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1A list of antagonist characters found in Creator/{{Disney}}'s ''ComicBook/MickeyMouseComicUniverse''.
2
3[[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverse Click here to return to the main list.]]
4* [[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverseProtagonists Click here to go to the protagonist list.]]
5* [[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverseFriends Click here to go to the friend list.]]
6* [[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverseAnimals Click here to go to the animal list.]]
7* [[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverseFiends Click here to go to the fiend list.]]
8* [[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverseOtherworlders Click here to go to the otherworlder list.]]
9* [[Characters/MickeyMouseComicUniverseSubseries Click here to go to the subseries character list.]]
10* [[labelnote:Click here for more options.]]
11** [[Characters/ClassicDisneyShorts Click here to go to the classic Disney shorts character list.]]
12** [[Characters/HouseOfMouse Click here to go to the ''House of Mouse'' character list.]]
13** [[Characters/MickeyMouseClubhouse Click here to go to the ''Mickey Mouse Clubhouse'' character list.]]
14** [[Characters/DisneyDucksComicUniverse Click here to go to the Disney Ducks Comic Universe list.]]
15** [[Characters/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics Click here to go to the Mouse & Duck Comic Universe list.]][[/labelnote]]
16
17'''Keep in mind that since the characters and series [[PrintLongRunners have been around for so long]], whether a character displays certain traits or not in any given story largely depends on the [[DependingOnTheArtist artist]], [[DependingOnTheWriter the writer]], [[EraSpecificPersonality or the time period]].'''
18----
19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21! Main villains
22[[folder: Pete]]
23!! Pete [[note]][[{{WesternAnimation/Pete}} Animation]][[/note]]
24[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_black_pete.png]]
25-> Voiced by: Various, Walt Disney (1928), Billy Bletcher (1933-1954), Creator/{{Jim Cummings|VoiceActor}} (1992-present)
26[[AC:First appearance: ''"Death Valley"'', 1930]]
27
28Mickey's ArchEnemy for over 90 years of comic history. There's no question about it; ItsPersonal.
29----
30* {{Acrofatic}}: He's far more agile than one would expect from his size, even able to engage in RoofHopping if pressed.
31* ArchEnemy: He is Mickey's most frequently recurring enemy and one of the few villains in the comic to also appear in animation.
32* BigBadDuumvirate: Sometimes forms this with other villains, most notably the Phantom Blot. In AlternateUniverse stories, the Blot tends to be the true BigBad and Pete is TheDragon.
33* BondVillainStupidity: In the Gottfredson era, Pete always tried to directly off Mickey but was dissuaded to a more subtle approach by a partner-in-crime. When he became a villain that was likely to work alone, the trope kicked in for him. He regularly leaves Mickey in death traps that are very easy to escape or toys with him long enough for him to come up with a plan or for help to arrive.
34* BringHimToMe: With Mickey, generally. First time was in ''"Mickey Mouse Sails for Treasure Island"'', but that was a small scene and necessary. ''"The Mail Pilot"'' features a big scene for no other reason than Pete and Sylvester showing off. Whichever scientist or genius he needs to abduct for their knowledge also is at risk of being put through this. Bring ''her'' to me with Minnie, which is mostly in older stories. Any modern stories to pull it tend to acknowledge her as an adversary on par with Mickey.
35* CatsAreMean: He is a cat and is not a pleasant person at all.
36* CharacterCheck: Once in a while, Italian writers remember that the only reason Pete isn't much of a threat is that he usually gets caught by Mickey early, and when he doesn't he ''at least'' turns Mouseton's criminals in his personal gang, depending on how much time he gets without Mickey butting in. In the 2018 story "All of This Will Happen Tomorrow" he managed to keep Mickey off his back for three years, and when he was stopped he had just plunged the world into chaos and was literally seconds away from ''TakingOverTheWorld'', while the "Young Mickey" miniseries has his debut on Mouseton's crime scene consist in him, Trudy, and two others commit multiple series of robberies so successful that when he demanded the entire gold reserve of Calisota to stop the governor almost ''gave up''.
37** In the ''Ducktopia'' miniseries he had to pull an EnemyMine, and eventually reformed. Comes the sequel ''Gambaville'', where he builds and manages a wealthy suburb of Mouseton after striking rich honestly... And uses it to ''fill Gambaville with wanted criminals masked to the police through the use of Portis' new holographic technology to eventually take over the city'' while trying to ruin Mickey's relationship with his friends to keep him busy in case he started suspecting things. The only reason he's eventually found and caught is that he tried to recruit Miklos and, when the latter refused, [[FramingTheGuiltyParty made it appear he was pulling his usual shtick of committing crimes while appearing to be Mickey]], resulting in Miklos, who had figured out the mysterious crime boss operated from Gambaville, deciding to join forces with Mickey, [[DidntSeeThatComing a move nobody could have possibly expected due everything that had gone through between them]].
38%%* CardCarryingVillain: Often portrayed as one.
39* LesCollaborateurs: Whereas the [[WartimeCartoon wartime cartoons]] of the period showed Pete, for all of his gruffness and brutishness, on the side of the Allies as WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck's [[DrillSergeantNasty commanding officer]], the 1943 comic story ''"On a Secret Mission"'' showed Pete working with the Nazi agent Von Weasel to try and steal the Americans' new long-range combat plane known as "The Bat" for Nazi Germany. His reward in case of success is stated to be 5000 bucks.
40* TheCorrupter: As per ''"Mickey Mouse Sails for Treasure Island"'' and ''"The Mail Pilot"'', do not let Pete and Sylvester on a boat unless you want [[TheMutiny the crew to turn against the captain]].
41* CutLexLuthorACheck: It's shown he could make a fortune by hiring himself to a private police agency or anyone who operates in the private sector to stop crimes. He doesn't do that because he likes stealing.
42* DependingOnTheWriter: He has been depicted as anything from criminal mastermind with his own gang to a thug who wouldn't be able to design a way out of a cardboard box depending on what the story requires. His level of ruthlessness also varies between an AffablyEvil everyman with no intention to inflict permanent harm, to a cold-blooded murderer who could casually eliminate his own friends and allies.
43* DidYouActuallyBelieve: Gottfredson-Walsh kept it so that Mickey never quite believed any nice stories told by Pete, such as in ''"Peg-leg Pete Reforms"'', and this remains how these things tend to play out, but the trope has occasionally come up in comics like ''"History Re-Petes Itself"'' and ''"Gentleman Pete!"'' whether it was Mickey being fooled or another character.
44* TheDragon: When he is not the main villain of the story, he is usually the main henchman.
45* TheDreaded: Most criminals in Mouseton are ''terrified'' of his wrath. Those who aren't will try and doublecross him... And find out that Pete ''will'' beat them bloody and rob them blind or get them arrested trying, and doesn't care if he's arrested in the process as long as he takes them down with him. Even [[DiabolicalMastermind Phantom Blot]] knows better than doublecrossing Pete, and if he has to work with him he'll give him a good deal and keep his word.
46* EntitledBastard: When he is not making demands, Mickey's helping him on his own initiative anyway.
47* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Pete has plenty of them, friends and family. Just read the "Allies of Pete" section for the most prominent ones. A moment of note occurs in ''"Mickey Mouse on Quandomai Island"'' when Pete puts his distrust and fears aside to save Trudy.
48* EvenEvilHasStandards: In an episode of WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse, Mortimer tries to use the Mistletoe trick on Minnie. Pete kisses him himself so Minnie won't have to.
49* TheFamilyThatSlaysTogether: Kickstarted by Carl Fallberg and Paul Murry, although they did not care about being consistent. In ''"Double Trouble"'', Pete is given a twin brother named Zeke, while in ''"The River Pirates"'' a twin brother named L'il Pete is introduced alongside the men's [[EvilMatriarch mother and gang leader]], identified only as Maw Pete. However, ''"Mickey's Strange Mission"'' has an unspecified relative of Pete, Blackstone P. Percival, claim that Pete is the BlackSheep of the family. In addition to the characters listed below under '''Pete's family''', various writers have introduced Pedro, Pete's brother, in ''"Enfim... Argh... Juntos!"'', Petula, Pete's protective CoolBigSis, in ''"Fattening Fudge"'', (Black) Petra, a cousin in ''"Terror Of The Territory"'', Pit, a nephew and would-be future tyrant of Mouseton, in ''"Topolino e lo strappo cronospaziale"'', Alfonso "Al" Gambone, a Sicilian cousin of Pete, and his mother Assunta Bonfiglio in ''"Babbo Ciccione"'', Pierette and Jo, a Parisian aunt and uncle, in ''"Minni e la zia di Gambadilegno"'', Maude, an aunt that's doing jailtime for counterfeiting goldfish, in "Gentleman Pete!", and Crowbar, an uncle in ''"Topolino e la maxi-minicoppa"''. The animated works also chip in, such as the ''[[WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse Mickey Mouse Works]]'' short ''"Mickey's Cabin"'', which gives Pete a criminal CountryCousin named Zeke. In regards to pets, [[Characters/ClassicDisneyShorts two shorts]] feature Muncey, a dog owned by Pete who aids him in his schemes.
50* FatBastard: He's overweight and not a nice guy. Overlaps with LargeAndInCharge when he is the one who commands his own minions.
51* FauxAffablyEvil: DependingOnTheWriter; he can be ''genuinely'' AffablyEvil, but more often he's pretending.
52* FunetikAksent: He speaks in a typical "tough-guy" tone.
53* FriendlyEnemy: To an extent, anyways. It's not like he has any problems with smacking Mickey around when the opportunity arises. The feeling's mutual. As per ''"Mickey Mouse Joins the Foreign Legion"'' and ''"History Re-Petes Itself"'':
54--> '''Pete:''' "I'm sure glad I hate yuh! Cause if I didn't hate yuh, I'd like yuh! An' I don't '''wanna''' like yuh -- I hate yuh too much!"
55--> '''Pete:''' "I ''hafta'' hate him, 'cause if I didn't, I might ''like'' him! [[SymbolSwearing #%&*!]] An' I don't ''wanna'' like him!"
56* GeniusBruiser: He is violent, but is clever enough to find the use of any new technology or make a cunning plan. On a good day, he's able to go toe-to-toe with the Phantom Blot.
57* GoneHorriblyWrong: One story had a therapist decide Pete lacked stories of good triumphing over evil in his formative years and assigned fairy tales to be read to him by a prison guard before sleep. This apparently traumatized Pete so hard that once he was allowed parole, he started kidnapping professional storytellers and children writers and force them to tell him fairy tales where bad guys win.
58* HandicappedBadass: It's why he was called "Peg-leg Pete" for a time. The artists could never remember just which leg was supposed to be the peg-leg, though, so in the end they gave him two normal legs. Floyd Gottfredson dealt with this by having Pete explain in ''"The Mystery at Hidden River"'' that he'd gotten a prosthetic upgrade. ''"The Mystery of Tapiocus VI"'' by Romano Scarpa reiterated this by having Pete's covering prosthetic get damaged so only his pegleg remained visible. If one must know, in his first appearance in the animated short ''Alice Solves the Puzzle'' as "Bootleg Pete", his peg-leg is his right leg and through all the switching-around this can be assumed to be the "true" version.
59* HappilyMarried: It varies whether Trudy is portrayed as his wife or his live-in girlfriend, but their relationship is a happy one.
60* HenpeckedHusband: Occasionally. One story(title?) had Trudy forcing Pete and his friends to shape up, even threatening them with a RollingPinOfDoom. They complied.
61* IdenticalStranger: Duke Feline of Mazumia in ''"The Mystery of Tapiocus VI"'' is alike enough that Pete could switch places with him easily.
62* IHaveManyNames: [[MeaningfulName Bootleg Pete, Peg-leg Pete, Black Pete, Dirty Pete, and Big Bad Pete]] are a few. And then there's the many fake identities he's used over the years.
63* ILied: Every single time he looks to have given up crime, like in ''"Island in the Sky"'', it's a ruse.
64%%* ItsPersonal: Really, ''really'' personal...
65* JerkJustifications: In the form of ItsWhatIDo.
66* JustBetweenYouAndMe: Pete's prone to do this because of his long standing enmity with Mickey. In ''"The Mystery of Tapiocus VI"'', it causes his partner-in-crime to turn on him and save Mickey. In ''"History Re-Petes Itself"'', it causes Mickey to use Pete's plan against him (somewhat by accident).
67* KickTheDog: His treatment of Hickup in ''"The Captive Castaways"'' serves no purpose but to show off his cruelty. Recurring partner-in-crime Dexter Dingus also gets dealt a detrimental amount of violence and disdain, although this at least is used to further the story.
68* KickThemWhileTheyAreDown: How about Pete and Sylvester tricking Mickey into eating non-food while eating a rich dinner in front of him themselves when he's in their power and set for execution within an hour in ''"The Mail Pilot"''? Or Pete having Mickey bound and planning to kill him taking a few extra minutes to shove his face into a copy machine to make a few pictures in ''"The Copy-Cat Crimes"''?
69* KingOfThieves: When given enough time to set himself up, Pete will usually take over crime in Duckburg and reorganize it in his own gang. In one occasion he managed to do ''from jail'', with Trudy working as his substitute.
70* MasterOfDisguise: Readers can usually pick him out, but the protagonists rarely can.
71* NeverLearnedToRead: A trait during the Gottfredson-Walsh era. Pete can't read according to ''"The Captive Castaways"'' and still can't in ''"On a Secret Mission"''. Modern comics have done away with it.
72* TheNicknamer: The Phantom Blot is "Blotty", Dexter Dingus is "Dexie", Prince Penguin is "Penny", Eurasia is "Lady Longtail", etc.
73* NotSoHarmlessVillain: Italian stories usually depict him as not really dangerous... But also tend to point out that it's only because Mickey usually stops him before he can steal some funds for a larger plan, and have shown that with Mickey out of the picture for as little as a week he can become as bad as a threat as the ''Phantom Blot'' and often [[KingOfThieves taking over all crime in Mouseton]]. A story even openly declared him #2 public enemy, below Phantom Blot but above ''[[ANaziByAnyOtherName doctor Vulter]]'' (who in the same story was explicitely identified as a [[WesternTerrorists terrorist]]).
74* ObfuscatingStupidity: At times, like in ''"The Ghost Town Airport"'', he uses this to become a DevilInPlainSight.
75* OnlyOneName: Whether his name comes with an adjective or not, Pete is Pete. His family is often named as if "Pete" is a surname, but it's not a clearcut case. In ''WesternAnimation/GoofTroop'', his full name is given as "Peter Pete", but he's only ever referred to as "Pete" (or "Petey"). In ''"Mickey's Strange Mission"'', his full name is given as "Percy P. Percival" and it's made clear that he [[EmbarrassingFirstName finds the name embarrassing]].
76* {{Outlaw}}: There are several stories with a Wild West setting in which Pete gets this role. ''"The Bar None Ranch"'', ''"Double Trouble"'', ''"The River Pirates"'', and ''"Two Gun Sheriff"'' are all examples.
77* PunchClockVillain: To varying degrees but not uncommon for him to treat crime as a regular job up to the point in one story Vicky hires Mickey to prove Pete's innocence of the crime he was arrested for because it happened on their vacations and Pete would never "work on vacations".
78* {{Revenge}}: After 90 years, yeah, sometimes all he hopes to get out of a scheme is revenge on Mickey.
79* RoguesGalleryTransplant: Not only was Pete already around to pester Mickey's predecessors Oswald and Julius, but he's also been a recurring pain in the lives of the Ducks. He even has a set of henchmen, Red Eye and another guy, exclusive to his confrontations with the feathered protagonists.
80* RootingForTheEmpire: In-Universe, in one story he claims to, while reading, always take a side of monsters, hags and werewolves.
81* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Licorice and orange candy according to ''"While We Were Waiting"''.
82* SoLongSuckers: Happens offscreen in ''"Race for Riches"''.
83* StoutStrength: He's fat and large, but has strong muscles under his blubber, enough to be [[{{Acrofatic}} far more agile than one would expect]] and beat up most opponents.
84* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: There's been a number of Pete lookalikes during the Western Publishing era that would be Pete for all but the name used. There's Phil the Pill Pusher in ''"The Mysterious Pill Plot"'', Fingers Fagin in ''"Minnie Mouse"'' (1952), and Daddy Doomie in ''"Super Goof vs. Daddy Doomie and Dr. Malstrom"''. Dan the Dogcatcher seems to have been meant to be Pete at first, but [[DivergentCharacterEvolution then was treated as a separate character]] most likely for continuity reasons.
85* UnholyMatrimony: The Italian artist introduced the character Trudy van Tubb, who serves as Pete's romantic partner and partner in crime at the same time. The two are shown as a happy couple in Italian stories till today.
86* UngratefulBastard: Sometimes Mickey rescues him from death only to be put into an even worse predicament by Pete himself. Or as per ''"Topolino e i misteri del monte Acchiappanuvole"'', saves him back but robs him when he's unconscious.
87* VillainDecay: A strong case of DependingOnTheWriter and unavoidable [[ComicBookTime given how long he's been in business]]. In present day, Italian writers often turn him into a HarmlessVillain due to the family man context created in several focus comics, while the rest of Europe generally keeps him a threat.
88* VillainProtagonist: Nowadays stars in his own stories, mostly Italian ones. They either deal with his everyday life and family, with his everyday life in prison, or with his interactions with other villains.
89* VillainousCrush: Some older comics have him being heavingly attracted to Minnie Mouse, sometimes trying to force her into a relationship with him. In more recent comics the crush is gone as Pete is usually portrayed as being in a loving, happy relationship with Trudy.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder: The Phantom Blot]]
93!! The Phantom Blot
94[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_phantom_blot_7.png]]
95-> Voiced by: Creator/FrankWelker (''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''), John O'Hurley (''Mickey [=MouseWorks=]'', ''House of Mouse'')
96[[AC:First appearance: ''"Mickey Mouse Outwits the Phantom Blot"'', 1939]]
97
98A master criminal who dresses in a black sheet. He's more dangerous than one might initially be led to believe. He's Mickey's ''other'' ArchEnemy.
99----
100* AdaptationalAbomination: It's not uncommon for adaptations to turn him from a guy in a suit to a straight up LivingShadow or ink. ''ComicBook/WizardsOfMickey'', notably, has him start out as a normal wizard (well, normal for the setting, at least) not even wearing the costume. It's not until after his defeat and subsequent banishment to the shadow realm that he gets the iconic appearance, albeit with added SpikesOfVillainy.
101* ArchEnemy: In the comics, he is established as Mickey's most dangerous foe. Less so in animation, where he's only appeared as a MonsterOfTheWeek in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', appeared in one episode of ''Mickey Mouse Works'', two shorts and one episode of ''WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse'', and one of the 2013 ''Mickey Mouse'' shorts.
102* BadGuyBar: Might own one, the [[InkblotTest Rorschach]] Club, according to the ''[[WesternAnimation/HouseOfMouse Mickey Mouse Works]]'' short ''"Mickey Foils the Phantom Blot"''.
103* BigBadDuumvirate: He sometimes teams up with Mr. X or with Pete to form this. In the regular continuity, the Phantom Blot and Pete tend to treat each other as equals and sometimes rivals, while in AlternateUniverse stories (such as the ''ComicBook/WizardsOfMickey'' series), the Blot is more often depicted as the BigBad with Pete as his [[TheDragon Dragon]].
104* BitingTheHandHumor: Under the mask, he resembles Creator/WaltDisney himself.
105* BondVillainStupidity: A rare justified example. In his original apparence, Mickey asks why he didn't just kill him when he had the chance. The Blot reveals that he's too soft-hearted to watch people die.
106* BunnyEarsLawyer: Sure, look at his debut appearance at a glance and all he did was steal cameras, but the fact that he was so ''good'' at it is what makes him so dangerous in the eyes of the police. What could they possibly do if he suddenly decided to go after something more valuable? [[spoiler: He actually ''was'' going after something more valuable that they didn't know about; it was hidden in one of the cameras.]]
107* CallingCard: An ink blot on a white piece of paper was a common way to get his messages across, but modern comics rarely retain the trait.
108* CardboardPrison: Even if the heroes manage to arrest him, the Blot manages to escape by inventing some gizmo from the electronics available in jail. At one point, he escaped by turning himself into ''electricity''.
109* CardCarryingVillain: The most exaggerated version of the character ''wants'' to be seen as evil incarnate and would hate for anyone to think otherwise.
110* ClothesMakeTheSuperman: Sometimes:
111** In ''"The Blot's Double Mystery"'', the Phantom Blot wears a cloak that's black on the outside so he's hard to see in the dark, white inside-out so he can use the other side when he needs to hide in a snow landscape, and capable of reflecting infrared when in warm places so that the Blot turns invisible.
112** In the ''Darkenblot'' series he has the titular Darkenblot, a formidable suit of PoweredArmor, of which there have been five iterations:
113*** The prototype was assembled from a number of devices the Blot had tricked the prison's director to let him build, allowing to break out with ease once he can put them in the same place and have a lightning hit them. Also serves to [[{{Foreshadowing}} hint at the real nature of the Darkenblot]], as in the first story it was first shown to be an army of robots and then nothing but a bluff.
114*** The original Darkenblot easily thrashed Robopolis' police robots and could fly-but wasn't resistant enough to survive a TurbineBlender, getting wrecked when Mickey tricks PB into flying into one.
115*** The Darkenblot 2.0 is the original repaired and improved with heavier armor and more weapons, and inflicts a mighty CurbStompBattle on an army of crazed robots. It gets destroyed when [[spoiler:Phantom Blot activates its self-destruction to destroy the device that had made Robopolis' robots go insane, as by the time he reached it he was out of ammo]].
116*** The Darkenblot 2.1 seems identical to the 2.0, making Mickey suspect a copycat until he notices a large yellow button: [[spoiler:it's a powerful EMP device that, alongside a second 2.1, allows Phantom Blot to pull a massive scam to fund his newest plot and build the 3.0]].
117*** The Darkenblot 3.0 has even more armor and improved strength than before and, as a response to the circumstances that got the 2.0 destroyed, has switched to energy weapons, but is now too heavy to fly. The improvements are so great that, when confronted with four power armors designed to thrash the 2.0 and what Robopolis expected the 3.0 to be able to do, [[CurbStompBattle Phantom Blot wins in a minute without bothering to fire his guns]].
118* CurseOfTheAncients: He seems to enjoy using "Curses!" or using "thousand" to describe things - and mentioning Caesar, if his debut story is anything to go by.
119--> '''Phantom Blot:''' "Curses! Ten thousand curses!" / "Caesar's ghost!" / "Curse the luck!" / "Thousand names of a devil!" / "Great Caesar!"
120* DarkIsEvil: The black wearing, ghost-like (and sometimes themed) master criminal that hides in the dark is evil. Who saw it coming?
121* DeathTrap: He ''loves'' these, and [[JustifiedTrope he's actually got a reason to use them]] because he can't bear to watch people die. He's damn good at making them too, more often than not sitting comfortably in RubeGoldbergHatesYourGuts terrain. Mickey survives them more out of luck than any particular skill.
122* DependingOnTheWriter:
123** Look-wise, the main tradition is to have the Phantom Blot in costume and avoid showing his face. Italian stories, on the other hand, regularly [[NotAMask ditch the idea of his appearance being a costume]].
124** Personality-wise, his position in the SlidingScaleOfVillainThreat and the SlidingScaleOfVillainEffectiveness can vary widely. From a PaperTiger to the EvilOverlord, and from a Personal Threat (to the heroes) to a Global Threat with TakeOverTheWorld as his final goal.
125** Also largely depends on the type of story. Silvia Ziche (1951-) is a prominent Disney comics writer, whose style involves over-the-top parodies of more conventional Disney stories. One of her 1990s stories, features the Blot's latest scheme at world conquest defeated with the easiest way possible. The Blot's plan required so much effort on his part, that he did not even have enough time to sleep. After more than a few days of sleep deprivation, the Blot collapses and is in no condition to complete the master plan.
126* DiabolicalMastermind: Although a fine combatant, he favors the use of his intellect backed up by stealth to accomplish his goals.
127* {{Dogface}}: Unlike most dogfaces, the Blot has no muzzle at all and a curiously flat nose, almost like a koala's.
128* TheDreaded: He normally ''loves'' being feared, and actually banks on his VillainCred for his heists. To the point that when he stopped being feared he temporarily ''wiped out the memory of everyone in Mouseton'' to "correct" the situation ([[TheBadGuysWin he succeeded and escaped arrest]]).
129* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes:
130** ''"The Big Fall"'' reveals that he has a very young daughter, the Phantom Brat. After being captured, he is given permission to say goodbye to her by explaining his arrest through a bedtime story where he is a benevolent king and Mickey is a cruel villain who imprisoned him. He urges his daughter to dream of happy endings while he is away.
131** ''"The Phantom Blot Meets the Mysterious Mr. X"'' establishes the Phantom Blot and Mr. X as [[VillainousFriendship solid friends]]. They respect each other's intellect and like cooperating on crime.
132** In ''"A Mancha Cor-de-Rosa"'', the Phantom Blot meets the Pink Blot, a female version of him that helps him out on several occasions in ways that might be just a tad unexplainable. The Phantom Blot does not pick up on this. When she reveals her face, she also turns out to be quite the looker and she and Phantom Blot arrange to marry. Shortly before the marriage, it becomes clear that the Pink Blot is a shapeshifted [[Characters/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics Mad Madam Mim]], his periodic AbhorrentAdmirer, and that's the end of that romance.
133* EvilGenius: He is one of the most intelligent of Mickey's enemies.
134* TheFaceless: Averted or played straight, as explained under DependingOnTheWriter.
135* TheFagin: To Alberta in ''"The Return of Phantom Bob"''.
136* {{Flanderization}}: Whereas the original was limited by his soft-heartedness, some authors have taken him to the logical extreme by making him TheSociopath, while others have gone for the illogical extreme by making him a cartoonishly evil CardCarryingVillain. Of course, there are also writers that do the original justice.
137* ImpossibleThief: He generally cheats by using technology that allows him to do what's not normally possible, like when he turned himself two-dimensional in ''"Blotting Out the Blot"''. Some tricks have been more clever, like when he made the paint on some paintings invisible by spraying in stuff through the museum air vents, making it only ''look'' like they'd been impossibly stolen, and then bought the "empty canvases".(title?)
138* KnightOfCerebus: Comics featuring the Phantom Blot tend to be a lot darker than most other stories.
139* LargeHam: In his animated incarnations and some Western Publishing stories, he is rather over-the-top.
140* TheManBehindTheMan: Occasionally, he turns out to be the real mastermind after someone else is thought to be the one behind the latest crime. One example would be the ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' [[ComicBook/DarkwingDuck ''Campaign Carnage'' arc]], where the ending revealed that he was the one who gave Constance A. Dention the magic ink that she used to become Suff-Rage.
141* ManipulativeBastard: Lets look at ''"The Blot's Double Mystery"'' and how the Blot hypnotized Mickey into stealing a worthless hat as both a test and as a diversion. His true goal was nothing material or even Mickey's death, but to get Mickey locked away for attempted murder on O'Hara as a way to hurt the both of them. He'd later use the hat in a plot to get O'Hara arrested too. Another story (title?) has him threaten Goofy so he can blackmail Mickey into presenting evidence that the Blot will be at a certain place at a certain time to the police, to throw them off his tracks. Mickey stops the threat and is able to reveal the truth to the police, who are now certain the Blot will not be at that time in that place. Which is [[BatmanGambit exactly what he wanted]]!
142* MasterOfDisguise: Several stories, like ''"Perils of Mickey"'' and ''"A Phantom Blot Bedtime Story"'', have him utilize fake identities. Oftentimes, his disguise consists of LatexPerfection masks ''on top of his hood''. Used to good effect in some stories. One story has Mickey interact with several different men during a mission, from stage performers to street beggars. He learns at a later point that everyone of these guys was the Blot in disguise, as part of a scheme of vengeance. Another story has Mickey breaking and entering a suspect's house, while his ally for the story serves as his lookout. He finds an entire gang waiting for him inside, turns to his ally for help, ... and finds out that his ally was just another identity of the Blot.
143* MasterForger: Being a master criminal, he has often been portrayed as an expert forger. Usually if his plan involves stealing paintings, he will have personally painted identical forgeries to swap them for. He's also been the mastermind behind several money counterfeiting scams.
144* NoNameGiven: We probably don't know his real name. Some Italian stories have TheUntwist that he's actually called [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments Mr Blot, Phantom]]. However, [[FanonDiscontinuity not every fan agrees]]. The ''Goofy Reporter'' series shows him ''before'' he became the Blot and reveals his name to be Basil Blackspot. However, this story might be an AlternateContinuity and have no bearing on the regular canon. The Phantom Blot has also shown an affinity for the name Bob as shown in the ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' [[ComicBook/DarkwingDuck ''Campaign Carnage'' arc]] and ''"The Return of Phantom Bob"'', but "Bob" might as easily be based on "Blot" as "Blot" on "Bob". [[AvertedTrope Averted]] in some German translations, where the name of the "unmasked" Blot is "Plattnase", often leading to DubInducedPlotlineChange. [[DependingOnTheWriter Sometimes,]] [[DecompositeCharacter Plattnase is treated as a seperate character]] [[MindScrew who is merely impersonating the Blot.]]
145* OddFriendship: With Melinda, ''Mickey's favorite aunt''. He had become her temporary neighbour while preparing a heist, presenting himself as a crime novelist with some odd habits and having no idea who his friendly neighbour or her favorite nephew are... And ran like hell in the belief he had been tracked down when Mickey visited his favorite aunt.
146* PhantomThief: Was his name, by chance, a giveaway?
147* PragmaticVillain: At his worst, the Phantom Blot wants to TakeOverTheWorld... So he can be found on the front lines to deal with world-ending threats, even risking his life and saving his enemies for that.
148* RetCon: Some authors ignore the fact that the Blot was captured and unmasked at the end of his first story and imply that Mickey has never seen his true face or seen him brought to justice.
149* RoguesGalleryTransplant: He appeared as a MonsterOfTheWeek in the ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' episode "All Ducks on Deck" and also fought ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' during the final two story arcs of [[ComicBook/DarkwingDuck his comic book]].
150** A number of 1960s stories used the Blot as a new opponent for Uncle Scrooge, though most of them were rather weak in characterization. They were intended to introduce the Blot to a wider audience, but the characters seemed mismatched.
151* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: He tends to have a large vocabulary.
152* SurroundedByIdiots: Mostly a Western Publishing trait as it is mostly those stories he has non-character henchmen in.
153* TermsOfEndangerment: The Phantom Blot is an expert at this. He even managed to make genuinely thanking Mickey for allowing him to say goodbye to his daughter sound menacing in ''"A Phantom Blot Bedtime Story"'':
154--> '''Phantom Blot:''' "Sure I do, Mouse, and I always pay my debts! And I can't wait to pay you back!"
155* TookALevelInBadass: In some stories he becomes an enormous danger even in combat and not just for his brains, most notably ''ComicBook/{{Ultraheroes}}'', where he has been given a device that allow him to [[MakingASplash turn himself liquid]].
156** Done ''repeatedly'' in the ''Darkenblot'' saga. The saga is named after PB's PowerArmor... That he improves and modifies in every story: the first model could easily thrash any of Robopolis' police robots, even the combat-oriented Panthers, and could fly extremely fast, but was crippled when Mickey got it in [[TurbineBlender a large moving turbine]]; the 2.0, obtained by improving the first, is tougher and better armed, and turned the Phantom Blot into a OneManArmy; the 2.1 seems identical to the 2.0, to the point Mickey was immediately suspicious because of it, and then noticed the one modification, a large button on the chest that [[spoiler:generates a powerful EMP pulse that, coupled with well-placed crates and an identical copy, allowed him to fake having [[TeleportersAndTransporters a teleportation device]] for a scam that netted him two billion dollars]]; and the 3.0 could casually smash ''four powered armor designed to take on the previous model '''without using the on-board weapons''''' (that had been upgraded to EnergyWeapons from the ballistics used with the original and the 2.0), but at the price of becoming too large to fly.
157* TopHeavyGuy: He is occasionally drawn with a large chest and skinny legs, most notably in his appearances on ''Mickey Mouse Works'' and ''House of Mouse''.
158* VillainExitStageLeft: One of the villains who does this most. Some stories go as far as to imply that [[RetCon he has ''never'' been captured properly]]. On occassion, stories depict him in a cell, only to imply that it will take him a few minutes or hours to escape. Other stories give him improbable escapes. A Danish story has the Blot falling from a mountain during a battle with Mickey. Mickey mourns his death, flies a private plane alone, and returns home without interacting with anyone. Yet finds a message from the Blot in his office, realizes that someone stole a decorative feather from his hat ... while he was wearing it, and he seems to hear the Blot's voice outside his home. The story ends there, with a disturbed Mickey.
159* YouHaveNoChanceToSurvive: He frequently gloats about how unlikely it is for Mickey to escape his death traps.
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder: Emil Eagle]]
163!! Emil Eagle
164[[AC:First appearance (in this '{{Verse}}): ''"The Case of the Dazzling Hoo-Doo"'', 1968]]
165
166An evil inventor whose origins lie in the ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse as a rival of Gyro Gearloose. He became a regular opponent of Mickey Mouse two years later and a core foe of Super Goof, who debuted another two years later. An example of a shared ModularFranchise villain at its finest!
167----
168For a comprehensive list of tropes applying to Emil Eagle, see his entry on the [[Characters/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics Disney Mouse And Duck Comics character page]].
169[[/folder]]
170
171! Pete's family
172[[folder: Zeke]]
173!! Zeke
174[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_brother_zeke.png]]
175[[AC: First appearance: ''"Double Trouble"'', 1956]]
176
177Pete's twin brother.
178----
179* AlwaysIdenticalTwins: Zeke and Pete are this. An argument can be made for Always Identical Triplets if Li'l Pete from ''"The River Pirates"'' is counted, as the two stories do not preclude the other twin's existence.
180* {{Expy}}: Like they often did, Fallberg-Murry recycled concepts from this story for another. Specifically, another identical twin of Pete shows up in ''"The River Pirates"''. The difference between Zeke and Li'l Pete is, well, that Li'l Pete didn't do much growing.
181* TwinSwitch: With ScoobyDooHoax elements. Pete and Zeke both pretended to be Pete, who held the most notority between the two, to confuse the townfolk into thinking there was nothing they could do against a dangerous crook that was everywhere at once.
182[[/folder]]
183
184[[folder: Trudy Van Tubb]]
185!! Trudy Van Tubb
186[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/564030-trudy_6037.jpg]]
187[[AC: First appearance: ''"Mickey Mouse and the Chirikawa Necklace"'', 1960]]
188
189Pete's girlfriend and partner-in-crime; some stories even depicted her as his [[CommonLawMarriage common-law wife]]. She has a sister named Becky.
190----
191* {{Acrofatic}}: She's a poor choice of opponent to pick a fight with.
192* BattleCouple: She and Pete have about the same physical capacity and aggression level. When with Pete, though, Trudy tends to be a little less hard-boiled than when she is alone.
193* BreakoutCharacter: Easily the most popular of Romano Scarpa's characters on the ''Mickey Mouse'' side of things. She fills a niche in her ability to expand on Pete. Coincidentally, she also is the second or third most high-profile female villain in the joint-Mouse/Duck universe, being upstaged only by [[ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse Magica De Spell]] and arguably by [[Characters/DuckTales Ma Beagle]].
194* CordonBleughChef: Occasionally depicted as this. She has some really ''weird'' recipes that she's very proud of but almost nobody likes. Luckily, Pete is one of the few people who ''does'' like her cooking; he does admit that her her jam tarts with custard and anchovies might not be for everyone, but ''he'' genuinely enjoys them.
195* DistaffCounterpart: Same species, same built, and same capabilities and strategies as Pete.
196* TheDragon: Whenever Pete manages to assemble a large gang, Trudy serves as his second-in-command. In "The Chirikawa Necklace" she was even leading it while Pete was in jail, relaying his orders and dealing with the day-to-day operations.
197* ObnoxiousInLaws: Pete views Becky as such, going so far as to try to get arrested to avoid her in ''"Gambadilegno e la nottata "no""''.
198* OutlawCouple: Well, they are a criminal BattleCouple.
199* PunnyName: "Van Tubb" is a [[YouAreFat fat joke]]. The English version of ''"Goofy Adventures Online: Crimes of Passion"'' somewhat comes back on this by having Pete own a boat cutely named "Trudy's Tub".
200* UnholyMatrimony: Trudy and Pete enjoy a solid and even [[HappilyMarried happy]] relationship.
201* TheVamp: Averted. She's occasionally tried to be one of these, but isn't pretty or sexy enough to pull it off.
202* VictoriousChildhoodFriend: She started out as a childhood acquaintance of Pete. Later on, she became his girlfriend, and later still was depicted as living together with him. Some stories even refer to her as his wife.
203* WomanScorned: Lets just say that Trudy doesn't take kindly to Pete wanting Minnie as his queen in ''"Topolino nel favoloso regno di Shan-Grillà"''. Mickey wouldn't have defeated Pete without her wrath.
204* WrongGenreSavvy: In one story she becomes enamored with action movies and tries to force Pete and his gang to act more like characters in them. It forces Pete to form an alliance with Chief O'Hara, who had exact same problem with the city Mayor, to stage a scenario showing both her and the Mayor how terrifying the action-filled life actually is.
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder: Maw Pete]]
208!! Maw Pete
209[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_maw_pete.png]]
210[[AC:First appearance: ''"The River Pirates"'', 1968]]
211
212Pete's mother. Depictions of her vary, but she's usually an ambitious criminal.
213----
214* AscendedExtra: Maw Pete's first mention occurs in 1942's ''"Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold"'', 26 years before she'd have a starring role. Pete requests his crew that if anything happens to him, his remains are sent to his "old mudder in Pittsboig". Which Pittsburg(h) he refers to isn't specified.
215* DependingOnTheArtist: Counting animation, Maw Pete has made her appearance four times and none of those times resembled another. The image used is of her debut comic, ''"The River Pirates"'', in which she is the leader of a gang Pete belongs to. It is the only time she is depicted with glasses. In ''"The Spirit Of Christmas"'', her one other comic appearance, she's only shown during Pete's childhood years and unlike the 1968 version is thin, blonde, and law-abiding. In ''WesternAnimation/MickeyDonaldGoofyTheThreeMusketeers'', only a close-up portrait of her exists, which shows her as large again, but with red hair this time. As she's drawn in InstitutionalApparel, it follows she's a convicted criminal. The ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseClubhouse'' version from the episode "Mickey's Pirate Adventure" is also large, but with grey hair. Whether she's a crook or not is not elaborated on.
216* EvilMatriarch: Maw Pete is usually established as a criminal. Counting all comics, she'd be the mother of six children: Pete, L'il Pete from ''"The River Pirates"'', Zeke from ''"Double Trouble"'', Pedro from ''"Enfim... Argh... Juntos!"'', Petula from ''"Fattening Fudge"'', and an unnamed woman from "Topolino e il problema di Natale". Only the last one is not a crook herself.
217* PirateGirl: In ''"The River Pirates"'', she's the leader of said river pirates and the only woman in the gang.
218* UnnamedParent: She's Pete's mother and only known as "maw". Even the henchmen that aren't her sons call her "maw".
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder: Portis]]
222!! Portis
223[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_portis.png]]
224[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Weregoof's Curse!"'', 1977]]
225
226Pete's genius cousin who occasionally works for him and sometimes for other villains like the Phantom Blot.
227----
228* AscendedExtra: Portis was created to give Pete access to fancy weaponry to expand the kind of stories he could star in. Portis was initially written as his lesser, but he's been increasingly written as an equal to Pete to the point they now qualify as an equal pair. He's even been the sole villain in a number of stories, usually ones focusing on some new invention or weapon he's testing out -- most often with Mickey as the target.
229* BadPeopleAbuseAnimals: His debut comic and ''"The Transmutant Gifts"'' have him target and endanger animals.
230* CatsAreMean: Like everyone in Pete's family.
231* TheFamilyThatSlaysTogether: See the entry in Pete's section and decide for yourself which of the (non-Italian) characters would be related to Portis too through all the ContinuityDrift going on.
232* FatAndSkinny: Portis is the skinny one, Pete the fat one.
233* MadScientist: All his inventions are contributions to crime.
234* TerribleTrio: In a few stories, he forms this with Pete and Trudy.
235[[/folder]]
236
237[[folder: Chirpy Bird]]
238!! Chirpy Bird
239[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chirpy_bird.png]]
240[[AC:First appearance: ''"Pigeon Police"'', 1981]]
241
242Pete's girlfriend and partner-in-crime.
243----
244* BigBad: She usually gets Pete to do the dirty work for her.
245* DistaffCounterpart: Contextually averted. It is the norm in the Duck & Mouse comic universes for female partners to be the male characters with TertiarySexualCharacteristics slapped onto them. Even Pete's usual girlfriend Trudy follows that norm. Chirpy is one of the rare ones with a design that is her own, although it still qualifies as bulky.
246* OutlawCouple: With Pete.
247[[/folder]]
248
249[[folder: Pierino and Pieretto]]
250!! Pierino and Pieretto
251[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_pete_nephews.png]]
252[[AC:First appearance: ''"Topolino e un favore da nulla"'', 1991]]
253
254Pete's mischievous nephews who admire their uncle. They are rivals of Morty and Ferdie.
255----
256* CatsAreMean: As with pretty much all of Pete's family.
257* TheDividual: As Disney siblings are wont to be, Pierino and Pieretto are narratively inseparable.
258* TheFamilyThatSlaysTogether: See the entry in Pete's section and decide for yourself which of the (non-Italian) characters would be related to Pierino and Pieretto too through all the ContinuityDrift going on.
259* ParentalAbandonment: Not quite as they explicitly only occasionally visit Pete, but their parents never make an appearance and no information is given about them either. Humorously, in their debut comic they were to stay with Pete for a while, but he couldn't take them in because he was in jail. So, Mickey took them in for a while.
260* ThePrankster: They are mean-spirited pranksters, although Morty and Ferdie prevent their worst.
261[[/folder]]
262
263! Pete's allies
264[[folder: Sylvester Shyster]]
265!! Sylvester Shyster
266[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_sylvester_shyster.png]]
267[[AC:First appearance: ''"Death Valley"'', 1930]]
268
269Shyster is Mickey's second oldest recurring villain and one of the few Disney comic-characters that were actually created by Creator/WaltDisney. Shyster is an evil lawyer who often works in cahoots with Pete.
270----
271* AmoralAttorney: He is a lawyer who does dishonest things.
272* BrainsAndBrawn: He is the brains, Pete provides the brawn.
273* TheBusCameBack: Three, arguably four, times! He made a comeback in 1942 after being absent since 1934, had a one-shot appearance during the 50s, became a regular in Italian stories starting the early 60s, and was fully restored as a regular when the rest of Europe picked him up in the late 90s.
274* CartoonCreature: It isn't certain what animal he is supposed to be.
275* TheCorrupter: As per ''"Mickey Mouse Sails for Treasure Island"'' and ''"The Mail Pilot"'', do not let Sylvester and Pete on a boat unless you want [[TheMutiny the crew to turn against the captain]].
276* HangingJudge: Got to be this in ''"Vacation Brake"''. With some manipulation, Sylvester legally became the judge of Elk Pit and exclusively used his power to serve his own whim.
277-->'''Sylvester:''' "Oh no! '''Picknicking without a permit?!''' Why, according to '''new''' town ordinance number 142, article 18, paragraph 9, section C, that's punishable by imprisonment for no less -- and no '''more''' -- than '''exactly whatever I say!'''"
278* NoHonorAmongThieves: Leading to HonorAmongThieves. In their debut comic, ''"Death Valley"'', Sylvester and Pete have to follow Mickey into the desert. Sylvester reasons that Pete is not the most suited partner for that and so finds himself a local crook. Pete overhears Sylvester's plan to get rid of him and goes after Mickey alone. He finds him, but due to circumstances he ends up chained to him stuck in the desert with no water. Sylvester and the other crook come across the two, prompting Pete to rush to them asking his "old friend" for water. Sylvester gives him his bottle with no further questions and not even an objection to Pete's suggestion to split the loot three ways. They've been besties ever since. (The other crook turned out to be a deputy sheriff.)
279* YouDontLookLikeYou: ''"The Thunderbolt Machine"'' is the only (non-remake) story featuring Shyster created during the 50s and he's completely unrecognizable. What probably happened is that they sought to modernize his design, but it ended up draining him of anything distinctive.
280[[/folder]]
281
282[[folder: Eli Squinch]]
283!! Eli Squinch
284[[quoteright:180:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/180px-Eli_6620.gif]]
285[[AC:First appearance: ''"Bobo the Elephant"'', 1934]]
286
287A miserly businessman who spends a lot of time penny-pinching and trying to make more money through shady (and sometimes downright illegal) businesses. Like Sylvester Shyster, he has on several occasions teamed up with Pete to attain some common goal.
288----
289* AbhorrentAdmirer: Clarabelle Cow is his abhorrent admirer, although due to his own actions. In ''"Race for Riches"'', he pretends to be interested in her so he can get at the secret fortune of her grandfather. When that goes wrong, he buys up her debts at the bank so he can keep her house hostage if she doesn't cooperate. Since 2013, the setup of Eli Squinch still being the mortgage collector has been used as a motivation to fool Clarabelle again in such stories as ''"A Serenade from Squinch"'' and ''"Mortgage Misery"''. Both end with Squinch failing in his objective and having to sit out his time with Clarabelle so as not to draw suspicion.
290* BadPeopleAbuseAnimals: He's worked several horses to death to power his sawmill plant cheaply. His purchase of Bobo, a baby elephant, was to replace the horses. He didn't expect to be sent a youngling, noting it might not be able to meet the demands of the work either, but that wasn't stopping him from wanting to give it a try anyway.
291* BrainsAndBrawn: He is the brains, Pete provides the brawn.
292* TheBusCameBack: Squinch disappeared after the 30s, made a total of four appearances from the 40s to the 70s in the Italian comics, and then finally was fully brought back as a regular in the early 90s. In relation to his presence in the USA, his return comic is the 2005 publication of ''"The Treasure of Sierra Motty"'', but he would've been back sooner had Disney's ''Mickey Mouse Adventures'' not prematurely ended. ''"Weighty Matters"'' was published, if shorter than intended, but not in the USA.
293* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Gottfredson used Squinch in three stories. The first stars him as an animal-abusing but still not illegally operating business owner. The second has him going after a treasure Clarabelle Cow unknowingly inherited. He uses charm to get it first, then buys up her loans to force her into handing over the map. Half the story is him and Pete vs Mickey and Horace in a race for the gold. The third is again him and Pete teaming up to steal a treasure Mickey is going to look for in Africa. Because animal-abuse only stays fun for so long and trailing Mickey on an adventure is something any villain can do, his actions in ''"Race for Riches"'' have become the basis for his modus operandi in post-Gottfredson comics.
294* GrumpyOldMan: Of the villainous sort.
295* ImprovisedWeapon: A small but notable aspect of Squinch's aggressive propensities. First time was in ''"Race for Riches"'', where he went for Horace [[PowerfulPick with a pickaxe]] and only missed because the head flew off. In ''"The Treasure of Shark Reef"'', he is about to strike Goofy [[CaneFu with his cane]] when Mickey intervenes. And in ''"The Treasure of Sierra Motty"'', Mickey only just pulls back from getting a [[ShovelStrike shovel]] to the face.
296* KarmaHoudini: Eli may never win, but his losses are rarely greater than his investments not being returned. In ''"Bobo the Elephant"'', he doesn't get to keep the elephant (whom he considered too small anyway) but he gets the money back he paid for it. In ''"Race for Riches"'', he doesn't get the gold, but he still gets paid the mortgage and can apparently go home without further trouble after having stolen a police motorcycle. It's not until ''"In Search of Jungle Treasure"'' that he returns home empty-handed, having barely escaped death. The worst he gets in stories repeating his and Clarabelle's deal is having to spend time with her, while he straight-up escapes in ''"The Treasure of Sierra Motty"'' and ''"Schoolgirls"''.
297* LoanShark: To Clarabelle regularly and to Oscar Shrimp in ''"The Treasure of Shark Reef"''.
298* RoguesGalleryTransplant: In comics produced in Great Britain in the 30s, Eli was a regular enemy of Donald Duck.
299* TheScrooge: Some stories treat him like this, although it varies whether he's actually all that rich.
300* TheVamp: It's hard to believe looking at him, but Squinch is successful with women. He exclusively uses their interest in him for financial gain. Aside from the aforementioned Clarabelle Cow, he also nearly married Sierra Motty in ''"The Treasure of Sierra Motty"''.
301[[/folder]]
302
303[[folder: Von Weasel]]
304!! Von Weasel
305[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_von_weasel.png]]
306[[AC:First appearance: ''"On a Secret Mission"'', 1943]]
307
308A spy for Nazi Germany and partner-in-crime of Pete. He's also known as Agent 17.
309----
310* BrainsAndBrawn: He is the brains, Pete provides the brawn.
311* HighClassGlass: He only wears it in private and when he does, it's on his left eye.
312* TheMole: He and Pete work for the American army in order to have first seat tickets to all secret projects. They also regularly purchase war bonds, to Mickey's disgust, because doing so makes for a good cover and a wise investment because the money will go into developing the very secrets they aim to steal.
313* NaziNobleman: He's never said to be a nobleman and [[ConvenientlyUnverifiableCoverStory there's no telling whether his "pastry shop in Vienna" is a full lie or a convenient truth to hide behind]] (he does know how to make fruit preserves), but he's got the monocle, the "Von"-name, and is identified as a "personal buddy of Hitler's".
314* TheOneThingIDontHateAboutYou: A running gag in ''"On a Secret Mission"'' is that the Nazis love American culture. Von Weasel has a weakness for cowboy movies.
315* PutOnABus: The 90s kickstarted the return of Pete's other 30s/40s partners-in-crime, Sylvester Shyster and Eli Squinch. It's no surprise Von Weasel hasn't been brought back and isn't likely to anytime soon. A [[{{Retcon}} rewrite]]'d be mandatory.
316* TheVonTropeFamily: "Von Weasel".
317* WickedWeasel: He's a weasel and deceitful.
318* YouHaveFailedMe: Played straight and averted. After failing to acquire (photos of) America's new long-range combat plane known as "The Bat", Pete notes to Von Weasel: "Frankly, I'm a little noivous, boss! I know what you did to de others who woiked for you... and failed...". Notwithstanding this history, Von Weasel tells him not to be afraid and never actually gives any indication Pete is to be offed too.
319[[/folder]]
320
321[[folder: Doc Wombat]]
322!! Doc Wombat
323[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_doc_wombat.png]]
324[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Ghost Town Airport"'', 1948]]
325
326A country fellow and smuggler, as well as a friend of Pete.
327----
328* InformedSpecies: He does not ''not'' look a wombat, but he'd be mistaken for a regular {{dogface}} were it not for the name.
329* ScoobyDooHoax: To keep people from snooping, Doc Wombat and Pete had set up a ghost story for Specterville, which is a ghost town deserted in 1879 when the last gold was found. The ghosts of the town would not take kindly to strangers, though leave alone Doc because he lives there and Pete because he's a regular visitor of Doc's. Any plane that'd try to land would be pulled down by spectral forced (in reality a controlled magnet), while any strangers staying would be visited by the ghosts (in reality a hologram). To cover for the smuggler plane specifically, a story about a ghost plane was thought up that sometimes was the smuggler plane and sometimes a hologram.
330[[/folder]]
331
332[[folder: Scuttle]]
333!! Scuttle
334[[quoteright:170:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mmcu_scuttle_image1_4793.png]]
335[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald Duck Captures the Range Rustlers"'', 1951]]
336
337Principally partner-in-crime of Pete and Dum-Dum, but can occasionally be found working with other villains. He's almost always found in a subordinate role and is usually happy this way.
338----
339* BrainsAndBrawn: With Dum-Dum, it depends on the story who is the brains. Sometimes it's Scuttle, but other times Dum-Dum takes on the role of leader. Scuttle never qualifies as the brawn, but Dum-Dum occasionally does. In fact, this was the setup in their earliest stories like ''"Alaskan Adventure"'' and ''"Backwoods Bugaboo"''.
340* CompositeCharacter: Overlaps with AscendedExtra, DecompositeCharacter, SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute, and SuddenNameChange with a dash of IHaveManyNames. Scuttle as he's known today is an invention of the 80s, but goes back several more decades. He has his origins in the Fallberg-Murry stories and those two believed in making standalone stories rather than creating continuity. As well, Murry limited himself to dogfaces when designing new characters and developed a few go-to models (with minor variations) easy for him to draw because of familiarity. The character today known as Scuttle was one of these go-to models. Although the model was regularly partnered with Pete and/or Dum-Dum, it could show up working with anyone, including itself like when it was doubled for use as the Terwilliger Twins in ''"The Secret of the Swamp"'', and didn't even have to take the role of a criminal, like when it was assigned the role of Dr. Quantum in ''"The Marvelous Magnet"''. Furthermore, the consistency of being Pete's and/or Dum-Dum's partner-in-crime is not a guarantee to same-characterness either, because the name given to the model never was the same between any two stories and Mickey never recognized him unlike he did Pete, sometimes explicitly. And even if one were to retroactively interpret this use of the model all Scuttle, then ambiguity emerges from the occasional model variation, like the fat version (Bushface) that shows up in ''"The Big Christmas Tree Mystery"'', the beardless version (Frenchy) of ''"The Return of the Phantom Blot"'', or the ''other'' beardless version (Slink) in ''"The Tortoise Shell Treasure"''. Some of Scuttle's better known names, on account of them appearing in high profile stories, are Ropey (''"Captures the Range Rustlers"''), Catfoot (''"The Legend of Loon Lake"''), Saltspray (title?), Slowdraw (''"Mickey's Strange Mission"''), and Yardarm (title?). "Yardarm" also has the honor of being the name he got when he appeared in the ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'' episode ''"The Pearl of Wisdom"''. Other names the model has appeared under are Sourdough Sam/Skulk (''"Alaskan Adventure"''), Barney (''"Backwoods Bugaboo"''), Pickhandle (''"The Mystery of Misery Mesa"''), Snark (''"Arctic Roundup"''), Squinch (''"The Treasure of El Dorado"''), Lynx-Eye (''"Undercover Mountie"''), Chum (''"Strange Cargo to Pingoola"''), Smite (''"The Whale Chasers"''), Deadeye (''"Lair of the Zoomby"''), Slick (''"Moose Call"''), Dr. Gantry (''"Desert Dilemma"''), and Mulligan (''"Rainbow Runaround"''). The only Western Publishing era story to call him "Scuttle" is ''"The Missing Merchantman"'', but it's the name that's been settled on after the 70s and the one used for fresh translations.
341* FatAndSkinny: Scuttle is the skinny one, while the role of fat one is filled by either Pete or Dum-Dum.
342* RoguesGalleryTransplant: He debuted as an enemy of Donald Duck during one of the times Pete appeared in a ''Disney Ducks'' story.
343[[/folder]]
344
345[[folder: Dum-Dum]]
346!! Dum-Dum
347[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_dumdum.png]]
348[[AC:First appearance: ''"Donald Duck Captures the Range Rustlers"'', 1951]]
349
350A criminal who is often the partner-in-crime of Scuttle, sometimes serving as his henchman, sometimes essentially taking the role of Pete. At times, the two work for Pete (or another employer), though unlike Scuttle Dum-Dum never is Pete's sole henchman.
351----
352* BrainsAndBrawn: It depends on the story who is the brains. Sometimes it's Scuttle, but other times Dum-Dum takes on the role of leader. Scuttle never qualifies as the brawn, but Dum-Dum occasionally does. In fact, this was the setup in their earliest stories like ''"Alaskan Adventure"'' and ''"Backwoods Bugaboo"''.
353* CompositeCharacter: Overlaps with AscendedExtra, DecompositeCharacter, SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute, and SuddenNameChange with a dash of IHaveManyNames. Dum-Dum as he's known today is an invention of the 80s, but goes back several more decades. He has his origins in the Fallberg-Murry stories and those two believed in making standalone stories rather than creating continuity. As well, Murry limited himself to dogfaces when designing new characters and developed a few go-to models (with minor variations) easy for him to draw because of familiarity. The character today known as Dum-Dum was one of these go-to models. The model is less distinct than Scuttle's and only recognized when partnered with Scuttle and/or Pete. Furthermore, this context is not a guarantee to same-characterness either, because the name given to the model never was the same between any two stories and Mickey never recognized him unlike he did Pete, sometimes explicitly. And even if one were to retroactively make this use of the model all Dum-Dum, then ambiguity emerges from that occasional model variation, like the long-eared version (nameless) that shows up in ''"Donald Duck Captures the Range Rustlers"'' or the large-chinned version (Bullneck) of ''"Backwoods Bugaboo"''. Other names the model has appeared under are Gumboot/Tiny (''"Alaskan Adventure"''), Lunk (''"The Mystery of Misery Mesa"''), Filch (''"The Incredible Box Top Plot"''), Flabb (''"The Treasure of El Dorado"''), Cokey (''"Twenty Fathoms to Treasure"''), Moose (''"Undercover Mountie"''), Harry (''"Strange Cargo to Pingoola"''), Spike (''"The Whale Chasers"''), Ketch (''"Trapped on Wreckers Reef"''), Galvin (''"Desert Dilemma"''), Willie (''"Rainbow Runaround"''), and Mack (''"The Dream House"''). The only Western Publishing era story to call him "Dum-Dum" is ''"Moose Call"'', but it's the name that's been settled on after the 70s and the one used for fresh translations.
354* FatAndSkinny: Dum-Dum is the fat one, Scuttle is the skinny one.
355* LargeAndInCharge: Sometimes when working with Scuttle, like in ''"The Whale Chasers"''.
356* PermaStubble: In most of his appearances Dum-Dum's got this. Rarely he has a full beard and sometimes he's clean-shaven, but the stubble is his most recurring look.
357* OutOfFocus: Dum-Dum has only been featured in a handful of comics after the 70s.
358* RoguesGalleryTransplant: He debuted as an enemy of Donald Duck during one of the times Pete appeared in a ''Disney Ducks'' story.
359[[/folder]]
360
361[[folder: El Cad]]
362!! El Cad
363[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_el_cad.png]]
364[[AC:First appearance: ''"Mickey Mouse"'', 1952]]
365
366A museum thief with an eye for commercializing antiquities.
367----
368* BeardOfEvil: El Cad's goatee looks like it'd be sharp enough to stab someone with. In fact, along with FangsAreEvil, El Cad's design includes a lot of sharp angles as a contrast to Pete's round shapes.
369* BrainsAndBrawn: He'd work alone if not for the occasional need of some brute force, which Pete can provide.
370* CatsAreMean: El Cad's PunnyName combines "cat" and "cad", which should tell you enough about his attitude.
371* FatAndSkinny: He's skinny, Pete's fat.
372[[/folder]]
373
374[[folder: Al Popone]]
375!! Al Popone
376[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_al_popone.png]]
377[[AC: First appearance: ''"Topolino e la stella dello sceriffo"'', 1959]]
378
379One of Pete's henchmen.
380----
381* ShoutOut: He's named after UsefulNotes/AlCapone.
382[[/folder]]
383
384[[folder: Monkey scientist]]
385!! Monkey scientist
386[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_monkey_scientist.png]]
387[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Mystery of Lost Green Valley"'', 1973]]
388
389A scientist ([[NoNameGiven whose name is not given]]) that teamed up with Pete to create diamonds from coal.
390----
391* BrainsAndBrawn: He is the brains, Pete provides the brawn.
392* LabcoatOfScienceAndMedicine: He's working with coal and heavy machinery. He does not need a labcoat, but a good overall and a helmet.
393* NoNameGiven: Not even a nickname or anything!
394* PollutedWasteland: He and Pete used Lost Green Valley as the dumping grounds of all the waste produced in the diamond making process. That way, they wouldn't draw attention with a smoke stack as the only one to know of anything going on was a simple farmer living in the valley.
395* TheStoic: He is proud of his work, but underreacts to anything that's not his department.
396-->'''Scientist:''' "No harm done, but the lady ''is'' getting a bit tiresome!"
397[[/folder]]
398
399[[folder: Joe Wharfrat]]
400!! Joe Wharfrat
401[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_joe_wharfrat.png]]
402[[AC:First appearance: ''"It's a Blast"'', 1979]]
403
404A sailor who sometimes teams up with Pete.
405----
406* FatAndSkinny: He's skinny, Pete's fat.
407* YouDirtyRat: All the more noticeable when the heroic protagonist is a mouse.
408[[/folder]]
409
410[[folder: Weasel]]
411!! Weasel
412[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_weasel.png]]
413[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Big Escape"'', 1980]]
414
415One of Pete's henchmen.
416----
417* CompositeCharacter: Overlaps with RememberTheNewGuy, SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute, and SuddenNameChange. Weasel is a creation by Bob Langhans and comes in two variants: average height and short. The former, among others, shows up in ''"Gentleman Pete"'' and ''"The Big Escape"'', and the latter in ''"The Lost Palace of Kashi"'', ''"The Steamboat Trip"'', and ''"The Box Office Heist"''. Only ''"Gentleman Pete"'' and ''"The Lost Palace of Kashi"'' have had releases in English, and in the former the character is known as Henchy. For unknown reasons, a year after ''"The Lost Palace of Kashi"'' Langhans stopped using Weasel and joined in on portraying Scuttle as Pete's main partner-in-crime.
418%%* EyeObscuringHat: Technically. This look is specific to the short version of Weasel.
419* MadeASlave: Sort of as part of the EverybodyLaughsEnding in ''"The Lost Palace of Kashi"'', coincidentally and unfortunately his final appearance. After Pete's and Weasel's [[MuggedForDisguise maltreatment of two nomads]] and an attempt to steal various ancient artifacts, the nomads want them executed. Pete begs Mickey to help him, which Mickey agrees to if they first fix up the plane they flew into some trees during their failed escape. Once they've done so, [[ValuesDissonance Mickey points out to the chief the two crooks are much more useful alive than dead and the two are dragged off for more work]].
420* OneSteveLimit: Averted. There are two other crooks named Weasel, one of which shows up in ''"The Crooked Clown Case"'' and the other in ''"The Coconut Caper"''.
421[[/folder]]
422
423[[folder: Dexter Dingus]]
424!! Dexter Dingus
425[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dexter_dingus.png]]
426[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Right Mouse For The Job"'', 1998]]
427
428A brilliant inventor whose criminal career is only hampered by his physical shortcomings and lack of a spine. To compensate, he has teamed up with Pete. The two can't stand each other, which tends to be the reason their plans fail.
429----
430* BrainsAndBrawn: Dexter is the brains, Pete the brawn.
431* TheDogBitesBack: Dexter being the dog in this case. Happened in ''"The Great Birthday Robbery"'' and ''"The Copy-Cat Crimes"''.
432* InvisibilityCloak: Dexter made two, designing them so that the wearers even became intangible but could still pick up things if brought within their sphere of influence. Pete earned the nickname "The Fog" while pulling heists with it. Only danger it could pose was if the two wearers would ever pass each other in intangible form, which Mickey tried to stop Pete.
433* InSeriesNickname: Pete, TheNicknamer, calls him Dexie. Dexter hates that.
434* ShorterMeansSmarter: Dexter's a shorty and not only smarter than Pete in terms of inventing but also in performing their schemes with minimal risk. Too bad all the authority between them is held by Pete's fists.
435* MadScientist: He's actually not all that mad, but he's still cooking up fancy inventions for the sake of personal gain regardless of how it effects others. There's also something to be said for his choice to keep teaming up with Pete.
436* StayInTheKitchen: Oddly invoked despite Dexter being a guy. Pete is very resentful towards him for being afraid to stand up to him.
437[[/folder]]
438
439[[folder: Jack the Jerk]]
440!! Jack the Jerk
441[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_jack_jerk.png]]
442[[AC:First appearance: ''"Foes in Fellowship"'', 2001]]
443
444One of Pete's fences.
445----
446* NoHonorAmongThieves: When Jack thinks Pete by accident picked a meeting spot crawling with cops and is spotted, he immediately rats out Pete as the one he has business with in a TakingYouWithMe deal.
447* RunForTheBorder: The reason Jack insists on a meeting at 17:00 is because he wants to skip town at 18:00 what with the cops closing in on him.
448[[/folder]]
449
450[[folder: "Muck" Raker]]
451!! "Muck" Raker
452[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_muck_raker.png]]
453[[AC:First appearance: ''"Mickey for Mayor"'', 2002]]
454
455An OldFriend of Sylvester Shyster and just as much of a rat. He's the owner of the ''Daily Quack'', a newspaper.
456----
457* BigThinShortTrio: Forms this with Sylvester and Pete.
458* DaEditor: A corrupt one.
459* FalseReassurance: Mickey should've paid attention to the small matter that "Politicians sometimes play dirty tricks! Is that the whole story? Don't worry! We'll do the right thing with that photo!" does not contain any promise to not print it. Much like Sylvester knows how to spin the law, Muck knows how to spin words.
460* NerdGlasses: Overly large ones.
461* NoNameGiven: Forename, that is. The one time his name is mentioned, it's written as if "Muck" is a nickname. On his office door "M. Raker" is written, so his first name does start with a "M".
462* OldFriend: To Sylvester Shyster.
463* PropagandaMachine: Raker and Pete do everything in their power to make Mickey look bad and improve the chances of Shyster getting elected mayor.
464[[/folder]]
465
466! The Phantom Blot's allies
467[[folder: Mr. X]]
468!! Mr. X
469[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_mrdrx_6.png]]
470[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Phantom Blot Meets the Mysterious Mr. X"'', 1964]]
471
472A mad scientist who regularly teams up with the Phantom Blot. He only appeared in one American story but was picked up for a few more by Brazil.
473----
474* AtrociousAlias: Most people consider Mr. X an intimidating enough name, but not Donald: "What kind of guy would sign his name with an "X"? Heh heh!"
475* BigBadDuumvirate: Whenever he teams up with the Phantom Blot.
476* EinsteinHair: It points in all possible directions.
477* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: The Phantom Blot is [[VillainousFriendship his friend]]. His only one. In his first story, Mickey and Goofy trick Mr. X into hammer-KO'ing the Phantom Blot by making him think he's dealing with a spy in disguise. Once Mr. X realizes what he's done, he freezes in shock and horror before regaining his bearings to escape.
478* KansasCityShuffle: Mickey threw one up for him. Mr. X had sent letters ahead announcing his plans to rob Scrooge [=McDuck=]'s Money Bin and to free the Phantom Blot so he could join him in this historic crime. Cognizant that Mr. X would have a fool-proof plan, Mickey had Goofy pretend to be the Phantom Blot, claiming to have escaped on his own as could be expected from a master criminal, so that the real Phantom Blot would stay in jail and Goofy would be able to get close to Mr. X to thwart the robbery.
479* LabcoatOfScienceAndMedicine: Always wears his no matter what he's doing.
480* LetXBeTheUnknown: "The Mysterious Mr. X".
481* MadScientist: Brazil prefers to call him Dr. X.
482* MindControlDevice: The ray-o-copter in ''"The Phantom Blot Meets the Mysterious Mr. X"''.
483* NoNameGiven: He's only ever referred to as Mr. X.
484[[/folder]]
485
486[[folder: The Phantom Brat]]
487!! The Phantom Brat
488[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/phantom_brat.png]]
489[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Big Fall"'', 1990]]
490
491The Phantom Brat is the young daughter of the Phantom Blot. She's not a danger to anyone, but has acquired a villain perspective from her father. With him in jail, she's being raised by their housekeeper, Mrs. Fragmuffin.
492----
493* CreepyChild: That she goes around in an outfit like her dad's is one thing, but all [[CreepyDoll those hooded dolls and plushies]] are a bit much.
494* CutShort: The Phantom Brat was the biggest deal cast addition made by the ''Mickey Mouse Adventures'' series, with the editorial asking for feedback on her. She was received well, but no stories featuring her followed due to the series dying in the Disney Implosion ten issues later. No other writer has picked her up either.
495* DaddysGirl: She's a fan of her father and expects a bedtime story about his adventures every night.
496* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: After watching her father plummet to his quite possible death:
497--> '''Phantom Brat:''' "Daddy...*sob!* I didn't want the diamond that badly..."
498* FaceOfAnAngelMindOfADemon: Possibly. The editorial in ''Mickey Mouse Adventures'' #8 reads: "We know that no jail can hold the Blot for long, so his future as an unpredictable opponent is clear, but what about his daughter? [[EvilParentsWantGoodKids Is she a sweet tyke who just happens to have a felon for a father?]] [[DaddysLittleVillain Or is she as twisty as dear old dad?]]"
499* NoNameGiven: The name "Phantom Brat" was used solely in the editorial of ''Mickey Mouse Adventures'' #8 and placed between quotation marks to boot.
500[[/folder]]
501
502[[folder: Alberta]]
503!! Alberta
504[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mickey_mouse_alberta.png]]
505[[AC:First appearance: ''"The Return of Phantom Bob"'', 1995]]
506
507A little girl of criminal disposition who works for the Phantom Blot.
508----
509* TheArtfulDodger: Her clothes and employ with the Phantom Blot mark her as such. The whereabouts of her parents aren't known.
510* FaceOfAnAngelMindOfADemon: Her design works with both aspects. Her hair's black and curly, which is as much [[GoodHairEvilHair coding for her youthfulness as for her deviousness]]. The same goes for her YouthfulFreckles.
511* LittleMissConArtist: She's as innocent-looking as a ±9 year old girl can be and delights in the way it allows her to trick people. She knows her appearance goes a long way to making her actions seem harmless, easily long enough to spring a trap.
512[[/folder]]

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