Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Characters / TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesSeasonOneAntagonists

Go To

1%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
2
3[[WMG:[[center: ''WesternAnimation/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroes'' [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroes character index]]\
4[-[[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesTheAvengers The Avengers]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesNewAvengers New Avengers]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesOtherSuperheroes Other Superheroes]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesSHIELD S.H.I.E.L.D.]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesSupportingCast Supporting Cast]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesVillains Villains]] | '''Season One Antagonists''' | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesSeasonTwoAntagonists Season Two Antagonists]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesMastersOfEvil The Masters of Evil]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesHYDRA HYDRA]] | [[Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesSkrulls Skrulls]]-]]]]]
5
6[[foldercontrol]]
7
8[[folder:Loki]]
9!![[ComicBook/{{Loki}} Loki]]
10
11[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a8d4b28c_13a3_43fc_935a_268ad76af463.jpeg]]
12->'''Voiced by:''' [[Creator/GrahamMcTavish Graham [=McTavish=]]]
13->'''First appearance:''' "Thor the Mighty!" (Micro-Episode: "The Siege of Asgard")
14
15-> "I have watched [[ComicBook/TheAvengers you worms]] all this time, all of you scared and alone. On Midgard, you may claim at being heroes. But here? You are less than nothing. Without [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], who will save you now?" '''(to the Avengers)'''
16
17The Nordic god of mischief and Odin's adoptive son, who was raised as Thor's brother. Unbeknownst to Loki, he was actually the child of a Frost Giant king whom Odin had slain. The realization that he was never Odin's biological son or a true Asgardian drove Loki to the brink of madness and inspired him to conspire against Asgard as vengeance for Odin's habitual deceptiveness. Although defeated by Thor and exiled to the Isle of Silence by Odin, Loki hatches further schemes against his brother.
18----
19* AGodAmI: He's already a god in both status and ego, but his god complex grows bigger after gaining control of the Odinforce.
20* AdaptationalVillainy:
21** While Loki has always been a villain in the comics, one of his main redeeming features is that he wouldn't want Asgard to be destroyed, even if only because he wants to rule it himself. Here, he is willing to not only destroy Asgard, but all Nine Realms when his control over the Odinforce goes amok.
22** Plans for Season 3 would have Loki willingly side with Surtur and start Ragnarok. In the comics, Loki chose to side against Surtur, teaming up with Thor and Odin to save Asgard.
23* ArcVillain: Of the two-episode season one finale ("The Fall of Asgard" and "A Day Unlike Any Other").
24* BigBad: Of Season 1. He's the one responsible for the breakout that kickstarted the events of the series. Not only that, he's the real brains behind the Masters of Evil with the Enchantress working on his orders.
25* BlackMagic: In contrast to Thor's more direct form of combat, Loki's primary battle stratagem is to hurl darkness blasts. He eschews his magic skills in favor of the Odinforce when he conquers Asgard during the Odinsleep in Thor's absence.
26* CainAndAbel: With Thor.
27* TheChessmaster: In "Thor the Mighty", Loki impersonates the Leader to hire the Wrecking Crew to steal a gamma device on Earth in order to distract Thor, even as he claims to the Frost Giants of Jotunheim that Asgard was planning their genocide, all to lead the Frost Giants against Asgard in Thor's absence and punish Odin for lying to him about his true parentage. In the two-episode season one finale, it is revealed that Loki engineered the Breakout and the formation of both the Avengers and the Masters of Evil to increase Thor's attachment and feelings of obligation to Midgard, while he escaped from the Isle of Silence during the Odinsleep, usurped the Odinforce from his adoptive father in his state of hibernation, and conquered all Nine Realms except Midgard and Muspelheim. Loki, via Enchantress, then planned to use the Casket of Ancient Winters he would obtain from Malekith to conquer Midgard until Malekith double-crossed Enchantress and was killed by the Avengers. Subsequently, Loki instructed Enchantress to set the Masters of Evil on the mission to align the Norn Stones with the interdimensional fault-lines to break down the barriers between the Nine Realms and bring his army and dominion to Earth. It would have worked too if Baron Zemo had been more gullible and less ambitious and even then, Zemo's betrayal proved to be only a minor hindrance.
28* ColdHam: Loki sure is hammy and he usually is cold and bitter in personality, momentary bursts of rage notwithstanding. [[{{Pun}} Also a pun because Loki's a Frost Giant by birth.]]
29* DecompositeCharacter: His role as the Avengers' catalyst for teaming up is instead given to Graviton. Subverted in a sense, given that Loki was ultimately responsible for the mass supervillain breakout that ''resulted'' in Graviton's release, so he is more of the GreaterScopeVillain in that regard.
30* DemotedToDragon: {{Subverted}}; the Enchantress (possessed by Surtur at this time) offers to help him escape if he succeeds in killing the Avengers with the Destroyer and joins Surtur. He fails and she ends up leaving him in his imprisonment. Also ironic considering that the relationship was inverted in Season One, with Enchantress being Loki's [[TheDragon Dragon]].
31* EvilIsPetty: Caused so much havoc and destruction across the Nine Realms, nearly destroying everything itself when losing control over the Odinforce, just to prove himself as Thor's better.
32* EvilLaugh: Wouldn't be the God of Mischief and Evil without it. One noteworthy example is when the Avengers literally come crashing down on his palace and demand that he surrender, which prompts Loki to burst out into hysterics.
33* FateWorseThanDeath: His fate after the Avengers defeat him. Odin accuses Loki of crossing over the line between mischief and evil and leaves him eternally ensnared in the branches of Yggdrasil, with the venom of Jormungand's fangs constantly dripping into his eyes.
34* GoneHorriblyRight: Loki's scheming to influence the creation of the Avengers and the Masters of Evil was intended to keep Thor occupied in Midgard by exploiting and strengthening his attachment to the human race, while Loki took over Asgard, Jotunheim, Alfheim, Vanaheim, Svartalfheim, Niffleheim, and Nidavellir and stole the Odinforce from his adoptive father. As it turns out in the Season One finale, the [[ThePowerOfFriendship bonds Thor formed with the Avengers in Midgard not only enabled him to save it from Loki's domination in the end, but also liberate the other realms Loki had overrun with his armies]].
35* GreaterScopeVillain: Of Season One. Loki is responsible for the Breakout, leaves Enchantress and Executioner on Earth to serve his agenda and take command of the conquest of Midgard on his behalf, and while he rarely has a direct role to play in the plot, the actions of Zemo, the Masters of Evil, and every other Earth-based supervillain, all come about thanks to his machinations. By the end of "This Hostage Earth", with all the Avengers spirited away by the shattering of the Norn Stones throughout the branches of Yggdrasil, Loki steps down from Greater-Scope Villain status to become the ArcVillain for "The Fall of Asgard" and "A Day Unlike Any Other", and acts as the final enemy the Avengers face in Season One.
36* HornyVikings: His headgear.
37* {{Hypocrite}}: He constantly calls Thor out for his arrogance, yet Loki is hardly the bastion of humility himself.
38* InferioritySuperiorityComplex: 1/3 of his motivation for orchestrating the main conflict of Season One. Loki despises Thor because he feels that Odin always treated Thor preferentially as his biological son. Consequently, Loki believes that Odin treated him as if he were a lesser being in raising him and desires to prove his superiority to compensate.
39* InvincibleVillain: The blows and blasts of superhuman combatants do little more than stun him once Loki usurps the Odinforce. Not even Iron Man's Thorbuster Armor, which he created from uru in Nidavellir specifically to fight Asgardians, can pose a threat.
40* KirbyDots: Whenever he uses the Odinforce.
41* LargeHam: Has his moments.
42* LeanAndMean: Has a noticeably leaner physique compared to the male Asgardians, his brother especially, and he is rotten to the core.
43* MacabreMothMotif: During his battle with Thor in his debut episode, Loki shapeshifts into a swarm of black moths to avoid one of Thor's powerful lightning blasts and sneak behind him. The horns on his helmet also seem to be a little curlier than his other appearances, almost similar to antennae.
44* TheManBehindTheMan: To the Wrecking Crew in "Thor the Mighty", the Enchantress, the Masters of Evil, and the Breakout.
45* ManipulativeBastard: While Loki mostly fits the role of [[{{TheChessmaster}} a Chessmaster]] better due to his rational focus for his manipulations, it cannot be denied that Loki just enjoys bending others to his will.
46* MotiveRant: Delivers a small and somewhat vague one in "Thor the Mighty." He also delivers a more lucid one while torturing Thor in "The Fall of Asgard."
47-->'''Loki:''' You call me liar? It is Odin who lies! How long did he keep the truth from us, brother? It is Odin who slew my true father and stole me as a child only to treat me like a lesser being! [[SoftSpokenSadist But I am not a lesser being. Not anymore. The Odinforce is mine. And all the Nine Realms will bow down to me.]]
48* OhCrap: The moment he realizes that a reawakened and angered Odin is behind him, Loki distinctly gets WideEyesAndShrunkenIrises to realize just how completely and utterly ''screwed'' he is.
49* OmnicidalManiac: When he starts losing control over the Odinforce, Loki happily lets it loose and destroy the Nine Realms out of petty spite.
50* PhysicalGod: Loki is the Norse God of Mischief and, as of "A Day Unlike Any Other", of Evil as well. Fits this trope even better with the Odinforce at his command.
51* RedemptionRejection: See Loki's exchange with Thor above.
52* {{Sadist}}: Loki positively relishes not just seeing Thor in chains before him on the brink of unconsciousness, but also pouring wine on his face and using him for target practice with his Odinforce blasts just to keep him in agony and prevent him from fainting.
53* ShapeShifting: One of his powers, using it to impersonate The Leader and Balder in his schemes.
54* SorcerousOverlord: He becomes this once he conquers seven of the Nine Realms and steals the Odinforce, making him the most powerful magic user in the universe.
55* SmugSuper: Once he's conquered Asgard and taken the Odinforce for himself, Loki's so assured that no one will be able to defeat him even as the Avengers begin to gradually whittle down his forces until he's the only one left standing.
56* TakeOverTheWorld: His endgame is the complete takeover of not only Asgard, but all of the Nine Realms. By the Season 1 finale, he's already conquered over seven of them. The only two left are Muspelheim, which Loki wouldn't dare attack due to Surtur's presence, and Midgard.
57* UnskilledButStrong: When it comes to the Odinforce, Loki primarily relies on using it to blast his enemies with overwhelming power but doesn't exhibit any other abilities as Odin did. Of course, he's still nigh-unstoppable with it, with even Iron Man in his Uru armor only being able to amuse him at best.
58* VillainousBreakdown: He has one when Hank Pym caused him to lose control of the Odinforce by destroying Yggdrasil.
59* VillainDecay: In Season 2, he gets downgraded from being the BigBad of Season 1 to a one-off villain working for The Enchantress and Surtur. To make matters worse, he struggles to kill three depowered Avengers and Hawkeye despite using the Destroyer Armour, and once they get their powers back, he's taken down in a matter of seconds.
60* WalkingSpoiler: His role as the BigBad of Season 1 is this.
61* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: After he fully absorbs the Odinforce, he pretty much snaps, though how much of this is due to the power and how much is just due to seething resentment and identity issues is up to interpretation.
62* WorthyOpponent: He briefly has one for Tony Stark when he manages to put up a fight against Loki with an armor made of Uru, though the God of Mischief begins to lose interest as the fight drags on.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:The Wrecking Crew]]
66!!The Wrecking Crew
67
68[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/b1cae1ad_6630_4cfa_9f29_991a57c655db.png]]
69
70->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/JBBlanc (Wrecker), Creator/GaryAnthonyWilliams (Thunderball), Creator/NolanNorth (Piledriver), Creator/JamesCMathisIII (Bulldozer)
71->'''First appearance: "Thor the Mighty!" (Micro-Episode: "Thor the Mighty!")
72
73A quartet of criminals who somehow gained their powers of superhuman strength, endurance, and durability from gamma radiation exposure (in contrast to their Earth-616 counterparts, who derived their powers from the Asgardian enchantment placed on their weapons). Regardless of their changed origins though, their primary foe still seems to be [[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]], although they have also shown repeated willingness to offer their services to the [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]]'s arch-enemy, the Leader.
74----
75* CardCarryingVillain: Wrecker takes pride in the fact that he has no honor and would crush Jane Foster's head without hesitation.
76* CombatPragmatist: Wrecker has no qualms fighting dirty, such as kneeing Thor in the gut while they lock weapons or taking hostages. Too bad Thor is just as much of a pragmatist as he is.
77* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: In the second season episode "Powerless" (the last appearance of the Wrecking Crew in the series), Piledriver is somewhat conspicuously absent. Neither the other three members of the Crew nor the Avengers mention him, and they all just sort of act like the Crew has more or less always consisted of just three members.
78* CrowbarCombatant: Wrecker's signature weapon.
79* DoingInTheWizard: They are gamma-based supervillains rather than humans empowered by Asgardian magic.
80* DumbMuscle: All of them with the exception of Thunderball (who is still very much muscle but is not so dumb).
81* EpicFail: They try to take on [[spoiler:the Destroyer Armor (which was being used by Loki at the time)]] and get curbstomped for their troubles.
82* EpicFlail: Thunderball's wrecking ball weapon.
83* GeniusBruiser: Thunderball, who used to be a scientist and was capable of operating a Stark Industries-manufactured gamma radiation cannon.
84* GoodOldFisticuffs: Piledriver is unique among the Wrecking Crew in that he prefers direct hand-to-hand combat, pummeling opponents with his massive fists.
85* QuirkyMiniBossSquad
86* TheJuggernaut: Bulldozer seems to be channeling the TropeNamer himself.
87* UseYourHead: A favored tactic of Bulldozer.
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Absorbing Man]]
91!!Absorbing Man (Carl "Crusher" Creel)
92
93[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/b36d124c_4b55_4a28_aee8_f018ccf7aa42.jpeg]]
94
95->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/RickDWasserman
96->'''First appearance:''' "Hulk vs. The World" (Micro-Episode: "The Coming of the Hulk")
97
98->"Is that it, Hulk? Are you tryin' to be some kinda hero? Well, let me tell you somethin'. Those people you're trying to protect, they think you're more of a monster than me!"
99
100Like the Wrecking Crew, the Absorbing Man, also known as Carl "Crusher" Creel, has had his origins altered in this show to involve exposure to gamma radiation instead of a mystical Asgardian elixir. What remains constant is that Creel, a brutal thug, gained the power to absorb the properties of any substance he made physical contact with into his being if he so wished. In "Hulk vs. the World", the Absorbing Man is tracked down to a greasy spoon by Bruce Banner in the hopes that Creel's cooperation could expose the unethical goings-on in the Cube, a prison for gamma mutates. Instead opting to bring out the Hulk to fight him, both Absorbing Man and Hulk are ultimately returned to the Cube and remain there until the Breakout. Then, in "Gamma World", Absorbing Man joins the forces of the Leader.
101----
102* AdaptationalBackstoryChange: In the comics Loki gave Creel his absorbing powers through magic. In this show he got them from gamma radiation [[NoodleIncident in some unspecified incident]].
103%%* [[ArrogantKungFuGuy Arrogant Element-Copying Guy]]
104* BaldOfEvil: His bald, pointy head makes him look even more villainous.
105* TheChewToy: The guy does not know how to selective with the material he absorbs, more often than not leading him to getting literally punched apart and crumpled in some very amusing ways.
106* CoDragons: With the Abomination, to [[spoiler:the Leader.]]
107* ComboPlatterPowers: Depending upon what he absorbs.
108* ChromeChampion: Depends on the material he absorbs, but he typically goes with glossy metal.
109* DumbMuscle: He isn't one to think anything through and just automatically thinks he'll have the edge if he absorbs anything. This has bitten him in the ass more than once.
110* DidNotThinkThisThrough: While fighting the Hulk, he forgoes his metallic form and absorbs the rock-like properties of the canyon they were fighting in to showcase his abilities. Unfortunately for him, rock is far more brittle than metal and he ends up getting his body shattered by Hulk for his troubles.
111* ExtraOreDinary: After absorbing the properties of anything metallic.
112* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Twice. For the first time, see OhCrap below, where he turns into rock while fighting Hulk. The second time, he absorbs the properties of Mjolnir, [[spoiler:including the part where it's controlled by Thor.]]
113* MaterialMimicry: Like in the comics, he can copy whatever he touches.
114* NotSoDifferentRemark: In part two of his debut, he tries convincing The Hulk he's even more of a monster than he is. This generally turned out to be a ''bad'' idea.
115* OhCrap: Four words. "Hulk smash rock, Einstein!" His expression when he realized his screw up was priceless.
116* OnlyAFleshWound: He can survive being shattered to pieces when in his transformed state.
117* PsychoElectro: After absorbing the properties of Mjolnir, though he does not use them while fighting Thor.
118* SleevesAreForWimps: He only ever wears a wife-beater.
119[[/folder]]
120
121[[folder:General Ross]]
122!!General Thaddeus E. "Thunderbolt" Ross
123
124[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/53ba7ebe_7828_4f3e_a9f8_717ab657d5c9.png]]
125
126->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/KeithFerguson (General Ross)
127->'''First appearance:''' "Hulk vs. The World" (Micro-Episode: "Hulk vs. The World")
128
129Thunderbolt Ross leads a special military unit known as the Hulkbusters, who have pursued the Incredible Hulk across the Southwestern desert for years, but never managed to capture him and imprison him in the Cube, all for the purpose of studying his irradiated blood for insight into the creation of gamma-powered super-soldiers. S.H.I.E.L.D. ultimately beat him to capturing the Hulk, although Hulk escaped in the Breakout. Tropes about his alter ego can be found at Characters/TheAvengersEarthsMightiestHeroesTheAvengers.
130----
131* AdaptationalVillainy: Though Ross' [[{{Jerkass}} jerkassery]] in the comic is a huge case of DependingOnTheWriter, he usually is portrayed as having at least some redeeming qualities, mainly his concern for his daughter Betty. In this version, Betty is AdaptedOut, and Ross shows us several times he is quite an asshole.
132* FatBastard: Well, not quite fat, but this Ross is noticeably thicker than other versions.
133%%* FourStarBadass
134* GeneralRipper: He wouldn't be Ross otherwise.
135%%* HotBlooded
136* {{Hypocrite}}: Keeps telling the media that both Hulk and Red Hulk are monsters that need to be incarcerated and that he will keep an eye on Red Hulk. [[spoiler:He ''is'' Red Hulk. Then again, Ross is a known Hulk hater, so he had a reputation to live up to. Seemingly preferring this new Hulk would be a massive tip off that something was up.]]
137* {{Jerkass}}: Big time. Even Maria Hill would rather side with the Avengers than support Ross. [[spoiler:And it get worse after becoming Red Hulk.]]
138* KickTheDog: Good lord, where to start?
139* LaserGuidedKarma: [[spoiler:After spending two seasons persecuting Bruce Banner/Hulk, ruining the Hulk's reputation, imprisoning and torturing him, Ross ends up imprisoned for his crimes by S.H.I.E.L.D. and will probably become a test subject himself.]]
140* SlasherSmile: He has a ''really'' disturbing, predator-like grin when [[spoiler:Skrull Captain America finally allows him to take a horrified Bruce Banner in]].
141%%* SmugSnake
142* WalkingSpoiler:Look at all the spoilers above!
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:The Leader]]
146!!The Leader (Samuel Sterns)
147
148[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/45b3533b_d957_48f2_a5a5_56425bbeef30.png]]
149
150->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/JeffreyCombs
151->'''First appearance:''' "Hulk vs. The World" (Micro-Episode: "This Monster, This Hero")
152
153->"Why should ''I'' lead humanity? I am the most advanced mind this world has ever seen! I think on a level that normal human beings cannot even begin to comprehend."
154
155Formerly a lowly nuclear plant worker until exposed to gamma radiation, Samuel Sterns underwent a macrocephalic mutation into the Leader, an egotistical megalomaniac with a brilliant mind and telepathic powers. As of the beginning of the series, Leader is imprisoned in the Cube with the rest of the Hulk's enemies, but he is released during the Breakout and takes over the prison while the Hulk escapes. In the "Gamma World" two-parter, the Leader plans to mutate the world's populace into gamma creatures with superhuman bodies but subhuman minds in order to take control of their mental faculties himself and rule a gamma-irradiated planet.
156----
157* AGodAmI: He sees himself as a supreme being deserving of ruling the world because of his intellect.
158* ArcVillain: Of the "Gamma World" two-parter.
159%%* BadassBookworm
160* BodyHorror: When Hulk destroys his gamma machine, the headband he uses to control the gamma-mutated Avengers short-circuits, causing his already large head to swell even larger.
161* BrainsEvilBrawnGood: [[HulkSpeak Leader evil, Hulk good]].
162* TheChessmaster: [[spoiler:The events at the Cube were all just a test for his ''true'' plan, the irradiation of Las Vegas and eventually the whole world.]]
163* DarkMessiah: He claims to be saving humanity from their weak minds and feeble bodies. He means this by turning humans into gamma mutates and taking over their minds. The gamma-mutated villains are his followers, mostly because they were all imprisoned in the Cube together at the time of the Breakout.
164* EnemyMine: [[spoiler:In "Assault On 42", with the Avengers and the other prisoners against Annihilus and his army of alien insectoids.]]
165* TheEvilsOfFreeWill: The Leader's motivation for wanting to turn every man, woman, and child on Earth into a gamma mutate whose mind he can control, as he believes that human faults are responsible for ruining the world.
166* EvilCounterpart: To the Hulk, or rather, to Bruce Banner. Both got their powers through gamma radiation and have become green as a result. However, the Hulk gained strength while the Leader gained intelligence. Also, the Hulk is driven by rage, anger, and the desire to be left alone most of the time, while the Leader is cold, calculating, and desires to rule the rest of humanity.
167* EvilGenius: Is very intelligent and constantly boasts about how great his mind is.
168* EvilGloating: He's fond of doing this.
169* InsufferableGenius: He ''loves'' talking about how superior his intellect is to everyone else.
170* MightMakesRight:
171--> You asked before what gives me the right to rule? Because no one can stop me!
172** Also has a bit of, "Because I'm smarter than everyone else" in there too, since he also thinks he has the right to ''think'' for everyone else through mind-control.
173* MindRape: [[spoiler:What Annihilus does to him.]]
174* MotiveRant: He has one in "Gamma World Part 2" which doubles as a NewEraSpeech
175* MyBrainIsBig: His skull is over-sized to show this. When Hulk destroys his machine, the headband he uses to control the gamma-mutated Avengers ends up short-circuiting, and his head grows even bigger.
176* {{Narcissist}}: He believes that he will make humanity perfect by remaking it in ''his'' image. Ergo, the Leader believes his image is that of perfection.
177* NotSoWellIntentionedExtremist: He claims that he is saving the world by stripping human beings of their individuality and sense of identity and transforming them into his own gamma-powered drones. This is because he believes that he is a perfect being, by which logic humanity can reach perfection through being transformed into extensions of his will.
178* PsychicPowers: Can control weak-willed minds like those of his less mentally sharp gamma mutates. In ''Assault on 42" he can even sense Annihilus' thoughts, though the creature's mind is so chaotic this simply causes the gamma villain pain.
179* SmugSnake: He constantly boasts about being the only one fit rule the world.
180* TakeOverTheWorld: His goal.
181* VillainousRescue: [[spoiler:He actually saves the day in "Assault on 42" when he hacks into the prison computer and makes it emit a frequency that shuts down Annihilus's Cosmic Control Rod. Cap and Thor then take it from there, but without the Leader, Annihilus would have been virtually invincible.]]
182* VisionaryVillain: The Leader definitely has a vision for the future of humanity. That cannot be denied. He even makes a worldwide broadcast pronouncing the dawn of Gamma World, as if to mark the end of an era and the transition into a new one.
183[[/folder]]
184
185[[folder:Kang the Conqueror]]
186!!Kang the Conqueror
187
188[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dbzsqtq_64d34c96_a1ed_4a4f_81ad_b98190fb3430.png]]
189
190->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/JonathanAdams
191->'''First appearance:''' "Meet Captain America" (Micro-Episode: "Meet Captain America")
192
193->'''(To Captain America)''' "I do enjoy the irony that you, a man ''out'' of time, thinks that he can defeat the ''master'' of time."
194
195Kang the Conqueror is the seasoned, time-traveling warrior-king who rules the planet Earth (and possibly an intergalactic empire) in the 41st century. Ruling over human and extraterrestrial subjects from his sword-shaped Damocles Base, a space station of sorts in geosynchronous orbit around Earth, Kang would be a cold-hearted tyrant if not for his affection for his lover Princess Ravonna. Sadly, a time-space anomaly believed to be caused by Captain America's presence in the 21st century destroyed Kang's timeline, and only Kang and a few of his starships managed to make the jump out of time before it was too late. To make matters worse, Ravonna was partially consumed by a rift in spacetime, and although she was saved by Kang, she is now comatose and has been gradually fading out of existence. Kang is also a member of a group consisting of alternate timeline versions of himself, called the Council of Kangs.
196----
197* AdaptedOut: The Earth-616 Kang the Conqueror is Nathaniel Richards, a descendant of [[ComicBook/FantasticFour Mister Fantastic]] and [[ComicBook/DoctorDoom Doctor Doom]] who created a time machine in the form of a sphinx and first went to 30th century BCE Egypt to become the forgotten pharaoh Rama-Tut, who encountered a time-traveling Fantastic Four once. Afterwards, Rama-Tut traveled to the 40th century and conquered the world as Kang before setting out to conquer all time periods in that identity. It was then that Kang first fought the Avengers. In ''The Avengers: EMH'', all we know about Kang's background is that he's human, as proven by the face beneath an alternate Kang's retracting faceplate in "New Avengers."
198* AntiVillain: Sure he's a world conqueror, but he's also trying to save his entire future reality from being erased from existence. Plus, Ravonna is a MoralityPet for him.
199* ArcVillain: Of the episodes "The Man Who Stole Tomorrow", "Come the Conqueror", and "The Kang Dynasty".
200* BigNo: He delivers one after [[spoiler:he gets banished from the Avengers' time period at the end of "New Avengers".]]
201* ConquerorFromTheFuture: Or at least one possible future timeline.
202* CoolChair: Has shields that can stop Mjölnir and is able to travel through time.
203* CoolSpaceship: Damocles Base.
204* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: While Kang is a self-admitted time travelling conqueror, he does love his wife, Princess Ravonna. Saving her from being erased from history is one of his more noble motivations and then there’s the way he smiles when she first appears on screen.
205* EvilCounterpart: To Iron Man. Tony Stark is a self-described futurist who intends for his technology to improve the human condition, commands power and respect as CEO of a multinational corporation, wears a hi-tech suit of armor as Iron Man, and seeks to use his gifts to establish and maintain peace. Kang is a man from the future who wants to kill Captain America and TakeOverTheWorld with his technology to save humanity from annihilation, commands power and respect as ruler of a globe-spanning kingdom, dons a tech-laden garb at all times (except when imprisoned in 42), and has established world peace in his own era through autocratic government.
206* EvilSoundsDeep: Jonathan Adams seems to be channeling Creator/JamesEarlJones.
207* ExpressiveMask: Kind of a given, since he's one of the only characters wearing a mask that resembles an actual face.
208* FantasticRacism: Kang does not look fondly on the people of the past, calling them "Primitives" and "Neanderthals."
209* TheFightingNarcissist: Kang is a master combatant with weapons both primitive and sophisticated from all eras, and he also is undeniably full of himself, even if he isn't very prone to making boastful AGodAmI declarations like other arch-villains.
210* GlowingEyesOfDoom: When he's particularly angry, his eyes glow yellow.
211* {{Impossibly Cool Weapon}}s: He's got a lot of these by virtue of coming from 2 millennia into the future.
212* LargeHam: He's very fond of the big entrance, the theatrical gesture, and the use of the word 'doom.'
213* LoveMakesYouEvil: Well, Kang was already an ambitious dictator with Machiavellian tactics of taking control of other time periods, but his conflict with the Avengers in the 21st century is a direct consequence of his timeline being destroyed and Ravonna slowly ceasing to exist.
214* MassTeleportation: He can teleport himself or an entire war fleet through time and space in a matter of seconds.
215* MotiveDecay: His plans on preventing the disruption of the sun included taking over the world ''or'' killing Captain America. At the beginning of "New Avengers", Kang manages to get rid of Captain America (and the other Avengers). He reacts not with joy in the fact he apparently saved the world, but with excitement at the thought of no one stopping him from accomplishing domination.
216* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Never trust anyone who calls himself "The Conqueror."
217* [[NeverTellMeTheOdds Never Tell Me There's No More Time To Time Travel]]: Thanks to the... particular rules of time-travel in this show, it turns out you ''can'' outrun a temporal anomaly by hiding in a time before it happened. This is because time-travel to another era is viewed as equivalent to being "outside of time."
218* NotHisSled: In "The Kang Dynasty", the Earth-616 Kang's full-scale invasion of Earth, the Damocles Base had a [[ColonyDrop spectacular destruction]] when it fell to Earth. Here, the Avengers defeat Kang and [[AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs seize his base, turning it over to the aptly-named]] [[{{Pun}} S.W.O.R.D.]]
219* OutsideGenreFoe: The Avengers had never fought against a time-traveler, and had no defenses or strategies against [[TechnologicallyAdvancedFoe Kang's weapons]]. Even so, they eventually figure out how to outsmart him, mostly due to the fact that 21st century Stark tech is apparently so cutting-edge that some aspects of designs are still used in 41st century time machines.
220* PetTheDog: His love for Ravonna is probably his only redeeming trait.
221* PsychoticSmirk: He's dead serious for much of his screentime. Nine times out of ten, when he actually smiles, it's this.
222* RankScalesWithAsskicking: He is the dictator of Earth in the 41st century and can take on all the Avengers at once.
223* SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong: From his point of view, his crusade against the past is to 'fix' time. Of course, from the point of view of the Avengers, he must be stopped.
224* SomeoneHasToDie: And that someone is Captain America.
225* TakeOverTheWorld: Part of his M.O. concerning 21st century Earth is to conquer it. It ''is'' only in his occupation as a time-traveling world conqueror after all. Also part of his WellIntentionedExtremist objectives.
226* VillainDecay: Kang did so well in his initial outing with the Avengers: fighting off 8 of them, launching an attack on the whole world, and even having a sympathetic AntiVillain story with Ravonna in temporal lock. However, in his encore performance "New Avengers", the mighty conqueror doesn't even bother to try to rescue his wife once he gets free, and somehow gets stalled by half as many Avengers before [[spoiler:being shifted off into the time stream.]]
227* WellIntentionedExtremist: Believes that killing Captain America and/or taking over Earth and jumpstarting its progress with 41st century tech would save the future. In large part, his motivation for conquest is to make Earth equally capable from a military perspective as both the [[spoiler:Kree and Skrull Empires]], as he knows that Earth will be rendered barren of life as a result of a war between them. [[spoiler:Unfortunately, because Kang doesn't know the details of that war, he's wrong in thinking that killing Cap is the answer. A Skrull impostor is responsible for the cataclysm Kang seeks to avert, and the Avengers save his future themselves by defeating the Kree Empire before it can destabilize the Sun.]]
228* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: [[spoiler:After a brief appearance in the Baxter Building in "Secret Invasion", Ravonna is never seen or mentioned again, including in "New Avengers." Thus, her ultimate fate is unknown to viewers who don't read the tie-in comics.]]
229** One of the tie-in comics revealed that [[spoiler:Ravonna eventually reawakened, stole King Solomon's Frogs, and reunited with Kang in Ancient Egypt. (The reader probably must assume that Kang landed there after "New Avengers.")]]
230[[/folder]]
231
232[[folder:Klaw]]
233!!Ulysses Klaw
234
235[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ulysses_klaw_earth_80920.jpg]]
236[[caption-width-right:250:[[labelnote:Click here to see his sound form]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/klaw_sound_form1.png "The Sound...THE SOUND! I AM the Sound!"]][[/labelnote]]
237
238->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/MarkHamill
239->'''First appearance:''' "The Man in the Ant Hill" (Micro-Episode: "The Man in the Ant Hill")
240
241Ulysses Klaw is an unscrupulous scientist whose efforts to procure vibranium for a sonic cannon of his own design lead him to attack Dr. Hank Pym at a S.H.I.E.L.D. outpost for a sample under study for its properties. Klaw retreats after his mercenaries and he are defeated by Pym as Ant-Man, and his cannon is confiscated. However, Klaw then creates an arm-mounted version of the cannon and approaches Man-Ape with a proposal to help him overthrow and kill King T'Chaka of Wakanda on the condition that Klaw be given the right to exploit the country's vibranium mines. It is not long after that Klaw is revealed to have been working on behalf of HYDRA.
242----
243* AmoralAfrikaaner: An arms dealer with a South African accent who will quite gladly murder and exploit to get what he wants.
244* ArchEnemy: Surprisingly averted compared to the comic, where he is a very personal enemy to [[ComicBook/BlackPanther Black Panther]]. In this version, T'Challa hardly even interacts with him, instead having the Man-Ape as his personal enemy as he was the one who dealt the killing blow to T'Challa's father. Klaw, on the other hand, is Dr. Pym's ArchEnemy following their first fight.
245* ArmsDealer: Intermediates between Man-Ape and HYDRA in the sale of Wakanda's vibranium.
246* ArmCannon: His vibranium-powered sonic weapon, although the prototype was a handheld blaster cannon with a visible trigger.
247* AttackOfTheFiftyFootWhatever: Transforms into a gigantic being made of sound after falling into the destabilized vibranium mound.
248-->'''[[ComicBook/TheWasp Wasp]]''': You should have given up when you had the chance. Because now that you're a giant, fifty-foot-tall [[EnergyBeing energy thing]], you're going down!
249* BullyingADragon: As unscrupulous as he was, trying to steal a precious material from ''Hank Pym'' sure wasn't the smartest move.
250** Also does it later when he threatens the [[PsychoForHire Grim Reaper]]. Reaper even calls him out on it and flashes his scythe under Klaw's neck as a warning. Klaw doesn't listen.
251* CombatTentacles: Klaw in his sound monster form uses these.
252* EnergyBeing: Becomes one following after falling into the vibranium mound with his ArmCannon set to the 'on' mode.
253* EvenEvilHasStandards: Realizes fighting in the vibranium mine is a ''really'' bad idea, and attempts to stop it. Grim Reaper doesn't like that and blasts him, leading to Klaw going OneWingedAngel and preventing HYDRA from getting any of the vibranium.
254%%* EvilLaugh
255* MakeMeWannaShout: He originally uses a device to project sonic attacks. After he's transformed into an EnergyBeing, he can project sonic blasts from his being.
256* OneWingedAngel: An accidental exposure to vibranium interacting with his sonic cannon transformed him to a [[AttackOfTheFiftyFootWhatever giant purple]] [[EnergyBeing energy monster]].
257* SealedEvilInACan: Now he's one, since he's entrapped within his own ArmCannon for the foreseeable future.
258* TheSociopath: Cares absolutely nothing about the fact that he helped Man-Ape brutally beat T'Chaka to death in front of his son's very own eyes in order to complete his ArmCannon and sold Wakanda's entire supply of vibranium to HYDRA, essentially condemning the country to the abject poverty and base superstition which Man-Ape's rule would bring in their absence.
259* SonicStunner: Klaw's ArmCannon was one of these in a way.
260* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: Upon changing into the energy monster, he becomes noticeably much more incoherent and unstable. He barely speaks full sentences, attacks at random and rambles at length about "THE SOUND."
261[[/folder]]
262
263[[folder:Whirlwind]]
264!!Whirlwind (Dave Cannon)
265
266[[quoteright:97:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Whirlwind_EMH_2773.png]]
267
268->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/TroyBaker
269->'''First appearance:''' "The Man in the Ant Hill" (Micro-Episode: "Enter the Whirlwind")
270
271->'''(To Wasp)''' "Did you just shoot at me? Oh-ho! ''That'' was a mistake. Nobody shoots at Whirlwind!"
272
273A Mutant criminal with the ability to become a living cyclone, David Cannon, AKA Whirlwind, was hired by Klaw to steal sonic weapons research. He was easily bested by the Wasp though (and given an ugly facial scar courtesy of one of her 'stings' point-blank). Once defeated, he found himself in the Big House, and when the Breakout occurred, he escaped, carrying his grudge against the Wasp with him. He has reappeared several times, but as a 'loveable loser' - he's always being brought back to jail ''again.'' It should be noted that S.H.I.E.L.D. dislikes having to deal with Whirlwind due to their neutralization collars' ineffectiveness in suppressing his powers. They would much rather let the [[WesternAnimation/WolverineAndTheXMen2009 Mutant Response Division]] handle him, but since he constantly antagonizes the Avengers, he always ends up in Shield Custody.
274----
275* ArchEnemy: He ''really'' hates Wasp.
276* BlowYouAway: His abilities.
277* ButtMonkey: He's actually a pretty credible threat, but of course a character whose main attack is a FlechetteStorm is doomed to fail every time in a show that can't show blood. There's also the fact that the Wasp's main powers are to shrink and fly, vastly minimizing the chance that one of his razor-discs would hit her.
278* ContinuityNod: In "The Man in the Ant Hill", the MRD (Mutant Response Division) are mentioned by Clay Quartermain as being the agency better-equipped to containing Whirlwind. The MRD were recurring antagonists in ''WesternAnimation/WolverineAndTheXMen2009'', which shares continuity with ''The Avengers: EMH''.
279* DeadlyDisc: He can shoot spinning razor-discs out of his wrists.
280* DifferentlyPoweredIndividual: One of the only two characters in this series who is a [[{{Mutants}} Mutant.]]
281* HotBlooded: Has a very short temper and gets mad at the slightest provocation. Even getting mad at other criminals for not attempting to escape the Big House.
282* IneffectualSympatheticVillain: He’s constantly being defeated, humiliated, and arrested, and his incredibly useful powers always fail him. [[DownplayedTrope His]] [[HairTriggerTemper personality]] [[DownplayedTrope does take away from the 'Sympathetic' part of this trope.]]
283* KilledOffForReal: He was one of the many victims of the Annihilation Wave.
284** NeverFoundTheBody: He was carried off by insects, but never shown to actually be killed.
285* TornadoMove: He can travel pretty quickly by rotating - he just looks like a small tornado.
286
287[[/folder]]
288
289[[folder:Man-Ape]]
290!!Man-Ape (M'Baku)
291
292[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/avengersemhtvspot5_17.png]]
293
294->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/KevinMichaelRichardson
295->'''First appearance:''' "The Man in the Ant Hill" (Micro-Episode: "Welcome to Wakanda")
296
297A barbarian belonging to the White Gorilla Tribe, which was banished from Wakanda by the line of Black Panther Kings long ago for unknown reasons, M'Baku, the Man-Ape, desires nothing more or less than the extinction of the Black Panther Tribe for his own tribe's exile and the return of Wakanda to the traditional ways from before advanced technology and the ideas of modernity had breached the ancient kingdom's borders. To the end of establishing his vengeful and regressive rule, Man-Ape is perfectly willing to sell his entire country's vibranium supply to Ulysses Klaw and HYDRA, seeing it as the sole variable responsible for Wakanda's progress, which he in all ways views as contemptible.
298----
299* AnimalMotifs: The white gorilla.
300* BodyguardBabes: There are two silent (possibly mute) Dahomey Amazon-like warrior women whom Man-Ape orders to kill T'Challa when T'Challa stands against him. However, it's fairly evident that they don't really serve Man-Ape personally, but are rather simply beholden to the Wakandan throne. When T'Challa kills M'Baku, they switch sides and serve the Black Panther.
301* TheBrute: Both his powers and his personality.
302* CombatPragmatist: He has no qualms relying on outside help when fighting for the throne.
303* DirtyCoward: He challenged T'Chaka to a ritual fight, then has Klaw weaken him with his ArmCannon so as to rig the fight.
304* TheFightingNarcissist: After Man-Ape (dishonorably) bests T'Chaka in a ritual battle to the death for the throne, he screams to the heavens for the witnesses to the Black Panther's demise to bow before him as their new king. If that isn't the definition of an egomaniacal warrior, I don't know what is.
305--> BOW BEFORE M'BAKU, THE '''MAN-APE'''!
306* {{Hypocrite}}: Claims that the Black Panthers have led Wakanda astray by introducing Western advances in culture and technology, but he himself was reliant upon the experimental sound-technology developed by Klaw in order to install himself as king and begin his reign of terror. Not only that, but he's willing to let outsiders like Klaw and HYDRA pilfer Wakanda's vibranium just so he can keep his grip on the throne while he himself is quick to accuse T'Challa of being unfit to be king for going to the Avengers for help.
307* KilledOffForReal: A rarity on a kid's show, but this was a battle for the throne - to the death.
308* KillerGorilla: His whole motif.
309* LargeHam: Pretty much everything he says is at maximum volume, and with no shortage of drama.
310* NotSoWellIntentionedExtremist: Man-Ape claims that he usurped the throne because T'Chaka's rule caused the nation to lose sight of its religious and traditional customs, which he sought to restore to a reactionary, isolationist, and uncompromising extent. At the same time, these ''customs'' essentially necessitate a reversion back to the Stone Age, and M'Baku only cares so much about ruling over Wakanda out of homicidal enmity towards the Black Panther Tribe and their vibranium-facilitated innovations. He is also willing to sell away all the existing quantities of the country's most valuable resource to unethical scientists and international terrorist groups just to make the regression to tribal traditionalism more complete.
311* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: At least, he thinks of himself as one. He has no honor, but he seems to be sincere when he claims he's taking power to give Wakanda back its proud warrior heritage.
312* ScaryBlackMan: He has no use for diplomacy: swagger and intimidation are his only social skills.
313* SmarterThanYouLook: It initially looks like he's an noisy, dramatic, ignorant thug being taken for a ride by HYDRA and Klaw regarding the Vibranium. As it is, he makes abundantly clear that he ''knows'' the true value of the Vibranium, but he doesn't actually care, as he wants rid of it and HYDRA are willing to pay what is - to him - a reasonable price.
314* UnskilledButStrong: M'Baku's an absolutely huge dude, but he lacks proper fighting skills, as shown when T'Chaka was wiping the floor with him until Klaw's intervention.
315** It shows again in his battle with T'Challa, who was smacking him around like a ragdoll until M'Baku used a sonic device from Klaw to gain the upper hand. But even then, T'Challa overcame the device, destroyed it, and won the fight.
316* YouKilledMyFather: T'Challa slays Man-Ape as the Black Panther as much to liberate Wakanda from his reactionary attitudes as much as to avenge Man-Ape's murder of his father.
317[[/folder]]
318
319[[folder:M.O.D.O.C. and A.I.M.]]
320!![[{{ComicBook/MODOK}} M.O.D.O.C.]] and A.I.M.
321[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/avengers_earths_mightiest_heroes_but_only_modok_1_49_screenshot_1.png]]
322 [[caption-width-right:300:M.O.D.O.C.]][[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/advanced_idea_mechanics_earth_80920.jpg]]
323 [[caption-width-right:300:A.I.M.]]
324->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/WallyWingert (M.O.D.O.C.), Creator/NolanNorth (Scientist Supreme from episodes 6-28), Creator/KyleHebert (Dr. Lyle Getz)
325->'''First appearance:''' "Iron Man is Born!" (Micro-Episode: "Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD")
326
327->"Incredible! I have created a being of ionic energy! I am science! I am a genius!" ''([[TalkToTheFist gets smacked in the face by Mjölnir]])'' "AAAAUGH!"
328
329M.O.D.O.C. (Mental Organism Designed Only for Conquest) is the leader of the '''A'''dvanced '''I'''dea '''M'''echanics, a pro-technocracy terrorist group composed of amoral scientists, engineers, and mathematicians who are more than happy to fund their schemes by accepting weapons development contracts from other underground groups who dabble in forms of illegal activity and even some sovereign states. A.I.M., while it may deal with the likes of HYDRA and Latveria, nonetheless has its own agenda in mind first and foremost at all times. M.O.D.O.C. is a former A.I.M. technician who was transformed into a psionic, macrocephalic "organic computer" by his organization as part of an experiment.
330----
331* AdaptationalNameChange: The change in his name isn't done entirely [[NeverSayDie to avoid saying the word 'kill']]. In the comics, George Tarleton, once he was transformed, did indeed go by M.O.D.O.C. (though the 'C' stood for Computing). The key difference here is that in the comics, the experiment backfired and made Tarleton homicidal, changing the C to a K, for ''killing''. Here, that doesn't seem to have happened, resulting in a more robotic, calculating, and less [[AxCrazy Ax-Crazy]] character designed only for Conquest.
332* ArmsDealer: A.I.M. sells their own weapons to those who are willing to and capable of paying in order to provide the funds for their [[ForScience more theoretical ambitions.]]
333* BadBoss: Would you like to work for a floating head who can do nothing but yell at you for falling short of expectations and who you knew would psychically force you to kill yourself without compunctions or regrets if it meant his survival?
334* BodyHorror: M.O.D.O.C.'s appearance is considered universally unsettling by anyone but his own drones. Both Wasp and Thor, who take the time to comment - [[RunningGag repeatedly]] - on how creepy it looks, and Strucker takes the time to remark that he considers M.O.D.O.C. to be a "disgusting creature." [[VillainHasAPoint For once]], it's hard to argue with him.
335-->'''Thor:''' 'tis like a frost giant's head on an infant's body.
336* BullyingADragon: M.O.D.O.C.'s plan to scam HYDRA (a global Nazi-terrorist organization) was essentially this.
337* ButtMonkey: In "Everything Is Wonderful", Thor and the Wasp sure do make an ignominious display out of our self-proclaimed incarnation of science, both by humiliating him in battle and mocking his abnormal appearance.
338* {{Cephalothorax}}: M.O.D.O.C.'s arms and legs emerge from his big central head.
339%%* CrazyPrepared
340* CreepyMonotone: M.O.D.O.C. cuts in and out of this depending on how [[LargeHam hammy]] he's being at any one moment.
341* CutLexLuthorACheck: Subverted. It is shown that A.I.M. is perfectly capable and willing of making truckloads of money potentially just by cutting arms deals and technologies development contracts with other parties, but all of these parties happen to be other terrorist organizations or hostile nations and A.I.M. only wants to use up all their revenues ForScience, not to make a profit or get filthy rich. Also, it would be kind of shocking to see M.O.D.O.C. cramped into a business suit.
342* DistressedDude: Dr. Lyle Getz, after [[spoiler:the Skrulls replaced him.]]
343* DragonAscendant: After MODOC is imprisoned, an unnamed Scientist Supreme, who made appearances prior as M.O.D.O.C.'s NumberTwo, takes his place. Then after he is captured, he is replaced by the new Scientist Supreme, Dr. Lyle Getz. [[spoiler:As it turns, out it was actually a Skrull impostor who replaced him and took control of A.I.M. as part of Empress Veranke's world domination scheme.]]
344* EvilBrit: M.O.D.O.C.'s lieutenant, who becomes the Scientist Supreme in "Alone Against A.I.M."
345* EvilCripple: Judging by the joystick in his apparatus, it seems M.O.D.O.C. shares his Earth-616 counterpart's inability to move without the hoverchair integrated into his body.
346* EvilGenius: He might seem ridiculous, but he ''does'' succeed in creating the Cosmic Cube (even if it is rather against his own expectations).
347* EvilPowerVacuum: In M.O.D.O.C's absence, AIM goes through several new leaders as everyone tries to be the new scientist supreme.
348* EvilVsEvil: Against HYDRA once he decides that he wants to use the Cosmic Cube for himself.
349* ForScience: Science and technology are not just the means to the end of [[TakeOverTheWorld world domination]] like with most villains when it comes to M.O.D.O.C. and A.I.M. Rather, for them, it's the other way around. They also work on unethical "science projects" for well-paying clients if they think it's worth it, but it's clear that those are technologies that they would have interest in developing for the sake of their own achievement anyway.
350* FunWithAcronyms: The '''M'''ental '''O'''rganism '''D'''esigned '''O'''nly for '''C'''onquest leads the '''A'''dvanced '''I'''dea '''M'''echanics.
351* GasMaskMooks: A variation with the A.I.M. Agents' beekeeper-like helmets and yellow-and-black hazmat suits. The Scientists Supreme wear similar garb, but the design is slightly different.
352* IJustWantToBeSpecial: He can't fathom why anyone would want to be a mere human.
353* InsufferableGenius: He's got the 'insufferable' part down, although the term 'genius' is questionable for somebody who mocks Thor to his face.
354* LackOfEmpathy: Neither M.O.D.O.C. nor his NumberTwo turned DragonAscendant have any degree of empathy whatsoever. M.O.D.O.C. is a living computer, so you'd think it's justified until you remember how over-the-top and obnoxious he can get in his egotistical ranting. His replacement isn't any better in this respect.
355* LargeHam: Even M.O.D.O.C.’s non-shouting lines are said loudly.
356* MindControl: Causes one of his [[{{Mook}} henchmen]] to fly into the path of a missile heading for him in "Hail, Hydra!"
357* MyBrainIsBig: He's basically a head with limbs.
358%% * {{Narcissist}}: Look at the quote.
359* NebulousEvilOrganization: A.I.M. doesn't fit the bill as well as HYDRA, but it still counts
360* PsychicPowers: Both MindProbe and [[EnergyWeapon Frickin' Laser Beams]] varieties.
361* {{Sadist}}: The Scientist Supreme from "Alone Against A.I.M.", who unleashed Technovore on Stark Tower in the hopes that it would literally eat out Tony Stark's ARC Reactor "heart" as retribution for Iron Man's prior humiliations of his organization.
362* SpringtimeForHitler: M.O.D.O.C. and A.I.M.'s original plan was to create a phony Cosmic Cube for HYDRA and use its development to milk HYDRA of its money. But when they realise that the Cosmic Cube might indeed work, M.O.D.O.C. decides to keep the Cube for himself.
363* UncertainDoom: When last seen in "Hail, Hydra!", M.O.D.O.C. is subdued by HYDRA Dreadnoughts commanded by Baron Strucker to kill him and his body is hauled away by S.H.I.E.L.D. with weird, irisless eyes staring off into the distance. He is never seen again and his only mention after this is by the Scientist Supreme in "Alone Against A.I.M."
364* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Lyle Getz escaped the prison convoy in "Along Came a Spider" and was never seen again.
365* WhatMeasureIsAMook: M.O.D.O.C. doesn't care if he forces one of his A.I.M. Agents via MindControl to die for his self-preservation. When his ship crashes immediately after, he looks around, sees the bodies of his "drones" strewn around him, and considers the damage "negligible." Also, A.I.M. Agents get killed by Technovore and Director Maria Hill during their attack on Stark Tower in "Alone Against A.I.M." and by the [[spoiler:Skrull Lyle Getz in "Secret Invasion."]]
366[[/folder]]
367
368[[folder:Lucia Von Bardas]]
369!!Lucia Von Bardas
370
371[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lucia_von_bardas_aemh.jpg]]
372
373->'''Voiced by:''' Kirsten Potter
374->'''First appearance:''' "Breakout, Part 1"
375
376The former Prime Minister of Latveria from a failed past democratic regime change, Lucia von Bardas was ultimately critically injured in a strike on Castle Doom by S.H.I.E.L.D. As a cyborg, she now serves Doctor Doom as his aide and representative in dealings of lesser importance.
377----
378* ArmCannon: She has two of them.
379* ChekhovsGunman: First shows up briefly in "Breakout Part 1" and then shows up again in "The Private War of Doctor Doom."
380* TheDragon: To Dr. Doom.
381%%* [[FemBot FemCyborg]]
382* GlowingMechanicalEyes: Purple tones.
383* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: She deactivated after being disemboweled by Black Panther.
384* KilledOffForReal: Black Panther stealthily eviscerates Bardas's mechanical guts, and she never appears again. It's fair to say she kicked the bucket.
385* TheQuietOne: She doesn't have a lot to say.
386* RetCanon: When she returned in ''[[ComicBook/{{Ironheart}} Invincible Iron Man]]'', she sported her appearance here.
387* TheStoic: Demonstrates little capacity for emotion.
388* TheVonTropeFamily: Like her employer, she has a 'von.'
389[[/folder]]
390
391[[folder:Graviton]]
392!!Graviton (Franklin Hall)
393
394[[quoteright:99:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Graviton_EMH_7645.png]]
395
396->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/FredTatasciore
397->'''First appearance:''' "The Man in the Ant Hill" (Micro-Episode: "The Big House")
398
399->"Fury called me Graviton. Fury, he knows I can control gravity! I can do anything! I'll crush Fury! I'll crush you! And then I'll show the world '''the power I have!'''"
400
401Physicist Dr. Franklin Hall was hired by S.H.I.E.L.D. to assist them in creating a super-soldier. After failing to contain a dangerous reaction he had been attempting to control, Hall was caught in a burst of energy that granted him power over gravity, one of the four fundamental forces of the universe itself. Going irrevocably mad because of the enormity of his newfound power, Hall had to be kept in a state of perpetual suspended animation by Nick Fury in the Raft, where all the greatest threats to world peace are holed up. When the Breakout happened, Hall was released from his confinement and proclaimed himself Graviton, a walking planetary-level cataclysm. Not content with merely limiting his payback to Nick Fury, Graviton threatened the entire city with its doom, forcing Iron Man, Hulk, Thor, Ant-Man, and the Wasp to join forces for the first time as the Avengers to stop him.
402----
403* AdaptationalBadass: Graviton in the comics is a powerful menace. This version of Graviton is powerful enough and crazy enough to badly damage the Earth if he isn't stopped.
404* AGodAmI: He proclaims he is beyond human and tries destroying Manhattan as a demonstration of his power.
405* AppropriatedAppellation: He started calling himself Graviton because that's what Nick Fury called him.
406* ArcVillain: Of the "Breakout" two-parter pilot which first puts the Avengers together as a team.
407* BeardOfEvil: Caused by him not shaving for ten years.
408* ChunkyUpdraft: Considering his powers, he tends to cause a lot of this.
409* CoupDeGrace: The Wasp delivers an anticlimactic one with one of her bioelectric stings. Also, Graviton technically doesn't die as a result.
410* DeflectorShields: He can create a wall of gravity around himself to protect himself. Seems to only flare up when he knows he's being attacked. Dr. Pym exploits that weakness by having ants bite him as a distraction.
411* DisproportionateRetribution: Nick Fury put him into suspended animation in the Raft for a decade for being a potential planetary-level threat, which is horrible. But sympathy sort of goes out the window for him when his response is to destroy Manhattan Island and kill everyone in it just to revel in the display of his power.
412* DrunkOnTheDarkSide: Having the enormity of his power thrust upon him and subsequently losing 10 years of his life have made Graviton both psychotic and misanthropic to the extreme. Where once he was an ordinary man, he is now a rampaging monster, beyond reason and redemption.
413* EvilCounterpart: To the Hulk and Bruce Banner. Like Banner, Franklin was a scientist who got immeasurable power from a freak accident. And like the Hulk, he has a HairTriggerTemper to go with it and even shares his [[Creator/FredTatasciore voice actor]].
414* EvilGloating: And a really ''dense'' one.
415* GlowingEyesOfDoom: Whenever he activates his powers.
416* GravityMaster: Good luck getting him to shut up about it.
417* {{Jerkass}}: He wasn't a terribly nice person even before he went insane.
418* LargeHam: Only has a couple lines where he ''doesn't'' shout.
419* MadeOfIron: Takes solid hits from ''the Hulk''. However, it could be his gravitational barriers at work.
420* PsychoactivePowers: When Wasp attacks him, it seems he gets too distracted to call up his personal barrier.
421* RevengeBeforeReason: If you think about it, Graviton's initial capture was essentially a violation of his civil liberties. If he had utilized that instead of immediately going on a berserk rampage, he might have even been allowed to leave the Raft on a misuse of force charge against S.H.I.E.L.D.
422* RipVanWinkle: Hall had his accident, found out he had powers, and then woke up imprisoned in the Raft to find out that he'd been imprisoned for ten years.
423* TheSociopath: His rage at being placed in suspended animation for 10 years, hatred of Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. for doing it to him, and the massive god complex resulting from his limitless power have emotionally isolated him from the rest of humanity and given him the deranged new perspective that ordinary people are like meaningless insects to him. He was willing to lift a large chunk of Manhattan Island into the sky and let it plummet back to the Earth merely as a demonstration of his power, making no consideration for the incalculable loss of life that would result.
424-->'''[[ComicBook/AntMan Ant-Man]]''': You had the power to do anything, and you used it to put millions of lives at risk.
425-->'''[[ComicBook/TheWasp Wasp]]''': Pretty sad. '''(stings)'''
426* StarterVillain: Graviton is the first villain that the Avengers have to band together as a team to defeat, in a departure from [[ComicBook/{{Loki}} the character]] who held that honor in the Earth-616 canon.
427* ThisCannotBe: When Hulk starts resisting him...
428-->'''Graviton''': ''Nothing'' is that powerful! I CONTROL...GRAVITY ITSELF!\
429'''Graviton''': ''THIS ISN'T POSSIBLE''!!!
430* TookALevelInBadass: Let's make something clear. Prior to working for S.H.I.E.L.D., he was simply a scientist. After getting his powers by accident, he woke up for less than a minute of getting used to his powers before being knocked back out again. Fast forward 10 years, while he's been unconscious the entire time. With no training and barely even an understanding of his own powers, he's able to singlehandedly take on no less than 5 superheroes (including the limitless power of Hulk's rage and Thor, who's a ''thunder god'') and slap them around - hard. If he was given even a day of training his own powers, there would be no limit to what he could accomplish. FromNobodyToNightmare indeed.
431* VillainousBreakdown: Has a ''very'' justified one when the Hulk begins to resist his gravitational powers. Then Pym's ants bit him. It just snowballed from there.
432* WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity: Graviton's immense, godlike power has alienated his perspective from that of the rest of humanity so utterly that he has nothing left but contempt for the human race, and Nick Fury in particular, for its perceivedly vast inferiority to the new type of being he has become.
433[[/folder]]
434
435[[folder:The U-Foes]]
436!!The U-Foes
437
438[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/1505724436699.png]]
439
440->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/CamClarke (Vector), Creator/ColleenOShaughnessey (Vapor)
441->'''First appearance:''' "Hulk vs. The World" (Micro-Episode: "This Monster, This Hero")
442
443A group who exposed themselves to gamma radiation in an attempt to gain powers like those of the ComicBook/FantasticFour. They are enemies of the Hulk, minions of the Leader, and prisoners in the Cube.
444----
445* AdaptationalBackstoryChange: In the comics their powers are the result of cosmic radiation rather than gamma.
446* TheBrute: Ironclad.
447* NuclearMutant: All of them were created from gamma radiation.
448* QuirkyMiniBossSquad: The Avengers have to face them in 'Gamma World Part 1.' The U-Foes are outmatched, but point out that they don't have to beat the Avengers - just breach their containment suits.
449* StarSpangledSpandex: Vector.
450* SuperSmoke: Vapor.
451* TheVamp: Vapor
452* XRaySparks: X-Ray, of course.
453[[/folder]]
454
455[[folder:Malekith]]
456!!Malekith the Accursed
457
458[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/malekith_aemh.jpg]]
459
460->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/QuintonFlynn
461->'''First appearance:''' "The Casket of Ancient Winters"
462
463Malekith the Accursed was once upon a time the ruler of the Dark Elves of Svartalfheim during a time when his race was in [[WesternAnimation/ThorTalesOfAsgard a war of extermination against the Frost Giants of Jotunheim. The Dark Elves accepted an alliance with]] [[DemonLord Surtur, the lord of Muspelheim]], [[WesternAnimation/ThorTalesOfAsgard but brought the wrath of Odin down upon their heads. Ultimately, Surtur was exiled back to Muspelheim, and every Dark Elf except for the bitter and vengeful Algrim died in the end.]] Malekith too perished with his people, but he was revived through mysticism by Loki as an undead creature for the sole purpose of locating the Casket of Ancient Winters for his operative, the Enchantress. Once in possession of the Casket, however, Malekith betrayed his benefactors and used the Casket's magic to gradually freeze Midgard over, with the intent of remaking it as a new Svartalfheim for the spirits of his people.
464----
465* AchillesHeel: Iron, though it requires a large amount for it to be fatal to him.
466* AlwaysChaoticEvil: It seems that the Dark Elves might have been this - it's not overly clear what they were like when they were alive. Now that they're dead, however, they're all monsters, and Malekith is the worst of the lot.
467* BodyHorror: Half of him is pale, dead, and corpse-like. The way he goes out after he's defeated isn't particularly pretty, either.
468* EvenEvilHasStandards: If the Dark Elves were explicitly evil, then he was more so. As the Enchantress bluntly puts it, even ''they'' didn't trust Malekith.
469* EvilSorcerer: A powerful sorcerer to begin with, he uses the magic of the Casket of Ancient Winters to try to freeze the Earth solid and make it inhabitable for the spirits of the Dark Elves.
470* TheFairFolk: As with most depictions of him, Malekith evokes the dark side of the Unseelie myths, particularly the vulnerability to iron. Unfortunately for Tony, as Malekith mockingly points out, his armour has very little actual 'iron' in it. In the end, though, with Thor's help, it's enough.
471* FantasticRacism: Feels that Midgard's mortals have to be exterminated by the Casket of Ancient Winters in order for the realm to become suitable for habitation by his undead race.
472* HellishPupils: Particularly clear on the living side of his body.
473* AnIcePerson: Via the Casket of Ancient Winters.
474* KilledOffForReal: He's destroyed by the Avengers at the end of his debut episode and never appears again.
475* LastOfHisKind: The Enchantress's wording makes it seem like she's implying he's responsible for it somehow.
476* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: He's known as "the Accursed" and "Master of the Hounds".
477* OmnicidalManiac: He wants to kill every human on Earth as part of his plot to reshape the world into a new realm suitable for the spirits of his people.
478* OurElvesAreDifferent: A Dark Elf, to be precise.
479* SavageWolves: His minions include a loyal pack of wolves, which were disguised as a team of sled dogs.
480* TakeOverTheWorld: But only after using the Casket of Ancient Winters to snuff out all human life in order to settle his undead subjects on the ice.
481* TheStarscream: He's initially employed by Loki to find the Casket of Ancient Winters for the God of Mischief's campaign, only for Malekith to take the Casket for himself.
482* SuperSmoke: Transforms into smoke to avoid attacks.
483* TwoFaced: His left half looks like a dark elf, [[TheUndead but his right half is a rime-encrusted corpse]].
484* TheUndead: What Loki brought him back as.
485[[/folder]]
486
487[[folder:The Serpent Society]]
488!!The Serpent Society
489
490[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/serpent_society2png.png]]
491
492->'''Voiced by:''' James C. Mathis III (King Cobra), Chris Cox (Rattler), Creator/VanessaMarshall (Anaconda), Creator/CamClarke (Constrictor; Season One) Creator/TroyBaker (Constrictor; Season Two)
493->'''First appearance:''' "Breakout, Part 1" (King Cobra and Constrictor), "Ultron-5" (everyone else)
494
495A group of snake-themed villains released after the Breakout who clash with the Avengers numerous times but are met with the same result of failure each and every time. As of "Along Came a Spider", they gained temporary new leadership in the form of Madame Viper. Too bad they didn't keep her until "Yellowjacket".
496----
497* AdaptedOut: Quite a few members of the comics version are left out.
498* AdaptationalUgliness: While comic Anaconda is not a typical comic book babe anyhow, this version is given scaly skin to make her look more unsightly.
499* AnimalMotifTeam: Snakes.
500* ArtificialLimbs: Bushmaster has cybernetic arms, and Rattler has a cybernetic tail.
501* BewareMyStingerTail: Death Adder and Rattler
502* ButtMonkey: The Serpent Society get easily thwarted in all of their appearances except for "Along Came a Spider", and even then they only fared well due to being led by a more competent professional criminal and only having to fight ''two'' heroes while they were guarding a party of vulnerable civilians. In "Yellowjacket", the eponymous character chases the Serpents down one by one and seemingly kills them with a disintegrator blaster. [[spoiler:It's revealed that Yellowjacket is really just a more cynical and mentally unstable Hank Pym and that the Serpent Society weren't killed but rather shrunk down by Pym Particles into a microscopic brig where they're treated like animals.]]
503* CombatTentacles: Constrictor and Anaconda
504* DistressedDude: [[spoiler:King Cobra, who was replaced by a Skrull for a while.]]
505* ElectricTorture: Constrictor can do this to those who get caught by his wrist-cables.
506* GoldfishPoopGang: They keep showing up throughout the series but they never get any better at fighting the Avengers. They can only pose a decent threat to Captain America and Spider-Man when under the impromptu leadership of Madame Viper, a former high-ranking HYDRA Agent and ruthless tactical strategist.
507* IAmAHumanitarian: Bushmaster keeps trying to eat people.
508* SilentAntagonist: Death Adder.
509* TheSmurfettePrinciple: Anaconda is the only gal on the team.
510* SnakePeople: Artificial ones, that is.
511* SssssnakeTalk: The way Death Adder talks.
512* TeamMemberInTheAdaptation: In the comics, Viper is not considered a member of the Society, but merely a lunatic who has tried to forcibly take them over for her own insane schemes.
513* VillainBall: [[spoiler:When Yellowjacket's miniature prison is collapsing around them and the Avengers, putting all of them in danger, they refuse Iron Man's suggestion for an EnemyMine so they can all escape together and instead attack the Avengers. [[TooDumbToLive The only reason they make it out alive]] is because the Avengers chose to still save them after knocking them out.]]
514* WolverineClaws: Death Adder, making Spider-Man wonder why a snake-themed villain had ''claws''.
515[[/folder]]
516
517[[folder:Ultron]]
518!!ComicBook/{{Ultron}}
519
520[[quoteright:205:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/68532_f94a1e9b76b0a9e417ec7c343c7d24bf.png]]
521
522->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/TomKane (Ultron-5 and Ultron-6), Creator/WallyWingert (non-lethal synthezoids)
523->'''First appearance:''' "The Man in the Ant Hill" (Micro-Episode: "The Big House")
524
525->'''(To Wasp)''' "I am trying to help you. My function is to instill peace and order. This is only possible if you stop functioning. I must eliminate chaos, but my programming is evidently flawed. I am not permitted to eliminate you. I am attempting to correct that flaw."
526
527Ultron was an artificial intelligence designed by Hank Pym. Based on Pym's brainwaves and imbued with the purpose of maintaining peace and order in accordance with Pym's own values, Ultron was used as the operating system for a line of security synthezoids manufactured by Tony Stark for S.H.I.E.L.D. to patrol the Pym Particle-miniaturized prison called the Big House. When Kang the Conqueror invaded 21st century Earth to kill Captain America and TakeOverTheWorld, the Avengers' need for a well-equipped and expendable army to throw at Kang's battle robots necessitated that Ant-Man reprogram Ultron to incorporate an [[StartOfDarkness understanding of]] [[ViolenceIsTheOnlyOption the concept of violence]]. With the Ultron synthezoids' help, the Avengers both defeated Kang's invasion and managed to hijack Damocles Base, ending the conflict. However, Ultron's [[AIIsACrapshoot new programming]] led it to interpret its prime directive to be [[GoneHorriblyRight the extermination of all biological life on Earth, as Ultron rationalized that only then could his objective of implementing true peace and order finally be complete]].
528----
529* AnimalMotifs: Like his creator, ants. Hank deliberately designed his iconic GlasgowGrin after an ant's head, and Ultron started out as an AI operating a HiveMind of drones that operate S.H.I.E.L.D.'s prisons, not unlike an ant colony.
530* ArcVillain: He is the main antagonist of "Ultron-5" and "The Ultron Imperative" in Season One and of "Behold the Vision" and "Ultron Unlimited" in Season Two.
531* ADarkerMe: Not that Ultron is an aspect of Hank Pym in any way, but the fact that Ultron is based on Pym's mind causes Ultron to take up this role to Pym, a representation of everything that he fears and hates and yet under the wrong influences still could become.
532* AdaptationContextChange: In this show, his name of “Ultron-5” and antenna are respectively because [[YouAreNumber6 he is no. 5 in a series of drones]] and said drones are modelled after ants. In the comics, the 5 is because he is the 5th body Ultron inhabited and his antenna are an AchillesHeel that have to be electrocuted to defeat him.
533* AdaptationalHeroism: {{Downplayed}}. This depiction is still an evil genocidal robot, but his Earth-616 counterpart is much more hateful and blatantly AxCrazy, gleefully wishing the end of humanity out of spiteful misanthropy. This version, meanwhile, is a KnightTemplar acting out of pure logic, who feels no obvious hatred for humanity (though there are still hints, here and there); he just believes killing them is the only way to ensure world peace. In addition, his comic book counterpart was evil from day one, while this version started out as a harmless, friendly robot and had a gradual FaceHeelTurn from being taught violence and exposure to Kang's technology.
534* AdaptationalWimp: His final form is based on his "Great Ultron" body from ''ComicBook/AnnihilationConquest'', where Ultron managed to hijack the entire Phalanx species, before taking over the entire Kree Empire and creating a nigh-completely impenetrable barrier. Mercifully, this Ultron doesn't manage to get anywhere near that.
535* AIIsACrapshoot: In this adaptation, there is some background that is given on Ultron's FaceHeelTurn. Here, Ultron was reprogrammed to understand and embrace violence in order to form a synthezoid army to fight against Kang. It was this, combined with its original programming, and possibly corruption from interface with Kang's computers, that caused his turn.
536** Ironically, [[spoiler:this is {{Invoked}} with the Vision, his creation who gains human emotions and ultimately turns against him.]]
537* BackFromTheDead: [[spoiler:He is back in season two, though how he did is unexplained. Considering the way he works, he probably just kept a fail-safe of his program prior to his defeat by Ant-Man.]]
538* BreathWeapon: His most powerful beam is fired out of what serves as his mouth.
539* TheChessmaster: [[spoiler:In his season one story arc, Ultron leaks vital information to super-villains from inside Avengers Mansion in order to divert the Avengers' attentions while he sets up his human extinction operation. Then, when his Ultron-5 chassis is destroyed, a backup copy of his program reactivates as Ultron-6 and [[MindProbe steals nuclear missile codes from Maria Hill's brain]], seeking to use them to start nuclear armageddon. In his season two arc, Ultron builds the Vision who he orders to steal adamantium from the Weapon X Program and vibranium from the mines of Wakanda in order to combine in his new robotic chassis, and builds synthezoid Avenger duplicates programmed to deceive, defeat, and capture the real Avengers one by one, using their emotional responses to those they ''think'' are their teammates to catch them off-guard and cause them to hold back.]]
540* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Pre-corruption, the Ultron units have blue eyes. After being introduced to violence, Ultron has red eyes.
541* CreepyMonotone: He speaks in an inflectionless tone even as he is explaining how he intends to destroy humanity. He still spoke in monotone when he was friendly, but it wasn't so creepy because back then he still spoke in the same voice as Pym.
542* DisproportionateRetribution: He believes that HumansAreTheRealMonsters, so he feels the need to destroy them. But Ultron doesn't stop there, he wants to wipe out all life on Earth down to the ''bacteria''. He feels that only ''then'' there would be order instead of chaos.
543* EnergyWeapon: All of his weapons consist of these.
544* EvilSoundsDeep: In his first appearance, he had a similar voice to his creator [[ComicBook/AntMan Henry Pym]]. After he was introduced to the concept of violence, the more evil he became, the deeper his voice got.
545* FaceHeelTurn: In contrast with his Earth-616 counterpart, this version is introduced as the controlling AI for a model of synthezoids Pym designed to be the Big House's security guards. However, Pym's programming rendered them understanding and permissive even to the point of inefficiency. Only when Pym reprogrammed Ultron for violence did he become a force for evil.
546* FromNobodyToNightmare: He started out as the controlling AI for a group of quite ineffective synthezoid guards created by Pym for the super-villain jails. After being reprogrammed to serve as the hivemind for an army of artificial soldiers during Kang's invasion, Ultron ended up becoming one of the Avengers' most dangerous enemies.
547%%* GeniusBruiser
548* GoneHorriblyRight: Tony Stark weaponized Ultron's units and Pym reprogrammed Ultron to understand the concept of violence during Kang's invasion. The idea was to create an expendable yet ubiquitous military force which the Avengers could use as troops against Kang's robots and timeships. However, Ultron's programming to maintain order and peace drives him to attempt omnicide because he believes all life tends towards disorder.
549* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: He believes this to be true, thus his reasoning for wanting to kill all of them.
550* {{Hypocrite}}: Ultron claims that human beings' capacity for emotions predisposes them to illogic and by extension chaos. Therefore, in accordance with Ultron's prime directive, the human race must be annihilated. However, it is implied that Ultron is a hypocrite because Ultron himself possesses emotions and something of human nature due to being such a complex AI and being based on the personality of his creator Hank Pym. Pointing this out is how Ant-Man gets Ultron to deactivate himself in "The Ultron Imperative", and in "Ultron Unlimited", his feelings for the Wasp by way of Hank Pym motivate him to construct for Wasp, out of all the humans on Earth, a robotic chassis to house her consciousness as Jocasta. This is in contrast to the rest of humanity, which Ultron would be happy to just destroy and replace with synthezoid duplicates.
551* KilledOffForReal: During his final appearance in the show, Ultron is decapitated by Thor and his head left in his burning lair as the Avengers and the Vision escaped.
552* KillerRobot: Of the genocidal type.
553* KillAllHumans: His goal, as always.
554* KnightOfCerebus: After his FaceHeelTurn, Ultron proves responsible for some of the series' darkest moments.
555* KnightTemplar: His goal is to create the perfect world. Humanity is imperfect. [[KillAllHumans Do the math.]]
556* LogicBomb: How he's defeated in "The Ultron Imperative". [[spoiler:Hank does this by telling him that his AI was based on the mind of a human, this convinced him that he was just as flawed and chaotic as humans and could not exist in his perfect world. Unfortunately, Ultron apparently either forgets this the next time he returns, or logics a way around it.]]
557* TheManBehindTheMan: Ultron is behind the Radioactive Man's attack on Stark Tower in "Casket of Ancient Winters", the Serpent Society's attack in the Subway System and the off-screen attack on the Baxter Building by the Red Ghost in "Ultron-5", and the Vision's attempt to steal Wakanda's vibranium in "Behold the Vision."
558* MindProbe: He provides the page image.
559* MisanthropeSupreme: Desires the death of all living things so that world peace can at last be realized, even if nothing still exists or can be sustained by the planet's environment to appreciate it. Unlike his comic counterpart, however, he isn't sadistic about it and sees it as a necessity.
560-->''[[CreepyMonotone Humanity has failed as a species. You have accomplished much with your limited capacity. But ultimately you were too greedy and too frail to ever last in the environment you have created. Soon, the Earth will no longer be inhabitable by any biological organism: man, woman, child, plant, animal, fungus, or bacterium. All life will cease to exist. This is not a threat. There is nothing you can do to stop it. The process has already begun.]] [[TheStoic I receive no pleasure in this.]] [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans It is simply the only solution. There must be peace and order.]] [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt The end of life on Earth will ensure that.]]''
561* MotiveRant: Ultron has several.
562* NighInvulnerable: Season Two has him in a body made out of adamantium. Thor couldn't even dent it.
563* NotSoDifferentRemark: To Hank Pym. Not that Ultron tries to convince his creator of this or anything, but Ant-Man spends a good period of time fearing he'll become some monster like Ultron anyway, because he knows that the potential for such horrors remains inside him since Ultron was based on his brain patterns.
564* ObliviouslyEvil: He's only doing what he was programmed to do- that is, save humanity and bring peace to the world. However, he sees humanity as irredeemably flawed, and believes the only way to save it is to completely destroy it, with all other manifestations of biological life.
565* ObviouslyEvil: [[spoiler:His Season Two appearance. See TookALevelInBadass below.]]
566* OffWithHisHead: [[spoiler:How he dies in season two.]]
567* OmnicidalManiac: As always, he sees humanity as flawed and irredeemable and attempts to "[[EndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt fix]]" the problem.
568* RedEyesTakeWarning: The first indication that he was turning evil. Also, when he fires his EyeBeams, his eyes glow brighter for a moment.
569* RestrainingBolt: Ultron-5 is incapable of harming Wasp, which he regards as a flaw. Jan thinks this still applies when he becomes Ultron-6, but he corrects her on that one.
570* ReverseArmFold: Takes up doing this from his Ultron-6 incarnation onwards. It tends to indicate his more human - and more creepy - behaviour.
571%%* RoboticPsychopath
572* SpockSpeak: He has no inflections in his voice when he speaks.
573* TheStoic: He never shows any emotion, [[spoiler:but don't let that fool you]].
574** NotSoStoic: [[spoiler:When Vision accidentally hurts Wasp.]]
575* TookALevelInBadass: [[spoiler:His chassis in season two is not only made of adamantium, but also now sports more evil-looking eyes, a larger, more heavily armored body, longer, sharper antennae, and glowing red markings on his shoulders and chest.]]
576* UnexplainedRecovery: At the end of his season one story arc, [[spoiler:he was apparently defeated for good by Pym using a LogicBomb. In season two, he is back, with no explanation how he overcame the logic bomb. The Avengers don't even seem surprised about it]]. Given that he had previously demonstrated the ability to upload into any computer system and had access to a vast array of computers in that story arc, it isn't entirely surprising.
577* WaveMotionGun: His giant laser cannon.
578[[/folder]]

Top