Yeah these example images are a bit odd, however, ignoring the characters presented I would pick "one that does bad things for the greater good".
I personally prefer him when he's less of a greedy villain and just a comedic cheapskate.
I mean, I doubt he would ever try. If for some reason he did, it's unlikely he could ever truly find redemption after everything he's done.
I mean a lot of villainous characters in Breaking Bad/Better Call Saul could fall under this. Walt, Gus, Saul to an extent, definitely Chuck, even Mike at times. They're all expertly written but jesus christ are they annoying assholes.
Very neutral. I feel like she was hyped so much for what was essentially just a 10 minute argument with Steven at the end of the series. She is frightening I suppose but also just... underwhelming.
Walter White, one of the best written characters I've ever seen but also incredibly annoying.
There's not really a good reason to be ageist. That being said, there are reasons to hate individual children, like anyone who hates Joffrey is fully understandable regardless of his young age.
While I'll give the live-action version props for being the only live-action version of a Clone Wars/Rebels character to have the same actor in both mediums, the cartoon is still better overall.
I'd say Lex Luthor since Doom isn't fully human. Lex is the smartest human alive in the DC universe and is the only person who is stated to be more intelligent than Bruce Wayne, with feats such as curing incurable diseases, turning the entire sun red, upgrading Braniac's intelligence, building a device as teenager that gave him dimensional abilities and perfecting genetic cloning the list just goes on. Doom is a master at what he does but in order to achieve his level of success he has stolen cosmic powers and used higher level technology, whereas Luthor pulled off everything while still being completely human in most stories.
Tom Griffin actually does have a red link for his page so if you want to make it go ahead
Barney the Dinosaur be looking different these days
On-screen is probably Butcher or Stormfront. San Edgar in terms of indirect kills.
Classic Disney villains are always hard to go wrong with. He's actually quite disturbing once you get past the memes due to the way he views Belle.
If he does come back, it's either as a sinner or they introduce a concept of where angels and demons go when they're killed, for example purgatory.
I think Arthur Fleck is the best written character here. However, the Joker film, as great as I think it is, deviates so heavily from the original Batman comics that I'm not sure if I consider him an amazing Joker, but rather an amazing character. With that in mind, LEGO Joker is my favorite interpretation of the character here.
Not from what we've seen, I mean the Vs are slave owners and she willingly and happily works with a rapist like Valentino so doesn't seem very redeemable to me.
Very unnerving in an uncanny valley sort of way. Not really scary in a way where you jump out of your seat, but anytime he appears in Petscop you just get this horrible feeling.
I'd like to see him with other villains, Koopalings, King Boo, etc.
I mean Afton's so iconic when it comes to indie horror it's pretty hard to beat him.
The Killing Joke animated film is known to be pretty bad since they had to add a bunch of filler in order to make the story long enough for a film. Now, the Joker in that movie is a good Joker, but that movie is pretty lame, so that's a notable Joker appearance where the writing was kind of meh.