The role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons has a number of, according to Charles Elliott "not-very-ingenious", imaginary plant species,[14] as well as "a taxonomy of fungal horrors", which Ben Woodard considers eerie not only for their poisonous nature, but because many have the ability to move.
[22] The following plants appear in the David Attenborough sketch of the last Monty Python episode.
In the Avatar franchise, plants on Pandora have evolved according to the characteristics of their environment, which has a thicker atmosphere than Earth.
Pandoran plants can communicate via a phenomenon called 'signal transduction'.
[30][31] Video games frequently feature fictional plants as items that can be collected by the player, or occasionally appear as non-player characters.