Doctor Fujiyama the Famous Scientist
| This article is about the nominally heroic human. For his mirrorverse counterpart, see Doctor Fujiyama the Infamous Scientist. |
- Doctor Fujiyama the Famous Scientist is a human from the Generation 1 continuity family.

Doctor Fujiyama (the Famous Scientist!) builds robots. Ninja robots. Giant ninja robots. Giant female ninja robots.
He's no Bruce Sato.
Fiction
Generation 1 cartoon continuity
The Transformers cartoon
- Voice actor: Michael Bell (English), Keiichi Nanba (Japanese), François Leccia (European French)
Doctor Fujiyama, who reportedly is a man of some renown in the scientific world, built a ninja robot. Her name was Nightbird, and her purpose was to benefit mankind. However, the Decepticons stole her and reprogrammed her to be evil, so he locked her away for humanity's protection. Enter the Nightbird
Ask Vector Prime
Doctor Fujiyama was one of several Japanese scientists to contribute to the creation of the Trainbots as part of the Raiden Initiative. He was primarily responsible for their combat protocols, and chose to name the 485-200 series train due to its connection with his native Kyushu. He went with the name "Seizan" after the geography of his home region. Ask Vector Prime, 2015/09/27
3H comics

Decades later, Fujiyama built an army of Nightbirds, and for some reason, that didn't go well either. Daniel Witwicky detonated an explosive device to destroy them, killing himself and Wheelie in the process. Departure
Games
Transformers Legends
Doctor Fujiyama built Nightbird, and had to get the Autobots to rescue her when she was stolen by the Decepticons. Enter the Nightbird
Notes
- In the script for "Enter the Nightbird", Dr. Fujiyama the Famous Scientist's last name is consistently spelled "Fujiama", omitting the "y". However, as Fujiyama is (bad) Japanese for "Mt. Fuji", it is possible that the episode writer did not know the proper spelling of the word. His name is written as "Fujiyama" in The Wreckers comic. His name in the Japanese dub, Hamada, likely came from the translators being thrown off by this misspelling.
Foreign names
- Japanese: Hamada-hakase (ハマダ博士, "Doctor Hamada")

