
The Blood-Splat Rating System is the debut studio album of American rock band Powerman 5000. Released in 1995, it is the band's second independent release. The album was a local success in Boston, MA, sold out of its initial pressing and won three awards from the 1995 Boston Phoenix Readers' Poll, including "Best Metal Album", "Best Rap Album" and "Album of the Year". Its success led to a contract with the major label DreamWorks Records, who reissued the album under the title Mega!! Kung Fu Radio on February 25, 1997. It had sold around 150,000 copies to date.

Builders of the Future is the eighth studio album from American rock band Powerman 5000. Produced by Evan Rodaniche, Spider One and Nick Quijano, the album was released on May 27, 2014 the album is the first composition that the band released through T-Boy Records. The album became available for preorder starting March 25, 2014. The album sold around 4,200 copies in its first week of release, while debuting at position No. 63 on the Billboard 200 chart.

Copies Clones & Replicants is the seventh studio album by Powerman 5000, and their first cover album, continuing the return to their more traditional industrial metal sound, following after 2009s Somewhere on the Other Side of Nowhere, but still keeping some of the pop-rock feels of their 2006 album Destroy What You Enjoy. Each song is a cover of some of the band's favorite tracks, which usually fall into the new wave genre.

Destroy What You Enjoy is the fifth studio album by American rock band Powerman 5000, released on August 1, 2006 via DRT Records. It includes the single "Wild World", which was voted No. 3 on Headbangers Ball's top videos poll of 2006, while the album itself was voted by Metal Edge as one of the "Top 10 Albums of 2006". The album debuted at No. 120 on the Billboard 200 chart and sold 7,000 copies in its first week of release.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Vol. 1 is a compilation album by Powerman 5000, released in 2004. It contains rare and unreleased tracks from the early days of Powerman 5000. The album sold around 340 copies in the first week of its release.

The Korea EP is an EP by American hard rock band Powerman 5000. The EP was released as a limited-edition CD during the band's South Korea tour in August 2005. During the band's time in South Korea, they performed at the Rolling Hall in Seoul and was scheduled to perform at the Busan Rock Festival, but was cancelled due to visa issues. The EP includes four Powerman 5000 songs that do not appear on any other official release. However, a live version of "Heroes and Villains" was later included on the band's studio album Destroy What You Enjoy. The Korea EP was also available for purchase at shows during the Return to the City of the Dead Tour '07, and eventually became available on the official Powerman 5000 website.

New Wave is the ninth studio album by American industrial metal band Powerman 5000. It was released on October 27, 2017 through Pavement Entertainment. To support the album's release, Powerman 5000 toured the United States through the end of 2017 on the New Wave Tour.

Somewhere on the Other Side of Nowhere is the sixth studio album by Powerman 5000 returning to their more traditional industrial metal sound, following their punk rock oriented 2006 album Destroy What You Enjoy. The album was released in the US on October 6, 2009 and in Canada on October 20. The album sold around 2,000 copies in its first week of release. The digital single for "Super Villain" has scanned around 15,000 paid downloads.

Tonight the Stars Revolt! is the second major label studio album by American rock band Powerman 5000. It was released on July 20, 1999 by DreamWorks Records. Having sold over one million copies and achieving platinum status, this would become the group's most successful release and featured such hits as "Nobody's Real" and "When Worlds Collide."

Transform is the fourth studio album by American rock band Powerman 5000, released May 20, 2003. It is an enhanced CD that includes the videos for "Free" and "Action", the album's two singles. The album had sold 148,561 copies in the U.S. in 2003, before the band was dropped from DreamWorks Records.