@Draco Mitchell from TMvTM Universe
Wait, they're going to be proposed? Sorry, didn't know that. Personally feel like their comedic factors are mitigating. Not trying to start a fight.
Some of these guys are not going to be PE.
PAL has comedic moments like treating Mark Bowman like a mistreated smartphone, flopping about on a table in rage, entering sleep mode during Katie's speech about family, and her death is being compared to a screaming monkey meme.
Thunderclap doesn't really do anything heinous other than kill one animal, which I don't recall was sapient, and try to kill two heroes. Even if his crew killed other animals, I don't believe there was any on-screen evidence.
Big Jack Horner is played for laughs countless times, even if he is treated as a serious threat by the heroes, engaging in cartoonish gimmicks such as causing his minions to explode into confetti and noting that his clothes grew with him after eating the magic snacks.
The Mimic is an amoral robot programmed to mimic the actions of others, and it just happens that it's mimicking William Afton, a Pure Evil serial killer.
Mean Green Mother From Outer Space
I really love the energy. Doesn't hurt that Howard Ashman wrote it.
You should go for it. Sounds like an interesting story.
@OAU890 Have you considered actually publishing your story and making money off of it? Amazon KDP makes it free and easy.
I'd characterize her similarly to Death from Puss in Boots: The Last Wish. She goes after the main protagonist over a grudge, though in this case due to representing the infidelity of her husband Zeus, having been sired by one of his affairs. Like Death, she would appear indirectly; Death stays in the background most of the time, and Hera would send minions and natural disasters after the hero to ruin his life. There's a fight in the climax where the hero declares they will never give in; Puss refused to ever stop fighting to live out his final life, and the protagonist would refuse to give into hatred, list the people he in his life that he loves, and list Hera at the end. Hera is simultaneously touched and broken by this speech; love is strong than hatred, and she finally calms down. Hera finally sees the protagonist as more than a result of her husband's infidelity, and lets go of her grudge. Perhaps Zeus would serve as the story's true villain, and the protagonist would ask Zeus the armor-piercing question: "You have a wonderful wife. Is she not enough?" This would take place right after the reconciliation with Hera, so she would be there, and Zeus wouldn't be able to answer the question, perhaps try to use his authority to silence the hero's insolence, but Hera backs him up. It would be so touching, just like The Last Wish.
Reminds me of Stu Macher claiming his parents were gonna be mad at him. Looks more like a beaten coward reverting to childish instinct.
@Drip goku kaioken 4 She's the villainess of a Nick Jr. show called Butterbean's Cafe. No clue what she's doing here.
I'll name two:
Zuko from Avatar: The Last Airbender
Captain Grime from Amphibia
Both good shows.
Constantine is the number one most wanted criminal and most dangerous frog in the world - Miklos is no match for him.
He's number one!
I feel like Unalaq is a better fit due to their shared faux good intentions: Unalaq was supposed to be well-intentioned, but the way he was written made him qualify for pure evil status; Belos thinks he's doing what's best for humanity, but it's made clear in-universe he's a delusional narcissist with a messiah complex. Plus, Belos loses the mask at the end of season two. That said, it was rather iconic.
No. His genocide was not done out of paranoia that one of them (a black and white warrior) would be his downfall, not some sort of bigoted beliefs on his part.
Quaritch didn't undergo any character development or realization in the final battle, other than realizing that Jake believed himself to be a real Na'vi, which only gave him another reason to want Jake's avatar dead. Personality-wise, there is nothing to distinguish the deceased human Quaritch from Recom Quaritch.
There's no evidence that anything happened to Quaritch that mentally differentiates his human and Recom forms, other than wanting to avenge his own death, but he was already intent on getting revenge on Jake.
Correct. He doesn't have every single one of Quaritch's memories, but he does have most of them; I'm pretty sure that Quaritch's mind was copied just before the final battle. What point are you trying to get across?
I don't understand the question.
The clone usually has the exact same conscious mind as the original, copied and pasted. Thus, it is for all intents and purposes the same person, just in a different body. So if Recom Quaritch is redeemed, that means that human Quaritch is redeemed, too, as it's the same guy in two different bodies.
I mean, we already have a category for comedy villains. I don't see why such a subcategory would be necessary.
I'm more scared of Pitch Black because he's genuinely evil, whereas Death has been shown to be honorable, and willing to spare his victims, while Pitch just wants to bathe the world in fear.