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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villains being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with criminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.

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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villains being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with criminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, angels,vampires,werewolves cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons.assassins,Demons,and other monsters. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.
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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villains being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.

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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villains being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals, criminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.
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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villain being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.

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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villain villains being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.
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Spaces were missing.


* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villain being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals,other hellspawns,gods,angels,cyborgs,asassins,and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator,Malebolgia,Mammon,Sinn/Cogliostro,Disruptor/Jason Wynn,Curse,Billy Kincaid,Brock Fennel,Overtkill,Cy-gor,Zera,Tiffany,The Freak,Redeemer,Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken,Plague Spawn,Omega Spawn,morana,ab,zab,Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture,Godsend,Margaret Love,Necro Cop,and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.

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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lot of recurring villain being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals,other hellspawns,gods,angels,cyborgs,asassins,and crinminals, other hellspawns, gods, angels, cyborgs, assassins, and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator,Malebolgia,Mammon,Sinn/Cogliostro,Disruptor/Jason Wynn,Curse,Billy Kincaid,Brock Fennel,Overtkill,Cy-gor,Zera,Tiffany,The Freak,Redeemer,Dark Violator, Malebolgia, Mammon, Sinn/Cogliostro, Disruptor/Jason Wynn, Curse, Billy Kincaid, Brock Fennel, Overtkill, Cy-gor, Zera, Tiffany, The Freak, Redeemer, Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken,Plague Spawn,Omega Spawn,morana,ab,zab,Urizen, Forsaken, Plague Spawn, Omega Spawn, Morana, Ab, Zab, Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture,Godsend,Margaret Love,Necro Cop,and Rapture, Godsend, Margaret Love, Necro Cop, and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.
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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lor of recurring villain being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals,other hellspawns,gods,angels,cyborgs,asassins,and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator,Malebolgia,Mammon,Sinn/Cogliostro,Disruptor/Jason Wynn,Curse,Billy Kincaid,Brock Fennel,Overtkill,Cy-gor,Zera,Tiffany,The Freak,Redeemer,Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken,Plague Spawn,Omega Spawn,morana,ab and zab along with many more.

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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lor lot of recurring villain being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals,other hellspawns,gods,angels,cyborgs,asassins,and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator,Malebolgia,Mammon,Sinn/Cogliostro,Disruptor/Jason Wynn,Curse,Billy Kincaid,Brock Fennel,Overtkill,Cy-gor,Zera,Tiffany,The Freak,Redeemer,Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken,Plague Spawn,Omega Spawn,morana,ab and zab Spawn,morana,ab,zab,Urizen, Cataclysm, Rapture,Godsend,Margaret Love,Necro Cop,and Mandarin Spawn along with many more.
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* ''{{ComicBook/Spawn}}'' has a lor of recurring villain being both supernatural and sci-fi mostly dealing with crinminals,other hellspawns,gods,angels,cyborgs,asassins,and of course Demons. His most prominent and notable foes are Violator,Malebolgia,Mammon,Sinn/Cogliostro,Disruptor/Jason Wynn,Curse,Billy Kincaid,Brock Fennel,Overtkill,Cy-gor,Zera,Tiffany,The Freak,Redeemer,Dark Redeemer/The Forsaken,Plague Spawn,Omega Spawn,morana,ab and zab along with many more.
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** Goofy, often co-starring in Mickey's adventures, tends to face the same villains as him, but he still has a small handful of recurring enemies such as Kranz, Super-Thief, and Doctor Tempo.
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* Despite being relatively young by the standards of many comic book continuities, ''[[ComicBook/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesIDW Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (IDW)]]'' has built up an extremely formidable gallery of rogues, virtually appear at least twice, with many having their own story arcs and some arguably even have their ''own'' rogue galleries.

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* Despite being relatively young by the standards of many comic book continuities, ''[[ComicBook/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesIDW Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (IDW)]]'' has built up an extremely formidable gallery of rogues, virtually most appear at least twice, with many having their own story arcs and some arguably even have their ''own'' rogue galleries.
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Could use some refinement and pazazz, but adding TMNT IDW to the list. Seriously, like half the comics' cast is just bad guys.

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* Despite being relatively young by the standards of many comic book continuities, ''[[ComicBook/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesIDW Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (IDW)]]'' has built up an extremely formidable gallery of rogues, virtually appear at least twice, with many having their own story arcs and some arguably even have their ''own'' rogue galleries.
** Of the core villains, there are The Shredder, Krang, Baxter Stockman, Rat King, and arguably Agent Bishop, Leatherhead, Madame Null and Old Hob fill this role as well. Villains of slightly lesser notability are plentiful but not to be underestimated, such as Karai, Hun, Natsu, Zodi, Bebop and Rocksteady, Atilla the Frog, Metalhead, Bludgeon, Koya, Ocho, Dr. Barlow and D.B., Bloch, Darius Dun, Victor, Queen Maligna, Puggle, Bandit, and Diamond.
** On the more cosmic scale, the turtles have battled against many aliens and astral beings, such as Colonel Ch'rell, Hakk-R, Savanti Romero, Queen Maligna and Zog.
** Of course, the Turtles haven't just faced individuals. The four brothers and many of their friends have faced off against entire teams, organizations, and even entire civilizations, such as the Foot Clan and its many sub-organizations, T.C.R.I. Corporation, Earth Protection Force, Darkwater, the Stone Soldiers, the Malignoid Swarm, Punk Frogs, Utrom Empire, the Triceratons, Stock Gen, Mighty Mutanimals, Street Phantoms, and more.
** Inarguably the most powerful enemies ever faced by the turtles are The Pantheon, a group of Chaotic Neutral gods who have been playing a "game" with humanity, a game that's almost over. Members include the aforementioned Rat King, Aka, Manmoth, Gothano, Chi-You, Toad Baron, Jagwar, Kitsune, and their father, The Dragon.
** Several characters and teams in the series also have their own micro-rogue galleries. Each of the turtles have one or two villains who are (or were) out for them specifically. Leonardo has Koya, Karai and "Dark Leo", whose more of his darker innerself, but they've still fought a few times. Raphael has Alopex, Zodi, and a more personal hatred for the EPF. Michelangelo is associated with Wyrm, Kara Lewis, and in the later stories, [[spoiler:Master Splinter]]. Donatello arguably has the largest of these, with Bebop and Rocksteady, Metalhead, Colonel Ch'rell, and Shredder all specifically attempting to kill him over his brothers. For their allies, Angel and Casey have beef against Hun and have butted heads against many gangs such as the Purple Dragons and the Garden State Wreckers. The Mutanimals themselves have confronted a handful of enemies unique to them, such as the Gang of Four and currently [[spoiler:the group is split apart in a war against themselves, with Man Ray, Herman, and Old Hob as the bad guys.]]
** As mentioned before, a number of the rogues have their own rogues! Most notably of this bunch are Bebop and Rocksteady, whose antics got them tangled in all sorts of sticky situations, causing them to go up against the Ghost Boys (lead by Xiang Fei Tong), The Olympian and Bopsteady.
** And lastly, it goes without saying that many former villains have reformed to the side of good and a few good guys went bad. For the former, Alopex, Jennika, Krisa, Slash and most recently [[spoiler:Kitsune and ''Shredder'']] all started off as recurring enemies before becoming allies to the Turtles. For the latter, Leonardo for a time and [[spoiler:Master Splinter fell to the dark side. He got better, though.]]
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* Comicbook/JudgeDredd has a rather small gallery, since (much like Punisher) most of his enemies end up dead, and many of those that he sends to prison don't pop up again. Recurring villains include [[OmnicidalManiac Judge Death]] (who's an immortal undead), [[SerialKiller PJ Maybe]] (who's both incredibly lucky and a master of escape), and the recently retired [[TheBrute Mean Machine Angel]]. One could perhaps also add Orlok, though he tends to tangle more with Anderson.

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* Comicbook/JudgeDredd has a rather small gallery, since (much like Punisher) most of his enemies end up dead, and many of those that he sends to prison don't pop up again. Recurring villains include [[OmnicidalManiac Judge Death]] (who's an immortal undead), [[SerialKiller PJ Maybe]] (who's both incredibly lucky and a master of escape), Judge Child (Who was Dredd's first recurring enemy), and the recently retired [[TheBrute Mean Machine Angel]]. One could perhaps also add Orlok, though he tends to tangle more with Anderson. Other foes of lesser renown include Stan Lee the Deathfist, Satanus the Time Traveling Dinosaur, Judge Caligula, and arguably Rico Dredd.
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** ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogIDW'' still has Doctor Eggman and his minions (especially [[TheDragon Metal Sonic]]) as the primary threat, with the [[VideoGame/SonicLostWorld Deadly Six]] also showing up a few times as a separate faction. There's also original villains, including [[EvilDuo Rough and Tumble]], [[PsychoSupporter Doctor Starline]], [[BlackMarket Clutch]], and [[EvilKnockoff Surge and Kit]].

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[[folder:DC Universe]]
* ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} has ComicBook/BlackManta and [[CainAndAbel Ocean Master]] sharing archvillain status, with [[PoweredArmor Carapax]], the [[PeoplePuppets Fisherman]], the [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower Scavenger]], the [[PunchClockVillain Human Flying Fish]], [[AnimalisticAbomination The Trench]], [[ThreateningShark King Shark]], [[MakingASplash the Eel]], [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Marine Marauder]], the [[DiabolusExNihilo Deep Six]], [[ShadowArchetype the Thirst]], Kordax, and [[FishPeople Charybdis]] rounding out the ranks.
* ComicBook/TheAtom has The Floronic Man, the Bug-Eyed Bandit, The Thinker, Dwarfstar, Lady Chronos, the Panther, Wizardo, the Man in the Ion Mask, Xotar, and of course, Chronos.
* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'':
** Batman is a standout example, both in terms of memorable [[Characters/BatmanRoguesGallery villains]] and in terms of sheer size. Many individual members of the Bat-Family all have ''their'' own rogues galleries, too. Combine them all and you have one of the biggest rogues gallery in comics history, with new members being added all the time:
** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]], ComicBook/TwoFace[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]], ComicBook/PoisonIvy[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]], ComicBook/ThePenguin[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]], ComicBook/TheRiddler[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]], Comicbook/{{Catwoman}}[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]], ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]], and ComicBook/TheJoker[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]]. Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]], Hush[[note]]scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]], ComicBook/HarleyQuinn[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]], Clayface[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape their bodies at will[[/note]], Killer Croc[[note]]a man with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]], ComicBook/RasAlGhul[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]], ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[note]]Ra's [[DaddysLittleVillain loyal daughter]] who's often either a foe or LoveInterest to Bruce[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Deadshot}}[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Bane}}[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]], Mad Hatter[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]], and Black Mask[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]]. He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, Wrath and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].
** Depending on the continuity, poor Batman has had to deal with ''multiple'' rogues galleries. On [[Series/Batman1966 the 1960s TV show]], [[BornInTheWrongCentury King Tut]] and Egghead were particularly troublesome. [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries The animated series]] gave us the Clock King and its spinoff comic ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' gave us, among others, the trio of [[CrazyPrepared Mastermind]], [[AwesomenessByAnalysis The Professor]], and [[BewareTheNiceOnes Mr. Nice]] (although they were more in the IneffectualSympatheticVillain category, really). And ''Series/{{Gotham}}'' adds Barbara Kean, Theo and Tabitha Galavan, Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska, and Fish Mooney to its Rogue roster, although they and the rest are more ''Jim Gordon's'' Gallery than Bruce Wayne's.
** Batman's former sidekick ComicBook/{{Nightwing}} has his own gallery, including villains that have plagued him from his days with Batman and the Titans: Blockbuster, Torque, the Tarantula, [[EvilKnockoff Nite-Wing]], Double Dare, Hellhound, Amygdala, ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, the Pierce Brothers. In a subversion, one of them is Shrike, an assassin Nightwing befriended while undercover receiving assassin's training. He thinks that he's Nightwing's worst foe; in reality, Nightwing doesn't even consider him a threat, on one occasion ignoring him and ''walking away'' while Shrike chased after him, trying (and failing) to hit him.
** In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'', Bruce Wayne's successor Terry developed his own set, including [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Bli]][[PoisonousPerson ght]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Shriek]], [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Inque]], [[BrainwashedAndCrazy Spellbinder]], [[ProfessionalKiller Curare]], [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame the Stalker]], [[AlternateCompanyEquivalent the Terrific Trio]], [[JekyllAndHyde Terminal]], [[BombThrowingAnarchists Mad Stan]], [[WhosLaughingNow Willy Watt]], [[EvilFormerFriend Big Time]], [[OverlordJr Preston Powers]], the Royal Flush Gang, and the [[GangofHats Jokerz]]. There was even some overlap; Mr. Freeze appeared in one episode, [[spoiler:Ra's al Ghul lived to face ''both'' Batmen after [[GrandTheftMe bodyjacking his own daughter]]]] and ComicBook/TheJoker himself came BackFromTheDead to [[WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker get his own feature presentation]].
*** Lampshaded when Terry and Bruce first encounter Shriek, the following exchange takes place:
---->'''Terry:''' You know this guy?\\
'''Bruce:''' Sorry, not one of mine.
** Tim Drake was the first [[ComicBook/RobinSeries Robin]] to start collecting his own personal rogues gallery while still acting as the Dark Knight's squire, and he continued adding to it as ComicBook/RedRobin. Notable members include [[MightyWhitey King Snake]], [[DragonLady Lynx]] (I & III), [[EnfantTerrible The General]], [[PowersViaPossession Johnny Warlock]], [[EvilSorcerer Warlock's Daughter]], [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame Jaeger]], [[ProfessionalKiller Scarab]], [[VillainTeleportation Dodge]], [[SnakePeople Tapeworm]], [[PoisonousPerson Wanderer]], [[BloodKnight Widower]], [[MasterPoisoner Funnel]], the BodyHorror inducing [[PeoplePuppets Sac]] and the [[DarwinistDesire Daughters of Acheron]].
* Deconstructed in Bates and Weisman's version of ''Comicbook/CaptainAtom'', in which Cap had a fictitious rogues' gallery that the military designed for him as part of his publicly-revealed false origin. Since that origin was his original, [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[RetCon Charlton origin]], his fake rogues' gallery, most notably Dr. Spectro, were drawn from his ''actual'' Charlton stories. On top of which, some of these fake villains later ''became'' [[BecomingTheMask real ones]]. Plus which, they, along with many of his other actual rogues, including, again, Dr. Spectro, as well as [[EvilCounterpart Major Force]], The Ghost (at one time), and [[MagnificentBastard Wade Eiling]], worked for the same secret military project he himself worked for. He also had "regular" rogues like [[DatingCatwoman Plastique]], [[CorporateSamurai The Cambodian]], and the [[EvilOverlord Queen Bee]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Firestorm}}'' has a Rogues Gallery that could be charitably described as deficient. Not only are the vast majority laughably underpowered compared to the hero (who has to carry around an IdiotBall the size of a house for them to be any threat to him whatsoever), but they seem to made up mostly of perverts or offensive stereotypes. [[http://mightygodking.com/index.php/2008/03/11/there-is-lame-and-then-there-are-firestorm-villains/ This article]] covers several of the worst offenders. But at least there were both [[StrawFeminist Killer Frosts]], Typhoon, Brimstone, and Tokamak. None of whom were slouches in the power department.[[note]]The Killer Frosts are among the deadliest examples of [[AnIcePerson ice powers]] in fiction, Typhoon is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin basically a sentient typhoon in humanoid form]], Brimstone is an immensely powerful [[PlayingWithFire fire elemental]] created by [[ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} the Big Bad of the entire DC Universe]], and Tokamak [[EvilCounterpart has the same story-breaker powers as Firestorm]].[[/note]]
* ''Franchise/TheFlash''
** Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be a former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, the ComicBook/{{Shade}}, and ComicBook/VandalSavage.
** Barry Allen has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], Pied Piper, ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, Professor Zoom/[[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flash]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.
** They have an unspoken rule of not to kill the Flash (bar their ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' appearance). That they actually did it (if accidentally) is [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone the worst thing that]] [[AntagonistInMourning ever happened to them]].
*** And in ''Comicbook/BlackestNight'', the Rogues tell [[spoiler:Captain Boomerang II]] that "[[EvenEvilHasStandards The Rogues don't kill women and children]]" right before they [[spoiler:[[KarmicDeath shove him into the pit he's been using to feed his Black Lantern father, the original Captain Boomerang]]]].
*** On the flip-side however, the Rogues have occasionally undergone a DarkerAndEdgier transformation to basically became Central City's version of the Mafia. While their gimmicks were still silly, they were unrepentant killers who were considered very dangerous.
** Several of them have appeared in some form in either ''Series/TheFlash1990'' or ''Series/TheFlash2014'' (and there's a list for the latter series further down below), or in his appearances on ''WesternAnimation/{{Superfriends}}'', ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'', and ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague''.
** ComicBook/WallyWest got unique enemies such as [[ExtraOreDinary Blacksmith]], [[SerialKiller Murmur]], [[SplitPersonality Magenta]], [[MadeOfIron Girder]], [[ColdSniper Plunder]], [[{{Cult}} Cicada]], [[DimensionLord Brother Grimm]], [[ComicBook/UnderworldUnleashed Neron]], Razer, [[ThenLetMeBeEvil Peek-a-boo]], [[BlobMonster Tar Pit]], and [[DeathDealer Double Down]]. A lot of Barry's traditional foes and their {{Legacy Character}}s clashed with Wally as well, including [[MagicFromTechnology Abra Kadabra]] (he started as an enemy of Barry but with Wally ItsPersonal mutually), a new Mirror Master and Trickster (Axel Walker, a spoiled rich kid who stole James Jesse's gimmicks and went into crime ForTheEvulz) and Zoom ([[FaceHeelTurn Hunter]] [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Zolomon]], inspired by ComicBook/EobardThawne).
*** Depending on when the comics were printed, some of Wally's Rogues were sometimes depicted as being {{Punch Clock Villain}}s who were actually almost ''{{friend|lyEnemy}}s'' [[FriendlyEnemy with the Flash]]. Notably, scenes like [[http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/the-flash/19-1.jpg this]] actually happened in the comic, not just on the cover (that one happened because the Trickster sent Wally an invitation to a Rogues party as a joke - Wally had a date and no better ideas, so he decided to take him up on the invite. All involved find themselves having a surprisingly good time).
** [[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he has [[EvilformerFriend Griffin]], Superboy-Prime and even gains an arch-enemy of his own, [[EvilTwin Inertia]].
* ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'': The titular Emerald Archer has his own gallery of rogues, some of whom are archers like himself, and many of whom tend to be [[ProfessionalKiller professional assassins]]. These include [[EvilCounterpart Merlyn]], [[AristocratsAreEvil Count Vertigo]], [[ClockKing Clock King]], [[ArrogantKungFuGuy Constantine Drakon]], [[NighInvulnerability Brick]], [[ShellShockedVeteran Cupid]], China White, Red Dart, Hatchet, Silver Monkey, [[DatingCatwoman Shado]], Camorouge, and [[SerialKiller Onomatopoeia]]. Occasionally Oliver will clash with ComicBook/{{Deadshot}}, despite the two having no real animosity with each other, and with ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, who definitely carries a grudge against Oliver for stabbing him in his (already-blind) eye. Several of these would later show up as antagonists in ''Series/{{Arrow}}'' (see below).
* Each Franchise/GreenLantern to headline his own series has had a collection of recurring foes, though they rarely if ever have teamed up collectively.
** Alan Scott: ComicBook/VandalSavage (arguably his archnemesis), Solomon Grundy, the Sportsman, the Icicle, the Gambler, the Harlequin (who actually only became a villain in the first place to [[DatingCatwoman date, and, subsequently, marry Alan]]) and the Thorn (the mother of his two children).
** Hal Jordan: Sinestro (''definitely'' his archnemesis), the Manhunters, Kanjar Ro (a RoguesGalleryTransplant - he was originally a foe of ComicBook/{{Hawkman}}), Atrocitus, Hector Hammond, Star Sapphire ([[DatingCatwoman Hal's sometimes-girlfriend]]), Dr. Polaris, the Tattooed Man, Evil Star, Black Hand, Goldface (another HeelFaceTurn), Sonar, and the Shark.
** Kyle Rayner: Major Force (on loan from Comicbook/CaptainAtom and not really his archnemesis, but he's loomed large in Kyle's life anyway, thanks largely to [[StuffedIntoTheFridge what he did to his first girlfriend]]), Oblivion, Grayven, Effigy, Alex Nero, Fatality, Sonar II, Amon Sur and acquired Brainwave JR, Dr. Light, Dr. Polaris and Hal Jordan as Parallax. Kyle, in an issue of his comic, bemoans the fact that he has a lousy Rogues Gallery, compared to his friend Wally West (The Flash).
** As of ''Green Lantern: Rebirth'' and the subsequent relaunch of the franchise, Hal and Kyle's galleries have more or less merged into a collective Rogues Gallery for the entire Green Lantern Corps, with the additions of Parallax, Mongul, Cyborg-Superman, Superboy-Prime, Krona, and [[Characters/GLSinestroCorps the Sinestro Corps]].
** Furthermore, the ''GL Corps'' now have their own rival factions, including the [[TheBerserker Red Lanterns]], [[TheHeartless Black Lanterns]], [[OneManArmy Agent Orange]], and the aforementioned [[DespotismJustifiesTheMeans Sinestro Corps]]. The Star Sapphire name is now applied to a corps as well, although they don't have any designs towards antagonizing the Green Lanterns.
* ComicBook/{{Hawkman}} and the rest of the Hawk-Family have had a number of enemies ranging from villainous fellow aliens and non-powered human criminals to meta-humans and even figures from ancient mythology, to include the likes of [[ShapeShifting Byth Rok]], [[VillainTeleportation Fadeaway Man]], ComicBook/GentlemanGhost, [[SuperIntelligence I.Q.]], [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent Lion-Mane]], the Manhawks, Matter Master, the Monocle, Lasso, Hath-Set, Headhunter, Hummingbird, Count Viper, ComicBook/VandalSavage, and the [[LivingShadow Shadow-Thief]], who's also their ArchEnemy.
* Even though her series is only 38 issues long, Kate Spencer, the Comicbook/{{Manhunter}}, has quite an impressive rogues gallery. Sweeney Todd, Copperhead, the Monocle, Phobia, Dr. Moon, Everyman, and Vesetech.
* While the ComicBook/MartianManhunter has mostly fought one-off villains like [[OmnicidalManiac Commander Blanx]], Human Falcon, Human Squirrel, Mister Moth and the Countryman, he 's also got a few more notable enemies, such as his brother [[CainAndAbel Malefic]], [[MadScientist Professor Arnold Hugo]], the [[KillItWithFire Human Flame]], the Vulture Society, Dr. Trap, Fernus, the Martian Man-eater, [[VampiricDraining Bette Noir]] and [[MindManipulation Despero]].
* The ''Comicbook/{{Shazam}}'' Captain Marvel: the Rogues Gallery includes [[MadScientist Dr. Sivana]] (and all four of his children), Mr. Mind, ComicBook/BlackAdam, Mr. Atom, Ibac the Invincible, Sabbac, Oggar, King Kull, the crocodile-gangsters of Planet Punkus, etc. Most (save Black Adam) haven't appeared much lately, but they tend to congregate as [[LegionOfDoom the Monster Society of Evil]].
** The Monster Society has the distinction of being the first recurring villain team in comics. So it was Captain Marvel's gallery who first came up with the idea of teaming up to destroy the hero (a tactic which proved about as successful as it usually does.)
** The only unrepentantly evil members of the Sivana Family are Dr. Thaddeus Sivana, Georgia, and Sivana Jr. [[BeautyEqualsGoodness Magnificus and Beautia]] both pulled [[HeelFaceTurn Heel Face Turns]] and became at the very least Law-Abiding Citizens who are mostly embarrassed by their family, if not outright allies of the Marvel Family.
* ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'':
** His gallery is one of the most popular in comics, and it [[Characters/SupermanRoguesGallery includes]] earthly villains like ComicBook/LexLuthor, [[{{Cyborg}} Metallo]], [[EvilKnockoff Bizarro]], [[EvilTwin Ultraman]], [[PowersAsPrograms Parasite]], [[ItAmusedMe Prankster]], [[PsychopathicManchild Toyman]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Silver Banshee]], [[PsychoElectro Livewire]], [[RobotMe Cyborg-Superman]], [[ManOfKryptonite Kryptonite Man]], [[PsychicPowers Manchester Black,]] and [[TheSyndicate Intergang]], as well as alien or space-based foes like ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}, [[KneelBeforeZod Zod]], {{ComicBook/Darkseid}}, [[GalacticConqueror Mongul]], [[SpaceCowboy Terra-Man,]] [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Doomsday]], [[PlanetKiller Imperiex]] and [[GreatGazoo Mister Mxyzptlk]]. The latest addition is Blanque, an OmnicidalManiac who is basically Superman's version of The Joker, only without any humor.
** The producers of ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' felt this gallery was really limited; they resorted to using Creator/JackKirby's [[Comicbook/NewGods Fourth World]] DC characters, such as Darkseid and his gang, to fill the ranks. They also created a couple of their own villains, most notably CanonImmigrant [[PsychoElectro Livewire]].
** To be fair, Darkseid and other elements of the Fourth World were introduced in Jack Kirby's ''ComicBook/JimmyOlsen'' comics, so they were, by extension, always a part of the Superman Mythos. And, in any case, their storylines were ''[[RuleOfCool awesome]]''. It should also be noted that Darkseid and his minions had already been introduced and had been recurring archenemies for Superman in the comics for several years before ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' was even produced and aired.
* ''Comicbook/{{Supergirl}}'' has her own gallery, including MadScientist and body-swapper Lesla-Lar, Kryptonian criminal Black Flame, sword-wielding Amazon Nightflame, Satan Girl (name shared by three vastly different enemies), reality-warper Nazi Blackstarr, super-powered Darkseid minion Powerboy, mass-murderer bounty-hunter ''SelfDemonstrating/{{Lobo}}'', Metallo expy and genocidal thug Reactron (who killed post-Crisis Supergirl's parents and blew New Krypton up), corrupt businessman Simon Tycho, SuperSoldier Reign and the remainder world-killers -biological super-weapons-, Kryptonian werewolf Lar-On, Cyborg-Superman, and many more.
* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' has the ComicBook/{{Cheetah}}, [[OurGiantsAreBigger Giganta]], [[PlayingWithSyringes Dr. Poison]], [[PsychicPowers Dr. Psycho]], [[{{Cyborg}} Dr. Cyber]], [[AlienGeometries Angle Man]], [[ThoseWackyNazis Baroness Von Gunther]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Silver Swan]], [[EmperorScientist Queen Atomia]], [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Veronica Cale]], [[SuperSpeed Mayfly]], [[EvilCounterpart Gundra]], [[PlayingWithFire Zara]], the Queen of Fables, and some gods gone bad (ComicBook/{{Ares|DC}}, Eris, etc.) and other figures from [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek Mythology]] (ComicBook/{{Hercules|Unbound}}, Medusa, ComicBook/{{Circe}}). However, many of the more recent rogues are often skipped over due to Wonder Woman's continual battle with DependingOnTheWriter, and then there's the fact that most villains she fights legitimately reform after their encounters with her.
* As one of the most recognizable magic-using heroes in the DCU, ComicBook/{{Zatanna}} tends to fight enemies who either have a supernatural background or are otherwise mystically empowered, including in her own limited series. Her recurring foes include the likes of [[SealedEvilInACan Allura]], [[EvilSorcerer Brother Night]], [[DreamWeaver Fuseli]], [[DemonicDummy Oscar Hampel]], [[RealityWarper Zor]], [[PlayingWithFire Ember]], [[ChildMage Uriah]], [[ManipulativeBastard The Tempter]], [[MalevolentMaskedMen Romalthi the Shaper]], and [[ClaimedByTheSupernatural Nimue Ravensong]].
* In addition to their individual enemies, the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica had a handful of villains that regularly fought them as a team: [[PowerCopying Amazo]], Despero, Starro the Conqueror, Kanjar Ro, Starbreaker, The Shaggy Man (later known as the General), The Queen Bee, and Prometheus, to name but a few. Two of the most famous villain teams are the Injustice League and the Secret Society of Supervillains.
* The ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica's Rogues Gallery is made up mostly of the surviving foes of their individual members from back in UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks, as well as said foes' {{legac|yCharacter}}ies and a few add-ons from more recent years. These include but are not limited to: ComicBook/VandalSavage, the Wizard, and the Ultra-Humanite (more or less collectively the team's archfoes), plus Per Degaton, Wotan, ComicBook/SolomonGrundy, the Rival, the Tigress, Shiv, the ComicBook/GentlemanGhost, Johnny Sorrow, Roulette, Icicle II, the Thinker, Killer Wasp, Rag Doll, and on-again-off-again AntiHero ComicBook/BlackAdam.
* Both the League and the Society occasionally fall foul of various terrorist groups (Kobra, the Illuminati) and shadowy government organizations (The D.E.O., S.H.A.D.E., The Agency, Checkmate).
* The ComicBook/{{Legion of Super-Heroes}} has loads and loads of recurring enemies, including at least three teams of villains:
** The Fatal Five: Tharok, Manos, Validus, Emerald Empress, and the Persuader (plus, on one occasion, Mordecai standing in for Validus).
** The Legion of Super-Villains: Lightning Lord, Saturn Queen, Cosmic King, Chameleon Chief, Esper Lass, Hunter, Magno Lad, Micro Lad, Nemesis Kid, Ol-Vir, Radiation Roy, Ron-Karr, Spider Girl, Sun Emperor, Tyr, and Zymyr.
** The Justice League of Earth: Earth-Man, Storm Boy, Golden Boy, Tusker, Eyeful Ethel, and Radiation Roy and Spider Girl from the LSV.
** And numerous unaffiliated villains: Mordru, the Time Trapper, Computo, Universo, the Dark Circle, Leland [=McCauley=], Imperiex, Evillo, Grimbor the Chainsman, and so on and so forth.
* The ComicBook/TeenTitans have had ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, [[ComicBook/TheJudasContract Terra]], Trigon, Brother Blood, [[CainAndAbel Blackfire]], Psimon, and occasionally the Brotherhood of Evil. More recent additions are Jericho and {{evil counterpart}}s like the Terror Titans and the Titans of Tomorrow. [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitans The animated Titans]] had Slade, Brother Blood, the HIVE, the Brotherhood of Evil, Trigon, Blackfire ([[LighterAndSofter though many of these names are the same, the animated villains were often very different in terms of personality and motivation than their comic counterparts]]) and a wide variety of gag or {{Harmless Villain}}s.

to:

[[folder:DC Universe]]
[[folder:Other]]
* ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} has ComicBook/BlackManta and [[CainAndAbel Ocean Master]] sharing archvillain status, with [[PoweredArmor Carapax]], the [[PeoplePuppets Fisherman]], the [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower Scavenger]], the [[PunchClockVillain Human Flying Fish]], [[AnimalisticAbomination The Trench]], [[ThreateningShark King Shark]], [[MakingASplash the Eel]], [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Marine Marauder]], the [[DiabolusExNihilo Deep Six]], [[ShadowArchetype the Thirst]], Kordax, and [[FishPeople Charybdis]] rounding out the ranks.
* ComicBook/TheAtom has The Floronic Man, the Bug-Eyed Bandit, The Thinker, Dwarfstar, Lady Chronos, the Panther, Wizardo, the Man in the Ion Mask, Xotar, and of course, Chronos.
* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'':
** Batman is a standout example, both in terms of memorable [[Characters/BatmanRoguesGallery villains]] and in terms of sheer size. Many individual members of the Bat-Family all have ''their'' own rogues galleries, too. Combine them all and you have one of the biggest rogues gallery in comics history, with new members being added all the time:
** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]], ComicBook/TwoFace[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]], ComicBook/PoisonIvy[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]], ComicBook/ThePenguin[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]], ComicBook/TheRiddler[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]], Comicbook/{{Catwoman}}[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]], ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]], and ComicBook/TheJoker[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]]. Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]], Hush[[note]]scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]], ComicBook/HarleyQuinn[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]], Clayface[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape
Before they lost their bodies at will[[/note]], Killer Croc[[note]]a man powers en masse, the Order of Despots was this to the Pantheon in ''ComicBook/AllFallDown''.
* ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'': A non-superhero example would be
with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]], ComicBook/RasAlGhul[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]], ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[note]]Ra's [[DaddysLittleVillain loyal daughter]] who's often either a foe or LoveInterest to Bruce[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Deadshot}}[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Bane}}[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]], Mad Hatter[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]], and Black Mask[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]]. He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, Wrath and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].
** Depending on the continuity, poor Batman has had to deal with ''multiple'' rogues galleries. On [[Series/Batman1966 the 1960s TV show]], [[BornInTheWrongCentury King Tut]] and Egghead were particularly troublesome. [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries The animated series]] gave us the Clock King and its spinoff comic ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' gave us, among others, the trio of [[CrazyPrepared Mastermind]], [[AwesomenessByAnalysis The Professor]], and [[BewareTheNiceOnes Mr. Nice]] (although they were more in the IneffectualSympatheticVillain category, really). And ''Series/{{Gotham}}'' adds Barbara Kean, Theo and Tabitha Galavan, Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska, and Fish Mooney to its Rogue roster, although they and the rest are more ''Jim Gordon's'' Gallery than Bruce Wayne's.
** Batman's former sidekick ComicBook/{{Nightwing}} has his own gallery, including villains that have plagued him from his days with Batman and the Titans: Blockbuster, Torque, the Tarantula, [[EvilKnockoff Nite-Wing]], Double Dare, Hellhound, Amygdala, ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, the Pierce Brothers. In a subversion, one of them is Shrike, an assassin Nightwing befriended while undercover receiving assassin's training. He thinks that he's Nightwing's worst foe; in reality, Nightwing doesn't even consider him a threat, on one occasion ignoring him and ''walking away'' while Shrike chased after him, trying (and failing) to hit him.
** In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'', Bruce Wayne's successor Terry developed his own set, including [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Bli]][[PoisonousPerson ght]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Shriek]], [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Inque]], [[BrainwashedAndCrazy Spellbinder]], [[ProfessionalKiller Curare]], [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame the Stalker]], [[AlternateCompanyEquivalent the Terrific Trio]], [[JekyllAndHyde Terminal]], [[BombThrowingAnarchists Mad Stan]], [[WhosLaughingNow Willy Watt]], [[EvilFormerFriend Big Time]], [[OverlordJr Preston Powers]], the Royal Flush Gang, and the [[GangofHats Jokerz]]. There was even some overlap; Mr. Freeze appeared in one episode, [[spoiler:Ra's al Ghul lived to face ''both'' Batmen after [[GrandTheftMe bodyjacking his own daughter]]]] and ComicBook/TheJoker himself came BackFromTheDead to [[WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker get his own feature presentation]].
*** Lampshaded when Terry and Bruce first encounter Shriek, the following exchange takes place:
---->'''Terry:''' You know this guy?\\
'''Bruce:''' Sorry, not one of mine.
** Tim Drake was the first [[ComicBook/RobinSeries Robin]] to start collecting his own personal rogues gallery while still acting as the Dark Knight's squire, and he continued adding to it as ComicBook/RedRobin. Notable members include [[MightyWhitey King Snake]], [[DragonLady Lynx]] (I & III), [[EnfantTerrible The General]], [[PowersViaPossession Johnny Warlock]], [[EvilSorcerer Warlock's Daughter]], [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame Jaeger]], [[ProfessionalKiller Scarab]], [[VillainTeleportation Dodge]], [[SnakePeople Tapeworm]], [[PoisonousPerson Wanderer]], [[BloodKnight Widower]], [[MasterPoisoner Funnel]], the BodyHorror inducing [[PeoplePuppets Sac]] and the [[DarwinistDesire Daughters of Acheron]].
* Deconstructed in Bates and Weisman's version of ''Comicbook/CaptainAtom'', in which Cap had a fictitious rogues' gallery that the military designed for him as part of his publicly-revealed false origin. Since that origin was his original, [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[RetCon Charlton origin]], his fake rogues' gallery,
Scrooge [=McDuck=], most notably Dr. Spectro, were drawn from his ''actual'' Charlton stories. On top of which, some of these fake villains later ''became'' [[BecomingTheMask real ones]]. Plus which, they, along in the comics by Creator/CarlBarks and Creator/DonRosa. Along with many of the [[CardCarryingVillain Beagle]] [[TerribleTrio Boys]], who are constantly trying to rob Scrooge blind, he has to contend with [[FemmeFatale Magica De Spell]], an evil sorceress who constantly tries to steal Scrooge's NumberOneDime because she thinks it has magic powers; the snooty [[UpperClassTwit John D. Rockerduck]], who simply inherited his other actual rogues, including, again, Dr. Spectro, as well as money instead of working for it like Scrooge did; and [[EvilCounterpart Flintheart]] [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney Glomgold]], who has all of Scrooge's drive and determination but none of his ethics or morals. There's also Blackheart Beagle, the Beagle Boys' grandfather, founder, and occasional leader who is depicted as Scrooge's ArchEnemy and is constantly trying to rob Scrooge blind with the aid of his family The Beagle Boys. Later day additions include the country of [[{{Ruritania}} Brutopia]] and [[GentlemanThief Arpine Lusene]], who's out to steal Scrooge's money simply to show that he can, or, at the very least, make it disappear so he can claim he did.
** The Beagle Boys, Flintheart, and Magica all became regulars on ''WesternAnimation/{{DuckTales|1987}}''.
** Interestingly, while both come from the original canon, Rockerduck and Flintheart rarely if ever are featured in the same canon in modern comics. In America Flintheart is prevalent while in Europe Rockerduck is more famous, and as a result hardly any American fan is aware of Rockerduck and the same applies to European fans for Flintheart, which resulted in their personalities to have evolved over time to ''be the same''. Thus, you can call Rockerduck "Europe's Flintheart" and Flintheart "America's Rockerduck".
** Scrooge's Rogues Gallery is actually lampshaded in the first episode of the ''[[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 DuckTales reboot]]'', when Scrooge learns that Donald's new job is with [[spoiler:Flintheart Glomgold]].
--->'''Scrooge:''' Your new job is with ''my sworn enemy?''\\
'''Donald:''' I can't keep track of [[LongList all your sworn enemies!]]
* During her quest to find the person(s) responsible for her apparent murder, ComicBook/GhostDarkHorseComics amasses a gallery of enemies with varying strange abilities, including the likes of [[RealityWarper Cameron Nemo]], [[PowerParasite Dr. October]], [[{{Telepathy}} Hunger]], [[EvilGenius Dr. Trouvaille]] and his Ghost-Hunters, [[MindManipulation Archibald Scythe]], [[AbsurdlySharpBlade Joe Yimbo]], [[EvilOldFolks Malcolm Greymater]], [[SuperStrength Towering Chris]], [[PeoplePuppets Miasma]], [[ReptilesAreAbhorrent Snake]], and [[SinisterMinister Von Ghastly]], and non-powered foes like [[TheDon Crux]], [[SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil Leo Merino]] and [[ScarilyCompetentTracker The Hunter]].
* Across the ''Franchise/GIJoe'' franchise, the Joes consistently do battle against the Cobra Command terrorist organization in one form or another (not always paramilitary, such as in ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeRenegades'' where it's Cobra Industries, a pharmaceutical conglomerate). Members of the Cobra group include Cobra Commander, Destro, the Baroness, Storm Shadow, Zartan, Dr. Mindbender, Black-Out, and Serpentor (who temporarily took Cobra Commander's place as leader of Cobra), while mercenaries
Major Force]], Bludd and Firefly occasionally grant their services to the organization.
* Comicbook/JudgeDredd has a rather small gallery, since (much like Punisher) most of his enemies end up dead, and many of those that he sends to prison don't pop up again. Recurring villains include [[OmnicidalManiac Judge Death]] (who's an immortal undead), [[SerialKiller PJ Maybe]] (who's both incredibly lucky and a master of escape), and the recently retired [[TheBrute Mean Machine Angel]]. One could perhaps also add Orlok, though he tends to tangle more with Anderson.
* WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse faced many adversaries in the ComicBook/MickeyMouseComicUniverse, but his most notable enemies, aside from [[WesternAnimation/{{Pete}} Peg-Leg Pete]], include an AmoralAttorney named Sylvester Shyster, a stingy old man named Eli Squinch, a [[TerribleTrio trio]] of [[ManiacMonkeys simian]] {{mad scientist}}s named Professors Ecks, Doublex, and Triplex, and his ArchEnemy, the Phantom Blot.
* Comicbook/TheSavageDragon has hundreds of rogues between the Vicious Circle, various Overlords, Darklord, Thor, Solar Man,
The Ghost (at one time), Fiend, his EvilDoppelganger, etc.
* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
** ''Comicbook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'':
*** Sonic the Hedgehog has acquired a large Rogues Gallery over the comic's {{long run|ners}}. Aside from his ArchEnemy Dr. Robotnik/Eggman, Sonic
and his friends have also had to deal with Eggman's nephew [[TheStarscream Snively]], [[EvilSorcerer Ixis Naugus]], [[MagnificentBastard Wade Eiling]], worked for Mammoth Mogul]], [[QuirkyMinibossSquad the same secret military project he himself worked for. He also had "regular" rogues like [[DatingCatwoman Plastique]], [[CorporateSamurai The Cambodian]], and the [[EvilOverlord Queen Bee]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Firestorm}}'' has a Rogues Gallery that could be charitably described as deficient. Not only are the vast majority laughably underpowered compared to the hero (who has to carry around an IdiotBall the size of a house for them to be any threat to him whatsoever), but they seem to made up mostly of perverts or offensive stereotypes. [[http://mightygodking.com/index.php/2008/03/11/there-is-lame-and-then-there-are-firestorm-villains/ This article]] covers several of the worst offenders. But at least there were both [[StrawFeminist Killer Frosts]], Typhoon, Brimstone, and Tokamak. None of whom were slouches in the power department.[[note]]The Killer Frosts are among the deadliest examples of [[AnIcePerson ice powers]] in fiction, Typhoon is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin basically a sentient typhoon in humanoid form]], Brimstone is an immensely powerful [[PlayingWithFire fire elemental]] created by [[ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} the Big Bad of the entire DC Universe]], and Tokamak [[EvilCounterpart has the same story-breaker powers as Firestorm]].[[/note]]
* ''Franchise/TheFlash''
** Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be a former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, the ComicBook/{{Shade}}, and ComicBook/VandalSavage.
** Barry Allen has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], Pied Piper, ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, Professor Zoom/[[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flash]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.
** They have an unspoken rule of not to kill the Flash (bar their ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' appearance). That they actually did it (if accidentally) is [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone the worst thing that]] [[AntagonistInMourning ever happened to them]].
*** And in ''Comicbook/BlackestNight'', the Rogues tell [[spoiler:Captain Boomerang II]] that "[[EvenEvilHasStandards The Rogues don't kill women and children]]" right before they [[spoiler:[[KarmicDeath shove him into the pit he's been using to feed his Black Lantern father, the original Captain Boomerang]]]].
*** On the flip-side however, the Rogues have occasionally undergone a DarkerAndEdgier transformation to basically became Central City's version of the Mafia. While their gimmicks were still silly, they were unrepentant killers who were considered very dangerous.
** Several of them have appeared in some form in either ''Series/TheFlash1990'' or ''Series/TheFlash2014'' (and there's a list for the latter series further down below), or in his appearances on ''WesternAnimation/{{Superfriends}}'', ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'', and ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague''.
** ComicBook/WallyWest got unique enemies such as [[ExtraOreDinary Blacksmith]], [[SerialKiller Murmur]], [[SplitPersonality Magenta]], [[MadeOfIron Girder]], [[ColdSniper Plunder]], [[{{Cult}} Cicada]], [[DimensionLord Brother Grimm]], [[ComicBook/UnderworldUnleashed Neron]], Razer, [[ThenLetMeBeEvil Peek-a-boo]], [[BlobMonster Tar Pit]], and [[DeathDealer Double Down]]. A lot of Barry's traditional foes and their {{Legacy Character}}s clashed with Wally as well, including [[MagicFromTechnology Abra Kadabra]] (he started as an enemy of Barry but with Wally ItsPersonal mutually), a new Mirror Master and Trickster (Axel Walker, a spoiled rich kid who stole James Jesse's gimmicks and went into crime ForTheEvulz) and Zoom ([[FaceHeelTurn Hunter]] [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Zolomon]], inspired by ComicBook/EobardThawne).
*** Depending on when the comics were printed, some of Wally's Rogues were sometimes depicted as being {{Punch Clock Villain}}s who were actually almost ''{{friend|lyEnemy}}s'' [[FriendlyEnemy with the Flash]]. Notably, scenes like [[http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/the-flash/19-1.jpg this]] actually happened in the comic, not just on the cover (that one happened because the Trickster sent Wally an invitation to a Rogues party as a joke - Wally had a date and no better ideas, so he decided to take him up on the invite. All involved find themselves having a surprisingly good time).
** [[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he has [[EvilformerFriend Griffin]], Superboy-Prime and even gains an arch-enemy of his own,
Destructix]], [[EvilTwin Inertia]].
* ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'': The titular Emerald Archer has his own gallery of rogues, some of whom are archers like himself, and many of whom tend to be [[ProfessionalKiller professional assassins]]. These include [[EvilCounterpart Merlyn]], [[AristocratsAreEvil Count Vertigo]], [[ClockKing Clock King]], [[ArrogantKungFuGuy Constantine Drakon]], [[NighInvulnerability Brick]], [[ShellShockedVeteran Cupid]], China White, Red Dart, Hatchet, Silver Monkey, [[DatingCatwoman Shado]], Camorouge, and [[SerialKiller Onomatopoeia]]. Occasionally Oliver will clash with ComicBook/{{Deadshot}}, despite the two having no real animosity with each other, and with ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, who definitely carries a grudge against Oliver for stabbing him in his (already-blind) eye. Several of these would later show up as antagonists in ''Series/{{Arrow}}'' (see below).
* Each Franchise/GreenLantern to headline his own series has had a collection of recurring foes, though they rarely if ever have teamed up collectively.
** Alan Scott: ComicBook/VandalSavage (arguably his archnemesis), Solomon Grundy, the Sportsman, the Icicle, the Gambler, the Harlequin (who actually only became a villain in the first place to [[DatingCatwoman date, and, subsequently, marry Alan]])
Scourge]] and the Thorn (the mother of his two children).
** Hal Jordan: Sinestro (''definitely'' his archnemesis), the Manhunters, Kanjar Ro (a RoguesGalleryTransplant - he was originally a foe of ComicBook/{{Hawkman}}), Atrocitus, Hector Hammond, Star Sapphire ([[DatingCatwoman Hal's sometimes-girlfriend]]), Dr. Polaris, the Tattooed Man, Evil Star, Black Hand, Goldface (another HeelFaceTurn), Sonar,
[[ThePsychoRangers Suppression Squad]], [[AxCrazy Warlord Kodos]] (now deceased), [[AIIsACrapshoot A.D.A.M. and the Shark.
** Kyle Rayner: Major Force (on loan from Comicbook/CaptainAtom and not really his archnemesis, but he's loomed large in Kyle's life anyway, thanks largely to [[StuffedIntoTheFridge what he did to his first girlfriend]]), Oblivion, Grayven, Effigy, Alex Nero, Fatality, Sonar II, Amon Sur and acquired Brainwave JR, Dr. Light, Dr. Polaris and Hal Jordan as Parallax. Kyle, in an issue of his comic, bemoans the fact that he has a lousy Rogues Gallery, compared to his friend Wally West (The Flash).
** As of ''Green Lantern: Rebirth'' and the subsequent relaunch of the franchise, Hal and Kyle's galleries have more or less merged into a collective Rogues Gallery for the entire Green Lantern Corps, with the additions of Parallax, Mongul, Cyborg-Superman, Superboy-Prime, Krona, and [[Characters/GLSinestroCorps the Sinestro Corps]].
** Furthermore, the ''GL Corps'' now have their own rival factions, including the [[TheBerserker Red Lanterns]], [[TheHeartless Black Lanterns]], [[OneManArmy Agent Orange]], and the aforementioned [[DespotismJustifiesTheMeans Sinestro Corps]]. The Star Sapphire name is now applied to a corps as well, although they don't have any designs towards antagonizing the Green Lanterns.
* ComicBook/{{Hawkman}} and the rest of the Hawk-Family have had a number of enemies ranging from villainous fellow aliens and non-powered human criminals to meta-humans and even figures from ancient mythology, to include the likes of [[ShapeShifting Byth Rok]], [[VillainTeleportation Fadeaway Man]], ComicBook/GentlemanGhost, [[SuperIntelligence I.Q.]], [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent Lion-Mane]], the Manhawks, Matter Master, the Monocle, Lasso, Hath-Set, Headhunter, Hummingbird, Count Viper, ComicBook/VandalSavage, and the [[LivingShadow Shadow-Thief]], who's also their ArchEnemy.
* Even though her series is only 38 issues long, Kate Spencer, the Comicbook/{{Manhunter}}, has quite an impressive rogues gallery. Sweeney Todd, Copperhead, the Monocle, Phobia, Dr. Moon, Everyman, and Vesetech.
* While the ComicBook/MartianManhunter has mostly fought one-off villains like [[OmnicidalManiac Commander Blanx]], Human Falcon, Human Squirrel, Mister Moth and the Countryman, he 's also got a few more notable enemies, such as his brother [[CainAndAbel Malefic]], [[MadScientist Professor Arnold Hugo]], the [[KillItWithFire Human Flame]], the Vulture Society, Dr. Trap, Fernus, the Martian Man-eater, [[VampiricDraining Bette Noir]] and [[MindManipulation Despero]].
* The ''Comicbook/{{Shazam}}'' Captain Marvel: the Rogues Gallery includes [[MadScientist Dr. Sivana]] (and all four of his children), Mr. Mind, ComicBook/BlackAdam, Mr. Atom, Ibac the Invincible, Sabbac, Oggar, King Kull, the crocodile-gangsters of Planet Punkus, etc. Most (save Black Adam) haven't appeared much lately, but they tend to congregate as [[LegionOfDoom the Monster Society of Evil]].
** The Monster Society has the distinction of being the first recurring villain team in comics. So it was Captain Marvel's gallery who first came up with the idea of teaming up to destroy the hero (a tactic which proved about as successful as it usually does.)
** The only unrepentantly evil members of the Sivana Family are Dr. Thaddeus Sivana, Georgia, and Sivana Jr. [[BeautyEqualsGoodness Magnificus and Beautia]] both pulled [[HeelFaceTurn Heel Face Turns]] and became at the very least Law-Abiding Citizens who are mostly embarrassed by their family, if not outright allies of the Marvel Family.
* ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'':
** His gallery is one of the most popular in comics, and it [[Characters/SupermanRoguesGallery includes]] earthly villains like ComicBook/LexLuthor, [[{{Cyborg}} Metallo]], [[EvilKnockoff Bizarro]], [[EvilTwin Ultraman]], [[PowersAsPrograms Parasite]], [[ItAmusedMe Prankster]], [[PsychopathicManchild Toyman]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Silver Banshee]], [[PsychoElectro Livewire]], [[RobotMe Cyborg-Superman]], [[ManOfKryptonite Kryptonite Man]], [[PsychicPowers Manchester Black,]] and [[TheSyndicate Intergang]], as well as alien or space-based foes like ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}, [[KneelBeforeZod Zod]], {{ComicBook/Darkseid}}, [[GalacticConqueror Mongul]], [[SpaceCowboy Terra-Man,]] [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Doomsday]], [[PlanetKiller Imperiex]] and [[GreatGazoo Mister Mxyzptlk]]. The latest addition is Blanque, an OmnicidalManiac who is basically Superman's version of The Joker, only without any humor.
** The producers of ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' felt this gallery was really limited; they resorted to using Creator/JackKirby's [[Comicbook/NewGods Fourth World]] DC characters, such as Darkseid and his gang, to fill the ranks. They also created a couple of their own villains, most notably CanonImmigrant [[PsychoElectro Livewire]].
** To be fair, Darkseid and other elements of the Fourth World were introduced in Jack Kirby's ''ComicBook/JimmyOlsen'' comics, so they were, by extension, always a part of the Superman Mythos. And, in any case, their storylines were ''[[RuleOfCool awesome]]''. It should also be noted that Darkseid and his minions had already been introduced and had been recurring archenemies for Superman in the comics for several years before ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' was even produced and aired.
* ''Comicbook/{{Supergirl}}'' has her own gallery, including MadScientist and body-swapper Lesla-Lar, Kryptonian criminal Black Flame, sword-wielding Amazon Nightflame, Satan Girl (name shared by three vastly different enemies), reality-warper Nazi Blackstarr, super-powered Darkseid minion Powerboy, mass-murderer bounty-hunter ''SelfDemonstrating/{{Lobo}}'', Metallo expy and genocidal thug Reactron (who killed post-Crisis Supergirl's parents and blew New Krypton up), corrupt businessman Simon Tycho, SuperSoldier Reign and the remainder world-killers -biological super-weapons-, Kryptonian werewolf Lar-On, Cyborg-Superman, and many more.
* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' has the ComicBook/{{Cheetah}}, [[OurGiantsAreBigger Giganta]], [[PlayingWithSyringes Dr. Poison]], [[PsychicPowers Dr. Psycho]], [[{{Cyborg}} Dr. Cyber]], [[AlienGeometries Angle Man]], [[ThoseWackyNazis Baroness Von Gunther]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Silver Swan]], [[EmperorScientist Queen Atomia]], [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Veronica Cale]], [[SuperSpeed Mayfly]], [[EvilCounterpart Gundra]], [[PlayingWithFire Zara]], the Queen of Fables, and some gods gone bad (ComicBook/{{Ares|DC}}, Eris, etc.) and other figures from [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek Mythology]] (ComicBook/{{Hercules|Unbound}}, Medusa, ComicBook/{{Circe}}). However, many of the more recent rogues are often skipped over due to Wonder Woman's continual battle with DependingOnTheWriter, and then there's the fact that most villains she fights legitimately reform after their encounters with her.
* As one of the most recognizable magic-using heroes in the DCU, ComicBook/{{Zatanna}} tends to fight enemies who either have a supernatural background or are otherwise mystically empowered, including in her own limited series. Her recurring foes include the likes of [[SealedEvilInACan Allura]], [[EvilSorcerer Brother Night]], [[DreamWeaver Fuseli]], [[DemonicDummy Oscar Hampel]], [[RealityWarper Zor]], [[PlayingWithFire Ember]], [[ChildMage Uriah]], [[ManipulativeBastard The Tempter]], [[MalevolentMaskedMen Romalthi the Shaper]], and [[ClaimedByTheSupernatural Nimue Ravensong]].
* In addition to their individual enemies, the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica had a handful of villains that regularly fought them as a team: [[PowerCopying Amazo]], Despero, Starro the Conqueror, Kanjar Ro, Starbreaker, The Shaggy Man (later known as the General), The Queen Bee, and Prometheus, to name but a few. Two of the most famous villain teams are the Injustice League and the Secret Society of Supervillains.
* The ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica's Rogues Gallery is made up mostly of the surviving foes of their individual members from back in UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks, as well as said foes' {{legac|yCharacter}}ies and a few add-ons from more recent years. These include but are not limited to: ComicBook/VandalSavage, the Wizard, and the Ultra-Humanite (more or less collectively the team's archfoes), plus Per Degaton, Wotan, ComicBook/SolomonGrundy, the Rival, the Tigress, Shiv, the ComicBook/GentlemanGhost, Johnny Sorrow, Roulette, Icicle II, the Thinker, Killer Wasp, Rag Doll, and on-again-off-again AntiHero ComicBook/BlackAdam.
* Both the League and the Society occasionally fall foul of various terrorist groups (Kobra, the Illuminati) and shadowy government organizations (The D.
E.V.E.O., S.H.]][[note]] who, despite the ThemeNaming, never actually worked together - or even met, for that matter[[/note]] (also deceased), the [[{{Magitek}} Iron]] [[DragonLady Queen]] and [[NighInvulnerability King]], the [[FeatheredFiend Battle Bird Armada]], and traitors like [[DarkActionGirl Fiona]] [[ConsummateLiar Fox]], [[ButtMonkey Drago Wolf]], and [[RivalTurnedEvil Geoffrey]] [[TheMole St.]] [[WellIntentionedExtremist John]]. And that's not even counting all of Robotnik's numerous robots with more character than mere {{Mooks}}.
*** Knuckles has one of his own, most of whom were introduced during his spinoff and later incorporated into the main series after the spinoff's cancellation. These include [[MadScientist Dimitri]] / [[PhysicalGod Enerjak]], [[OmnicidalManiac Finitevus]], [[ANaziByAnyOtherName the Dingo Regime]] (specifically when led by [[GeneralRipper Kage Von Stryker]]), and [[MachineWorship the Dark Legion]]. The Legion eventually joined forces with Eggman, so they can be considered part of Sonic's Rogues Gallery, too.
*** The ContinuityReboot triggered by Ken Penders' lawsuit of Archie's continued use of characters he created has caused most of the Archie Sonic rogues gallery to be removed from the series. That being said, it's also seen the introduction of numerous new villains to fill the gap, including Eclipse (Shadow's EvilKnockoff), [[FemmeFatale Breezie the Hedgehog]], and [[AIIsACrapshoot Phage]].
** ''Comicbook/SonicTheComic'' has its own Rogues Gallery, now continued on by the fan-continuation ''Webcomic/SonicTheComicOnline''. [[AGodAmI Dr. Robotnik]], [[SuperpoweredEvilSide Super Sonic]], [[EvilKnockoff the Metallix]], [[OmnicidalManiac Doctor Zachary]], Chaos, [[TheIgor Grimer]], Set, Megatox, Marxio Brothers, Trogg, Nutzan Bolt, Metamorphia, Nack the Weasel, Commander Brutus, [[BountyHunter Fleabyte the Bounty Hunter]], Max Gamble, Vermin the Cybernik, Doctor Robotnik Appreciation Tribe (D.R.
A.D.E., T.), Colonel Percy Granite, Agent X/Shayde, Rouge the Bat, Vichama, Shadow The Agency, Checkmate).
*
Hedgehog, The ComicBook/{{Legion of Super-Heroes}} Family, Nightmare Creature, [[EvilKnockoff Neo Metallix]], Gizoid, etc.
* ''ComicBook/{{Superlopez}}''
has loads and loads a cast of recurring enemies, bad guys including at least three teams of villains:
** The Fatal Five: Tharok, Manos, Validus, Emerald Empress,
Al Trapone, Escariano Avieso, Refuller D'Abastos and Lady Araña, to name a few.
* SupermanSubstitute ''ComicBook/{{Supreme}}'' has [[MadScientist Darius Dax]], [[TrappedInTVLand
the Persuader (plus, on one occasion, Mordecai standing in for Validus).
** The Legion of Super-Villains: Lightning Lord, Saturn Queen, Cosmic King, Chameleon Chief, Esper Lass, Hunter, Magno Lad, Micro Lad, Nemesis Kid, Ol-Vir, Radiation Roy, Ron-Karr, Spider Girl, Sun Emperor, Tyr,
Televillain]], [[GalacticConqueror Korgo the Space Tyrant]], [[EvilTwin Shadow Supreme]], [[EvilTwin Emerpus]], [[HardLight Optilux]], and Zymyr.
** The Justice League of Earth: Earth-Man, Storm Boy, Golden Boy, Tusker, Eyeful Ethel, and Radiation Roy and Spider Girl from
[[GreatGazoo Szasz the LSV.
** And numerous unaffiliated villains: Mordru, the Time Trapper, Computo, Universo, the Dark Circle, Leland [=McCauley=], Imperiex, Evillo, Grimbor the Chainsman, and so on and so forth.
* The ComicBook/TeenTitans have had ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, [[ComicBook/TheJudasContract Terra]], Trigon, Brother Blood, [[CainAndAbel Blackfire]], Psimon, and occasionally the Brotherhood of Evil. More recent additions are Jericho and {{evil counterpart}}s like the Terror Titans and the Titans of Tomorrow. [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitans The animated Titans]] had Slade, Brother Blood, the HIVE, the Brotherhood of Evil, Trigon, Blackfire ([[LighterAndSofter though many
Sprite Supreme]], among others. Almost all of these names are transparent [[CaptainErsatz Captains Ersatz]] of Superman villains.
* Franchise/{{Tintin}} isn't a superhero, but he did have a series of recurring antagonists: [[ArchEnemy Roberto Rastapopulous]] (''[[Recap/TintinCigarsOfThePharaoh Cigars of
the same, Pharaoh]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheBlueLotus The Blue Lotus]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheRedSeaSharks The Red Sea Sharks]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinFlight714 Flight 714]]''), [[FascistButInefficient Colonel Sponsz]](''[[Recap/TintinTheCalculusAffair The Calculus Affair]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTintinAndThePicaros Tintin and the animated Picaros]]'') Colonel Boris/Jorgen (''[[Recap/TintinKingOttokarsSceptre King Ottokar's Sceptre]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinDestinationMoon Destination Moon]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinExplorersOnTheMoon Explorers on the Moon]]''), [[TheDragon Allan]] (''Cigars of the Pharaoh'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheCrabWithTheGoldenClaws The Crab with the Golden Claws]]'', ''Flight 714''), [[UsefulNotes/NaziGermany Dr. Mueller]] (''[[Recap/TintinTheBlackIsland The Black Island]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinLandOfBlackGold Land of Black Gold]]'' minor in ''The Red Sea Sharks''), and [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized General Tapioca]] (''[[Recap/TintinTheBrokenEar The Broken Ear]]'', ''Tintin and the Picaros''). Also to a minor extent Dawson (''The Blue Lotus'', ''The Red Sea Sharks'') and Sheik Bab El-Ehr (''Land of Black Gold'', ''The Red Sea Sharks'').
* ''ComicBook/{{Vampirella}}'': Vampirella has had a shifting rogues gallery over the years. Some of her most frequent recurring enemies include {{Dracula}}, the progenitor of all evil vampires; the [[MadGod Mad]] GodOfEvil Chaos, who rules over Hell; Von Kreist, an undead PsychoForHire SerialKiller; and the Blood Red Queen of Hearts, a body-hopping demoness.
* Averted in ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'': One of the reasons the first wave of masked crime-fighters didn't work out well was that there weren't nearly as many
villains were often very different in terms of personality that wore costumes, and motivation than their comic counterparts]]) and a wide variety of gag or {{Harmless Villain}}s.they just ended up convincing criminals to work in less conspicuous ways.




[[folder:Marvel Universe]]
* ''ComicBook/BlackPanther'': Over the years of defending his kingdom of Wakanda, T'Challa has developed a nicely-sized gallery of his own, consisting of foes who either want to plunder Wakanda for its plentiful stock of vibranium or else usurp the throne from T'Challa for their own purposes of conquest (and many of whom are themselves natives of Wakanda or of neighboring villages or kingdoms). Three of the best known members of his gallery are [[MakeMeWannaShout Ulysses Klaw]] (who [[YouKilledMyFather murdered T'Challa's father T'Chaka]] in the backstory), ComicBook/ErikKillmonger (who wants revenge for T'Chaka exiling his family after his father assisted Klaw in an attack on Wakanda), and [[ImplacableMan Man-Ape]] (who has tried to usurp the Wakandan throne in order to return it to a more primitive state); all three appear in the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse, though Man-Ape has a HeelFaceTurn in that continuity during the events of the ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}'' film. Other enemies that the Black Panther has had to face include [[{{Necromancer}} Baron Macabre]], [[MindRape King Cadaver]], [[EvilGenius Kiber the Cruel]], [[TheBeastmaster Madame Slay]], [[TrickArrow Salamander K'ruel]], [[DatingCatwoman Princess Zanda]], [[StalkerWithACrush Malice]], [[SonicStunner Lord Karnaj]], [[PoisonousPerson Sombre]], [[WhenTreesAttack Tetu]], [[MindManipulation Zenzi]], [[SinisterMinister Reverend Achebe]], [[FantasticRacism the Sons of the Serpent]], and Klaw's father [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Colonel Fritz Klaue]]. T'Challa has even had to deal with members of his own family, such as half-brother [[WarriorPrince Jakarra]] and adopted brother [[EvilCounterpart White Wolf]], both of whom have a CainAndAbel dynamic with him (although White Wolf, a white man, loves and respects Wakanda to the point that he'll willingly temper his hatred of T'Challa enough to give aid to his adopted homeland when needed).
* Comicbook/CaptainAmerica's gallery consists mostly of threats to the American way of life: Nazis (The ComicBook/RedSkull, both Barons Zemo), terrorist organizations (ComicBook/{{HYDRA}}, [[FunWithAcronyms U.L.T.I.M.A.T.U.M.]]), internal threats (The Secret Empire, led by President Nixon), and The French (Batroc ze Lee-pair). That said, he's also battled more conventional supervillains like [[PlayingWithFire Solarr]], the [[ButtMonkey Porcupine]], the [[AxCrazy Animus]], and the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Serpent Society]]. The Captain has also repeatedly clashed with the likes of the [[Franchise/SpiderMan Scorpion]], [[Comicbook/{{Daredevil}} Mister]] [[Comicbook/TheMightyThor Hyde]], and Marvel's version of the [[Comicbook/GhostRider Scarecrow]].
* ComicBook/CarolDanvers has had a varied gallery, including enemies who were created specifically for her to fight but who are now [[RoguesGalleryTransplant better known as members of other heroes' galleries]]. Three foes who fall in that category include Mystique (her original Arch-Enemy), Deathbird, and the Brood alien race (all better known as X-Men villains these days), plus Carol has also had to deal with the Skrulls (who tend to fight other heroes as well as her), Moonstone, Toxie Doxie, Grace Valentine, Destructor and Doomsday Man (respectively, a man who wore PoweredArmor and a cyborg, and who both got fused into one individual later), [[RealityWarper the Storyteller]], sorcerer Warren Traveler, and Kree commander Yon-Rogg. Newer additions since she became a cosmic hero include Hala the Accuser and Dr. Eve.
* Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}, despite usually keeping to one area of New York City, has managed to rack up quite a Rogues Gallery, amongst them ComicBook/TheKingpin, assassin for hire ComicBook/{{Bullseye|MarvelComics}}, on and off again girlfriend[=/=]Greek Goddess of Death ComicBook/{{Elektra}}, evil ninja cult [[ConservationOfNinjutsu the Hand]], and then there's [[DiabolicalMastermind Owl]], [[GeniusBruiser Bullet]], [[TheChewToy Stilt-Man]], [[ButtMonkey Turk]], ComicBook/{{Typhoid Mary|MarvelComics}}, Tombstone, [[JekyllAndHyde Mister Hyde]], [[WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes Mister Fear]], the [[TouchOfDeath Death-Stalker]], [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} the Gladiator]], the [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain Eel]], and [[PsychoElectro Electro]] and ComicBook/{{Mysterio}}, who DD shares with Franchise/SpiderMan. Even AntiHero Comicbook/ThePunisher clashes with Daredevil often enough that the two show up in each other's series at least once on each run!
* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} has managed to acquire his own Rogues Gallery over the years. Among them include; [[EmbarrassingFirstName Francis]] (who keeps insisting his name's [[FeelNoPain Ajax]]), [[EvilCripple former FBI agent Allison Kemp]], [[UpliftedAnimal Hit-Monkey]], [[AxCrazy Madcap]], T-Ray, [[CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass Macho Gomez]], [[EvilGenius Dr. Killebrew]], [[PsychoPsychologist Dr. Whitby]], [[TheChessmaster Black Box]], [[MindVirus Black Swan]], [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Barton Utler a.k.a. Butler]], [[EvilMakesYouUgly Vetis]], and even ComicBook/{{Taskmaster}} once in a while.
* Naturally Comicbook/DoctorStrange, the Sorcerer Supreme of Creator/MarvelComics, has a rogues gallery, although it's extremely unusual. Strange's foes range from other human sorcerers (Baron Mordo) to demonic entities from other dimensions who want to take over the Earth (Nightmare, Dormammu, the Dweller-in-Darkness) to out-and-out {{Eldritch Abomination}}s (Shuma-Gorath) to ancient super weapons left behind (Zom). To complicate matters, sometimes these entities use humans as agents or vessels to attack Strange when they can't go after him directly (e.g. Dormammu possessing ComicBook/TheHood).
* Different incarnations of the Comicbook/GhostRider had their own rogues galleries, including both demonic and otherwise supernatural villains like ComicBook/{{Mephisto}}, Blackheart, Deathwatch, Blackout, Hag & Troll, Null the Living Darkness, Wallow, Vengeance, Centurious, and Lilith, and more conventional costumed villains like the Orb, the Water Wizard, Steel Wind, and Marvel's own version of the Scarecrow.
* Even ComicBook/HowardTheDuck had an off-kilter Rogues' Gallery, headlined by recurring nemeses Doctor Bong and the Kidney Lady, and including the likes of Pro-Rata, the Cosmic Accountant; Doctor Angst, Master of Mundane Mysticism; Betsy the Hellcow; and Le Beaver.
* The ''ComicBook/ImmortalIronFist'' has a gallery of villains of his own, many of whom are martial artists like Iron Fist himself, to include the likes of [[EvilCounterpart Steel Serpent]], [[MindManipulation Zhou Chen]], [[MasterSwordsman Scimitar]], [[{{Cyborg}} Bushmaster]], [[EvilOldFolks Crane Mother]], [[ShockAndAwe El Aguila]], [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Ferocia]], [[BeastMaster Nightshade]], [[PrecursorHeroes Quan Yaozu]], [[EnergyAbsorption Junzo Muto]], [[UnknownRelative Death Sting]], [[NotJustATournament Council of Lou-Shi]] and [[EvilSorcerer Master Khan]]. He's also tangled with enemies who are usually mainstays in other heroes' rogues galleries, including Batroc the Leaper and the Constrictor (both Captain America villains), the Wrecking Crew (Thor), and Bullseye (Daredevil). Interestingly, ComicBook/{{Sabretooth}} (who's best known as Wolverine's ArchEnemy) [[RoguesGalleryTransplant originally started out as an Iron Fist foe]], but back then he was portrayed as a human who wielded gloves with razor-claws; when he was shifted to being Wolverine's chief villain, he was retooled as a mutant with the claws being part of his bestial mutation.
* Most of the ComicBook/IncredibleHulk's enemies are other super-strong bruisers who can actually go a few rounds with the Big Green Machine without immediately getting turned into roadkill, like the [[EvilCounterpart Abomination]], Mister Hyde, Madman, the Glob, and the Wendigo. Not everyone fits the bill however, such as the Leader, a MadScientist and EvilGenius who has as much brains as the Hulk does brawn; the U-Foes, a collective EvilCounterpart to the Comicbook/FantasticFour with a similar origin and powers, although they never actually met the Four; [[EnergyBeings Zzzax]], a sentient electrical field; Mercy, a fragile-looking and wayward DarkMagicalGirl; the Gamma Corps, a collection of other gamma-mutated humans who serve the Leader; and Rock and Redeemer, one of whom is a sentient shapeshifting boulder and the other who wears a suit of deadly power armor. The Hulk has even battled a couple of {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, like the Crawling Unknown (a giant, cancerlike growth that mutated out of control), and Sh'mballah, an {{Expy}} of Franchise/{{Cthulhu|Mythos}} who tried to conquer the Earth, messed with the Hulk, [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu and didn't live to regret it]]. The Hulk is also a popular choice for [[RoguesGalleryTransplant villains who fight someone besides their traditional enemies]], as he's tangled with the likes of the [[Franchise/SpiderMan Sandman and the Rhino]] and [[Comicbook/XMen the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants and the Juggernaut]]. The Hulk is also one of the few Marvel characters who has other heroes in his rogues gallery, regularly slugging it out with Comicbook/TheMightyThor, Wolverine, and [[Comicbook/FantasticFour The Thing.]]
** Bruce Banner's cousin Jennifer Walters, also known as ''ComicBook/SheHulk'', has her own list of enemies, likewise consisting of super-strong bruisers such as her ArchEnemy Titania and others like the Abominatrix, Adrenazon, and the Behemoth, but also including other super-powered foes like the Countess (a reality-warper), Bulldozer (the daughter of the original Bulldozer from the Wrecking Crew), the Grappler (a martial artist who uses gadgets to fight), the Word (a cult leader) and his daughter Ultima, Madcap (a crazy fellow with incredible healing abilities), Ruby Thursday (Android/Cyborg, who knows?), Black Hole (a man who can create a black hole from his chest), and Frenzy (a mutant whose skin is hard as steel) and even non-powered villains like extortionist Beverly Cross and crime boss Nicholas Trask. Being the Hulk's cousin and ally, she's also butted heads with some of his enemies, including the Abomination and the Grey Gargoyle, and with villains from other rogues' galleries such as Venom and Juggernaut.
* Since Comicbook/IronMan began as a vehicle for Cold War stories, his gallery were nearly all communists -- the Mandarin (not technically a communist but more of a YellowPeril), the Crimson Dynamo, the Unicorn, and the Titanium Man. Eventually, when the Cold War threats died down, his enemies became tailored to be antagonists to a playboy industrialist millionaire: [[TheChessmaster Iron Monger]], [[ManipulativeBastard Justin Hammer]] and [[ManipulativeBitch Sunset Bain]] (two business rivals), Doctor Doom (a dictator and technocrat who has what may be an even more powerful [[PoweredArmor suit of armor]] than his own), the Ghost (an industrial saboteur), [[WhipItGood Whiplash/Blacklash]] (one of Hammer's longtime employees), the [[AnIcePerson Blizzard]] (an embittered ex-employee who was fired by Stark for stealing from the company, and created his own suit of armor in an attempt at revenge), [[PlayingWithFire Firebrand]] (a radical anarchist determined to destroy capitalism and lead a utopian revolution), the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Spymaster]] (an industrial spy), [[FemmeFatale Madame Masque]] (a masked criminal saboteur, as well as [[DatingCatwoman an on-again, off-again girlfriend]]), Firepower (an armored warrior sponsored by the U.S. government, who wanted to destroy Iron Man when they thought he had gone rogue), the Melter (a crooked industrialist who was run out of business and set out to sabotage Stark Enterprises), Sunturion (another armored warrior who worked for a rival company), and the Living Laser (a psychopath with deadly laser blasters strapped to his wrists, who started out lusting after one of Iron Man's teammates but soon developed a loathing for Iron Man himself).
** After the downfall of the Soviet Union, [[WhyWeAreBummedCommunismFell many of the Soviet villains were altered somewhat]], with the Crimson Dynamo armor [[CutLexLuthorACheck being used by petty criminals]] or by people with other non-Communist political agendas, the Unicorn having become a {{Cloudcuckoolander}}, and the Titanium Man embittered over Russia's transition to a capitalist democracy and determined to destroy Iron Man, who he blames for the change.
** Then there's Fin Fang Foom, because you can't have a hero in shining armor without a bona fide fire-breathing dragon to fight. Foom also hates the Mandarin, because the Mandarin stole his ten power rings from Foom's spaceship (yes, Foom is a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot fire-breathing Chinese dragon]] ''[[NinjaPirateZombieRobot from space.]]'' And that is ''awesome).''
* The martial artist ComicBook/ShangChi has often fought Zaran, the Cat, Pavane, Kogar, Mordillo, Tiger/Claw, Ghost-Maker, Razor-Fist and Shadow-Stalker. But more importantly he fought Midnight Sun (his adopted brother), Moving Shadow (his half brother), Fah Lo Suee/Cursed Lotus (his half sister) and big bad Fu Manchu/Zheng Zu (his father).
* ComicBook/{{Luke Cage|HeroForHire}} has a number of foes who have similar origins to him (that is, born under poor circumstances and eventually taking up crime, though Cage himself reformed), and although many of them don't have superpowers, they make up for it by having some kind of physical superiority or high-powered weaponry. These include Cockroach Hamilton (wields [[{{BFG}} a six-barreled shotgun that pulls double-duty as a flame-thrower]]), Black Mariah (a 400-pound drug dealer with exceptional strength), Cornell Cottonmouth (an elderly drug kingpin and pimp with photographic memory), Hardcore (a mercenary with [[WolverineClaws medically-enhance nails capable of slashing through steel]]), John Bushmaster (not the same as the Bushmaster from Iron Fist's gallery; this one is a crime boss with [[EvilCounterpart powers similar to Cage]]), Chemistro (an identity borne by [[LegacyCharacter three different individuals]], all of whom have alchemic abilities), Cheshire Cat (able to turn invisible and intangible and also able to teleport), Stiletto (fights using wrist-mounted blade-launchers), and Piranha Jones (a crime boss with metallic jaws and teeth). Three other enemies of Cage's, Billy Bob Rackham, [[KnifeNut Willis Stryker]] and [[KillItWithFire Coldfire]], loom much more largely in his life, as Rackham was a prison guard whose attempt to kill Cage [[CreateYourOwnHero wound up giving him his powers]], Stryker was the one who framed Cage and sent him to prison in the first place, and Coldfire is [[CainAndAbel Cage's brother]] who hated him for his formerly criminal lifestyle. Also [[ThoseTwoBadGuys Shades and Comanche ]]
* ComicBook/MoonGirlAndDevilDinosaur has Princess Fisk (Kingpin’s goddaughter), Kree Marvin Ellis, Demolisher, Stegron and the Killer Folk Tribe.
* Comicbook/TheMightyThor's rogues gallery is a strange mishmash of mythological villains and costumed criminals. Some of his enemies are derived from Myth/NorseMythology, like [[CainAndAbel his brother]] ComicBook/{{Loki}}, and the fire giant Surtur, and those who hail from the worlds of myth but were created by Stan Lee like Ulik the rock troll, Amora ComicBook/TheEnchantress, and Skurge the Executioner, but even in the early Stan Lee-scripted stories he fought mortal villains like the Wrecking Crew, the Absorbing Man, Mister Hyde, the Cobra, Radioactive Man, Zarrko, and the Grey Gargoyle.
* ComicBook/SubMariner aka Namor has a host of enemies. Attuma, Tiger Shark, Llyra, Llyron, Orka, Krang, his cousin Byrrah, Dr Dorcas, Tyrak and his frenemy Dr Doom.
* ''ComicBook/{{Nova}}'' has a moderately-sized group of enemies such as Condor, Diamondhead, Megaman, the Corrupter, Powerhouse, Supernova and Sphinx.
* While (for rather obvious reasons) Comicbook/ThePunisher has a small rogues gallery in the sense of ''recurring'' targets... Jigsaw is ''the'' most long-running character he's ever had to deal with, even [[spoiler:when the original Jigsaw was killed in the regular Marvel Universe, as Stuart Clarke eventually "succeeded" him]], although Nicky Cavella (2 arcs) and Kathie O'Brien's husband Rawlins (3), and finally the Generals briefly joined in [[Comicbook/ThePunisherMAX the MAX universe]] under Creator/GarthEnnis' years as author.
** Barracuda, the MadeOfIron [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder backstabbing]] mercenary introduced in the MAX universe, also lasted for a few arcs and got his own miniseries. After surviving a ridiculous number of injuries throughout the series, Barracuda was finally KilledOffForReal after [[spoiler:Frank tore off his nose with a pair of pliers, chopped off his arms, and ''blew his head off with an AK-47'']].
** Terrorist-for-hire Saracen had a sixteen-issue run in the 616 universe.
** ComicBook/TheKingpin is also a major recurring enemy to Frank, in both the 616 and MAX universes. In fact, as explained on Fisk's character page, the only reason he's survived so many encounters with the Punisher is because even Frank recognizes the massive power vacuum and accompanying deaths of innocents that would result if Kingpin were to die.
** Other enemies of Castle's who have made appearances in three or more issues include [[{{Cyborg}} Damage]], [[ImplacableMan Thorn]], [[MafiaPrincess Rosalie Carbone]], [[GatlingGood Rapido]], [[EvilCripple Ma Gnucci]], [[MadeOfIron the Russian]], Recoil, Bushwacker, [[ColdSniper Sniper]], [[RabidCop Blackwell]], [[LegacyCharacter the Elite]], [[ScaryBlackMan Gregario]], [[SinisterMinister the Rev]], and [[SuperSoldier Johnny Nightmare]].
* ComicBook/MoonKnight has Bushman, Stained Glass Scarlet, the Profile, Sun King, Black Spectre, Midnight Man and later his son, Morpheus, the Hellbent, Slasher and Moon Knight’s brother Shadow Knight.
* ''ComicBook/{{Sleepwalker}}'' had a strange collection of original villains, including costumed criminals (8-Ball, the Chain Gang, Spectra, Psyko), [[CivvieSpandex uncostumed villains]] (Lullaby and the Bookworm), crazed government agents (the Office of Insufficient Evidence, the Thought Police), and supernatural demons (Mr. Jyn and Cobweb). In his short career, Sleepy also found time to mess with the villains of the Comicbook/XMen (Brotherhood of Evil Mutants), Franchise/SpiderMan (the Hobgoblin), and Comicbook/DoctorStrange (Nightmare).
* ''Franchise/SpiderMan'':
** His gallery [[Characters/SpiderMan includes]] [[ComicBook/NormanOsborn the Green Goblin]][[note]]a CorruptCorporateExecutive with a MadBomber SplitPersonality after taking a PsychoSerum[[/note]], [[LegacyCharacter Hobgoblin]][[note]]a sane, albeit sociopathic fashion designer who uses a modified Goblin arsenal[[/note]], ComicBook/DoctorOctopus[[note]]a MadDoctor who has four mechanical arms fused to his back[[/note]], Comicbook/{{Venom}}[[note]]a mentally troubled reporter bonded to an alien symbiote, sharing a hatred for Spider-Man[[/note]], [[PsychoElectro Electro]][[note]]a man who controls all forms of electricity[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Mysterio}}[[note]]a failed special effects artist who uses his technology to become a villain[[/note]], [[DishingOutDirt Sandman]][[note]]a crook whose molecules are fused with sand particles[[/note]] ComicBook/KravenTheHunter[[note]][[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame a big game hunter]] with the abilities of a SuperSerum[[/note]], [[EvilOldFolks the Vulture]][[note]]an old businessman who utilizes a electromagnetic winged harness[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Carnage}}[[note]]a psychopathic SerialKiller bonded to ''another'' symbiote spawned from Venom's own[[/note]], [[JekyllAndHyde the Lizard]][[note]]a scientist with a SplitPersonality which transforms him into a humanoid reptilian[[/note]], [[DumbMuscle the Rhino]][[note]]a brute with his skin fused with a rhino-like hide costume[[/note]], ComicBook/BlackCat[[note]]a master cat burglar who goes by her father's words to "never settle for second best"[[/note]], [[BewareMyStingerTail the Scorpion]][[note]]an investigator turned insane PsychoForHire trapped in a scorpion-esque armor[[/note]], [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain the]] [[MakeMeWannaShout Shocker]][[note]]a robber who created an insulated battle suit with vibro-shock gauntlets[[/note]], etc. Together with Franchise/{{Batman}} and Franchise/{{Superman}}'s, it's considered probably the most well-known Rogues Gallery in all of comicdom.
** The villains are also good examples of villains crossing over to fight new heroes besides their traditional sparring partners. Electro, for example, has become an enemy to Daredevil as well as Spider-Man, while Spidey himself has thrown down with the enemies of everyone from Comicbook/IronMan to the Hulk to Captain Marvel.
*** A glaring example is Wilson Fisk, ComicBook/TheKingpin. He's become so closely associated with Comicbook/{{Daredevil}} that both [[Film/{{Daredevil}} the 2003 movie]] and [[Series/Daredevil2015 the Marvel Studios/Netflix series]] used him as the BigBad.
*** Comicbook/DarkReign upgraded Norman "The Green Goblin" Osborn to a universe-wide villain when he [[spoiler:took over the Avengers]].
** Starting with ''ComicBook/BrandNewDay'', ''many'' new villains have been introduced in order to keep stories from falling into routine. Among them are [[YinYangBomb Mr. Negative]], [[DistaffCounterpart Menace]], [[LeParkour Screwball]], [[SquashedFlat Paper Doll]], [[DisadvantageousDisintegration Fracture]], [[{{Technopath}} Overdrive]], and [[TemporaryBlindness Blindside]]. Of the bunch Mr. Negative, Screwball, and Overdrive proved to be the only ones to have any staying power in Spidey's rogues gallery.
** ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl'', his daughter, has a nice rogues gallery as well. Crazy Eight, Killerwatt, the Dragon King, Funny Face, Soldiers of the Serpent, Quickwire, the Hobgoblin, Earthshaker, Mr. Abnormal, [[DaddysLittleVillain Aftershock]], Apox, Angel Face, Fury the Goblin Queen, Mr. Nobody, Carolyn Trainer, Killer Frost, Reverb, etc. She even inherited a villain from her father's rogues gallery in the form of Black Tarantula.
** Due to villain attrition, such as the death of Kraven and [[HeelFaceTurn the reforming of Sandman as a hero]], the [[LegionOfDoom Sinister Six]] has seen a lot of villains take part of the sextet as Doc Ock sought to fill up the empty slots any way he could just to preserve the group name. This has actually lead to the Six's downfall on a few occasions, due to Ock picking a villain who isn't really a team player. for example the one time they let Venom join, his mental instability and [[TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou obsession with being the one to kill Spider-Man]] resulted in him going rogue mid-battle, crippling Sandman with a poisonous bite, and basically ruining the plan just as they were about to win. Generally Spidey's villains don't play well with each other.
* ComicBook/MilesMorales: As the younger Spider-Man, Miles has his Uncle Aaron (Prowler, Iron Spider), Bombshell’s mom, Tomoe, Ceres, Snatcher, the Assessor, the female Electro, Hammerhead, Ultimatum, the Ultimate Green Goblin and the Spot.
* ComicBook/SpiderGwen aka ComicBook/GhostSpider2019: has her universe’s Kingpin Murdock, The Lizards, the S.I.L.K. Organization, Koala Kommander, the Black Cat, the “Punisher”, the Bodega Bandit, the Vulture, Man-Wolf and now the main Marvel universe’s Jackal.
* The original ''Comicbook/SpiderWoman'' developed a considerable rogues gallery of her own during her original 50-issue series in the late 1970s and early 1980s, including [[LukeIAmYourFather Viper]], the [[PsychopathicManchild Brothers Grimm]], the [[NightmareFuel Needle]], the [[PsychoForHire Flying Tiger]], Nekra, [[MadScientist Dr. Karl Malus]], the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hangman]], [[{{Stripperiffic}} Gypsy Moth]], the [[HalfHumanHybrid Human Fly]] (on loan from Spider-Man), Daddy Long Legs, [[ButtMonkey Turner D. Century]], the [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Waxman]], and her ArchEnemy [[Myth/KingArthur Morgan Le Fey.]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Venom}}'': While Eddie Brock and the symbiote have traditionally been part of Spider-Man's rogues gallery (as outlined above), they have also developed a gallery of their own as they've shifted from outright villainy to being more anti-heroic. A big constant in their list of adversaries is ComicBook/{{Carnage}}, the Venom symbiote's offspring which has been a recurring foe both on its own and when bonded to its usual host [[SerialKiller Cletus Kasady]]; but other enemies Venom has had to endure--regardless of who the symbiote is bonded to at the time--include [[PlayingWithFire Jack O'Lantern]] (the fifth person to wield the name and outfit), [[MindManipulation Killer Thrill]], [[ShotgunsAreJustBetter Sin-Eater]], [[KnightTemplar The Jury]] (whose leader formed the team after Venom killed his security guard son while escaping the Vault), [[ManOfKryptonite Pyre]], [[BewareMyStingerTail Scorpion]] (the third Venom host), [[BlobMonster Krogg]], [[SkullForAHead The Redeemer]], and [[AncientEvil Knull]] (the deity who created the symbiotes).
* The ''Comicbook/XMen'' [[Characters/XMenRoguesGallery have]] ComicBook/{{Magneto}}, ComicBook/{{Mystique}}, ComicBook/{{Apocalypse}}, ComicBook/MisterSinister, [[SinisterMinister Reverend]] ([[Film/XMenFilmSeries or Colonel]]) Stryker, [[DemonicPossession the Shadow King]], Black Tom Cassidy, [[ImmortalityImmorality Selene]], ComicBook/{{Sabretooth}}, the ComicBook/{{Juggernaut|MarvelComics}}, etc. X-Men being a book about a team, they've got even more groups as enemies: the Brotherhood of Mutants, the Hellfire Club, the Savage Land mutates, the original Hellions, the Acolytes, the Marauders, the Four Horsemen, the Sentinels, and on and on. Team names tend to get reused, and individual members get around a ''lot,'' nearly as much as with the X-Men themselves.
** Making things even more complicated, a few X-Men have their ''own'' Rogues galleries! Franchise/{{Wolverine}} has everyone ever involved with the Weapon Plus project (ComicBook/{{Sabretooth}}, Lady Deathstrike, etc.), ComicBook/JeanGrey (thanks to being the incarnation of the Phoenix) is on the ''entire Shi'ar Empire's'' shit list, and ComicBook/ProfessorX himself has personal issues with Magneto, the Shadow King, Cassandra Nova, and Cain "Juggernaut" Marko. ComicBook/{{Cyclops}} and his brother Havok are of special interest to Mr. Sinister (who has up to THREE teams of PsychoForHire assassins!) and have their psychopathic Omega class brother [[CainAndAbel Vulcan]] to deal with, ComicBook/{{Beast|MarvelComics}} has to deal with his Age of Apocalypse EvilCounterpart Dark Beast, Banshee and Black Tom are cousins, and ComicBook/{{Colossus}} has a CainAndAbel dynamic with his brother Mikhael Rasputin. The X-Men have so many enemies it's a wonder how they keep track of them all. And while some of the above are currently dead, [[DeathIsCheap this is X-Men]], so they'll probably be back.
** ComicBook/{{Excalibur}} has had Arcade, Doctor Doom, Galactus, the Hellfire Club, Juggernaut, Mister Sinister, Mystique, Nightmare and Sentinels.
* Likewise to the JLA and JSA, ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' fought both the enemies of their individual members (such as ComicBook/{{Loki}} and The ComicBook/RedSkull) and their own collective enemies, including ComicBook/{{Ultron}}, Kang the Conqueror, Graviton, Count Nefaria, and the various incarnations of The Masters of Evil.
** They also have a tendency to "borrow" ComicBook/{{Magneto}} and ComicBook/DoctorDoom, presumably because the X-Men and the Fantastic Four can't be bothered on some days.
** [[VillainWithGoodPublicity The government-sanctioned]] ComicBook/DarkAvengers are The Masters of Evil in all but name. Former Masters of Evil member Moonstone is part of the team, and they're overseen by ComicBook/NormanOsborn's secret "Cabal" (consisting of ComicBook/DoctorDoom, ComicBook/{{Loki}}, and ComicBook/TheHood, with ComicBook/EmmaFrost and [[ComicBook/SubMariner Namor]] as [[TokenGoodTeammate Token Sympathetic and Likable Teammates]]).
* The Comicbook/FantasticFour have a rather wide-ranging gallery, from ComicBook/{{Galactus}} to ComicBook/DoctorDoom to The Red Ghost and his Super Apes, taking in [[PeoplePuppets Puppet Master]], [[EvilGenius Mad Thinker]], [[BeenThereShapedHistory Rama-Tut]], {{Mole M|en}}an, [[EvilSorceror Diablo]], [[VoluntaryShapeshifting the Skrulls]], [[HigherTechSpecies the Kree]], [[HarbingerOfImpendingDoom Terrax]], [[FlyingFirepower Wizard]] and [[EvilCounterpart the Frightful Four]]. It says something, however, that their "Oh, right, it's Tuesday again. And right in the middle of Andy Griffith" foes are most of the universe's "Anyone know a really, really interventionist deity?" foes. (Obviously, this does not apply to the Super Apes.) The FF have also fought a number of heroes, some of whom debuted fighting the Four. These include [[Comicbook/SubMariner Namor]], Hulk, the ComicBook/BlackPanther, the ComicBook/SilverSurfer, and even Anime/CombattlerV.
* The [[CListFodder C-List Heroes]] of [[ComicBook/GreatLakesAvengers Great Lakes Aveng -- uhm -- X-Me -- uhm Champi -- uh... Initiative]] have a rogues gallery consisting of Gene "[[{{Leatherman}} Leather Boy]]" Lorrene, Dr. Tannenbaumm, Deathurge (the Squirrel), and Maelstrom. Yes, most of them are even D-List Villains.
* In the very early stories written by Creator/StanLee, even the Comicbook/HumanTorch and ComicBook/AntMan had their own rogue's galleries before they became full-time team heroes. The Torch faced off against the Beetle, Plant-Man, the Trapster, and the Wizard, while Ant-Man battled the likes of Whirlwind, Egghead, and the Porcupine. The Wizard went on to become a significant threat to the Fantastic Four, while the rest of them languished as minor villains... they weren't Stan's best creations.
* The ComicBook/NewWarriors have squared off with the likes of A.I.M., High Evolutionary, the Sphinx (both the male and female version), Juggernaut, Malekith the Accursed, Nitro, the U-Foes, Punisher, Super-Apes, Tiger Shark, Skrull, Terrax, the Folding Circle, Psionex, Asylum, Harrier and Midnight’s Fire.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Other]]
* Before they lost their powers en masse, the Order of Despots was this to the Pantheon in ''ComicBook/AllFallDown''.
* ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'': A non-superhero example would be with Scrooge [=McDuck=], most notably in the comics by Creator/CarlBarks and Creator/DonRosa. Along with the [[CardCarryingVillain Beagle]] [[TerribleTrio Boys]], who are constantly trying to rob Scrooge blind, he has to contend with [[FemmeFatale Magica De Spell]], an evil sorceress who constantly tries to steal Scrooge's NumberOneDime because she thinks it has magic powers; the snooty [[UpperClassTwit John D. Rockerduck]], who simply inherited his money instead of working for it like Scrooge did; and [[EvilCounterpart Flintheart]] [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney Glomgold]], who has all of Scrooge's drive and determination but none of his ethics or morals. There's also Blackheart Beagle, the Beagle Boys' grandfather, founder, and occasional leader who is depicted as Scrooge's ArchEnemy and is constantly trying to rob Scrooge blind with the aid of his family The Beagle Boys. Later day additions include the country of [[{{Ruritania}} Brutopia]] and [[GentlemanThief Arpine Lusene]], who's out to steal Scrooge's money simply to show that he can, or, at the very least, make it disappear so he can claim he did.
** The Beagle Boys, Flintheart, and Magica all became regulars on ''WesternAnimation/{{DuckTales|1987}}''.
** Interestingly, while both come from the original canon, Rockerduck and Flintheart rarely if ever are featured in the same canon in modern comics. In America Flintheart is prevalent while in Europe Rockerduck is more famous, and as a result hardly any American fan is aware of Rockerduck and the same applies to European fans for Flintheart, which resulted in their personalities to have evolved over time to ''be the same''. Thus, you can call Rockerduck "Europe's Flintheart" and Flintheart "America's Rockerduck".
** Scrooge's Rogues Gallery is actually lampshaded in the first episode of the ''[[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 DuckTales reboot]]'', when Scrooge learns that Donald's new job is with [[spoiler:Flintheart Glomgold]].
--->'''Scrooge:''' Your new job is with ''my sworn enemy?''\\
'''Donald:''' I can't keep track of [[LongList all your sworn enemies!]]
* During her quest to find the person(s) responsible for her apparent murder, ComicBook/GhostDarkHorseComics amasses a gallery of enemies with varying strange abilities, including the likes of [[RealityWarper Cameron Nemo]], [[PowerParasite Dr. October]], [[{{Telepathy}} Hunger]], [[EvilGenius Dr. Trouvaille]] and his Ghost-Hunters, [[MindManipulation Archibald Scythe]], [[AbsurdlySharpBlade Joe Yimbo]], [[EvilOldFolks Malcolm Greymater]], [[SuperStrength Towering Chris]], [[PeoplePuppets Miasma]], [[ReptilesAreAbhorrent Snake]], and [[SinisterMinister Von Ghastly]], and non-powered foes like [[TheDon Crux]], [[SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil Leo Merino]] and [[ScarilyCompetentTracker The Hunter]].
* Across the ''Franchise/GIJoe'' franchise, the Joes consistently do battle against the Cobra Command terrorist organization in one form or another (not always paramilitary, such as in ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeRenegades'' where it's Cobra Industries, a pharmaceutical conglomerate). Members of the Cobra group include Cobra Commander, Destro, the Baroness, Storm Shadow, Zartan, Dr. Mindbender, Black-Out, and Serpentor (who temporarily took Cobra Commander's place as leader of Cobra), while mercenaries Major Bludd and Firefly occasionally grant their services to the organization.
* Comicbook/JudgeDredd has a rather small gallery, since (much like Punisher) most of his enemies end up dead, and many of those that he sends to prison don't pop up again. Recurring villains include [[OmnicidalManiac Judge Death]] (who's an immortal undead), [[SerialKiller PJ Maybe]] (who's both incredibly lucky and a master of escape), and the recently retired [[TheBrute Mean Machine Angel]]. One could perhaps also add Orlok, though he tends to tangle more with Anderson.
* WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse faced many adversaries in the ComicBook/MickeyMouseComicUniverse, but his most notable enemies, aside from [[WesternAnimation/{{Pete}} Peg-Leg Pete]], include an AmoralAttorney named Sylvester Shyster, a stingy old man named Eli Squinch, a [[TerribleTrio trio]] of [[ManiacMonkeys simian]] {{mad scientist}}s named Professors Ecks, Doublex, and Triplex, and his ArchEnemy, the Phantom Blot.
* Comicbook/TheSavageDragon has hundreds of rogues between the Vicious Circle, various Overlords, Darklord, Thor, Solar Man, The Fiend, his EvilDoppelganger, etc.
* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
** ''Comicbook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'':
*** Sonic the Hedgehog has acquired a large Rogues Gallery over the comic's {{long run|ners}}. Aside from his ArchEnemy Dr. Robotnik/Eggman, Sonic and his friends have also had to deal with Eggman's nephew [[TheStarscream Snively]], [[EvilSorcerer Ixis Naugus]], [[MagnificentBastard Mammoth Mogul]], [[QuirkyMinibossSquad the Destructix]], [[EvilTwin Scourge]] and the [[ThePsychoRangers Suppression Squad]], [[AxCrazy Warlord Kodos]] (now deceased), [[AIIsACrapshoot A.D.A.M. and E.V.E.]][[note]] who, despite the ThemeNaming, never actually worked together - or even met, for that matter[[/note]] (also deceased), the [[{{Magitek}} Iron]] [[DragonLady Queen]] and [[NighInvulnerability King]], the [[FeatheredFiend Battle Bird Armada]], and traitors like [[DarkActionGirl Fiona]] [[ConsummateLiar Fox]], [[ButtMonkey Drago Wolf]], and [[RivalTurnedEvil Geoffrey]] [[TheMole St.]] [[WellIntentionedExtremist John]]. And that's not even counting all of Robotnik's numerous robots with more character than mere {{Mooks}}.
*** Knuckles has one of his own, most of whom were introduced during his spinoff and later incorporated into the main series after the spinoff's cancellation. These include [[MadScientist Dimitri]] / [[PhysicalGod Enerjak]], [[OmnicidalManiac Finitevus]], [[ANaziByAnyOtherName the Dingo Regime]] (specifically when led by [[GeneralRipper Kage Von Stryker]]), and [[MachineWorship the Dark Legion]]. The Legion eventually joined forces with Eggman, so they can be considered part of Sonic's Rogues Gallery, too.
*** The ContinuityReboot triggered by Ken Penders' lawsuit of Archie's continued use of characters he created has caused most of the Archie Sonic rogues gallery to be removed from the series. That being said, it's also seen the introduction of numerous new villains to fill the gap, including Eclipse (Shadow's EvilKnockoff), [[FemmeFatale Breezie the Hedgehog]], and [[AIIsACrapshoot Phage]].
** ''Comicbook/SonicTheComic'' has its own Rogues Gallery, now continued on by the fan-continuation ''Webcomic/SonicTheComicOnline''. [[AGodAmI Dr. Robotnik]], [[SuperpoweredEvilSide Super Sonic]], [[EvilKnockoff the Metallix]], [[OmnicidalManiac Doctor Zachary]], Chaos, [[TheIgor Grimer]], Set, Megatox, Marxio Brothers, Trogg, Nutzan Bolt, Metamorphia, Nack the Weasel, Commander Brutus, [[BountyHunter Fleabyte the Bounty Hunter]], Max Gamble, Vermin the Cybernik, Doctor Robotnik Appreciation Tribe (D.R.A.T.), Colonel Percy Granite, Agent X/Shayde, Rouge the Bat, Vichama, Shadow The Hedgehog, The Family, Nightmare Creature, [[EvilKnockoff Neo Metallix]], Gizoid, etc.
* ''ComicBook/{{Superlopez}}'' has a cast of recurring bad guys including Al Trapone, Escariano Avieso, Refuller D'Abastos and Lady Araña, to name a few.
* SupermanSubstitute ''ComicBook/{{Supreme}}'' has [[MadScientist Darius Dax]], [[TrappedInTVLand the Televillain]], [[GalacticConqueror Korgo the Space Tyrant]], [[EvilTwin Shadow Supreme]], [[EvilTwin Emerpus]], [[HardLight Optilux]], and [[GreatGazoo Szasz the Sprite Supreme]], among others. Almost all of these are transparent [[CaptainErsatz Captains Ersatz]] of Superman villains.
* Franchise/{{Tintin}} isn't a superhero, but he did have a series of recurring antagonists: [[ArchEnemy Roberto Rastapopulous]] (''[[Recap/TintinCigarsOfThePharaoh Cigars of the Pharaoh]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheBlueLotus The Blue Lotus]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheRedSeaSharks The Red Sea Sharks]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinFlight714 Flight 714]]''), [[FascistButInefficient Colonel Sponsz]](''[[Recap/TintinTheCalculusAffair The Calculus Affair]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTintinAndThePicaros Tintin and the Picaros]]'') Colonel Boris/Jorgen (''[[Recap/TintinKingOttokarsSceptre King Ottokar's Sceptre]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinDestinationMoon Destination Moon]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinExplorersOnTheMoon Explorers on the Moon]]''), [[TheDragon Allan]] (''Cigars of the Pharaoh'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheCrabWithTheGoldenClaws The Crab with the Golden Claws]]'', ''Flight 714''), [[UsefulNotes/NaziGermany Dr. Mueller]] (''[[Recap/TintinTheBlackIsland The Black Island]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinLandOfBlackGold Land of Black Gold]]'' minor in ''The Red Sea Sharks''), and [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized General Tapioca]] (''[[Recap/TintinTheBrokenEar The Broken Ear]]'', ''Tintin and the Picaros''). Also to a minor extent Dawson (''The Blue Lotus'', ''The Red Sea Sharks'') and Sheik Bab El-Ehr (''Land of Black Gold'', ''The Red Sea Sharks'').
* ''ComicBook/{{Vampirella}}'': Vampirella has had a shifting rogues gallery over the years. Some of her most frequent recurring enemies include {{Dracula}}, the progenitor of all evil vampires; the [[MadGod Mad]] GodOfEvil Chaos, who rules over Hell; Von Kreist, an undead PsychoForHire SerialKiller; and the Blood Red Queen of Hearts, a body-hopping demoness.
* Averted in ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'': One of the reasons the first wave of masked crime-fighters didn't work out well was that there weren't nearly as many villains that wore costumes, and they just ended up convincing criminals to work in less conspicuous ways.
[[/folder]]
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!!The following have their own pages:
[[index]]
* RoguesGallery/TheDCU
* RoguesGallery/MarvelUniverse
[[/index]]
----



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* The ComicBook/NewWarriors have squared off with the likes of A.I.M., High Evolutionary, the Sphinx (both the male and female version), Juggernaut, Skrull, Terrax, the Folding Circle, Psionex, Asylum, Harrier and Midnight’s Fire.

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* The ComicBook/NewWarriors have squared off with the likes of A.I.M., High Evolutionary, the Sphinx (both the male and female version), Juggernaut, Malekith the Accursed, Nitro, the U-Foes, Punisher, Super-Apes, Tiger Shark, Skrull, Terrax, the Folding Circle, Psionex, Asylum, Harrier and Midnight’s Fire.
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** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow,[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]] ComicBook/TwoFace,[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]] ComicBook/PoisonIvy,[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]] ComicBook/ThePenguin,[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]] ComicBook/TheRiddler,[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]] Comicbook/{{Catwoman}},[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]] ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]] and ComicBook/TheJoker.[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]] Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange,[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]] Hush,[[note]]the scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]] ComicBook/HarleyQuinn,[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]] Clayface,[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape their bodies at will[[/note]] Killer Croc,[[note]]a man with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]] ComicBook/RasAlGhul,[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]] ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[note]]Ra's [[DaddysLittleVillain loyal daughter]] who's often either a foe or LoveInterest to Bruce[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Deadshot}},[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Bane}},[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]] Mad Hatter,[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]] and Black Mask.[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]] He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, Wrath and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].
** Depending on the continuity, poor Batman has had to deal with ''multiple'' rogues galleries. On [[Series/Batman1966 the 1960s TV show]], [[BornInTheWrongCentury King Tut]] and Egghead were particularly troublesome. [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries The animated series]] gave us the ClockKing and its spinoff comic ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' gave us, among others, the trio of [[CrazyPrepared Mastermind]], [[AwesomenessByAnalysis The Professor]], and [[BewareTheNiceOnes Mr. Nice]] (although they were more in the IneffectualSympatheticVillain category, really). And ''Series/{{Gotham}}'' adds Barbara Kean, Theo and Tabitha Galavan, Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska, and Fish Mooney to its Rogue roster, although they and the rest are more ''Jim Gordon's'' Gallery than Bruce Wayne's.
** Batman's former sidekick ComicBook/{{Nightwing}} has his own gallery, including villains that have plagued him from his days with Batman and the Titans: Blockbuster, Torque, the Tarantula, [[EvilKnockoff Nite-Wing]], Double Dare, Hellhound, Amygdala, ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, the Pierce Brothers... In a subversion, one of them is Shrike, an assassin Nightwing befriended while undercover receiving assassin's training. He thinks that he's Nightwing's worst foe; in reality, Nightwing doesn't even consider him a threat, on one occasion ignoring him and ''walking away'' while Shrike chased after him, trying (and failing) to hit him.

to:

** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow,[[note]]a ComicBook/TheScarecrow[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]] ComicBook/TwoFace,[[note]]an fear[[/note]], ComicBook/TwoFace[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]] ComicBook/PoisonIvy,[[note]]a disfigured[[/note]], ComicBook/PoisonIvy[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]] ComicBook/ThePenguin,[[note]]a eco-terrorist[[/note]], ComicBook/ThePenguin[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]] ComicBook/TheRiddler,[[note]]a City[[/note]], ComicBook/TheRiddler[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]] Comicbook/{{Catwoman}},[[note]]a behind[[/note]], Comicbook/{{Catwoman}}[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]] Batman[[/note]], ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]] wife[[/note]], and ComicBook/TheJoker.[[note]]an ComicBook/TheJoker[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]] himself[[/note]]. Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange,[[note]]a Strange[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]] Hush,[[note]]the scion identity[[/note]], Hush[[note]]scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]] ComicBook/HarleyQuinn,[[note]]a family[[/note]], ComicBook/HarleyQuinn[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]] Clayface,[[note]]a Joker[[/note]], Clayface[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape their bodies at will[[/note]] will[[/note]], Killer Croc,[[note]]a Croc[[note]]a man with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]] ComicBook/RasAlGhul,[[note]]the characteristics[[/note]], ComicBook/RasAlGhul[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]] mentor]][[/note]], ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[note]]Ra's [[DaddysLittleVillain loyal daughter]] who's often either a foe or LoveInterest to Bruce[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Deadshot}},[[note]]a Bruce[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Deadshot}}[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Bane}},[[note]]an aim[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Bane}}[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]] drug[[/note]], Mad Hatter,[[note]]a Hatter[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]] Wonderland]]''[[/note]], and Black Mask.[[note]]a Mask[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]] [[/note]]. He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, Wrath and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].
** Depending on the continuity, poor Batman has had to deal with ''multiple'' rogues galleries. On [[Series/Batman1966 the 1960s TV show]], [[BornInTheWrongCentury King Tut]] and Egghead were particularly troublesome. [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries The animated series]] gave us the ClockKing Clock King and its spinoff comic ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' gave us, among others, the trio of [[CrazyPrepared Mastermind]], [[AwesomenessByAnalysis The Professor]], and [[BewareTheNiceOnes Mr. Nice]] (although they were more in the IneffectualSympatheticVillain category, really). And ''Series/{{Gotham}}'' adds Barbara Kean, Theo and Tabitha Galavan, Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska, and Fish Mooney to its Rogue roster, although they and the rest are more ''Jim Gordon's'' Gallery than Bruce Wayne's.
** Batman's former sidekick ComicBook/{{Nightwing}} has his own gallery, including villains that have plagued him from his days with Batman and the Titans: Blockbuster, Torque, the Tarantula, [[EvilKnockoff Nite-Wing]], Double Dare, Hellhound, Amygdala, ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, the Pierce Brothers...Brothers. In a subversion, one of them is Shrike, an assassin Nightwing befriended while undercover receiving assassin's training. He thinks that he's Nightwing's worst foe; in reality, Nightwing doesn't even consider him a threat, on one occasion ignoring him and ''walking away'' while Shrike chased after him, trying (and failing) to hit him.



* ''ComicBook/{{Firestorm}}'' has a Rogues Gallery that could be charitably described as... deficient. Not only are the vast majority laughably underpowered compared to the hero (who has to carry around an IdiotBall the size of a house for them to be any threat to him whatsoever), but they seem to made up mostly of perverts or offensive stereotypes. [[http://mightygodking.com/index.php/2008/03/11/there-is-lame-and-then-there-are-firestorm-villains/ This article]] covers several of the worst offenders. But at least there were both [[StrawFeminist Killer Frosts]], Typhoon, Brimstone, and Tokamak. None of whom were slouches in the power department.[[note]]The Killer Frosts are among the deadliest examples of [[AnIcePerson ice powers]] in fiction, Typhoon is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin basically a sentient typhoon in humanoid form]], Brimstone is an immensely powerful [[PlayingWithFire fire elemental]] created by [[ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} the Big Bad of the entire DC Universe]], and Tokamak [[EvilCounterpart has the same story-breaker powers as Firestorm]].[[/note]]

to:

* ''ComicBook/{{Firestorm}}'' has a Rogues Gallery that could be charitably described as... as deficient. Not only are the vast majority laughably underpowered compared to the hero (who has to carry around an IdiotBall the size of a house for them to be any threat to him whatsoever), but they seem to made up mostly of perverts or offensive stereotypes. [[http://mightygodking.com/index.php/2008/03/11/there-is-lame-and-then-there-are-firestorm-villains/ This article]] covers several of the worst offenders. But at least there were both [[StrawFeminist Killer Frosts]], Typhoon, Brimstone, and Tokamak. None of whom were slouches in the power department.[[note]]The Killer Frosts are among the deadliest examples of [[AnIcePerson ice powers]] in fiction, Typhoon is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin basically a sentient typhoon in humanoid form]], Brimstone is an immensely powerful [[PlayingWithFire fire elemental]] created by [[ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} the Big Bad of the entire DC Universe]], and Tokamak [[EvilCounterpart has the same story-breaker powers as Firestorm]].[[/note]]



** Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be the former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, the ComicBook/{{Shade}}, and ComicBook/VandalSavage
** Barry Allen has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], Pied Piper, ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, the [[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flashes]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.

to:

** Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be the a former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, the ComicBook/{{Shade}}, and ComicBook/VandalSavage
ComicBook/VandalSavage.
** Barry Allen has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], Pied Piper, ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, the [[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flashes]], Professor Zoom/[[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flash]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.



** [[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he has [[EvilformerFriend Griffin]], superboy-Prime and even gains an arch-enemy of his own, [[EvilTwin Inertia]].

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** [[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he has [[EvilformerFriend Griffin]], superboy-Prime Superboy-Prime and even gains an arch-enemy of his own, [[EvilTwin Inertia]].
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* ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} has ComicBook/BlackManta and [[CainAndAbel Ocean Master]] sharing archvillain status, with [[PoweredArmor Carapax]], the [[PeoplePuppets Fisherman]], the [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower Scavenger]], the [[PunchClockVillain Human Flying Fish]], [[AnimalisticAbomination The Trench]], [[ThreateningShark King Shark]], [[MakingASplash the Eel]], [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Marine Marauder]], the [[GiantSpaceFleaFromNowhere Deep Six]], [[ShadowArchetype the Thirst]], Kordax, and [[FishPeople Charybdis]] rounding out the ranks.

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* ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} has ComicBook/BlackManta and [[CainAndAbel Ocean Master]] sharing archvillain status, with [[PoweredArmor Carapax]], the [[PeoplePuppets Fisherman]], the [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower Scavenger]], the [[PunchClockVillain Human Flying Fish]], [[AnimalisticAbomination The Trench]], [[ThreateningShark King Shark]], [[MakingASplash the Eel]], [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Marine Marauder]], the [[GiantSpaceFleaFromNowhere [[DiabolusExNihilo Deep Six]], [[ShadowArchetype the Thirst]], Kordax, and [[FishPeople Charybdis]] rounding out the ranks.
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** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow,[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]] ComicBook/TwoFace,[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]] ComicBook/PoisonIvy,[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]] ComicBook/ThePenguin,[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]] ComicBook/TheRiddler,[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]] Comicbook/{{Catwoman}},[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]] ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]] and ComicBook/TheJoker.[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]] Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange,[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]] Hush,[[note]]the scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]] ComicBook/HarleyQuinn,[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]] Clayface,[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape their bodies at will[[/note]] Killer Croc,[[note]]a man with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]] ComicBook/RasAlGhul,[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]] ComicBook/{{Deadshot}},[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Bane}},[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]] Mad Hatter,[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]] and Black Mask.[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]] He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].

to:

** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow,[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]] ComicBook/TwoFace,[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]] ComicBook/PoisonIvy,[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]] ComicBook/ThePenguin,[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]] ComicBook/TheRiddler,[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]] Comicbook/{{Catwoman}},[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]] ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]] and ComicBook/TheJoker.[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]] Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange,[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]] Hush,[[note]]the scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]] ComicBook/HarleyQuinn,[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]] Clayface,[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape their bodies at will[[/note]] Killer Croc,[[note]]a man with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]] ComicBook/RasAlGhul,[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]] ComicBook/TaliaAlGhul, [[note]]Ra's [[DaddysLittleVillain loyal daughter]] who's often either a foe or LoveInterest to Bruce[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Deadshot}},[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Bane}},[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]] Mad Hatter,[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]] and Black Mask.[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]] He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, Wrath and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].
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* ComicBook/MilesMorales: As the younger Spider-Man, Miles has his Uncle Aaron (Prowler, Iron Spider), Bombshell’s mom, Tomoe, Ceres, Snatcher, the Assessor, the female Electro, Hammerhead, Ultimatum and the Ultimate Green Goblin.

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* ComicBook/MilesMorales: As the younger Spider-Man, Miles has his Uncle Aaron (Prowler, Iron Spider), Bombshell’s mom, Tomoe, Ceres, Snatcher, the Assessor, the female Electro, Hammerhead, Ultimatum and Ultimatum, the Ultimate Green Goblin.Goblin and the Spot.

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*** Lampshaded in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond''; when Terry and Bruce first encounter Shriek, the following exchange takes place:

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*** Lampshaded in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond''; when Terry and Bruce first encounter Shriek, the following exchange takes place:



* ''Franchise/TheFlash'', in his comic-book incarnation, has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, the [[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flashes]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.

to:

* ''Franchise/TheFlash'', in his comic-book incarnation, ''Franchise/TheFlash''
** Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be the former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, the ComicBook/{{Shade}}, and ComicBook/VandalSavage
** Barry Allen
has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], Pied Piper, ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, the [[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flashes]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.



*** On the flip side however, the Rogues have occasionally undergone a DarkerAndEdgier transformation to basically became Central City's version of the Mafia. While their gimmicks were still silly, they were unrepentant killers who were considered very dangerous.
** Depending on when the comics were printed, some of Wally's Rogues were sometimes depicted as being {{Punch Clock Villain}}s who were actually almost ''{{friend|lyEnemy}}s'' [[FriendlyEnemy with the Flash]]. Notably, scenes like [[http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/the-flash/19-1.jpg this]] actually happened in the comic, not just on the cover (that one happened because the Trickster sent Wally an invitation to a Rogues party as a joke - Wally had a date and no better ideas, so he decided to take him up on the invite. All involved find themselves having a surprisingly good time).

to:

*** On the flip side flip-side however, the Rogues have occasionally undergone a DarkerAndEdgier transformation to basically became Central City's version of the Mafia. While their gimmicks were still silly, they were unrepentant killers who were considered very dangerous.
** Depending on when the comics were printed, some of Wally's Rogues were sometimes depicted as being {{Punch Clock Villain}}s who were actually almost ''{{friend|lyEnemy}}s'' [[FriendlyEnemy with the Flash]]. Notably, scenes like [[http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/the-flash/19-1.jpg this]] actually happened in the comic, not just on the cover (that one happened because the Trickster sent Wally an invitation to a Rogues party as a joke - Wally had a date and no better ideas, so he decided to take him up on the invite. All involved find themselves having a surprisingly good time).
dangerous.



** The rogues named above were largely enemies of Barry Allen in the Silver Age period, and in fact nearly all of them were introduced at that time when the Flash was being retooled for the then-modern comic era. Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be the former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], and ComicBook/VandalSavage; while Barry's successor ComicBook/WallyWest, got unique enemies such as [[TheChessmaster Blacksmith]], [[SerialKiller Murmur]], [[SplitPersonality Magenta]], [[MadeOfIron Girder]], Plunder, Cicada, Brother Grimm, [[ComicBook/UnderworldUnleashed Neron]], Razer, [[ThenLetMeBeEvil Peek-a-boo]], Tar Pit, and Double Down. A lot of Barry's traditional foes and their {{Legacy Character}}s clashed with Wally as well, including a new Trickster (Axel Walker, a spoiled rich kid who stole James Jesse's gimmicks and went into crime ForTheEvulz) and Zoom ([[FaceHeelTurn Hunter]] [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Zolomon]], inspired by ComicBook/EobardThawne). [[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he gains an arch-enemy of his own, [[EvilTwin Inertia]].

to:

** The rogues named above were largely enemies of Barry Allen in the Silver Age period, and in fact nearly all of them were introduced at that time when the Flash was being retooled for the then-modern comic era. Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be the former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], and ComicBook/VandalSavage; while Barry's successor ComicBook/WallyWest, ComicBook/WallyWest got unique enemies such as [[TheChessmaster [[ExtraOreDinary Blacksmith]], [[SerialKiller Murmur]], [[SplitPersonality Magenta]], [[MadeOfIron Girder]], Plunder, Cicada, [[ColdSniper Plunder]], [[{{Cult}} Cicada]], [[DimensionLord Brother Grimm, Grimm]], [[ComicBook/UnderworldUnleashed Neron]], Razer, [[ThenLetMeBeEvil Peek-a-boo]], [[BlobMonster Tar Pit, Pit]], and [[DeathDealer Double Down. Down]]. A lot of Barry's traditional foes and their {{Legacy Character}}s clashed with Wally as well, including [[MagicFromTechnology Abra Kadabra]] (he started as an enemy of Barry but with Wally ItsPersonal mutually), a new Mirror Master and Trickster (Axel Walker, a spoiled rich kid who stole James Jesse's gimmicks and went into crime ForTheEvulz) and Zoom ([[FaceHeelTurn Hunter]] [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Zolomon]], inspired by ComicBook/EobardThawne). ComicBook/EobardThawne).
*** Depending on when the comics were printed, some of Wally's Rogues were sometimes depicted as being {{Punch Clock Villain}}s who were actually almost ''{{friend|lyEnemy}}s'' [[FriendlyEnemy with the Flash]]. Notably, scenes like [[http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/the-flash/19-1.jpg this]] actually happened in the comic, not just on the cover (that one happened because the Trickster sent Wally an invitation to a Rogues party as a joke - Wally had a date and no better ideas, so he decided to take him up on the invite. All involved find themselves having a surprisingly good time).
**
[[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he has [[EvilformerFriend Griffin]], superboy-Prime and even gains an arch-enemy of his own, [[EvilTwin Inertia]].
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* ComicBook/{{Aquaman}} has ComicBook/BlackManta and [[CainAndAbel Ocean Master]] sharing archvillain status, with [[PoweredArmor Carapax]], the [[PeoplePuppets Fisherman]], the [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower Scavenger]], the [[PunchClockVillain Human Flying Fish]], [[AnimalisticAbomination The Trench]], [[ThreateningShark King Shark]], [[MakingASplash the Eel]], [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Marine Marauder]], the [[GiantSpaceFleaFromNowhere Deep Six]], [[ShadowArchetype the Thirst]], Kordax, and [[FishPeople Charybdis]] rounding out the ranks.
* ComicBook/TheAtom has The Floronic Man, the Bug-Eyed Bandit, The Thinker, Dwarfstar, Lady Chronos, the Panther, Wizardo, the Man in the Ion Mask, Xotar, and of course, Chronos.
* ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'':
** Batman is a standout example, both in terms of memorable [[Characters/BatmanRoguesGallery villains]] and in terms of sheer size. Many individual members of the Bat-Family all have ''their'' own rogues galleries, too. Combine them all and you have one of the biggest rogues gallery in comics history, with new members being added all the time:
** The most famous examples include ComicBook/TheScarecrow,[[note]]a psychologist dressed in a scarecrow costume who is obsessed with fear[[/note]] ComicBook/TwoFace,[[note]]an attorney who became obsessed with duality after half his body was disfigured[[/note]] ComicBook/PoisonIvy,[[note]]a woman capable of controlling plants and an eco-terrorist[[/note]] ComicBook/ThePenguin,[[note]]a scion of a wealthy family who was born heavily disfigured; now a crime lord in Gotham City[[/note]] ComicBook/TheRiddler,[[note]]a criminal mastermind obsessed with proving his own genius by leaving difficult clues behind[[/note]] Comicbook/{{Catwoman}},[[note]]a cat burglar who has an on-off relationship with Batman[[/note]] ComicBook/MrFreeze,[[note]]a cryogenicist trapped in a cooling suit; he is seeking money to revive his frozen wife[[/note]] and ComicBook/TheJoker.[[note]]an incredibly deranged man who looks like a clown obsessed with Batman himself[[/note]] Lesser known, but still highly important villains, include Hugo Strange,[[note]]a scientist and psychologist also obsessed with Batman, being one of the few to have been able to deduce his true identity[[/note]] Hush,[[note]]the scion of a wealthy Gotham family who wants revenge on the Wayne family[[/note]] ComicBook/HarleyQuinn,[[note]]a former psychiatrist of Arkham Asylum who became infatuated with The Joker[[/note]] Clayface,[[note]]a series of characters who all have clay-like bodies that allow them to take on the appearances of other people and reshape their bodies at will[[/note]] Killer Croc,[[note]]a man with a rare genetic deformity that gives him crocodile-like characteristics[[/note]] ComicBook/RasAlGhul,[[note]]the seemingly immortal leader of an AncientConspiracy dedicated to steering society, and in one continuity [[EvilMentor is also Batman's mentor]][[/note]] ComicBook/{{Deadshot}},[[note]]a ProfessionalKiller with almost supernatural aim[[/note]] ComicBook/{{Bane}},[[note]]an exceptionally intelligent man who was raised in a prison and experimented on with a combat drug[[/note]] Mad Hatter,[[note]]a madman obsessed with Creator/LewisCarroll's ''[[Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland Alice in Wonderland]]''[[/note]] and Black Mask.[[note]]a crime lord obsessed with masks; the mask he wears was fused with the skin of his head after a fire.[[/note]] He's also got a bunch of lower-tier villains like Killer Moth, Firefly, Ventriloquist and Scarface, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Great White Shark, Narcosis, the Court of Owls, Professor Pyg, Dr. Dadelus, Ten-Eyed Man, KG-Beast, Black Spider, Lock-Up, Steeljacket, Orca, Roadrunner, Dr. Phospherus, Lord Death Man, Flamingo, and Cluemaster[[note]]The father of [[ComicBook/Batgirl2009 Stephanie Brown]]. Hadn't really used his gimmick since her introduction[[/note]].
** Depending on the continuity, poor Batman has had to deal with ''multiple'' rogues galleries. On [[Series/Batman1966 the 1960s TV show]], [[BornInTheWrongCentury King Tut]] and Egghead were particularly troublesome. [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries The animated series]] gave us the ClockKing and its spinoff comic ''ComicBook/TheBatmanAdventures'' gave us, among others, the trio of [[CrazyPrepared Mastermind]], [[AwesomenessByAnalysis The Professor]], and [[BewareTheNiceOnes Mr. Nice]] (although they were more in the IneffectualSympatheticVillain category, really). And ''Series/{{Gotham}}'' adds Barbara Kean, Theo and Tabitha Galavan, Jerome and Jeremiah Valeska, and Fish Mooney to its Rogue roster, although they and the rest are more ''Jim Gordon's'' Gallery than Bruce Wayne's.
** Batman's former sidekick ComicBook/{{Nightwing}} has his own gallery, including villains that have plagued him from his days with Batman and the Titans: Blockbuster, Torque, the Tarantula, [[EvilKnockoff Nite-Wing]], Double Dare, Hellhound, Amygdala, ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, the Pierce Brothers... In a subversion, one of them is Shrike, an assassin Nightwing befriended while undercover receiving assassin's training. He thinks that he's Nightwing's worst foe; in reality, Nightwing doesn't even consider him a threat, on one occasion ignoring him and ''walking away'' while Shrike chased after him, trying (and failing) to hit him.
** In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'', Bruce Wayne's successor Terry developed his own set, including [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Bli]][[PoisonousPerson ght]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Shriek]], [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Inque]], [[BrainwashedAndCrazy Spellbinder]], [[ProfessionalKiller Curare]], [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame the Stalker]], [[AlternateCompanyEquivalent the Terrific Trio]], [[JekyllAndHyde Terminal]], [[BombThrowingAnarchists Mad Stan]], [[WhosLaughingNow Willy Watt]], [[EvilFormerFriend Big Time]], [[OverlordJr Preston Powers]], the Royal Flush Gang, and the [[GangofHats Jokerz]]. There was even some overlap; Mr. Freeze appeared in one episode, [[spoiler:Ra's al Ghul lived to face ''both'' Batmen after [[GrandTheftMe bodyjacking his own daughter]]]] and ComicBook/TheJoker himself came BackFromTheDead to [[WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker get his own feature presentation]].
*** Lampshaded in ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond''; when Terry and Bruce first encounter Shriek, the following exchange takes place:
---->'''Terry:''' You know this guy?\\
'''Bruce:''' Sorry, not one of mine.
** Tim Drake was the first [[ComicBook/RobinSeries Robin]] to start collecting his own personal rogues gallery while still acting as the Dark Knight's squire, and he continued adding to it as ComicBook/RedRobin. Notable members include [[MightyWhitey King Snake]], [[DragonLady Lynx]] (I & III), [[EnfantTerrible The General]], [[PowersViaPossession Johnny Warlock]], [[EvilSorcerer Warlock's Daughter]], [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame Jaeger]], [[ProfessionalKiller Scarab]], [[VillainTeleportation Dodge]], [[SnakePeople Tapeworm]], [[PoisonousPerson Wanderer]], [[BloodKnight Widower]], [[MasterPoisoner Funnel]], the BodyHorror inducing [[PeoplePuppets Sac]] and the [[DarwinistDesire Daughters of Acheron]].
* Deconstructed in Bates and Weisman's version of ''Comicbook/CaptainAtom'', in which Cap had a fictitious rogues' gallery that the military designed for him as part of his publicly-revealed false origin. Since that origin was his original, [[UsefulNotes/TheSilverAgeOfComicBooks Silver Age]] [[RetCon Charlton origin]], his fake rogues' gallery, most notably Dr. Spectro, were drawn from his ''actual'' Charlton stories. On top of which, some of these fake villains later ''became'' [[BecomingTheMask real ones]]. Plus which, they, along with many of his other actual rogues, including, again, Dr. Spectro, as well as [[EvilCounterpart Major Force]], The Ghost (at one time), and [[MagnificentBastard Wade Eiling]], worked for the same secret military project he himself worked for. He also had "regular" rogues like [[DatingCatwoman Plastique]], [[CorporateSamurai The Cambodian]], and the [[EvilOverlord Queen Bee]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Firestorm}}'' has a Rogues Gallery that could be charitably described as... deficient. Not only are the vast majority laughably underpowered compared to the hero (who has to carry around an IdiotBall the size of a house for them to be any threat to him whatsoever), but they seem to made up mostly of perverts or offensive stereotypes. [[http://mightygodking.com/index.php/2008/03/11/there-is-lame-and-then-there-are-firestorm-villains/ This article]] covers several of the worst offenders. But at least there were both [[StrawFeminist Killer Frosts]], Typhoon, Brimstone, and Tokamak. None of whom were slouches in the power department.[[note]]The Killer Frosts are among the deadliest examples of [[AnIcePerson ice powers]] in fiction, Typhoon is [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin basically a sentient typhoon in humanoid form]], Brimstone is an immensely powerful [[PlayingWithFire fire elemental]] created by [[ComicBook/{{Darkseid}} the Big Bad of the entire DC Universe]], and Tokamak [[EvilCounterpart has the same story-breaker powers as Firestorm]].[[/note]]
* ''Franchise/TheFlash'', in his comic-book incarnation, has an impressively large Rogues Gallery, the most recognizable of which include [[AnIcePerson Captain Cold]], the Trickster, Mirror Master, Captain Boomerang, Weather Wizard, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], ComicBook/GorillaGrodd, [[{{Pyromaniac}} Heat Wave]], [[GemstoneAssault Golden Glider]], the Top, the [[EvilCounterpart Reverse-Flashes]], etc. They were also marked being a really unambitious bunch, considering they all have some incredibly powerful tech and [[CutLexLuthorACheck the best use most can think of is simple robberies of local targets]]. It's implied that many are at ''least'' as unstable as Batman's. Most actually called themselves "The Rogues" and are [[AffablyEvil unusually social for supervillains]]. Gorilla Grodd, the original Reverse Flash, and Zoom are not members of and actually hate the Rogues (the feeling is mutual -- the fact that said three villains [[EvenEvilHasStandards are probably the most heinous of the Flash's foes]] is implied to play a large part in the mutual dislike). The Rogues, in turn, have shunned other members of the Flash's Rogues Gallery, such as Abra Kadabra and the Rainbow Raider/s, though they will tolerate them when something big comes up (like Captain Boomerang's funeral) or when their goals coincide.
** They have an unspoken rule of not to kill the Flash (bar their ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' appearance). That they actually did it (if accidentally) is [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone the worst thing that]] [[AntagonistInMourning ever happened to them]].
*** And in ''Comicbook/BlackestNight'', the Rogues tell [[spoiler:Captain Boomerang II]] that "[[EvenEvilHasStandards The Rogues don't kill women and children]]" right before they [[spoiler:[[KarmicDeath shove him into the pit he's been using to feed his Black Lantern father, the original Captain Boomerang]]]].
*** On the flip side however, the Rogues have occasionally undergone a DarkerAndEdgier transformation to basically became Central City's version of the Mafia. While their gimmicks were still silly, they were unrepentant killers who were considered very dangerous.
** Depending on when the comics were printed, some of Wally's Rogues were sometimes depicted as being {{Punch Clock Villain}}s who were actually almost ''{{friend|lyEnemy}}s'' [[FriendlyEnemy with the Flash]]. Notably, scenes like [[http://www.coverbrowser.com/image/the-flash/19-1.jpg this]] actually happened in the comic, not just on the cover (that one happened because the Trickster sent Wally an invitation to a Rogues party as a joke - Wally had a date and no better ideas, so he decided to take him up on the invite. All involved find themselves having a surprisingly good time).
** Several of them have appeared in some form in either ''Series/TheFlash1990'' or ''Series/TheFlash2014'' (and there's a list for the latter series further down below), or in his appearances on ''WesternAnimation/{{Superfriends}}'', ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'', and ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague''.
** The rogues named above were largely enemies of Barry Allen in the Silver Age period, and in fact nearly all of them were introduced at that time when the Flash was being retooled for the then-modern comic era. Enemies peculiar to the Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick included the Turtle, the Thinker, the Fiddler, the Thorn, the Eel, Star Sapphire (an alien queen from another dimension and not to be confused with the similarly-named Green Lantern villain, though [[{{Retcon}} later revealed]] to be the former Zamaron queen), the Rival (Jay's own Reverse-Flash, who wore a darker version of Jay's costume with a mask), Rag Doll, [[ComicBook/{{Shade}} the Shade]], and ComicBook/VandalSavage; while Barry's successor ComicBook/WallyWest, got unique enemies such as [[TheChessmaster Blacksmith]], [[SerialKiller Murmur]], [[SplitPersonality Magenta]], [[MadeOfIron Girder]], Plunder, Cicada, Brother Grimm, [[ComicBook/UnderworldUnleashed Neron]], Razer, [[ThenLetMeBeEvil Peek-a-boo]], Tar Pit, and Double Down. A lot of Barry's traditional foes and their {{Legacy Character}}s clashed with Wally as well, including a new Trickster (Axel Walker, a spoiled rich kid who stole James Jesse's gimmicks and went into crime ForTheEvulz) and Zoom ([[FaceHeelTurn Hunter]] [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Zolomon]], inspired by ComicBook/EobardThawne). [[ComicBook/{{Impulse}} Bart Allen]]'s tenure as the fourth Flash isn't really long enough to build up a separate Rogues Gallery but, in addition to fighting Barry Allen/Wally West villains, he gains an arch-enemy of his own, [[EvilTwin Inertia]].
* ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'': The titular Emerald Archer has his own gallery of rogues, some of whom are archers like himself, and many of whom tend to be [[ProfessionalKiller professional assassins]]. These include [[EvilCounterpart Merlyn]], [[AristocratsAreEvil Count Vertigo]], [[ClockKing Clock King]], [[ArrogantKungFuGuy Constantine Drakon]], [[NighInvulnerability Brick]], [[ShellShockedVeteran Cupid]], China White, Red Dart, Hatchet, Silver Monkey, [[DatingCatwoman Shado]], Camorouge, and [[SerialKiller Onomatopoeia]]. Occasionally Oliver will clash with ComicBook/{{Deadshot}}, despite the two having no real animosity with each other, and with ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, who definitely carries a grudge against Oliver for stabbing him in his (already-blind) eye. Several of these would later show up as antagonists in ''Series/{{Arrow}}'' (see below).
* Each Franchise/GreenLantern to headline his own series has had a collection of recurring foes, though they rarely if ever have teamed up collectively.
** Alan Scott: ComicBook/VandalSavage (arguably his archnemesis), Solomon Grundy, the Sportsman, the Icicle, the Gambler, the Harlequin (who actually only became a villain in the first place to [[DatingCatwoman date, and, subsequently, marry Alan]]) and the Thorn (the mother of his two children).
** Hal Jordan: Sinestro (''definitely'' his archnemesis), the Manhunters, Kanjar Ro (a RoguesGalleryTransplant - he was originally a foe of ComicBook/{{Hawkman}}), Atrocitus, Hector Hammond, Star Sapphire ([[DatingCatwoman Hal's sometimes-girlfriend]]), Dr. Polaris, the Tattooed Man, Evil Star, Black Hand, Goldface (another HeelFaceTurn), Sonar, and the Shark.
** Kyle Rayner: Major Force (on loan from Comicbook/CaptainAtom and not really his archnemesis, but he's loomed large in Kyle's life anyway, thanks largely to [[StuffedIntoTheFridge what he did to his first girlfriend]]), Oblivion, Grayven, Effigy, Alex Nero, Fatality, Sonar II, Amon Sur and acquired Brainwave JR, Dr. Light, Dr. Polaris and Hal Jordan as Parallax. Kyle, in an issue of his comic, bemoans the fact that he has a lousy Rogues Gallery, compared to his friend Wally West (The Flash).
** As of ''Green Lantern: Rebirth'' and the subsequent relaunch of the franchise, Hal and Kyle's galleries have more or less merged into a collective Rogues Gallery for the entire Green Lantern Corps, with the additions of Parallax, Mongul, Cyborg-Superman, Superboy-Prime, Krona, and [[Characters/GLSinestroCorps the Sinestro Corps]].
** Furthermore, the ''GL Corps'' now have their own rival factions, including the [[TheBerserker Red Lanterns]], [[TheHeartless Black Lanterns]], [[OneManArmy Agent Orange]], and the aforementioned [[DespotismJustifiesTheMeans Sinestro Corps]]. The Star Sapphire name is now applied to a corps as well, although they don't have any designs towards antagonizing the Green Lanterns.
* ComicBook/{{Hawkman}} and the rest of the Hawk-Family have had a number of enemies ranging from villainous fellow aliens and non-powered human criminals to meta-humans and even figures from ancient mythology, to include the likes of [[ShapeShifting Byth Rok]], [[VillainTeleportation Fadeaway Man]], ComicBook/GentlemanGhost, [[SuperIntelligence I.Q.]], [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent Lion-Mane]], the Manhawks, Matter Master, the Monocle, Lasso, Hath-Set, Headhunter, Hummingbird, Count Viper, ComicBook/VandalSavage, and the [[LivingShadow Shadow-Thief]], who's also their ArchEnemy.
* Even though her series is only 38 issues long, Kate Spencer, the Comicbook/{{Manhunter}}, has quite an impressive rogues gallery. Sweeney Todd, Copperhead, the Monocle, Phobia, Dr. Moon, Everyman, and Vesetech.
* While the ComicBook/MartianManhunter has mostly fought one-off villains like [[OmnicidalManiac Commander Blanx]], Human Falcon, Human Squirrel, Mister Moth and the Countryman, he 's also got a few more notable enemies, such as his brother [[CainAndAbel Malefic]], [[MadScientist Professor Arnold Hugo]], the [[KillItWithFire Human Flame]], the Vulture Society, Dr. Trap, Fernus, the Martian Man-eater, [[VampiricDraining Bette Noir]] and [[MindManipulation Despero]].
* The ''Comicbook/{{Shazam}}'' Captain Marvel: the Rogues Gallery includes [[MadScientist Dr. Sivana]] (and all four of his children), Mr. Mind, ComicBook/BlackAdam, Mr. Atom, Ibac the Invincible, Sabbac, Oggar, King Kull, the crocodile-gangsters of Planet Punkus, etc. Most (save Black Adam) haven't appeared much lately, but they tend to congregate as [[LegionOfDoom the Monster Society of Evil]].
** The Monster Society has the distinction of being the first recurring villain team in comics. So it was Captain Marvel's gallery who first came up with the idea of teaming up to destroy the hero (a tactic which proved about as successful as it usually does.)
** The only unrepentantly evil members of the Sivana Family are Dr. Thaddeus Sivana, Georgia, and Sivana Jr. [[BeautyEqualsGoodness Magnificus and Beautia]] both pulled [[HeelFaceTurn Heel Face Turns]] and became at the very least Law-Abiding Citizens who are mostly embarrassed by their family, if not outright allies of the Marvel Family.
* ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'':
** His gallery is one of the most popular in comics, and it [[Characters/SupermanRoguesGallery includes]] earthly villains like ComicBook/LexLuthor, [[{{Cyborg}} Metallo]], [[EvilKnockoff Bizarro]], [[EvilTwin Ultraman]], [[PowersAsPrograms Parasite]], [[ItAmusedMe Prankster]], [[PsychopathicManchild Toyman]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Silver Banshee]], [[PsychoElectro Livewire]], [[RobotMe Cyborg-Superman]], [[ManOfKryptonite Kryptonite Man]], [[PsychicPowers Manchester Black,]] and [[TheSyndicate Intergang]], as well as alien or space-based foes like ComicBook/{{Brainiac}}, [[KneelBeforeZod Zod]], {{ComicBook/Darkseid}}, [[GalacticConqueror Mongul]], [[SpaceCowboy Terra-Man,]] [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Doomsday]], [[PlanetKiller Imperiex]] and [[GreatGazoo Mister Mxyzptlk]]. The latest addition is Blanque, an OmnicidalManiac who is basically Superman's version of The Joker, only without any humor.
** The producers of ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' felt this gallery was really limited; they resorted to using Creator/JackKirby's [[Comicbook/NewGods Fourth World]] DC characters, such as Darkseid and his gang, to fill the ranks. They also created a couple of their own villains, most notably CanonImmigrant [[PsychoElectro Livewire]].
** To be fair, Darkseid and other elements of the Fourth World were introduced in Jack Kirby's ''ComicBook/JimmyOlsen'' comics, so they were, by extension, always a part of the Superman Mythos. And, in any case, their storylines were ''[[RuleOfCool awesome]]''. It should also be noted that Darkseid and his minions had already been introduced and had been recurring archenemies for Superman in the comics for several years before ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' was even produced and aired.
* ''Comicbook/{{Supergirl}}'' has her own gallery, including MadScientist and body-swapper Lesla-Lar, Kryptonian criminal Black Flame, sword-wielding Amazon Nightflame, Satan Girl (name shared by three vastly different enemies), reality-warper Nazi Blackstarr, super-powered Darkseid minion Powerboy, mass-murderer bounty-hunter ''SelfDemonstrating/{{Lobo}}'', Metallo expy and genocidal thug Reactron (who killed post-Crisis Supergirl's parents and blew New Krypton up), corrupt businessman Simon Tycho, SuperSoldier Reign and the remainder world-killers -biological super-weapons-, Kryptonian werewolf Lar-On, Cyborg-Superman, and many more.
* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' has the ComicBook/{{Cheetah}}, [[OurGiantsAreBigger Giganta]], [[PlayingWithSyringes Dr. Poison]], [[PsychicPowers Dr. Psycho]], [[{{Cyborg}} Dr. Cyber]], [[AlienGeometries Angle Man]], [[ThoseWackyNazis Baroness Von Gunther]], [[MakeMeWannaShout Silver Swan]], [[EmperorScientist Queen Atomia]], [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Veronica Cale]], [[SuperSpeed Mayfly]], [[EvilCounterpart Gundra]], [[PlayingWithFire Zara]], the Queen of Fables, and some gods gone bad (ComicBook/{{Ares|DC}}, Eris, etc.) and other figures from [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek Mythology]] (ComicBook/{{Hercules|Unbound}}, Medusa, ComicBook/{{Circe}}). However, many of the more recent rogues are often skipped over due to Wonder Woman's continual battle with DependingOnTheWriter, and then there's the fact that most villains she fights legitimately reform after their encounters with her.
* As one of the most recognizable magic-using heroes in the DCU, ComicBook/{{Zatanna}} tends to fight enemies who either have a supernatural background or are otherwise mystically empowered, including in her own limited series. Her recurring foes include the likes of [[SealedEvilInACan Allura]], [[EvilSorcerer Brother Night]], [[DreamWeaver Fuseli]], [[DemonicDummy Oscar Hampel]], [[RealityWarper Zor]], [[PlayingWithFire Ember]], [[ChildMage Uriah]], [[ManipulativeBastard The Tempter]], [[MalevolentMaskedMen Romalthi the Shaper]], and [[ClaimedByTheSupernatural Nimue Ravensong]].
* In addition to their individual enemies, the Franchise/JusticeLeagueOfAmerica had a handful of villains that regularly fought them as a team: [[PowerCopying Amazo]], Despero, Starro the Conqueror, Kanjar Ro, Starbreaker, The Shaggy Man (later known as the General), The Queen Bee, and Prometheus, to name but a few. Two of the most famous villain teams are the Injustice League and the Secret Society of Supervillains.
* The ComicBook/JusticeSocietyOfAmerica's Rogues Gallery is made up mostly of the surviving foes of their individual members from back in UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks, as well as said foes' {{legac|yCharacter}}ies and a few add-ons from more recent years. These include but are not limited to: ComicBook/VandalSavage, the Wizard, and the Ultra-Humanite (more or less collectively the team's archfoes), plus Per Degaton, Wotan, ComicBook/SolomonGrundy, the Rival, the Tigress, Shiv, the ComicBook/GentlemanGhost, Johnny Sorrow, Roulette, Icicle II, the Thinker, Killer Wasp, Rag Doll, and on-again-off-again AntiHero ComicBook/BlackAdam.
* Both the League and the Society occasionally fall foul of various terrorist groups (Kobra, the Illuminati) and shadowy government organizations (The D.E.O., S.H.A.D.E., The Agency, Checkmate).
* The ComicBook/{{Legion of Super-Heroes}} has loads and loads of recurring enemies, including at least three teams of villains:
** The Fatal Five: Tharok, Manos, Validus, Emerald Empress, and the Persuader (plus, on one occasion, Mordecai standing in for Validus).
** The Legion of Super-Villains: Lightning Lord, Saturn Queen, Cosmic King, Chameleon Chief, Esper Lass, Hunter, Magno Lad, Micro Lad, Nemesis Kid, Ol-Vir, Radiation Roy, Ron-Karr, Spider Girl, Sun Emperor, Tyr, and Zymyr.
** The Justice League of Earth: Earth-Man, Storm Boy, Golden Boy, Tusker, Eyeful Ethel, and Radiation Roy and Spider Girl from the LSV.
** And numerous unaffiliated villains: Mordru, the Time Trapper, Computo, Universo, the Dark Circle, Leland [=McCauley=], Imperiex, Evillo, Grimbor the Chainsman, and so on and so forth.
* The ComicBook/TeenTitans have had ComicBook/{{Deathstroke}}, [[ComicBook/TheJudasContract Terra]], Trigon, Brother Blood, [[CainAndAbel Blackfire]], Psimon, and occasionally the Brotherhood of Evil. More recent additions are Jericho and {{evil counterpart}}s like the Terror Titans and the Titans of Tomorrow. [[WesternAnimation/TeenTitans The animated Titans]] had Slade, Brother Blood, the HIVE, the Brotherhood of Evil, Trigon, Blackfire ([[LighterAndSofter though many of these names are the same, the animated villains were often very different in terms of personality and motivation than their comic counterparts]]) and a wide variety of gag or {{Harmless Villain}}s.

[[AC:Franchise/MarvelUniverse:]]
* ''ComicBook/BlackPanther'': Over the years of defending his kingdom of Wakanda, T'Challa has developed a nicely-sized gallery of his own, consisting of foes who either want to plunder Wakanda for its plentiful stock of vibranium or else usurp the throne from T'Challa for their own purposes of conquest (and many of whom are themselves natives of Wakanda or of neighboring villages or kingdoms). Three of the best known members of his gallery are [[MakeMeWannaShout Ulysses Klaw]] (who [[YouKilledMyFather murdered T'Challa's father T'Chaka]] in the backstory), ComicBook/ErikKillmonger (who wants revenge for T'Chaka exiling his family after his father assisted Klaw in an attack on Wakanda), and [[ImplacableMan Man-Ape]] (who has tried to usurp the Wakandan throne in order to return it to a more primitive state); all three appear in the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse, though Man-Ape has a HeelFaceTurn in that continuity during the events of the ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}'' film. Other enemies that the Black Panther has had to face include [[{{Necromancer}} Baron Macabre]], [[MindRape King Cadaver]], [[EvilGenius Kiber the Cruel]], [[TheBeastmaster Madame Slay]], [[TrickArrow Salamander K'ruel]], [[DatingCatwoman Princess Zanda]], [[StalkerWithACrush Malice]], [[SonicStunner Lord Karnaj]], [[PoisonousPerson Sombre]], [[WhenTreesAttack Tetu]], [[MindManipulation Zenzi]], [[SinisterMinister Reverend Achebe]], [[FantasticRacism the Sons of the Serpent]], and Klaw's father [[ANaziByAnyOtherName Colonel Fritz Klaue]]. T'Challa has even had to deal with members of his own family, such as half-brother [[WarriorPrince Jakarra]] and adopted brother [[EvilCounterpart White Wolf]], both of whom have a CainAndAbel dynamic with him (although White Wolf, a white man, loves and respects Wakanda to the point that he'll willingly temper his hatred of T'Challa enough to give aid to his adopted homeland when needed).
* Comicbook/CaptainAmerica's gallery consists mostly of threats to the American way of life: Nazis (The ComicBook/RedSkull, both Barons Zemo), terrorist organizations (ComicBook/{{HYDRA}}, [[FunWithAcronyms U.L.T.I.M.A.T.U.M.]]), internal threats (The Secret Empire, led by President Nixon), and The French (Batroc ze Lee-pair). That said, he's also battled more conventional supervillains like [[PlayingWithFire Solarr]], the [[ButtMonkey Porcupine]], the [[AxCrazy Animus]], and the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Serpent Society]]. The Captain has also repeatedly clashed with the likes of the [[Franchise/SpiderMan Scorpion]], [[Comicbook/{{Daredevil}} Mister]] [[Comicbook/TheMightyThor Hyde]], and Marvel's version of the [[Comicbook/GhostRider Scarecrow]].
* ComicBook/CarolDanvers has had a varied gallery, including enemies who were created specifically for her to fight but who are now [[RoguesGalleryTransplant better known as members of other heroes' galleries]]. Three foes who fall in that category include Mystique (her original Arch-Enemy), Deathbird, and the Brood alien race (all better known as X-Men villains these days), plus Carol has also had to deal with the Skrulls (who tend to fight other heroes as well as her), Moonstone, Toxie Doxie, Grace Valentine, Destructor and Doomsday Man (respectively, a man who wore PoweredArmor and a cyborg, and who both got fused into one individual later), [[RealityWarper the Storyteller]], sorcerer Warren Traveler, and Kree commander Yon-Rogg. Newer additions since she became a cosmic hero include Hala the Accuser and Dr. Eve.
* Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}, despite usually keeping to one area of New York City, has managed to rack up quite a Rogues Gallery, amongst them ComicBook/TheKingpin, assassin for hire ComicBook/{{Bullseye|MarvelComics}}, on and off again girlfriend[=/=]Greek Goddess of Death ComicBook/{{Elektra}}, evil ninja cult [[ConservationOfNinjutsu the Hand]], and then there's [[DiabolicalMastermind Owl]], [[GeniusBruiser Bullet]], [[TheChewToy Stilt-Man]], [[ButtMonkey Turk]], ComicBook/{{Typhoid Mary|MarvelComics}}, Tombstone, [[JekyllAndHyde Mister Hyde]], [[WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes Mister Fear]], the [[TouchOfDeath Death-Stalker]], [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} the Gladiator]], the [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain Eel]], and [[PsychoElectro Electro]] and ComicBook/{{Mysterio}}, who DD shares with Franchise/SpiderMan. Even AntiHero Comicbook/ThePunisher clashes with Daredevil often enough that the two show up in each other's series at least once on each run!
* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} has managed to acquire his own Rogues Gallery over the years. Among them include; [[EmbarrassingFirstName Francis]] (who keeps insisting his name's [[FeelNoPain Ajax]]), [[EvilCripple former FBI agent Allison Kemp]], [[UpliftedAnimal Hit-Monkey]], [[AxCrazy Madcap]], T-Ray, [[CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass Macho Gomez]], [[EvilGenius Dr. Killebrew]], [[PsychoPsychologist Dr. Whitby]], [[TheChessmaster Black Box]], [[MindVirus Black Swan]], [[StevenUlyssesPerhero Barton Utler a.k.a. Butler]], [[EvilMakesYouUgly Vetis]], and even ComicBook/{{Taskmaster}} once in a while.
* Naturally Comicbook/DoctorStrange, the Sorcerer Supreme of Creator/MarvelComics, has a rogues gallery, although it's extremely unusual. Strange's foes range from other human sorcerers (Baron Mordo) to demonic entities from other dimensions who want to take over the Earth (Nightmare, Dormammu, the Dweller-in-Darkness) to out-and-out {{Eldritch Abomination}}s (Shuma-Gorath) to ancient super weapons left behind (Zom). To complicate matters, sometimes these entities use humans as agents or vessels to attack Strange when they can't go after him directly (e.g. Dormammu possessing ComicBook/TheHood).
* Different incarnations of the Comicbook/GhostRider had their own rogues galleries, including both demonic and otherwise supernatural villains like ComicBook/{{Mephisto}}, Blackheart, Deathwatch, Blackout, Hag & Troll, Null the Living Darkness, Wallow, Vengeance, Centurious, and Lilith, and more conventional costumed villains like the Orb, the Water Wizard, Steel Wind, and Marvel's own version of the Scarecrow.
* Even ComicBook/HowardTheDuck had an off-kilter Rogues' Gallery, headlined by recurring nemeses Doctor Bong and the Kidney Lady, and including the likes of Pro-Rata, the Cosmic Accountant; Doctor Angst, Master of Mundane Mysticism; Betsy the Hellcow; and Le Beaver.
* The ''ComicBook/ImmortalIronFist'' has a gallery of villains of his own, many of whom are martial artists like Iron Fist himself, to include the likes of [[EvilCounterpart Steel Serpent]], [[MindManipulation Zhou Chen]], [[MasterSwordsman Scimitar]], [[{{Cyborg}} Bushmaster]], [[EvilOldFolks Crane Mother]], [[ShockAndAwe El Aguila]], [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Ferocia]], [[BeastMaster Nightshade]], [[PrecursorHeroes Quan Yaozu]], [[EnergyAbsorption Junzo Muto]], [[UnknownRelative Death Sting]], [[NotJustATournament Council of Lou-Shi]] and [[EvilSorcerer Master Khan]]. He's also tangled with enemies who are usually mainstays in other heroes' rogues galleries, including Batroc the Leaper and the Constrictor (both Captain America villains), the Wrecking Crew (Thor), and Bullseye (Daredevil). Interestingly, ComicBook/{{Sabretooth}} (who's best known as Wolverine's ArchEnemy) [[RoguesGalleryTransplant originally started out as an Iron Fist foe]], but back then he was portrayed as a human who wielded gloves with razor-claws; when he was shifted to being Wolverine's chief villain, he was retooled as a mutant with the claws being part of his bestial mutation.
* Most of the ComicBook/IncredibleHulk's enemies are other super-strong bruisers who can actually go a few rounds with the Big Green Machine without immediately getting turned into roadkill, like the [[EvilCounterpart Abomination]], Mister Hyde, Madman, the Glob, and the Wendigo. Not everyone fits the bill however, such as the Leader, a MadScientist and EvilGenius who has as much brains as the Hulk does brawn; the U-Foes, a collective EvilCounterpart to the Comicbook/FantasticFour with a similar origin and powers, although they never actually met the Four; [[EnergyBeings Zzzax]], a sentient electrical field; Mercy, a fragile-looking and wayward DarkMagicalGirl; the Gamma Corps, a collection of other gamma-mutated humans who serve the Leader; and Rock and Redeemer, one of whom is a sentient shapeshifting boulder and the other who wears a suit of deadly power armor. The Hulk has even battled a couple of {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, like the Crawling Unknown (a giant, cancerlike growth that mutated out of control), and Sh'mballah, an {{Expy}} of Franchise/{{Cthulhu|Mythos}} who tried to conquer the Earth, messed with the Hulk, [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu and didn't live to regret it]]. The Hulk is also a popular choice for [[RoguesGalleryTransplant villains who fight someone besides their traditional enemies]], as he's tangled with the likes of the [[Franchise/SpiderMan Sandman and the Rhino]] and [[Comicbook/XMen the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants and the Juggernaut]]. The Hulk is also one of the few Marvel characters who has other heroes in his rogues gallery, regularly slugging it out with Comicbook/TheMightyThor, Wolverine, and [[Comicbook/FantasticFour The Thing.]]
** Bruce Banner's cousin Jennifer Walters, also known as ''ComicBook/SheHulk'', has her own list of enemies, likewise consisting of super-strong bruisers such as her ArchEnemy Titania and others like the Abominatrix, Adrenazon, and the Behemoth, but also including other super-powered foes like the Countess (a reality-warper), Bulldozer (the daughter of the original Bulldozer from the Wrecking Crew), the Grappler (a martial artist who uses gadgets to fight), the Word (a cult leader) and his daughter Ultima, Madcap (a crazy fellow with incredible healing abilities), Ruby Thursday (Android/Cyborg, who knows?), Black Hole (a man who can create a black hole from his chest), and Frenzy (a mutant whose skin is hard as steel) and even non-powered villains like extortionist Beverly Cross and crime boss Nicholas Trask. Being the Hulk's cousin and ally, she's also butted heads with some of his enemies, including the Abomination and the Grey Gargoyle, and with villains from other rogues' galleries such as Venom and Juggernaut.
* Since Comicbook/IronMan began as a vehicle for Cold War stories, his gallery were nearly all communists -- the Mandarin (not technically a communist but more of a YellowPeril), the Crimson Dynamo, the Unicorn, and the Titanium Man. Eventually, when the Cold War threats died down, his enemies became tailored to be antagonists to a playboy industrialist millionaire: [[TheChessmaster Iron Monger]], [[ManipulativeBastard Justin Hammer]] and [[ManipulativeBitch Sunset Bain]] (two business rivals), Doctor Doom (a dictator and technocrat who has what may be an even more powerful [[PoweredArmor suit of armor]] than his own), the Ghost (an industrial saboteur), [[WhipItGood Whiplash/Blacklash]] (one of Hammer's longtime employees), the [[AnIcePerson Blizzard]] (an embittered ex-employee who was fired by Stark for stealing from the company, and created his own suit of armor in an attempt at revenge), [[PlayingWithFire Firebrand]] (a radical anarchist determined to destroy capitalism and lead a utopian revolution), the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Spymaster]] (an industrial spy), [[FemmeFatale Madame Masque]] (a masked criminal saboteur, as well as [[DatingCatwoman an on-again, off-again girlfriend]]), Firepower (an armored warrior sponsored by the U.S. government, who wanted to destroy Iron Man when they thought he had gone rogue), the Melter (a crooked industrialist who was run out of business and set out to sabotage Stark Enterprises), Sunturion (another armored warrior who worked for a rival company), and the Living Laser (a psychopath with deadly laser blasters strapped to his wrists, who started out lusting after one of Iron Man's teammates but soon developed a loathing for Iron Man himself).
** After the downfall of the Soviet Union, [[WhyWeAreBummedCommunismFell many of the Soviet villains were altered somewhat]], with the Crimson Dynamo armor [[CutLexLuthorACheck being used by petty criminals]] or by people with other non-Communist political agendas, the Unicorn having become a {{Cloudcuckoolander}}, and the Titanium Man embittered over Russia's transition to a capitalist democracy and determined to destroy Iron Man, who he blames for the change.
** Then there's Fin Fang Foom, because you can't have a hero in shining armor without a bona fide fire-breathing dragon to fight. Foom also hates the Mandarin, because the Mandarin stole his ten power rings from Foom's spaceship (yes, Foom is a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot fire-breathing Chinese dragon]] ''[[NinjaPirateZombieRobot from space.]]'' And that is ''awesome).''
* The martial artist ComicBook/ShangChi has often fought Zaran, the Cat, Pavane, Kogar, Mordillo, Tiger/Claw, Ghost-Maker, Razor-Fist and Shadow-Stalker. But more importantly he fought Midnight Sun (his adopted brother), Moving Shadow (his half brother), Fah Lo Suee/Cursed Lotus (his half sister) and big bad Fu Manchu/Zheng Zu (his father).
* ComicBook/{{Luke Cage|HeroForHire}} has a number of foes who have similar origins to him (that is, born under poor circumstances and eventually taking up crime, though Cage himself reformed), and although many of them don't have superpowers, they make up for it by having some kind of physical superiority or high-powered weaponry. These include Cockroach Hamilton (wields [[{{BFG}} a six-barreled shotgun that pulls double-duty as a flame-thrower]]), Black Mariah (a 400-pound drug dealer with exceptional strength), Cornell Cottonmouth (an elderly drug kingpin and pimp with photographic memory), Hardcore (a mercenary with [[WolverineClaws medically-enhance nails capable of slashing through steel]]), John Bushmaster (not the same as the Bushmaster from Iron Fist's gallery; this one is a crime boss with [[EvilCounterpart powers similar to Cage]]), Chemistro (an identity borne by [[LegacyCharacter three different individuals]], all of whom have alchemic abilities), Cheshire Cat (able to turn invisible and intangible and also able to teleport), Stiletto (fights using wrist-mounted blade-launchers), and Piranha Jones (a crime boss with metallic jaws and teeth). Three other enemies of Cage's, Billy Bob Rackham, [[KnifeNut Willis Stryker]] and [[KillItWithFire Coldfire]], loom much more largely in his life, as Rackham was a prison guard whose attempt to kill Cage [[CreateYourOwnHero wound up giving him his powers]], Stryker was the one who framed Cage and sent him to prison in the first place, and Coldfire is [[CainAndAbel Cage's brother]] who hated him for his formerly criminal lifestyle. Also [[ThoseTwoBadGuys Shades and Comanche ]]
* ComicBook/MoonGirlAndDevilDinosaur has Princess Fisk (Kingpin’s goddaughter), Kree Marvin Ellis, Demolisher, Stegron and the Killer Folk Tribe.
* Comicbook/TheMightyThor's rogues gallery is a strange mishmash of mythological villains and costumed criminals. Some of his enemies are derived from Myth/NorseMythology, like [[CainAndAbel his brother]] ComicBook/{{Loki}}, and the fire giant Surtur, and those who hail from the worlds of myth but were created by Stan Lee like Ulik the rock troll, Amora ComicBook/TheEnchantress, and Skurge the Executioner, but even in the early Stan Lee-scripted stories he fought mortal villains like the Wrecking Crew, the Absorbing Man, Mister Hyde, the Cobra, Radioactive Man, Zarrko, and the Grey Gargoyle.
* ComicBook/SubMariner aka Namor has a host of enemies. Attuma, Tiger Shark, Llyra, Llyron, Orka, Krang, his cousin Byrrah, Dr Dorcas, Tyrak and his frenemy Dr Doom.
* ''ComicBook/{{Nova}}'' has a moderately-sized group of enemies such as Condor, Diamondhead, Megaman, the Corrupter, Powerhouse, Supernova and Sphinx.
* While (for rather obvious reasons) Comicbook/ThePunisher has a small rogues gallery in the sense of ''recurring'' targets... Jigsaw is ''the'' most long-running character he's ever had to deal with, even [[spoiler:when the original Jigsaw was killed in the regular Marvel Universe, as Stuart Clarke eventually "succeeded" him]], although Nicky Cavella (2 arcs) and Kathie O'Brien's husband Rawlins (3), and finally the Generals briefly joined in [[Comicbook/ThePunisherMAX the MAX universe]] under Creator/GarthEnnis' years as author.
** Barracuda, the MadeOfIron [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder backstabbing]] mercenary introduced in the MAX universe, also lasted for a few arcs and got his own miniseries. After surviving a ridiculous number of injuries throughout the series, Barracuda was finally KilledOffForReal after [[spoiler:Frank tore off his nose with a pair of pliers, chopped off his arms, and ''blew his head off with an AK-47'']].
** Terrorist-for-hire Saracen had a sixteen-issue run in the 616 universe.
** ComicBook/TheKingpin is also a major recurring enemy to Frank, in both the 616 and MAX universes. In fact, as explained on Fisk's character page, the only reason he's survived so many encounters with the Punisher is because even Frank recognizes the massive power vacuum and accompanying deaths of innocents that would result if Kingpin were to die.
** Other enemies of Castle's who have made appearances in three or more issues include [[{{Cyborg}} Damage]], [[ImplacableMan Thorn]], [[MafiaPrincess Rosalie Carbone]], [[GatlingGood Rapido]], [[EvilCripple Ma Gnucci]], [[MadeOfIron the Russian]], Recoil, Bushwacker, [[ColdSniper Sniper]], [[RabidCop Blackwell]], [[LegacyCharacter the Elite]], [[ScaryBlackMan Gregario]], [[SinisterMinister the Rev]], and [[SuperSoldier Johnny Nightmare]].
* ComicBook/MoonKnight has Bushman, Stained Glass Scarlet, the Profile, Sun King, Black Spectre, Midnight Man and later his son, Morpheus, the Hellbent, Slasher and Moon Knight’s brother Shadow Knight.
* ''ComicBook/{{Sleepwalker}}'' had a strange collection of original villains, including costumed criminals (8-Ball, the Chain Gang, Spectra, Psyko), [[CivvieSpandex uncostumed villains]] (Lullaby and the Bookworm), crazed government agents (the Office of Insufficient Evidence, the Thought Police), and supernatural demons (Mr. Jyn and Cobweb). In his short career, Sleepy also found time to mess with the villains of the Comicbook/XMen (Brotherhood of Evil Mutants), Franchise/SpiderMan (the Hobgoblin), and Comicbook/DoctorStrange (Nightmare).
* ''Franchise/SpiderMan'':
** His gallery [[Characters/SpiderMan includes]] [[ComicBook/NormanOsborn the Green Goblin]][[note]]a CorruptCorporateExecutive with a MadBomber SplitPersonality after taking a PsychoSerum[[/note]], [[LegacyCharacter Hobgoblin]][[note]]a sane, albeit sociopathic fashion designer who uses a modified Goblin arsenal[[/note]], ComicBook/DoctorOctopus[[note]]a MadDoctor who has four mechanical arms fused to his back[[/note]], Comicbook/{{Venom}}[[note]]a mentally troubled reporter bonded to an alien symbiote, sharing a hatred for Spider-Man[[/note]], [[PsychoElectro Electro]][[note]]a man who controls all forms of electricity[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Mysterio}}[[note]]a failed special effects artist who uses his technology to become a villain[[/note]], [[DishingOutDirt Sandman]][[note]]a crook whose molecules are fused with sand particles[[/note]] ComicBook/KravenTheHunter[[note]][[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame a big game hunter]] with the abilities of a SuperSerum[[/note]], [[EvilOldFolks the Vulture]][[note]]an old businessman who utilizes a electromagnetic winged harness[[/note]], ComicBook/{{Carnage}}[[note]]a psychopathic SerialKiller bonded to ''another'' symbiote spawned from Venom's own[[/note]], [[JekyllAndHyde the Lizard]][[note]]a scientist with a SplitPersonality which transforms him into a humanoid reptilian[[/note]], [[DumbMuscle the Rhino]][[note]]a brute with his skin fused with a rhino-like hide costume[[/note]], ComicBook/BlackCat[[note]]a master cat burglar who goes by her father's words to "never settle for second best"[[/note]], [[BewareMyStingerTail the Scorpion]][[note]]an investigator turned insane PsychoForHire trapped in a scorpion-esque armor[[/note]], [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain the]] [[MakeMeWannaShout Shocker]][[note]]a robber who created an insulated battle suit with vibro-shock gauntlets[[/note]], etc. Together with Franchise/{{Batman}} and Franchise/{{Superman}}'s, it's considered probably the most well-known Rogues Gallery in all of comicdom.
** The villains are also good examples of villains crossing over to fight new heroes besides their traditional sparring partners. Electro, for example, has become an enemy to Daredevil as well as Spider-Man, while Spidey himself has thrown down with the enemies of everyone from Comicbook/IronMan to the Hulk to Captain Marvel.
*** A glaring example is Wilson Fisk, ComicBook/TheKingpin. He's become so closely associated with Comicbook/{{Daredevil}} that both [[Film/{{Daredevil}} the 2003 movie]] and [[Series/Daredevil2015 the Marvel Studios/Netflix series]] used him as the BigBad.
*** Comicbook/DarkReign upgraded Norman "The Green Goblin" Osborn to a universe-wide villain when he [[spoiler:took over the Avengers]].
** Starting with ''ComicBook/BrandNewDay'', ''many'' new villains have been introduced in order to keep stories from falling into routine. Among them are [[YinYangBomb Mr. Negative]], [[DistaffCounterpart Menace]], [[LeParkour Screwball]], [[SquashedFlat Paper Doll]], [[DisadvantageousDisintegration Fracture]], [[{{Technopath}} Overdrive]], and [[TemporaryBlindness Blindside]]. Of the bunch Mr. Negative, Screwball, and Overdrive proved to be the only ones to have any staying power in Spidey's rogues gallery.
** ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl'', his daughter, has a nice rogues gallery as well. Crazy Eight, Killerwatt, the Dragon King, Funny Face, Soldiers of the Serpent, Quickwire, the Hobgoblin, Earthshaker, Mr. Abnormal, [[DaddysLittleVillain Aftershock]], Apox, Angel Face, Fury the Goblin Queen, Mr. Nobody, Carolyn Trainer, Killer Frost, Reverb, etc. She even inherited a villain from her father's rogues gallery in the form of Black Tarantula.
** Due to villain attrition, such as the death of Kraven and [[HeelFaceTurn the reforming of Sandman as a hero]], the [[LegionOfDoom Sinister Six]] has seen a lot of villains take part of the sextet as Doc Ock sought to fill up the empty slots any way he could just to preserve the group name. This has actually lead to the Six's downfall on a few occasions, due to Ock picking a villain who isn't really a team player. for example the one time they let Venom join, his mental instability and [[TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou obsession with being the one to kill Spider-Man]] resulted in him going rogue mid-battle, crippling Sandman with a poisonous bite, and basically ruining the plan just as they were about to win. Generally Spidey's villains don't play well with each other.
* ComicBook/MilesMorales: As the younger Spider-Man, Miles has his Uncle Aaron (Prowler, Iron Spider), Bombshell’s mom, Tomoe, Ceres, Snatcher, the Assessor, the female Electro, Hammerhead, Ultimatum and the Ultimate Green Goblin.
* ComicBook/SpiderGwen aka ComicBook/GhostSpider2019: has her universe’s Kingpin Murdock, The Lizards, the S.I.L.K. Organization, Koala Kommander, the Black Cat, the “Punisher”, the Bodega Bandit, the Vulture, Man-Wolf and now the main Marvel universe’s Jackal.
* The original ''Comicbook/SpiderWoman'' developed a considerable rogues gallery of her own during her original 50-issue series in the late 1970s and early 1980s, including [[LukeIAmYourFather Viper]], the [[PsychopathicManchild Brothers Grimm]], the [[NightmareFuel Needle]], the [[PsychoForHire Flying Tiger]], Nekra, [[MadScientist Dr. Karl Malus]], the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hangman]], [[{{Stripperiffic}} Gypsy Moth]], the [[HalfHumanHybrid Human Fly]] (on loan from Spider-Man), Daddy Long Legs, [[ButtMonkey Turner D. Century]], the [[VoluntaryShapeshifting Waxman]], and her ArchEnemy [[Myth/KingArthur Morgan Le Fey.]]
* ''ComicBook/{{Venom}}'': While Eddie Brock and the symbiote have traditionally been part of Spider-Man's rogues gallery (as outlined above), they have also developed a gallery of their own as they've shifted from outright villainy to being more anti-heroic. A big constant in their list of adversaries is ComicBook/{{Carnage}}, the Venom symbiote's offspring which has been a recurring foe both on its own and when bonded to its usual host [[SerialKiller Cletus Kasady]]; but other enemies Venom has had to endure--regardless of who the symbiote is bonded to at the time--include [[PlayingWithFire Jack O'Lantern]] (the fifth person to wield the name and outfit), [[MindManipulation Killer Thrill]], [[ShotgunsAreJustBetter Sin-Eater]], [[KnightTemplar The Jury]] (whose leader formed the team after Venom killed his security guard son while escaping the Vault), [[ManOfKryptonite Pyre]], [[BewareMyStingerTail Scorpion]] (the third Venom host), [[BlobMonster Krogg]], [[SkullForAHead The Redeemer]], and [[AncientEvil Knull]] (the deity who created the symbiotes).
* The ''Comicbook/XMen'' [[Characters/XMenRoguesGallery have]] ComicBook/{{Magneto}}, ComicBook/{{Mystique}}, ComicBook/{{Apocalypse}}, ComicBook/MisterSinister, [[SinisterMinister Reverend]] ([[Film/XMenFilmSeries or Colonel]]) Stryker, [[DemonicPossession the Shadow King]], Black Tom Cassidy, [[ImmortalityImmorality Selene]], ComicBook/{{Sabretooth}}, the ComicBook/{{Juggernaut|MarvelComics}}, etc. X-Men being a book about a team, they've got even more groups as enemies: the Brotherhood of Mutants, the Hellfire Club, the Savage Land mutates, the original Hellions, the Acolytes, the Marauders, the Four Horsemen, the Sentinels, and on and on. Team names tend to get reused, and individual members get around a ''lot,'' nearly as much as with the X-Men themselves.
** Making things even more complicated, a few X-Men have their ''own'' Rogues galleries! Franchise/{{Wolverine}} has everyone ever involved with the Weapon Plus project (ComicBook/{{Sabretooth}}, Lady Deathstrike, etc.), ComicBook/JeanGrey (thanks to being the incarnation of the Phoenix) is on the ''entire Shi'ar Empire's'' shit list, and ComicBook/ProfessorX himself has personal issues with Magneto, the Shadow King, Cassandra Nova, and Cain "Juggernaut" Marko. ComicBook/{{Cyclops}} and his brother Havok are of special interest to Mr. Sinister (who has up to THREE teams of PsychoForHire assassins!) and have their psychopathic Omega class brother [[CainAndAbel Vulcan]] to deal with, ComicBook/{{Beast|MarvelComics}} has to deal with his Age of Apocalypse EvilCounterpart Dark Beast, Banshee and Black Tom are cousins, and ComicBook/{{Colossus}} has a CainAndAbel dynamic with his brother Mikhael Rasputin. The X-Men have so many enemies it's a wonder how they keep track of them all. And while some of the above are currently dead, [[DeathIsCheap this is X-Men]], so they'll probably be back.
** ComicBook/{{Excalibur}} has had Arcade, Doctor Doom, Galactus, the Hellfire Club, Juggernaut, Mister Sinister, Mystique, Nightmare and Sentinels.
* Likewise to the JLA and JSA, ''Comicbook/TheAvengers'' fought both the enemies of their individual members (such as ComicBook/{{Loki}} and The ComicBook/RedSkull) and their own collective enemies, including ComicBook/{{Ultron}}, Kang the Conqueror, Graviton, Count Nefaria, and the various incarnations of The Masters of Evil.
** They also have a tendency to "borrow" ComicBook/{{Magneto}} and ComicBook/DoctorDoom, presumably because the X-Men and the Fantastic Four can't be bothered on some days.
** [[VillainWithGoodPublicity The government-sanctioned]] ComicBook/DarkAvengers are The Masters of Evil in all but name. Former Masters of Evil member Moonstone is part of the team, and they're overseen by ComicBook/NormanOsborn's secret "Cabal" (consisting of ComicBook/DoctorDoom, ComicBook/{{Loki}}, and ComicBook/TheHood, with ComicBook/EmmaFrost and [[ComicBook/SubMariner Namor]] as [[TokenGoodTeammate Token Sympathetic and Likable Teammates]]).
* The Comicbook/FantasticFour have a rather wide-ranging gallery, from ComicBook/{{Galactus}} to ComicBook/DoctorDoom to The Red Ghost and his Super Apes, taking in [[PeoplePuppets Puppet Master]], [[EvilGenius Mad Thinker]], [[BeenThereShapedHistory Rama-Tut]], {{Mole M|en}}an, [[EvilSorceror Diablo]], [[VoluntaryShapeshifting the Skrulls]], [[HigherTechSpecies the Kree]], [[HarbingerOfImpendingDoom Terrax]], [[FlyingFirepower Wizard]] and [[EvilCounterpart the Frightful Four]]. It says something, however, that their "Oh, right, it's Tuesday again. And right in the middle of Andy Griffith" foes are most of the universe's "Anyone know a really, really interventionist deity?" foes. (Obviously, this does not apply to the Super Apes.) The FF have also fought a number of heroes, some of whom debuted fighting the Four. These include [[Comicbook/SubMariner Namor]], Hulk, the ComicBook/BlackPanther, the ComicBook/SilverSurfer, and even Anime/CombattlerV.
* The [[CListFodder C-List Heroes]] of [[ComicBook/GreatLakesAvengers Great Lakes Aveng -- uhm -- X-Me -- uhm Champi -- uh... Initiative]] have a rogues gallery consisting of Gene "[[{{Leatherman}} Leather Boy]]" Lorrene, Dr. Tannenbaumm, Deathurge (the Squirrel), and Maelstrom. Yes, most of them are even D-List Villains.
* In the very early stories written by Creator/StanLee, even the Comicbook/HumanTorch and ComicBook/AntMan had their own rogue's galleries before they became full-time team heroes. The Torch faced off against the Beetle, Plant-Man, the Trapster, and the Wizard, while Ant-Man battled the likes of Whirlwind, Egghead, and the Porcupine. The Wizard went on to become a significant threat to the Fantastic Four, while the rest of them languished as minor villains... they weren't Stan's best creations.
* The ComicBook/NewWarriors have squared off with the likes of A.I.M., High Evolutionary, the Sphinx (both the male and female version), Juggernaut, Skrull, Terrax, the Folding Circle, Psionex, Asylum, Harrier and Midnight’s Fire.

[[AC:Other:]]
* Before they lost their powers en masse, the Order of Despots was this to the Pantheon in ''ComicBook/AllFallDown''.
* ''ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse'': A non-superhero example would be with Scrooge [=McDuck=], most notably in the comics by Creator/CarlBarks and Creator/DonRosa. Along with the [[CardCarryingVillain Beagle]] [[TerribleTrio Boys]], who are constantly trying to rob Scrooge blind, he has to contend with [[FemmeFatale Magica De Spell]], an evil sorceress who constantly tries to steal Scrooge's NumberOneDime because she thinks it has magic powers; the snooty [[UpperClassTwit John D. Rockerduck]], who simply inherited his money instead of working for it like Scrooge did; and [[EvilCounterpart Flintheart]] [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney Glomgold]], who has all of Scrooge's drive and determination but none of his ethics or morals. There's also Blackheart Beagle, the Beagle Boys' grandfather, founder, and occasional leader who is depicted as Scrooge's ArchEnemy and is constantly trying to rob Scrooge blind with the aid of his family The Beagle Boys. Later day additions include the country of [[{{Ruritania}} Brutopia]] and [[GentlemanThief Arpine Lusene]], who's out to steal Scrooge's money simply to show that he can, or, at the very least, make it disappear so he can claim he did.
** The Beagle Boys, Flintheart, and Magica all became regulars on ''WesternAnimation/{{DuckTales|1987}}''.
** Interestingly, while both come from the original canon, Rockerduck and Flintheart rarely if ever are featured in the same canon in modern comics. In America Flintheart is prevalent while in Europe Rockerduck is more famous, and as a result hardly any American fan is aware of Rockerduck and the same applies to European fans for Flintheart, which resulted in their personalities to have evolved over time to ''be the same''. Thus, you can call Rockerduck "Europe's Flintheart" and Flintheart "America's Rockerduck".
** Scrooge's Rogues Gallery is actually lampshaded in the first episode of the ''[[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 DuckTales reboot]]'', when Scrooge learns that Donald's new job is with [[spoiler:Flintheart Glomgold]].
--->'''Scrooge:''' Your new job is with ''my sworn enemy?''\\
'''Donald:''' I can't keep track of [[LongList all your sworn enemies!]]
* During her quest to find the person(s) responsible for her apparent murder, ComicBook/GhostDarkHorseComics amasses a gallery of enemies with varying strange abilities, including the likes of [[RealityWarper Cameron Nemo]], [[PowerParasite Dr. October]], [[{{Telepathy}} Hunger]], [[EvilGenius Dr. Trouvaille]] and his Ghost-Hunters, [[MindManipulation Archibald Scythe]], [[AbsurdlySharpBlade Joe Yimbo]], [[EvilOldFolks Malcolm Greymater]], [[SuperStrength Towering Chris]], [[PeoplePuppets Miasma]], [[ReptilesAreAbhorrent Snake]], and [[SinisterMinister Von Ghastly]], and non-powered foes like [[TheDon Crux]], [[SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil Leo Merino]] and [[ScarilyCompetentTracker The Hunter]].
* Across the ''Franchise/GIJoe'' franchise, the Joes consistently do battle against the Cobra Command terrorist organization in one form or another (not always paramilitary, such as in ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeRenegades'' where it's Cobra Industries, a pharmaceutical conglomerate). Members of the Cobra group include Cobra Commander, Destro, the Baroness, Storm Shadow, Zartan, Dr. Mindbender, Black-Out, and Serpentor (who temporarily took Cobra Commander's place as leader of Cobra), while mercenaries Major Bludd and Firefly occasionally grant their services to the organization.
* Comicbook/JudgeDredd has a rather small gallery, since (much like Punisher) most of his enemies end up dead, and many of those that he sends to prison don't pop up again. Recurring villains include [[OmnicidalManiac Judge Death]] (who's an immortal undead), [[SerialKiller PJ Maybe]] (who's both incredibly lucky and a master of escape), and the recently retired [[TheBrute Mean Machine Angel]]. One could perhaps also add Orlok, though he tends to tangle more with Anderson.
* WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse faced many adversaries in the ComicBook/MickeyMouseComicUniverse, but his most notable enemies, aside from [[WesternAnimation/{{Pete}} Peg-Leg Pete]], include an AmoralAttorney named Sylvester Shyster, a stingy old man named Eli Squinch, a [[TerribleTrio trio]] of [[ManiacMonkeys simian]] {{mad scientist}}s named Professors Ecks, Doublex, and Triplex, and his ArchEnemy, the Phantom Blot.
* Comicbook/TheSavageDragon has hundreds of rogues between the Vicious Circle, various Overlords, Darklord, Thor, Solar Man, The Fiend, his EvilDoppelganger, etc.
* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
** ''Comicbook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'':
*** Sonic the Hedgehog has acquired a large Rogues Gallery over the comic's {{long run|ners}}. Aside from his ArchEnemy Dr. Robotnik/Eggman, Sonic and his friends have also had to deal with Eggman's nephew [[TheStarscream Snively]], [[EvilSorcerer Ixis Naugus]], [[MagnificentBastard Mammoth Mogul]], [[QuirkyMinibossSquad the Destructix]], [[EvilTwin Scourge]] and the [[ThePsychoRangers Suppression Squad]], [[AxCrazy Warlord Kodos]] (now deceased), [[AIIsACrapshoot A.D.A.M. and E.V.E.]][[note]] who, despite the ThemeNaming, never actually worked together - or even met, for that matter[[/note]] (also deceased), the [[{{Magitek}} Iron]] [[DragonLady Queen]] and [[NighInvulnerability King]], the [[FeatheredFiend Battle Bird Armada]], and traitors like [[DarkActionGirl Fiona]] [[ConsummateLiar Fox]], [[ButtMonkey Drago Wolf]], and [[RivalTurnedEvil Geoffrey]] [[TheMole St.]] [[WellIntentionedExtremist John]]. And that's not even counting all of Robotnik's numerous robots with more character than mere {{Mooks}}.
*** Knuckles has one of his own, most of whom were introduced during his spinoff and later incorporated into the main series after the spinoff's cancellation. These include [[MadScientist Dimitri]] / [[PhysicalGod Enerjak]], [[OmnicidalManiac Finitevus]], [[ANaziByAnyOtherName the Dingo Regime]] (specifically when led by [[GeneralRipper Kage Von Stryker]]), and [[MachineWorship the Dark Legion]]. The Legion eventually joined forces with Eggman, so they can be considered part of Sonic's Rogues Gallery, too.
*** The ContinuityReboot triggered by Ken Penders' lawsuit of Archie's continued use of characters he created has caused most of the Archie Sonic rogues gallery to be removed from the series. That being said, it's also seen the introduction of numerous new villains to fill the gap, including Eclipse (Shadow's EvilKnockoff), [[FemmeFatale Breezie the Hedgehog]], and [[AIIsACrapshoot Phage]].
** ''Comicbook/SonicTheComic'' has its own Rogues Gallery, now continued on by the fan-continuation ''Webcomic/SonicTheComicOnline''. [[AGodAmI Dr. Robotnik]], [[SuperpoweredEvilSide Super Sonic]], [[EvilKnockoff the Metallix]], [[OmnicidalManiac Doctor Zachary]], Chaos, [[TheIgor Grimer]], Set, Megatox, Marxio Brothers, Trogg, Nutzan Bolt, Metamorphia, Nack the Weasel, Commander Brutus, [[BountyHunter Fleabyte the Bounty Hunter]], Max Gamble, Vermin the Cybernik, Doctor Robotnik Appreciation Tribe (D.R.A.T.), Colonel Percy Granite, Agent X/Shayde, Rouge the Bat, Vichama, Shadow The Hedgehog, The Family, Nightmare Creature, [[EvilKnockoff Neo Metallix]], Gizoid, etc.
* ''ComicBook/{{Superlopez}}'' has a cast of recurring bad guys including Al Trapone, Escariano Avieso, Refuller D'Abastos and Lady Araña, to name a few.
* SupermanSubstitute ''ComicBook/{{Supreme}}'' has [[MadScientist Darius Dax]], [[TrappedInTVLand the Televillain]], [[GalacticConqueror Korgo the Space Tyrant]], [[EvilTwin Shadow Supreme]], [[EvilTwin Emerpus]], [[HardLight Optilux]], and [[GreatGazoo Szasz the Sprite Supreme]], among others. Almost all of these are transparent [[CaptainErsatz Captains Ersatz]] of Superman villains.
* Franchise/{{Tintin}} isn't a superhero, but he did have a series of recurring antagonists: [[ArchEnemy Roberto Rastapopulous]] (''[[Recap/TintinCigarsOfThePharaoh Cigars of the Pharaoh]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheBlueLotus The Blue Lotus]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheRedSeaSharks The Red Sea Sharks]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinFlight714 Flight 714]]''), [[FascistButInefficient Colonel Sponsz]](''[[Recap/TintinTheCalculusAffair The Calculus Affair]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinTintinAndThePicaros Tintin and the Picaros]]'') Colonel Boris/Jorgen (''[[Recap/TintinKingOttokarsSceptre King Ottokar's Sceptre]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinDestinationMoon Destination Moon]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinExplorersOnTheMoon Explorers on the Moon]]''), [[TheDragon Allan]] (''Cigars of the Pharaoh'', ''[[Recap/TintinTheCrabWithTheGoldenClaws The Crab with the Golden Claws]]'', ''Flight 714''), [[UsefulNotes/NaziGermany Dr. Mueller]] (''[[Recap/TintinTheBlackIsland The Black Island]]'', ''[[Recap/TintinLandOfBlackGold Land of Black Gold]]'' minor in ''The Red Sea Sharks''), and [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized General Tapioca]] (''[[Recap/TintinTheBrokenEar The Broken Ear]]'', ''Tintin and the Picaros''). Also to a minor extent Dawson (''The Blue Lotus'', ''The Red Sea Sharks'') and Sheik Bab El-Ehr (''Land of Black Gold'', ''The Red Sea Sharks'').
* ''ComicBook/{{Vampirella}}'': Vampirella has had a shifting rogues gallery over the years. Some of her most frequent recurring enemies include {{Dracula}}, the progenitor of all evil vampires; the [[MadGod Mad]] GodOfEvil Chaos, who rules over Hell; Von Kreist, an undead PsychoForHire SerialKiller; and the Blood Red Queen of Hearts, a body-hopping demoness.
* Averted in ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'': One of the reasons the first wave of masked crime-fighters didn't work out well was that there weren't nearly as many villains that wore costumes, and they just ended up convincing criminals to work in less conspicuous ways.
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