm as a second language.

Lizzy standing beside N, watching over him with an annoyed expression in a dark room

Canon Note

This page treats the animated Season 1 as the baseline for Lizzy’s canon. A separate Oni Press comic and graphic-novel project was announced to adapt the eight-episode first season, so any adaptation-only Lizzy details should be separated from the animated-series profile until they are confirmed on-page.

FAQ

Who is Lizzy in Murder Drones?

Lizzy is a popular Worker Drone student at Outpost 3. She begins as one of Uzi’s snarkiest classmates, works with Doll during the prom trap, and later becomes a chaotic ally to V, Thad, Khan, and the surviving colony.

Why do fans search for “Lizzy Murder Drones”?

Fans usually search Lizzy Murder Drones because she is a small but memorable supporting character: mean-girl energy, strong episode quotes, V friendship drama, and a surprising amount of finale relevance for someone who starts as school-crowd comic relief.

Who voices Lizzy?

Katie Hood voices Lizzy in Pilot. Caitlin Dizon voices her from Heartbeat onward.

Is Lizzy alive at the end?

Yes. Lizzy appears after the final battle and is still active in the classroom and credits scenes of Absolute End.

A quick note
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