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7[-[[caption-width-right:350:Peridot's villainy isn't the only thing that's gone down the can.]]-]
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12->'''Sideshow Bob:''' ''Hello, Bart...''\
13'''Bart:''' Oh, it's you, Bob. How' ya doin'?\
14'''Sideshow Bob:''' No screams? ... Not even... an "eep"?\
15'''Bart:''' Hey, I'm not afraid of you. Every time we tangle you wind up in jail!
16-->-- ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS12E13DayOfTheJackanapes Day of the Jackanapes]]"
17
18The process by which a villain who is extremely scary on first appearance becomes a joke after a few more appearances.
19
20In most shows, FailureIsTheOnlyOption [[TheGoodGuysAlwaysWin for the]] {{Villains}}, because [[TheBadGuyWins success]] would mean that the villains TakeOverTheWorld, kill or imprison all the good guys, and otherwise do things that [[EvilOnlyHasToWinOnce make future episodes impossible]]. However, this eventually results in a ForegoneConclusion and a predictable plot, since it makes the audience wonder why TheHero is so concerned about an enemy that they've beaten six times already. Note that this does not apply to shows where the villains are supposed to be [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain incompetent jokes]] from the start.
21
22Most writers will try to stop this decline in menace, which sometimes helps and sometimes makes the Villain Decay worse, but the fastest way to decay a villain is to [[HeelFaceTurn make him switch sides]].
23
24Of course, you can prevent this by ''not'' having [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption failure be the only option]] for the villain; let them win battles, but not the war, or let their EvilPlan [[YouCantThwartStageOne come closer and closer to completion while the heroes race to prevent its final success]]. Another alternative is for there to be more than one villain in an evil organization with [[ConservationOfCompetence different levels of competence]] or [[VileVillainLaughableLackey seriousness]], with a boss who the audience can take seriously even if his minions lose repeatedly. Or, for the ''really'' cunning villain, [[UnwittingPawn dupe the heroes into doing what they wanted all along]] or [[XanatosGambit benefit from them foiling the plan.]] Subsequent writers may decide to make the villain NotSoHarmless with a particularly shocking move on their part. Or you can make them a DiscOneFinalBoss, and set up somebody who is far more evil and hasn't decayed yet.
25
26This tends to happen as a result of the following process:
27
28# An old or well-known series (particularly science fiction) has a famous signature villain that the fanbase loves.
29# The hero beats said villain(s) in their traditional form several times.
30# The writers become worried that fans will get bored with the villains unless they give said villains new strategies, or new forms of attack to use against the hero.
31# As a result, a steadily larger amount of knowledge about the villains becomes accumulated, which violates the NothingIsScarier rule. Villains are much more intimidating if we hardly know anything about them, and they come across as just being single-minded forces of nature with no real motivation other than [[ForTheEvulz to destroy things for the sake of it]]. Once writers start psychoanalyzing them and giving them definite reasons for what they do, they lose their menace.
32
33Villains who have gone through this process usually have three possible outcomes.
34
35# They can begin the transition to AntiHero or VillainProtagonist, as did ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}''[='s=] Orcs, and ''Franchise/StarTrek''[='s=] Borg ultimately did in isolated examples.
36# They can become a ButtMonkey or source of cheap comedy.
37# They can be [[PutOnABus retired from use completely]].
38
39Note that Villain Decay is almost never caused by a lack of OffscreenVillainDarkMatter, a difficulty in recruiting {{Mooks}}, or even injuries from battle with the heroes -- which is to say, they don't become worse off because they have ''lost''. Also note that a VillainousBreakdown is not a guarantee of Villain Decay. Decay will only happen quicker if their entire VillainPedigree is replaced. If you have an InvincibleHero - especially one who shouldn't be capable of winning [[InvincibleIncompetent but somehow always wins anyway]] – Villain Decay is almost assured, even for characters who haven't fought yet. Tends to be particularly hard to avoid for villains who manage to survive the heroes' climb up the SortingAlgorithmOfEvil.
40
41If the heroes are dealing with an entire villianous race, they can often become victim of ConservationOfNinjutsu: one such individual can be perceived as a dire threat, but when a hundred of them show up they often prove to be easily overcome.
42
43See also BadassDecay, IneffectualSympatheticVillain, GoldfishPoopGang, HarmlessVillain, MonsterThreatExpiration, MotiveDecay, and VileVillainLaughableLackey.
44
45Contrast VillainSue, InvincibleVillain, and OnlyTheAuthorCanSaveThemNow, where a villain is '''too''' effective or scary. Believe it or not, those tropes suck the tension out of the villains even worse than this one. Also contrast AdaptationalVillainy, where a relatively non-villainous character in a work becomes dramatically more villainous in an adaptation, and VillainForgotToLevelGrind, where the villain never becomes any ''less'' formidable, but the hero becomes so much ''more'' powerful over time that a once threatening villain is no longer a problem.
46
47Compare and contrast FailureHero. Same concept - repeated failures [[InformedAbility ruins their credibility]] - different role.
48
49See also DegradedBoss. Not to be confused with RedemptionDemotion, where the villain's strength decays because of their HeelFaceTurn. Not related to VillainousEthicsDecay.
50
51[[noreallife]]
52----
53!!Example subpages:
54
55[[index]]
56* VillainDecay/AnimeAndManga
57* VillainDecay/ComicBooks
58* VillainDecay/{{Film}}
59* VillainDecay/{{Literature}}
60* VillainDecay/LiveActionTV
61* VillainDecay/ProfessionalWrestling
62* VillainDecay/VideoGames
63* VillainDecay/{{Webcomics}}
64* VillainDecay/WesternAnimation
65[[/index]]
66
67!!Other examples:
68
69[[foldercontrol]]
70
71[[folder:Fan Works]]
72* ''Fanfic/{{Contraptionology}}'': The Nightmare, once a genocidal threat to Equestria, is reducing to trying to convince foals to let her possess them; Nightmare Scoot is a far cry from her glory days, and the main characters treat dealing with her constant reemergence as simply a tedious chore. [[spoiler:She recovers most of her dignity in the story.]]
73* ''Fanfic/DungeonKeeperAmi'': Mukrezar. Mukrezar is, and was, a Keeper of dubious competence, given to many Zany schemes (usually involving a RingOfPower). However, [[spoiler:since his resurrection]] he has shown such an assessment is significantly lacking. Apparently his resourcefulness, ability to bounce back from crushing defeat, and, most importantly, willingness to take incredible chances- and then ''turn them into victories even if they failed'' -was his greatest asset. Every appearance has only increased the estimation of his threat, despite being PluckyComicRelief.
74* In the beginning of ''Fanfic/SnowAngels'', Disaster is introduced as an [[PhysicalGod almighty being]] capable of [[EldritchAbomination driving people to madness just by seeing it]]. For a short while the heroes (who include a {{time travel}}er and SufficientlyAdvancedAlien) actually have trouble fighting Disaster, but by the end of the first arc, Disaster has decayed so much that it's beaten up by perfectly-mundane schoolgirls. Ironically, Disaster is the same entity as [[spoiler:Sasaki]], so she actually received an upgrade before the decay.
75* ''Fanfic/MyBravePonyStarfleetMagic'':
76** [[spoiler:Discord, god of chaos and in general considered one of the best characters in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'', is reduced to a brainwashed monster henchman of BigBad Titan near the end of the story and loses his reality warping abilities. To add insult to injury, he gets KilledOffForReal by Celestia.]]
77** [[spoiler:The sequel also does this to Queen Chrysalis.]]
78* ''Literature/HarryPotter'' has Voldemort, who suffers a severe case of this in Fanfic/TheArianaBlackSeries. In canon, he's practically a personification of [[NightmareFuel/HarryPotter Nightmare Fuel]]. In the fanfic, he's just an incompetent mustache-twirler.
79* [[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/3955187/1/Fading "Fading"]] actually explains Goldar's decay in ''Series/MightyMorphinPowerRangers''; he was dying of a rare disease that slowly crippled his combat skills, and he never told anyone because his culture considered it shameful to share details of their health.
80* Subverted in ''[[FanFic/UltimateSleepwalker Ultimate Sleepwalker: The New Dreams]]'' or ''[[FanFic/UltimateSpiderWoman Ultimate Spider-Woman: Change With The Light]]''. Given that the SortingAlgorithmOfEvil does '''NOT''' apply in these series, and the heroes do not gain any new powersets or power boosts over the course of the series, villains who were introduced early on have remained constantly and deadly threats throughout both series' runs. In fact, the author has specifically gone out of his way to ensure that this trope is subverted by allowing villains who look like they might suffer from this trope to [[TheBadGuyWins actually succeed in their evil plots.]]
81* ''FanFic/YoungJusticeDarknessFalls'': Depending on what you might think about The Light, you could say they underwent a form of this, since a lot of their subtle manipulations, small progresses and the like gets thrown out with what seems like Vandal Savage's nest egg plan to use Darkseid as HIS endgame. And then when Luthor cuts off the Light's legs by giving the league information about their operations, the Light essentially goes into hibernation for the most part, with any plans they have either done in public by Luthor or done by brute force. But even then, Klarion wasn't working for the light that time.
82* ''Fanfic/SonicXDarkChaos'' does this badly with the Metarex. In the canon ''Anime/SonicX'', the Metarex were a nearly unstoppable empire of powerful robots led by even more-powerful robot overlords that gave Super Sonic a run for his money. ''Dark Chaos'' reduces them to a side faction... and by the halfway point of the story, their armies are all but destroyed and their leaders have gone into hiding (with a collective VillainousBreakdown for good measure). It doesn't help that their motivations are also completely different from the canon; in the show, they wanted to exterminate all animal life in the galaxy and replace it with plant life. In ''Dark Chaos'', they're just trying to find a way to kill Tsali and revive their species by [[WellIntentionedExtremist any means necessary]].
83* The ''VisualNovel/DanganronpaTriggerHappyHavoc'' fanfic ''Fanfic/TheUltimateHope'' does an excellent job giving this treatment to [[BigBad Monokuma]] ([[spoiler:Junko Enoshima]]) through an amusing FailureMontage chronicling their [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain inability to create despair.]]
84* ''Fanfic/TheMLPLoops'':
85** Due to the GroundhogDayLoop that has been going on for a ''very'' long time, none of the villains pose the slightest threat to even the weakest of loopers. Special mention goes to Nightmare Moon; the baseline loop starts just a few days before her return, so a new looper's rite of passage is to defeat her by themselves. Twilight institutes "the Challenge," where everyone gets a turn defeating all the villains in a single loop in the most interesting ways they can. Of course, most of the villains are also looping, so they can counter-troll the loopers fighting them when they're Awake.
86--->'''Chrysalis:''' Does it count if I defeat myself?\
87'''Twilight:''' Yes, but only if you make it interesting.
88** Tirek, being a MagicEater, can avert this--he is a serious threat even to loopers if he catches them unawares. However, if he ''doesn't'' catch them unawares, then he is just as much of a joke as everyone else.
89--->'''Tirek:''' And do you really think you can win this, little pony?\
90'''Celestia:''' Oh, I think I can win this ''[[{{Beat}} [dramatic pause]]]'' with a pineapple stuck on my horn! ''[sticks a pineapple on her horn]'' Feel free to try and taste my magic! All you'll get now is a delicious pina colada.\
91'''Tirek:''' ...are you drunk?\
92'''Celestia:''' ''[giggles]'' Not telling! And now, boot to the head!\
93''[Celestia dropkicks Tirek through a mountain. Cadance, Twilight, and Luna hold up cards reading "7.7", "8.4", and "4.2" respectively.]''\
94'''Celestia:''' Sheesh, family members are the harshest critics.
95* The Mega Man Killers undergo this in ''Fanfic/MegaManDefenderOfTheHumanRace''. In their highlight episode, they nearly killed Mega Man twice before he managed to defeat them. After that, they just became as effective as regular Robot Masters. Punk got it the worse after he took a crippling blow from Proto Man in Episode 11. His heart just wasn't in it anymore since then and he was more prone to griping and staying out of the way than actually fighting.
96[[/folder]]
97
98[[folder:Pinball]]
99* Prince Charming, already a fairly ineffectual villain in the ''Franchise/{{Shrek}}'' movies, gets decayed further to a minor protagonist in the ''Pinball/{{Shrek}}'' pinball game.
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Radio]]
103* Spoofed in ''Radio/{{Nebulous}}'' where K.E.N.T. mention battling "the Seaquel Devils" (a play on the ''Series/DoctorWho'' monster the Sea Devils) - "They came back again. And again. Each time less effective than the last." Harry then reminds them of the Prequeloids - "We always knew how they did that!"
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
107* Whenever a new army in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' is introduced, they start as existential threats to the entire setting for a year or two and then decay into just another faction.
108** There's an obvious reason for this: ''profit''. Make your new faction unstoppable arse-kickers who make mincemeat out of any opposition, and you've got a surefire way of getting eternal 13-year-old boys ''everywhere'' forking out on them just so that they can be the toughest tabletop warrior. Then throw out some heroic last stands for the Space Marines so that the existing factions don't get completely alienated. Wait a few years till everybody's got them, introduce a new, even more powerful, even more expensive faction. Rinse and repeat. ''Profit''.
109** Necrons. When first formally introduced, they were supremely enigmatic horrors serving even more horrific beings, known for mysterious harvests of life, unknown plans, and ridiculously advanced technology. Fan perception of them quickly made them {{Omnicidal Maniac}}s to the public eye, and they began to be perceived as a race-wide CreatorsPet. The 5th Edition Codex has resulted in a serious hit to the Necrons' previously unknown and unstoppable nature in favor of shifting the focus towards the Tyranids and Chaos as the greatest threats facing humanity, [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools revealing much of their past and giving plenty of]] CharacterDevelopment to the race which as a natural consequence destroyed much of the mystery surrounding them, going from NothingIsScarier {{Omnicidal Maniac}}s to [[TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasy the Tomb Kings]] [[RecycledInSpace IN SPACE]]. The [[BrokenBase debate on whether this ruined the faction forever or breathed new life into them still rages to this day]].
110** The Orks started off as a galaxy wide tide of death and destruction but degenerated into pub brawlers over time.
111** Tyranids also started off as unstoppable, galaxy-devouring horde of alien locusts, but their impending, full-scale invasion and eating of the galaxy kept getting delayed and delayed and then the tyranids inexplicably adopted an "attack in small numbers" strategy that made them less of a threat to the setting.
112** Then on a smaller scale you have some of the lords of Chaos. Abbadon the Despoiler is probably the number one offender. He is supposedly the heir to Horus and carries the title of Warmaster of Chaos, as well as the favor of all four Chaos Gods. However his Black Crusades seem to end in defeat more often than not, or at best as a stalemate.
113** Games Workshop has spent the better part of 2013 trying their hardest to dispel this notion about Abaddon, eventually resorting to retconning eleven of his thirteen Black Crusades. Advancing the storyline during the ''Gathering Storm'' storyline saw him finally succeed in busting out of the Eye of Terror and destroying Cadia, splitting the Imperium in two and throwing the entire galaxy into chaos.
114** During the ''Gathering Storm'' events, Asdrubael Vect, effective leader of the Dark Eldar, got hit pretty hard with this in one fell swoop, both in-universe and outside. An incident he couldn't have foreseen ([[spoiler:Ynnead destructively picking an avatar]]) caused a giant cataclysm inside Commorragh that he had expected, yet the plans he had to stop it failed, he panicked in front of everyone (which severely undermined his reputation), and whatever improvisations he could come up with weren't enough to keep the situation under control, with other groups he didn't even have a hand in being the ones to save the day. As such, his plans were all shredded to nothing, there is active plotting to overthrow him (which used to be unthinkable), several of his loyal underlings ran off to join the new faction this spawned, and the moment he tried to say this was AllAccordingToPlan everyone smelled the bullshit from the start, ending his ConsummateLiar streak. As a result, within Commorragh his reputation has basically ''inverted'' and his survival is uncertain, and to the fanbase he now just looks like a goon that will probably get [[KlingonPromotion cut down]], his millennia of {{Magnificent Bastard}}ry now lost [[SpannerInTheWorks in a deluge of unexpected plan-wrecking spanners]]. [[spoiler:Later, it got bad enough that he was actually ''assassinated'' at last, which was once unthinkable... and then resurrection plans that played with his funeral were put into motion, and he came back ''with a vengeance'', casting off the rust]].
115* In the ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' adventure "TabletopGame/SavageTide", the main ArcVillain of the early story is Vanthus Vanderboren, a master swordsman transformed into a powerful fiend-like being, fought at the head of a massive horde of pirates. Then, Demogorgon brings him BackFromTheDead as a death knight, [[CameBackStrong making him considerably stronger]], but also [[DemotedToDragon putting him in a distinctly lesser position as another villain's enforcer]]. In his final appearance, the players confront him in the Abyss... where, following the standard policy for dead souls, he's been reduced to a completely powerless larva with none of his memories that looks like a maggot with his head on it. At this point, he poses no threat whatsoever to the players; the question is whether they give him a bit of mercy by returning him to his body, or just go for a threefer.
116[[/folder]]
117
118[[folder:Theatre]]
119* King George in ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' steadily loses poise as the British influence on the plot diminishes, first, at the start of the war, barely moving, singing ''at'' the audience in full regalia, then after Yorktown considerably more animated, and in the second act ''much'' more animated and more casually dressed, culminating in him joining in with the populace and throwing papers in Hamilton's face in "The Reynolds Pamphlet."
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Toys]]
123* For the first two thirds of the 2009 storyline of Toys/{{Bionicle}}, [[BigBad Tuma]] is built up as a [[TheChessmaster Machiavellian badass]], and his Skrall warriors as [[BossInMookClothing each able to curb-stomp even the best Glatorian]] and using advanced militaristic tactics. The Legend Reborn presents Tuma as the DumbMuscle, who throws away any menace he had by holding onto the VillainBall with both hands, and serves merely as TheDragon to [[spoiler:[[TheMole Metus]]]]. The rest of the Skrall fare even worse, being tossed around effortlessly by the Glatorian they were supposedly more than a match for, while their tactics amount to {{Zerg Rush}}ing their opponents.
124[[/folder]]
125
126[[folder:Web Original]]
127* Blood Boy, a big antagonist in the early stages of ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest'' version 3 had this occur in the last topic he appeared in, becoming an almost [[ComicBook/{{Batman}} Jokeresque]] figure (to the point of almost directly quoting from ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' at one point). This does, however, have a fairly good reason: a different handler took over the character for that scene, one who, needless to say, had a rather different take on the character.
128* The Necromancer, in the ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse''. Starts out as one of the top 60 supervillains on the Interpol rating scale. He's now oh-for-two against Team Kimba, who are ''high schoolers''. Even with his team of supervillains working for him. Now one-for-two, making out like a bandit in the process, excluding one goal failing due to a [[DidntSeeThatComing Unknown Unknown.]]
129* On TWGTG, we have the MadScientist Dr. Insano that first appeared on WebVideo/TheSpoonyExperiment, whose early appearances depict him as a LaughablyEvil, but none the less dangerous character. Later appearances, however, have him attempting no evil plans and just have him acting comedic.
130** The suave, chessmaster-like, psychotic WebVideo/{{Ask That Guy|WithTheGlasses}} is slowly turning into a pathetic, needy, emotional wreck. Maybe played with because he's always been like that, he just can't seem to hide it anymore.
131** In his first appearance during the Nostalgia Critic's review of ''Film/TheLastAirbender'', Shamalayan removed Critic's talent (he gets it back, even though "[[SelfDeprecation there wasn't much to lose]]"), and would have done it again in ''Devil'' if he hadn't been stopped by the actual Devil. Come ''Film/AfterEarth'', and he's become so predictable that Critic isn't even phased by him anymore. Heck, he even helps Critic out with his review of ''Film/{{Pixels}}'' by making Creator/PeterDinklage unfunny (a Reverse Shamalayan).
132** Evilina was portrayed as silly in her first appearance, but still capable of being a CruelMercy ManipulativeBitch. Later on she TookALevelInDumbass and just cries when Critic punches her in the head.
133* Strong Bad, from the infamous WebAnimation/HomestarRunner universe, used to try to do actually evil things, but he's gone under lots of Villain Decay. To quote him from the Strong Bad Email(sbemail) called "your edge"
134-->'''Strong Bad''': Me and the Cheat, walked past this deflated basketball and consciously decided not to re-inflate it! And we feathered Strong Sad for a HALF HOUR!
135* In ''Series/{{Noob}}'', Dark Avenger is one of the most feared player killers of the game... except a RunningGag has [[TheFool Sparadrap]] accidentally killing ''him''. He's shown to give other characters difficulty, but it made the decay slower rather than keeping it from happening. [[spoiler:Writing Dark Avenger out of the series due to his actor moving away relied on having that decay reach the lowest point possible.]]
136* The C.C Corporation in ''Series/FlandersCompany'' started out as a relatively competent organisation who actually succeeded in taking over Trueman's company without him even noticing, and their leader Carla Burnelle was a PsychoElectro and {{Magnificent B|astard}}itch who could handle the whole team of protagonists of her own. Come season 3, the arrival of [[KnightOfCerebus Aegis]] cause Carla to suffer a VillainousBreakdown, leading her to a {{Genre Blind|ness}} decision. Her group is even worse, as most competent members are either KilledOffForReal or PutOnABus, leaving her more and more SurroundedByIdiots.
137* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'':
138** [[Characters/RWBYAdamTaurus Adam Taurus]] starts off as a dangerous terrorist who dominates the fights he is in, easily wins against even talented student Huntsmen, and can rally hundreds to his call through his charismatic leadership. However, his return in Volume 5 reveals him to have deteriorating mental health, leading to [[GeneralFailure catastrophically poor decision making]] as he succumbs to narcissism and megalomania. During the Battle of Haven in the climax of Volume 5, [[spoiler:he cuts and runs after barely even trying to fight]], a choice which results in his remaining followers mocking and abandoning him. [[spoiler:He is then reduced to a lonely fugitive obsessed with stalking and killing the woman who dared to stand up to him. While still an extremely dangerous foe in a fight, in the grand scheme of things he has gone from being a terrorist leader who commanded a small army and was a threat to the entire world order to a PsychoExBoyfriend coming up with increasingly deluded excuses to lash out at his former girlfriend.]]
139** [[Characters/RWBYCinderFall Cinder Fall]] spends the first three volumes as a cunning, manipulative, and effective threat, and that was before she gained additional, wide ranging magical powers near the end of Volume 3. Then she crossed paths with Ruby, who accidentally unlocked the superpower that is Cinder's key weakness and nearly killed Cinder. After she spends most of Volume 4 recovering, Cinder is consumed by sadism, pettiness, and an obsession with revenge and acquiring more power that repeatedly blinds her and leads her into making critical, self-defeating mistakes. Worst of all, her new abilities make her certain that she can succeed through sheer overwhelming force and power (even when facing opponents with the same level of power), leading her to abandon the patience, cunning, and manipulation that were the key to why she was such a threat in the first three Volumes. After Watts gives her a brutal TheReasonYouSuckSpeech about her shortsightedness in Volume 8, Cinder begins taking steps to rectify her decay. [[spoiler:The end of Volume 8 sees her back in top form and ''easily'' the most focused and dangerous she's been since Volume 3. She takes on nearly all the heroes and, with only some help from Neo (and the fact that the heroes have their focus split between fighting Cinder and trying to get thousands of people to safety), manages to defeat them all. She gains the Relic of Creation and maintains her hold on the Relic of Knowledge, and only fails in acquiring the power of the Winter Maiden as well because while Cinder is distracted a dying Penny manages to pass it to Winter Schnee instead. Then, even with Winter newly empowered and Cinder having already fought a prolonged battle, she manages to fight Winter to a standstill until Winter has to leave to protect the refugees of Atlas. Along the way Cinder manipulates and then betrays and eliminates both [[TheEvilGenius Arthur Watts]] and [[PintsizedPowerhouse Neo]], seemingly cooperating with them and giving them everything they wanted until the opportunity came to backstab them, at which point Cinder not only took revenge on them for their slights against her (real or imagined), but also silenced the only two witnesses who could tell Salem that Cinder [[DragonWithAnAgenda had acted on her own agenda instead of Salem's]] and made the Relic of Knowledge useless to Salem by using it for herself.]]
140* [[TheGrimReaper Kravitz]] from ''Podcast/TheAdventureZoneBalance'' is introduced in the Crystal Kingdom-arc as the main baddie, hunting down the Tres Horny Boys because of [[spoiler:their many deaths]]. However, it turns out he's merely a DiskOneFinalBoss when [[spoiler:Legion]] shows up, and after the boys manage to defeat [[spoiler:Legion]] and save his ass, Kravitz strikes a deal with them, agreeing to not reap their souls as long as they [[spoiler:don't add to their death count]]. He turns out to be a reasonable guy [[PunchClockVillain just doing his job]], and spends the rest of the podcast on friendly terms with the main characters. [[spoiler:He even falls in love with Taako, and the two become an OfficialCouple during one of the Lunar Interludes]].
141* ''WebVideo/CJDachamp'' discusses this in "Frieza: From Riches to Rags". CJ discusses how Frieza from ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' went from TheDreaded to a mild annoyance, and how every subsequent appearance that Frieza has makes him less and less scary because of how many times that Frieza ends up on the business end of a CurbStompBattle.
142[[/folder]]
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