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Major Villains

    Dr. Drakken 

Drew Theodore P. Lipsky / Dr. Drakken

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s01___01mkv_snapshot_1124717.png
Click here to see him as Drew Lipsky
Click here to see him without blue skin
Click here to see him as a preschooler
Click here to see him as a preteen
Click here to see his future self
Voiced by: John DiMaggio
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Revenge of Monkey Fist | Kim Possible: A Sitch in Time | Kim Possible 2: Drakken's Demise | Kim Possible 3: Team Possible | Kim Possible: Kimmunicator | Kim Possible: What's the Switch? | Kim Possible: So the Drama

Dr. Drakken is a Mad Scientist aiming to Take Over the World. Along with Shego, he is a recurring villain for all four seasons, so we learn a lot about him.


  • Above the Influence: Doesn't take the bait of the Moodulator lovestruck Shego for even a moment. He doesn't even know this is the case either, simply seeing that something isn't normal.
  • Affectionate Nickname: Shego occasionally refers to him as "Dr. D".
  • Amazing Technicolor Population: His blue skin, though he didn't always have it. At the end of the last episode, he starts telling the story of how he turned blue, but the show ends and cuts him off mid-sentence. Interestingly, in the episode "Bad Boy", Drakken actually loses his blue skin when his evil is transferred to Ron (who becomes blue instead) and gets a more "normal" skin tone. At the episode's end, when Drakken gets his evil back, his blue skin returns with it. This suggests that his turning blue had something to do with him turning to evil.
  • Angrish: On at least one occasion, prompting Shego to cut him off with "Dr. D! You've stopped using words." Interestingly enough, in that instance, he wasn't totally pulling stuff out of thin air; he was quoting the bizarre instruments from How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
  • Arch-Enemy: Kim's archfoe, though not her biggest threat. On a more personal level, he has an enmity with Kim's dad that dates back to their college days when young James Possible and his friends made fun of him and his Bebes, leading to his Start of Darkness. In a sense, he also acknowledges that the extended Possible family as a whole has been a major nuisance to his plans in one way or another, and actively tried not to draw their attention to his plot in "Showdown at the Crooked D" by not inviting James to the science festival he organized.
    Drakken: You're a Possible! You people are such pests!
  • Belligerent Sexual Tension: With Shego as the series progresses. Season 4 particularly shifts their relationship from Vitriolic Best Buds to romantic underpinnings.
  • Big Bad: He and Shego are the most recurring villains in the series, as well as the main antagonists of the two movies.
  • Big Bad Wannabe: Usually he's too incompetent to pull off a successful Evil Plan.
  • Big Ol' Unibrow: He has a thick unibrow that's part of his ugly/creepiness.
  • Blue Means Smart One: Dr. Drakken has a blue Color Motif, wearing a blue outfit and even having blue skin. He's a genius robotics inventor and engineer who uses his devices to try and conquer the world.
  • Breakout Villain: He was originally intended to just be part of the show's rotating cast of villains, but his popularity turned him into by far the most recurring villain, and he became Kim's Arch-Enemy and the default Big Bad of the show.
  • Butt-Monkey: No one respects him, least of all his sidekick. Hilariously embarrassing things often happen to him.
  • Character Catchphrase:
  • Child Prodigy: He claims that in fourth grade, he was able to create a ray that could control rubber products, giving him an advantage in four square, tether ball and dodgeball.
  • Complexity Addiction: His Fatal Flaw is that he can't just go the direct route and take to the offensive more. He's actually got a lot of deathtraps and tools that can easily achieve what he wants three times over; but his flair for the theatrics ends up being his own downfall.
    • In So the Drama, this actually becomes his advantage in a roundabout way. Namely, by making a plan so complicated that not even Shego can figure it out, this means that Team Possible won't be able to as well. Indeed, they are largely unaware of the larger picture until little bits cause them to question things.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: Twice, first as the President of the Bueno Nacho Corporation which he acquired in a hostile takeover in So the Drama, and then later as a senior executive of the Hank's Gourmet Cupcakes franchise in "Odds Man In". Both plots are amongst those that came the closest to succeeding, and remained beneath Team Possible's notice until he was near the very end of his scheme.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass:
    • When Aviarius captures Kim, Shego and the rest of Team Go, Wade calls Dr. Drakken for help. Drakken, who's usually ineffective shows up with one very serious attack robot and says, 'I was told Shego was in trouble! WHERE IS THIS AVIARIUS?!'
    • Also in So The Drama he nearly conquered the world. The situation reached a point where Kim and Ron were captured and Kim's will to fight was effectively broken. Had Ron not managed to give her back some resolve (or Drakken and Shego remembered to disarm them) Drakken would have won.
    • Generally speaking he's pretty competent provided he's opposing other villains. This is something Dementor lampshades in The Stinger of the final episode.
    • He can actually be pretty intimidating if he's furious enough. On one notable occasion when Shego loses his body in "Mind Games" (he had switched bodies with a military official, with said official's mind now in Drakken's body), his anger is enough to actually frighten her into trying to flirt with him in order to placate him.
  • Demoted to Dragon: In A Sitch In Time, he's been demoted to a hulking bodyguard for Shego, the Supreme One.
  • Disappeared Dad: Mr. Lipsky is never acknowledged.
  • Ditzy Genius: He's often clueless about matters other than mad science. One particularly extreme example is when he tried to avenge himself on the classmates who had mocked him in college, it never occurred to him that the one surnamed "Possible" might be somehow connected to his nemesis Kim Possible.
  • Do Not Call Me "Paul": The only people who still call him Drew Lipsky are his mother (who is unaware of him being a super villain and thinks that "Dr. Drakken" is his radio talk show host stage name), his cousin Motor Ed and James Possible (who knows it annoys him to no end).
  • Don't Tell Mama: Drakken has his mother fooled about what it is he really does (she thinks he's a radio Talk Show host).
  • Drives Like Crazy: Early on, he has shown difficulties with piloting his hovercraft, requiring Shego to take the controls. He became better at it over time, piloting it on his own during the Lorwardian invasion.
  • Embarrassing Middle Name: Drew Theodore Lipsky (heck, all of them). You'd turn evil too.
  • Embarrassing Nickname: His mother calls him "Drewbie", something he'd prefer nobody, including Shego or Kim, to overhear.
  • Enemy Mine: On a few occasions, he's been forced to join forces with the good guys.
  • Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: Even though she embarrasses him to no end, Drakken clearly loves and respects his mother enough that he doesn't want her to know he's plotting world domination.
  • Even Evil Has Standards:
    • He draws the line at false advertising, as proven by his brainwashing shampoo. "I'm a supervillain, not a corporate shyster."
    • Humorously, he considers cloning his (non-Shego) henchmen a crime against humanity even he cannot do.
    • In "Grande Sized Me", while he couldn't remember Ron's name, he's the first to comment on how Ron really let himself go and (like the other villains) seems genuinely concerned.
  • Everyone Went to School Together: He turns out to have been a friend of Kim's father in college. His Start of Darkness occurred when they mocked his well-intentioned but ill-thought out plans for making robot dates to their outing, being the final straw in a lifetime of mockery and teasing.
  • Evil Counterpart:
    • To Ron. Aside from being Mirror Characters, they are both dorky and goofy guys who are partnered with smart and powerful women and were ostracized by their peers. However, they can be just as if not more dangerous under the right circumstances (such as Drakken's near-success in The Movie and Ron's hidden potential).
    • To a lesser extent, he is this to Kim Possible herself; both are driven go-getters who are proactive in what they do while being stubborn and with a need for control (compare Drakken's management of henchmen and determination for world domination to Kim doing something for school or saving the world), while having sidekicks who are much more laid-back.
  • Evil Duo: Drakken and Shego are a variation on the usual dynamic — Drakken wants to Take Over the World and demonstrate his intellectual superiority (superego) but is prone to childish outbursts (id).
  • Evil Former Friend: He used to be friends with James Possible, Bob Chen and Ramesh back in college. The three of them making fun of him when he presented his new Bebes as their dates for a college dance followed by them malfunctioning caused him to drop out and become a supervillain to prove his genius to them.
  • Evil Is Petty: One of his plans requires stealing Felix's tricked out wheelchair.
    Shego: Oh, no no no no no. You are not going to jack some kid's wheelchair.
    Drakken: Newsflash, Shego. I'm a bad man.
    • After stealing it:
      Shego: You actually stole a wheelchair. What's next, candy from a baby?
      Drakken: Been there, done that.
  • Evil Plan: In the words of Shego: "Always Taking Over The World. Always."
  • Familial Foe: Dr. Drakken and Shego specifically target Kim Possible and her father with some of their schemes, but Kim's mother, brothers, uncle, and one of her cousins join in some of Kim's missions to stop Drakken.
  • Flat-Earth Atheist: Demonstrated this in "A Sitch in Time", probably the only time he interacted with magic (and was still in his right mind).
    "There's no such thing as Mystic Monkey Power!"
  • Freudian Excuse: Drakken's whole life has been a collection of mockery, mishaps and belittlement, as Ron even noted he had a "twisted" childhood. The final push was in college where he was friends with Kim's dad, James Possible, and a couple other scientists. He promised to get them dates for an event and did so in the form of some shoddily-made robots. They ended up laughing at him and this betrayal by his friends was what finally started his path on mad science and supervillainy. Him taking over the world is all based on his need to get back at the world for making fun of him and to get the respect for his genius that he believes he deserves. He gets the recognition he long sought out... but in a plan of saving the world. The irony annoys him and earns him some teasing from Dementor.
  • Full-Name Ultimatum: On the receiving end of one from his mother in "Mother's Day" after inadvertently leaving her behind on the train.
  • Gambit Roulette: His fondness for this trope causes Shego much irritation.
    Shego: (marking her place in a magazine) Let's get Operation: Too-Complicated-To-Actually-Work over with.
  • Genre Blindness: Unlike the Seniors, he has no idea how many rules on the Evil Overlord List he violates on a regular basis.
  • Genre Savvy: Occasionally he shows signs of this due to his fights with Kim showing what he did wrong.
  • Gone Horribly Right: He created the Bebe robots to be perfect, and they were so perfect that started wondering why they obeyed someone who was definitely not perfect.
  • Good Feels Good:
    • While this could also fall under Happiness in Mind Control, when turned good by the Attitudinator he genuinely becomes a happier person who takes joy in helping others and only suffers negative feelings whenever he considers having to become evil again.
    • In the series finale, though not as explicit as the previous example, he takes pride in helping save the world from Warmonga and Warhok, and finally managing to claim the respect and recognition of his peers.
  • Good Scars, Evil Scars: He's got a rather sinister one under his left eye.
  • Green Thumb: In the Grand Finale, Drakken gains the powers of a Plant Person due to being exposed to a Super Plant Serum of his own creation. Surprisingly, this transformation gives him a major badass boost, provided you ignore the adorable flower petals that grow out of his neck!
  • Harmless Villain: Zigzagged. Sometimes he's planning to destroy the world; sometimes he's a joke. Sometimes he tries to zap Kim with a Death Ray, or drop her in lava; sometimes he doesn't even try to hurt Kim, only to keep her occupied with traps or his sidekick Shego. Really, his one major problem (aside from his ego) is that his plans tend to be ridiculously convoluted and unlikely to succeed. It's frequently shown that he would be more successful if he took a more pragmatic viewpoint in his schemes, such as in A Sitch In Time, where Shego simply relocating the Stoppables to Norway wins out over his time-travelling attempts to "break" Kim. The one time the complicated nature of his plots works in his favor is So The Drama, where his Evil Plan is so complicated and all over the place, it's hard to tell what the plan is, if any. Drakken himself rubs it in Shego's face, noting that if Shego cannot figure it out, then neither than Kim, meaning that Drakken's chances were quite good.
  • Hey, You!: A Running Gag on the show is that he always forgets Ron's name, much to the latter's annoyance. Ron finally gets him to spout it in So the Drama after actually threatening him after Drakken's actions to Bueno Nacho.
  • Hidden Depths: The episode "Rappin' Drakken" reveals that he loves to attend Karaoke Night, and if his song selection is any indication, he's also an Oh Boyz fan.
  • Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: The main reason he's trying to conquer the world is to prove he's a genius. No one believes it, especially not Shego. Except for his Fan, Frugal Lucre.
  • The Juggernaut: In A Sitch in Time, a combination of diet, exercise and genetic manipulation has turned him into a hulking fighter capable of tanking hits from both Kim and future Monique with ease, leading the two women to spend most of the fight against him keeping away from Drakken and using hit-and-run tactics that do little more than annoy him. The only person who actually manages to harm him is Ron.
  • Kick the Dog: Stealing a wheelchair from a disabled teenager just because it has advanced cyber-robotic technology? Seriously, Dr. D? As he himself puts it, "We're bad men!"
  • Last-Name Basis: He's only ever referred to as "Drakken" or "Dr. Drakken," apparently never bothering to come up with a new first name upon changing it from "Drew Lipsky."
  • Laughably Evil: His incompetence as a villain and snark bait for Shego is the source of much comedy.
  • Lesser of Two Evils: Invoked in "Bad Boy." When Drakken's evil is transferred to Ron, the latter becomes much more competent and dangerous as a villain than Drakken could ever hope to be. Kim realizes that turning the now-good Drakken back to evil is the only way to get Ron back to normal, and it's for the good of the world since normal Drakken is nowhere near as big of a threat to the world as Ron when he's evil.
  • Mad Scientist: He makes some of the gear he uses. Shego typically steals the rest. However, while every attempt at programming artificial intelligence has failed and backfired on him spectacularly, he's very proficient at adapting and incorporating new technology that is beyond his ability to create into his own creations.
    Shego: I don't get it. If you're such an evil genius, shouldn't you invent your own stuff? I mean, what's with the stealing?
    Drakken: It's called "outsourcing," Shego.
  • Mirror Character: In one of the Christmas episodes, Ron and Drakken bond over their shared love of Snowman Hank. This motivates them to declare a truce until New Year's. They are also normally the more bumbling, comical male counterparts to their strong female associates, but have both shown that they are the much more dangerous ones in their respective duos under the right circumstances.
  • Morally Ambiguous Doctorate: Evil, but not especially dangerous. Not surprising given that he was a college dropout and therefore possesses no degree.
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: John DiMaggio has admitted he based Drakken's voice on Harvey Korman.
  • No Indoor Voice: In the Halloween episode, after yelling on the phone with Duff Killigan, Shego tells him to use his indoor voice.
  • Noodle Incident:
    • His blue skin is never explained. The only times we hear him talking about it is during a Villain Song where he mentions that one day he turned blue and at the end of the final episode, which ends before he gets into the details, though he reveals it all started on a Tuesday.
    • Claims to have actually stolen candy from a baby.
  • Not Distracted by the Sexy: Doesn't blink twice at the sexy villainess frequently lazing around the lair in a swimsuit, not even when a mood altering chip is (unbeknownst to him) causing her to throw herself right at him.
  • Older Than They Look: According to character designer Stephen Silver, Drakken is in his fifties. Compared to some of his former classmates such as the greying Mr. Dr. Possible and the balding Professor Ramesh, he has aged somewhat better, blue skin aside. Even during the future portion of "A Stitch in Time", he looks quite good for a guy who must be in his seventies save for some greying.
  • Personality Swap: In the episode "Bad Boy", he ends up making 'Cocomoo' and cookies for his henchmen. Meanwhile, Ron is trying to conquer the world with Shego, at which he turns out to be amazingly effective.
  • Pointy-Haired Boss: He yearns to be a Bad Boss and figure of terror, but...he fails there too.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Is often driven by petty reasoning for his villainous schemes and prone to throwing temper tantrums when criticised.
  • Redemption Promotion: The one time his plan was an unqualified success is when he helped Kim and Ron defeat a greater villain. This embarrasses him and it's something Doctor Dementor needled him about in the series finale's stinger.
  • "Scooby-Doo" Hoax: His main island lair has "KEEP OUT - HAUNTED" signs posted, though he doesn't bother with any actual fake ghosts.
  • Ship Tease: With Shego. It's more prevalent in later seasons and "Emotion Sickness" really bought it out. They even get a Relationship Upgrade by the series finale.
  • Shirtless Scene: In the movie A Sitch In Time, Drakken (who has transformed into a hulking brute) rips his shirt while fighting Kim. Also, in the episode "Rappin' Drakken", he walks around in only a towel and shower cap and is shirtless when lathering his hair in the commercial for his 'Lather, Rinse, and Obey' shampoo. Whether these are Fanservice or just terrifying depends on the viewer.
  • Shipper on Deck: Was quick to point out in the Christmas episode when Ron and Kim were together under the "mistletoe".
  • Smug Snake: Part of his problem is that his ego far outstrips his ability to make his overly complicated plans work.
  • Spanner in the Works: At the end of A Sitch in Time, his suggestion that Shego take the time to gloat to her enemies is what ultimately pushed Ron into his Unstoppable Rage leading to the distruction of the Time Monkey. Had Shego simply executed them like she initially intended to, the bad guys likely would've won.
  • Starter Villain Stays: Interestingly, whether you go by production order, airdate order or even chronological order, Drakken and Shego are the first villains Kim is shown facing off with. And they become the most recurring villains of the series.
  • Strong Girl, Smart Guy: Smart Guy to Shego's Strong Girl. He invents plans to Take Over the World, she beats up people in their way. An unusual case in that Shego is more grounded and has more common sense than Drakken. However, the few times she tries to make plans, she never goes anywhere with them (heavily implying Creative Sterility) which may explain why she maintains her sidekick status.
  • Supervillain: He has the grandiose ambitions and physical trappings and becomes superpowered in the final season.
  • Stupid Evil: Lampshaded every time he appears. Whenever he acts evil, he fails.
  • Take Over the World: The usual goal of his Evil Plans is world domination.
  • Throwing Off the Disability: While in college as Drew Lipsky in the 80s, he used to wear glasses. By the present day, he doesn't wear glasses anymore and doesn't seem to be affected by eyesight problems.
  • Took a Level in Badass: On three occasions:
    • In A Sitch in Time, he's a Future Badass, having been turned into a bulky and hulking bodyguard for Shego who is more than capable of going toe-to-toe with Kim and future Monique and besting them both. Especially impressive considering he would probably be in his seventies by that point.
    • In So the Drama, he proved he was a Not-So-Harmless Villain.
    • In the Grand Finale "Graduation", Drakken develops plant powers that are so strong, they can crush advanced alien technology, and instantly develops a plan to save the world, one that is an unequaled success.
  • Totally Radical: In "The Golden Years" he started using teen slang he learned from a book, much of which was already outdated at the time, in preparation for his army of brainwashed teenagers. He occasionally still uses teen slang afterwards, for which he's mocked by Shego.
  • Unknown Rival: Drakken is irritated and jealous whenever he's reminded that Professor Dementor has a bigger reputation as a potential world-conquering Mad Scientist. For his part, Dementor seems to regard Drakken as a second-rate wannabe.
  • Villainous Friendship: With Shego. They constantly annoy each other, but their relationship is definitely more than just business. At the end of the series, they apparently become a couple.
  • Who's Laughing Now?: The entire crux of him taking over the world seems to be based on this. One episode reveals that his Start of Darkness was the result of his college friends (one of whom was Kim's father) laughing at him for building primitive fembots instead of finding them dates for a dance. His ranting about his clever plans suggest that attempting to Take Over the World is just a means toward the end of getting people to show him the respect he feels he deserves. In fact, in a Season 1 episode, Ron notes Drakken having a "twisted childhood" and indeed we cut to Drakken ranting to a mind-chipped Shego about it (apparently having ranted up to seventh-grade before being interrupted.)

    Shego 

Shego

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___20mkv_snapshot_1419159.png
Click here to see her as Miss Go
Click here to see her future self
Voiced by: Nicole Sullivan
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Revenge of Monkey Fist | Kim Possible: A Sitch in Time | Kim Possible 2: Drakken's Demise | Kim Possible 3: Team Possible | Kim Possible: Kimmunicator | Kim Possible: What's the Switch? | Kim Possible: So the Drama

Drakken's primary sidekick, originally from a family of superheroes before she cut ties with them and embraced supervillainy. Her role was first expanded when the creators realised how well Drakken and Shego interacted, and as the show progressed writers often found it more interesting to put Kim and Shego on the same side instead of always fighting each other.


  • Aloof Dark-Haired Girl: She's tall, attractive, aloof, and imposing and has long black hair.
  • Almighty Janitor: Tying into Brilliant, but Lazy, she spends much of the series as Drakken's sidekick yet is well respected in the villain world (more so than her boss).
  • Amazing Technicolor Population: Her skin is tinted pale green to match the color of her power glow.
  • Arch-Enemy: As the person Kim most locks fists with, she's considered by some to be her true arch enemy, which is helped by their chemistry.
  • Asshole Victim: She's kicked off the roof of the Bueno Nacho Corp headquarters by Kim in the climax of So the Drama, right into the Diablo army signal tower and with enough strength to break it in half and collapse on top of her. She survives, but when she's seen being loaded into the police van later she is pretty injured from the experience, being bruised, electrocuted and bleeding from the side of the head. Given the psychological torment that she and Drakken had put Kim through during the movie, let alone the numerous times they've personally tried to kill Kim in gruesome fashion in the past, one can't say she didn't have it coming.
  • Affectionate Nickname: Calls Drakken 'Dr D' frequently
  • The Bad Guy Wins / Tyrant Takes the Helm: A Sitch in Time made it clear that, out of everyone else in Kim's rogues gallery, Shego was the only one who succeeded in dominating the world using her smarts. After a series of time traveling misdemeanors, she wasted no time in turning Middleton and the rest of the planet into her own personal Orwellian fiefdom, dubbing herself the Supreme One, making the citizens wear her uniforms and having an arsenal of drones at her command.
  • The Baroness: A capable, dangerous, and very attractive female villain who enjoys pulling off evil when she can. Ironically, she's more competent at villainy than her employer.
  • Beauty Is Bad: Not only is her personality very foxy, her looks are too. She is stunning in the episode Stop Team Go, and usually rocks her black and green Spy Catsuit.
  • Big Bad: She is the Supreme One in A Sitch in Time, and behind all of that movie's trouble.
  • Black Sheep: The one villainous member of a superhero family.
  • Breakout Villain: Originally just a simple sidekick, she became one of the most popular characters in the series due to being a very competent (but unambitious) villain, combined with her sarcastic attitude towards Drakken and Kim.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: She has a lot more common sense than her boss, but tends to laze about reading magazines or lying on the beach when she isn't on a mission.
  • Cain and Abel: The Cain to Team Go's Abel. She betrayed them because she couldn't stand them.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Shego is evil and proud of it, even telling her brothers this is who she really is.
  • Creative Sterility: While never explicitly mentioned or discussed as a subject matter, it has been shown a fair number of times that Shego's actually quite lacking in the creative department. In fact, despite being level-headed and down-to-earth and thus capable of being a more effective supervillain than Drakken, she never really comes up with plans or ambitions for that matter. However, her episodes with Junior show her struggling to come up with a good target for theft or not even think to search for some online. This implies that she's not just disinterested in making villainous schemes, but she's actually lousy at it, which would explain her still being a henchwoman rather than a supervillain in her own right.
    • Furthermore, fans tend to point out that she continues to use her old costume and codename from her time as a superhero as further evidence. This makes her plan from A Sitch in Time notable since while she did technically come up with it, it was only because she got it from her future self (who had to work to convince her past self).
    • A Sitch In Time does imply this is the case as after she makes plenty of capital, she hires a think tank to come up with ideas. Either she's already aware of this or becomes aware of it over time, but regardless, acknowledges it and comes up with a way around that. Interestingly enough, she remains partnered up with Drakken in the future where their positions have changed, but banter remains the same.
  • Dark Action Girl: You see her picture on the trope page! She's deadly and she's brutal.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Particularly towards Dr. Drakken.
  • Doing in the Scientist: Initially, her hand blasts were implied to be devices in her gloves. Later it was firmly established to be a superpower given to her by a magic comet.
  • The Dragon: Drakken's chief minion.
  • Dragon-in-Chief: Subverted, Shego is much more grounded and competent in many ways than Drakken, but she's not a mad scientist like him and she has no desire to come up with her own plans (and in fact, may not be good at doing so). Furthermore, Drakken is a legitimate threat in his own right and even without Shego, provides a challenge for Kim.
  • Dub Personality Change: Some dubs, such as the French and German dubs, make Shego darker by giving her a more mature voice and less sassy personality.
  • Dude Magnet: Throughout the series, many men have complimented her on her good looks.
  • Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette: As a result of being hit by a comet, her skin is green-tinged.
  • Enhanced Punch: She can use the plasma her hand generates to enhance her punches.
  • Enemy Mine: Usually happens when there's a bigger threat than her boss, like Evil Ron or Warmonga.
  • Enraged by Idiocy: Even though Drakken is her boss, she has very little patience for most of his harebrained schemes.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Her brothers. While they may on opposite sides of the law now (and according to her, she left her brothers' team to begin with because she couldn't tolerate their quirks anymore), she still very much cares about them. Enough that she purposefully loses so they get their powers back.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Though she's much better at being a villain than her boss is, Shego does have some limits —
    • She objects to Drakken and Motor Ed's plan to steal Felix's wheelchair to reverse-engineer the cyber-robotic tech inside it. While she still participates in the scheme, she has nothing to do with the actual theft of the wheelchair and is disgusted when she sees that Drakken and Motor Ed actually went through with it.
      Shego: So you actually stole a wheelchair. What's next, candy from a baby?note 
      Drakken: Been there, done that!
    • When Drakken steals a weather machine and sucked the water out of a lake to generate a massive storm, Shego showed concern for the fish that were in the lake when it was drained (although she also could've been worried about what they'd do to the insides of said machine).
      Drakken: It doesn't matter!
      Shego: It matters if you're a fish.
    • She was one of the many villains who looked concerned when they saw what Ron's Bueno Nacho diet was doing to him.
    • When Drakken's possessed by a pirate ghost and is on the verge of killing Kim, Shego seems just as horrified as Ron, since Drakken killing Kim with a machine or trap is one thing, but with his bare hands is quite another.
    • She was the only person who remembered that Drakken's mother was further up a train with a matter-eating monster; she also didn't ruin Drakken's mother's delusion that Drakken was radio talk show doctor instead of evil supervillain.
    • She hates the idea of cloning and utterly refused participate in a scheme Drakken cooked up in an attempt to clone Kim (he got Bonnie instead by accident). So much so that it's even written in her contract that he can't clone her. Once the scheme went south, she made him promise not to do it again.
  • Evil Counterpart: To Kim; she uses her martial arts and savvy for evil.
  • Evil Duo: Drakken and Shego are a variation on the usual dynamic — Shego just wants to fight and amuse herself (id) but generally cool and collected (superego).
  • Evil Former Friend: She used to be part of Team Go, a superhero team with her four brothers.
  • Eviler than Thou: When Ron was temporarily turned evil, he actually managed to terrify her into submission. It was enough that when Ron was turned evil a second time, she was visibly still scared of him.
  • Evil Overlord: Known simply as "The Supreme One" in A Sitch In Time.
  • Face–Heel Turn: From her backstory, she eventually betrayed Team Go.
  • Fallen Hero: Part of her Backstory is that she used to be a superhero.
  • Family Theme Naming: Her similarly superpowered brothers are named "Hego," "Mego" and "Wego" (who're twins). They're all members of "Team Go." Go figure.
  • Fashionable Asymmetry: Her outfit is a green and black harlequin-dazzle pattern, with one glove and one boot in each color.
  • Foil: She fills this role in different ways to Dr. Drakken (her mocking commentary highlighting his overelaborate and doomed schemes) and to Kim (to whom she provides a dark mirror image).
  • For the Evulz: Supposedly part of her reason for switching sides. Shego doesn’t agree with this reason.
    Hego: The more we fought evil, the more Shego liked it.
    Ron: The fighting?
    Kim: The evil.
  • Freudian Excuse: Supposedly became a villain because she became annoyed by her brothers' quirks back when on the team. However, given the absence of parents and Shego's hostility even back then, it's implied there is more to the picture.
  • Future Badass: As if she wasn't badass enough already, she conquers the world in A Sitch In Time.
  • Gold Digger: She wouldn't turn on Drakken usually, but she would definitely leave him for money. She displayed this behavior in "The Mentor of our Discontent" with Martin Smarty at the end of the episode. Then she found out he had a teenage son and quickly leaves.
  • Green and Mean: Her skin is the same color as her outfit and the energy blasts she throws at heroes and civilians alike.
  • Hair Color Dissonance: She has black hair with a green hue due to her superpowers. The rest of her family just straight up have hair the same color as their powers.
  • Hand Blast: The magic comet gave her the ability to throw bolts of green energy from her hands.
  • Head-Turning Beauty: She has gained this reaction (repeatedly) from Motor Ed and (briefly) Martin Smarty. Ron also has this reaction to her in the first episode.
  • He Is Not My Boyfriend: Later episodes have her be this way with Drakken. Shego insists there is nothing going on between her and Dr. Drakken despite evidence to the contrary. No one, not even Kim, is buying it though.
  • Hidden Depths: She's got degrees in child development and has all the proper credentials to work as a schoolteacher.
  • Hypercompetent Sidekick: Just like Kim, "she can do anything." Without her, Drakken isn't nearly as threatening — she's better than him at everything except creating bizarre supertechnology... and baking cakes.
  • I Minored in Tropology: Shego is a Deadpan Snarker supervillainess—but in "Stop Team Go," it's revealed that she has degrees in child development and even has all the proper credentials to work as a schoolteacher.
  • Impossible Hourglass Figure: It varies, but it does become more apparent in certain situations. Her green dress definitely draws attention to it.
  • Improbable Hairstyle: Like Kim, Shego's hair is seemingly resistant to anything, even if she's drenched, buried or blown up, her hair springs back to shape in moments.
  • It's Personal with the Dragon: Drakken simply regards Kim as an annoying obstacle; Shego goes toe-to-toe with her and takes their conflict personally (for example, see the The Only One Allowed to Defeat You entry).
  • Jumping Off the Slippery Slope: It is implied that she does this in her backstory as a superhero, going from a well-meaning person to a full-on supervillain.
  • Jumping Out of a Cake: When Junior mentions his father's upcoming birthday as his reason for breaking Shego out of prison, she apparently gets the wrong idea of what he wants.
  • Karmic Butt-Monkey: She's a haughty villainess who sometimes manages to get into humiliating situations, especially when she is defeated.
  • Leitmotif: Has one called "Go Shego".
  • Light Feminine and Dark Feminine: Dark to Kim's Light. Kim is a model student-athlete, a loyal friend, and has a little side gig saving the world from evil (Light). Shego serves the Big Bad Drakken, is the biggest Deadpan Snarker in the series, and has long black hair (Dark).
  • Made of Iron: She can take a hell of a beating. The most notable instance is in So the Drama when Kim kicks her hard enough into a radio tower to electrocute her and break the tower in half, and the she appears at worst to be moderately cut up.
  • Massive Numbered Siblings: Even assuming that Hego, Mego, and the Wego twins are her only siblings, Shego's the only girl out of five kids.
  • Meaningful Name: Similar to her brothers, her name is a combination of her main trait and -go. In her case, "She-go", due to her being the only female member of the team.
  • Mirror Character:
    • Obviously to Kim. Both are powerful and clever young women who also have a taste for fashion, often annoyed by their brothers, and have a close relationship with a more bumbling male.
    • More surprsingly, she's this to her fellow 'sidekick' Ron. Both of them are The Slacker, content with kicking back and relaxing, whether it's Ron chilling or Shego sunbathing. They tend to be bothered whenever their downtime is disturbed, but when they need to get up and do what they need to, they're always there. Additionally, both of them are fine with following their more proactive partners yet at the same time have shown just as much if not more potential greatness. Shego once conquered the world and whenever Ron is turned evil, he becomes a manically laughing but surprisingly and ruthlessly clever villain who is capable of frightening Shego into compliance.
  • More Deadly Than the Male: Shego is easily the most competent villain in Kim's mostly male Rogues Gallery. The made-for-t.v. movie A Sitch In Time even has it as a plot point that Kim mistakenly believes the main villain in the Bad Future she is trying to avert is Drakken before being informed that it is actually Shego.
    Rufus 3000: Wasn't it clear that Shego was the only one smart enough to take over the world?
    Kim: Uh, well, I guess it always seemed more like a guy thing.
  • Ms. Fanservice: Out of all the female characters in the series, she's the one whom most often seems to be depicted in states of undress (i.e. relaxing in bathing suits in the middle of Drakken's lair or on private resorts) or seen using her sex appeal in some way (distracting Martin Smarty).
  • Non-Action Big Bad: Despite her love for fighting in the present, in the Bad Future where she takes over the world she prefers to delegate the fighting to her henchmen (including a Future Badass Drakken). The closest she gets to any fighting is when she threatened Ron with a glowing hand before throwing him across the room, and when she tried to attack Kim and Ron as they were being sent back to their proper time. Perhaps twenty years without her Worthy Opponent caused her to lose interest in fighting?
  • Not in My Contract: In "Kimitation Nation", she reminds Dr. Drakken that she has a 'no cloning' clause in her contract.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Where Drakken clearly enjoys the whole theatrics aspect of being a villain, to the point where he come across as a bit of a buffoon at times, Shego is coldly professional, doesn't show much interest in talking, and tends to go straight to fighting during a confrontation.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: She is the only major villain whose real name is never revealed. Though her brief stint as a Nice Girl teacher in "Stop Team Go!" and the theme naming of her family implies "Go" is at least her actual last name, as she gives her name as Miss Go and has no reason to lie.
  • Only Sane Woman: Just like Kim, she's the smart/hypercompetent one compared to her goofy partner.
  • The Only One Allowed to Defeat You: She even goes as far as to save Kim's life twice.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: Her appearance as "Miss Wobakoff" consists of her wearing a blonde wig and form-fitting bright green dress. In spite of her pale green skin it's enough to fool Martin Smarty (whose life she had previously threatened). Then again, her job at the time was to distract him, so she did her job well; very well.
  • Perpetual Frowner: She has a full range of facial expressions but usually finds two adequate: mocking sneer or contemptuous scowl.
  • Pet the Dog: Her brief time being a mentor for Senor Senior Junior. She genuinely tried to help him, she was at least less sarcastic than usual at the idea of him breaking her out of prison to help with a crime, and she even gets mopey about not doing the job together.
  • Primp of Contempt: She can normally be seen filing her nails (through her gloves) with lowered eyes and a bored frown while Drakken talks about his upcoming scheme.
  • Prodigal Family: Has four brothers that also have powers like her, and when Shego was good they were a team called 'Team Go'.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: She spends most of her time reading villain magazines or even lounging at spas when not assigned a task. She even has weekends and holidays off in a few episodes. In Kim Possible 3: Team Possible she says that Drakken pays her by the hour and she's on overtime by the time she's fighting Kim, hoping to drag out the fight for ten minutes so she'd be able to afford an outfit she had been eying for a while.
  • Sarcastic Devotee: She constantly mouths off to Dr. Drakken and sometimes walks out on him in mid-caper, but she does stick with him in the long run.
  • Say My Name: She very often finds herself on the receiving end of Drakken calling her name whenever he's annoyed with her or in need of her help.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: She has been known to just walk away from some of Drakken's schemes when she feels they have become too much trouble, or too stupid, for her tastes. Though as the trope directly above suggests, for some reason she always comes back.
  • Sexy Mentor: She tutored Senor Senior Junior in order to teach him to be a more effective villain. She succeeded all the while having her student admit he had the hots for her.
  • Ship Tease: With Dr. Drakken in later episodes. "Emotion Sickness" brought it out a bit because it had a "lovesick" feature.
  • Sickly Green Glow: Her suit is green to match her glow. This is confirmed when she temporarily stole her brothers' powers in "Go Team Go" and her suit changed color to match the power she was using at the moment.
  • Side Kick: She's Drakken's number two and despite being more menacing and capable than her boss, she's content getting orders rather than giving them. In A Sitch In Time this is a major plot point. Kim didn't believe she was the Supreme One because she's so used to thinking "Shego the sidekick".
  • The Slacker: Part of what makes her like Ron Stoppable. She is content with sunbathing, filing her nails, mocking Drakken and his plans, and only showing enthusiasm when fighting with Kim. Like Ron, she could be much more, even surpassing their more proactive partners.
    Rufus 3000: Wasn't it clear that Shego was the only one smart enough to take over the world?
    Joss: I mean, I know Dr. Drakken is your arch foe, but it seems to me Shego's the really dangerous one. I mean, if she put her mind to do it, she could be the toughest villain out there, don't you think?
  • Smug Super: She's very haughty and arrogant and snarky but it's implied she was always like that, before and after the magic comet.
  • Spell My Name With An S: The DisneyNOW closed captions spell her name as "Sheego".
  • Starter Villain Stays: Interesting, whether you go by production order, airdate order or even chronological order, Drakken and Shego are the first villains Kim is shown facing off with. And they become the most recurring villains of the series.
  • Still Wearing the Old Colors: Even after quitting to become a villain, she wears her Team Go superhero outfit. In fact, in the Bad Future in A Sitch In Time, she made everyone wear the outfit. Devoted apprentices such as Junior also wear the outfit.
  • Strong Girl, Smart Guy: Strong Girl to Drakken's Smart Guy. He invents plans to Take Over the World, she beats up people in their way. An unusual case in that Shego is more grounded and has more common sense than Drakken. However, the few times she tries to make plans, she never goes anywhere with them (heavily implying Creative Sterility) which may explain why she maintains her sidekick status.
  • Supervillain: Unlike Drakken she's always had super powers, as she's an ex-superhero, but is only a super villain in her own right during A Sitch In Time.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: The reason why she quit Team Go and became a villain was because her brothers were so annoying and it drove her nuts.
    • She also feels this way when she and Drakken team up with Duff Killigan and Monkey Fist.
  • Tall, Dark, and Snarky: Taller than Kim, long dark hair and regularly snarking at everyone (especially her boss); all three are checked.
  • Terms of Endangerment: Constantly addresses Kim with monikers like "Kimmie" and "Princess", which can be interpreted as either dismissive or affectionate. Her constant calling Drakken "Dr. D" may also count. In general, she just seems to have a penchant for giving the people around her nicknames.
  • Too Spicy for Yog-Sothoth: When Ron became evil and was shown to be surprisingly more competent in committing evil than Dr. Drakken, Shego immediately ditched her old boss to partner up with Evil Ron. However, she underestimated how capable Ron had become and while she did express annoyance at his constant laughing, she turned to outrage when Ron reminded her that she was just the hired help (unlike the equal status she has with Drakken). He proceeded to just block her plasma blasts (with a shield-producing belt), but then frightened her into compliance with threats. She was relieved to have Drakken back to normal and in a later episode (when Shego was turned good and her brothers evil by an old enemy), she anxiously mentions how surprisingly dangerous an evil Ron is (who then proceeds to wail on a crowd of Wegos).
  • Troll: Is almost always mocking and snarking at Drakken for her own amusement. She's also like this to Kim and Ron at times.
  • Tsundere: Can act like this towards people she cares for, even Kim sometimes. Later seasons have her be this way with Drakken, caring for him greatly but never wanting him to know that.
  • Useless Accessory: Her outfit has a leg pouch that never gets opened or even mentioned onscreen.
  • Vague Age: Her age was never actually stated in the series, though Ron stated that she looked too old to be in high school, and considering she was able to become fully credentialed in Child Development, he may be right. Some aspects of her character (her athletic ability, her immature attitude, her occasional flirtations with beach hunks) make her seem relatively young; others (the fact that she has a degree in Child Development, the Drakken/Shego moment in the final episode) suggest an older age (most likely in her twenties).
    • Further complicated by the fact that this is a series where 12-year-olds attend high school and a 10-year-old finished college in eight months (though the former were Tim and Jim, who were already established as geniuses and the latter being Wade). Shego having a degree and credentials at an improbably young age would not be out of place at all, especially given her smarter than her slacker tendencies would suggest nature and being the counterpart to the girl who can do anything.
    • Additionally, in the episode "Clean Slate", Ron notes that she is much too old to have been in high school the same time as he and Kim, shuddering when he states that she's "older than that". Which Shego takes offense to and claims is due to her time spent in the sun. Whether this is a valid claim or just an excuse is up to the viewer (though Ron was likely just insulting her).
    • One of the men she flirts with is Señor Senior Junior, who was once romantically interested in Kim Possible and later enters a relationship with Bonnie Rockwaller, both of whom were still in High School. In "Blush", she calls Josh Mankey, who is the same age as Kim, kinda cute. She also tells Kim in So the Drama that she thinks Kim's current love interest Eric is cute and considered dating him. Of course, she may have just said that to get under Kim's skin, especially since Eric turned out to be a robot working for Drakken.
    • Additionally, Shego's appearance resembles Kim's 26-year-old self much more than her current self [1][2] and when asked about it, Stephen Silver, the designer for the characters of the show, answered he thinks Shego might be in her 30s.
  • Villainous Friendship: With Dr. Drakken. They constantly annoy each other, but their relationship is definitely more than just business. She always goes back to working with him despite their numerous failures. At the end of the series, they apparently become a couple.
  • When She Smiles: She is far from unattractive, but very prone to frowning, smirking and psychotic rage. Once in a while though, when she's confused or nervous, she'll break out a sheepish, unguarded smile. The expression is utterly disarming.
  • Worthy Opponent: While she won't admit it out loud, she grudgingly regards Kim as a challenge to fight.

    Professor Dementor 

Demenz / Professor Dementor

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___06mkv_snapshot_0113517.png
Voiced by: Patton Oswalt

Ein Deutsch villain who, like Dr. Drakken, iz hell-bent on taking over ze VORLD! However, hiz technology, henchmen and intelligence are generally better zan zat of Dr. Drakken. Because of zis, zey feel ze rivalry INTENSELY! Unfortunately, hiz brilliant planz are often foiled by Kim Possible (much like Dr. Drakken's) so ze audience never sees hiz TRUE POTENTIAL! In case you vere vondering, he speaks just like zis, and raises hiz voice at ze end of ze SENTENCES!


  • Always Someone Better: To Dr. Drakken. His henchmen are well-drilled, and he sometimes invents something that Drakken tries to steal rather than duplicating for himself.
  • Amazing Technicolor Population: He has canary-yellow skin.
  • Ascended Extra: More precisely, an Ascended Ghost. Before finally appearing onscreen in the next-to-last episode of the first season, he was occasionally mentioned as a Mad Scientist villain who (unlike Dr. Drakken) was taken seriously as a threat.
  • Character Catchphrase: "Looking for this?"
  • Eloquent in My Native Tongue: Ze talking of ze madman is better understood ven in hiz own langvage of Deutsch, JA?
  • Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: He even had it on his list of things to do to call his mother because she gets SO irritable if he forgets.
  • Generation Xerox: Shown to have an ancestor who was also a scientist of extreme, though probably not a villain, still had a rivalry with ancestors of Drakken and Shego. After his ancestor was shown debuting his invention that absorbed ambient electricity, he was shown with a similar device scaled up to drain all the world's electricity so he could ransom it back.
  • Goofy Print Underwear: Skulls adorn his undergarments.
  • Harmless Villain: More competent than Drakken but still a minor threat.
  • Herr Doktor: Dutch, not German, but the effect is the same.
  • Informed Ability: Said to be the top villain in the world and a more competent villain than Drakken (he does have better trained henchmen and actually builds his own devices). However, he's taken down just as easily as Drakken, sometimes even easier. In his final appearance as a threat, he is taken out by Cousin Larry, of all people.
  • Mad Scientist: Like Drakken but more successful, i.e. doesn't need to steal other people's inventions.
  • Meaningful Name: "Dementia" also means madness or insanity.
  • Morally Ambiguous Doctorate: A more competent example than Drakken and might actually have the degree to back it up.
  • The Napoleon: Short and stocky, and quick to anger.
  • Never Bare Headed: He always wears a helmet that covers much of his face.note 
  • Pet the Dog: Dementor does reluctantly thank Cousin Larry for helping him plan a scheme (while thinking it's part of a role-playing game) despite Larry causing him a lot of frustration with his insistence on protocol.
  • Suddenly Shouting: He raises his voice at the end OF HIS SENTENCES!
  • Take Over the World: Like Drakken, his goal is taking over the world, but unlike Drakken, he is regarded as someone who could truly pull it off.
  • Unseen No More: Professor Dementor is mentioned several times as a Mad Scientist with a much more impressive reputation than Dr. Drakken (much to Drakken's annoyance) before he finally starts appearing as a regular antagonist late in the first season.
  • Villains Out Shopping: The Professor's first episode has a scene where he and his henchmen are relaxing by a pool.
  • What Does She See in Him?: A Running Gag of Season 4 is his inability to accept Ron and Kim being in a relationship, thinking Kim is too good for Ron. His final appearance implies that it's the result of projecting his frustrations at his sister getting married (he is forced to work with his brother-in-law in that episode).

    Monkey Fist 

Lord Montgomery "Monty" Fiske / Lord Monkey Fist

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___21mkv_snapshot_1040641.png
Click here to see Lord Monty Fiske
Click here to see him as a preschooler
Click here to see his future self
Click here to see his ultimate fate
Voiced by: Tom Kane
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Revenge of Monkey Fist | Kim Possible: A Sitch in Time | Kim Possible 3: Team Possible | Kim Possible: Legend of the Monkey's Eye | Kim Possible: What's the Switch?

Monkey Fist is a villain who specializes in the mystical and martial arts. More specifically, he is obsessively consumed with the study of Tai Shing Pek Kwar, or Monkey Kung-Fu, and with monkey-themed magical artifacts.


  • Adorable Evil Minions: His monkey ninjas are pretty cute! One is even named Chippy!
  • Adventurer Archaeologist: Before he became a supervillain, he looked into ancient ruins.
  • Alas, Poor Villain: Kim and Ron can't help but feel pity for him once they see him Taken for Granite.
    Ron: (sadly) Path of the Yono, path of the Yono.
  • And I Must Scream: His fate at the end of the Yamanouchi arc is petrification. It is unknown if he is still conscious, and if he isn't then it would disqualify him for this trope.
  • Animal-Themed Fighting Style: He is a master of Monkey Kung Fu, which uses monkey-like movements and is a real martial art.
  • Animal-Themed Superbeing: Has his hands and feet cosmetically modified to be more monkey-like and spends an inordinate amount of time on just about anything monkey-themed. The actual "super" doesn't kick in until he acquires the Mystical Monkey Power, though.
  • Arch-Enemy: He's more Ron's personal enemy than Kim's, because Ron got an infusion of the Mystical Monkey Power he'd intended to seize for himself. Considering he's also the embodiment of Ron's worst fear (monkeys), he essentially cements himself Ron's main enemy in the Team Possible Rogues Gallery. Ron even notes that he is the only villain to rememember his name, and not simply refer to him as Kim's sidekick. That said, Monkey Fist does not consider Ron his archfoe, as he hates how he is defeated by the sidekick, not the hero.
  • Arc Villain: He's present in the Yamanouchi/Mystical Monkey Power Myth Arc, tying into Ron's own development.
  • Aristocrats Are Evil: He's a British Lord complete with castle.
  • Arrogant Kung-Fu Guy: A master of Monkey Kung Fu and a Jerkass.
  • Ax-Crazy: While few of Kim's Rogues Gallery are all that sane, Monkey Fist is monomaniacally and murderously obsessed with becoming more and more like a monkey. It's particularly startling since he is one of the most serious, competent and intelligent villains on the show, yet his actual goals make him look bananas even compared to the rest.
  • Character Catchphrase: "Monkey ninjas attack!"
  • Child Hater: In "Monkey Ninjas in Space," he does not get along very well with the children he holds hostage.
  • Deadpan Snarker: While shown throughout the series, it becomes more apparent in Season Four where he refers to Kim and Ron as "The Cheer Squad".
  • Empowered Badass Normal: Prior to gaining Mystical Monkey Power, he was a master of Tai Shing Pek Kwar who was more than capable of holding his own against Kim while masquerading as the ninja. As such, his superior technique was why he was even able to defeat Ron despite now both empowered by Mystical Monkey Power (unfortunately for him, Ron's plan was just to distract him to let Rufus break the totem.)
  • Evil All Along: In his first episode, he's just Lord Montgomery Fiske, and Kim even helps him recover the MacGuffins he needs to get Mystical Monkey Power.
  • Evil Brit: A British supervillain.
  • Evil Laugh: His is especially distinctive, sounding like a screeching monkey.
  • Fatal Flaw: His Obsession for Power, Greed, and his Pride. It often causes him to pursue dangerous artifacts and make deals with forces he doesn't fully understand. Case and point, his final deal with the Yono left him a statue when he lost. He's also supremely arrogant and thinks Mystical Monkey Power should be his alone and obsessively hunts any competitors like Ron when it would be better if he just focused and trained the power he already has.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Maintains the facade of the British gentleman, but is one of the nastiest of the recurring villains.
  • Genius Bruiser: He is a master of Monkey Kung Fu and has superhuman strength, speed and agility as a consequence of magical enhancement and genetically engineering; he is also highly intelligent and has an advanced knowledge of archeology, cultural history, zoology and even some magic, as well as being one of the most ruthlessly efficient villains on the show.
  • Handy Feet: Used his family fortune to have DNAmy give him a pair of dexterous prehensile hands and feet out of obsession to become more like the simians he admired.
  • I Am a Monster: In his own words, he's no longer a human, but a "man-monkey who violates every law of nature and science!".
  • I Know Kung-Faux: Averted as he is a master of Tai Shing Pek Kwar, or Monkey Kung Fu, which is a genuine style of Kung Fu, and also known as Monkey Fist.
  • Impoverished Patrician: He spent the Fiske family fortune on genetically modifying his hands and feet to be more monkey-like, and the family butler Bates leaves him after he's arrested for the first time. He still continues to go by his lordly title, and continues to use his castle as his base of operations.
  • I Never Said It Was Poison: Kim and Ron had no idea about his obsession with Monkey Kung Fu, yet when they actually, Ron and Holo-Kim come to his home he starts out their conversation assuming they knew and reveals everything about his plan in minutes, assuming that their ignorance is Obfuscating Stupidity.
  • Killed Off for Real: In "Oh No! Yono!" he meets his ultimate fate when he's Taken for Granite after his deal with the Yono goes wrong. He never gets better.
  • Leitmotif: The theme that heralded his presence was one of the most memorable used for the show; it was a little harpsichord melody in a minor key. Very classy indeed.
  • Living Statue: It's implied via his statue appearing in "Graduation" that he's somehow still able to at least contact others to move him around, as he shows up both at Drakken's award ceremony and the Bad Guy Bar still in the same frozen pose he was buried in.
  • Maniac Monkeys: He has an army of evil monkey ninjas!
  • McNinja: His monkey ninjas, which are Japanese, are trained in Kung-Fu, which is Chinese. He himself also dresses like a ninja and fights with Kung Fu despite being British.
  • Meaningful Name: Monkey Fist is an alternate name of the real life style of Kung Fu that he practices, so by actually choosing to call himself that and by going to such extreme lengths to get monkey-based powers he is essentially taking the Arrogant Kung-Fu Guy trope to it's logical conclusion by signalling that he wants to be the ultimate master of Monkey Fist style.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Despite his monkey-obsessed tendencies, he's one of the most serious and psychopathic of Kim and Ron's enemies, freely being willing to kill with his bare hands when not using his monkey ninjas and more than happy to find and use the quickest and most gruesome method to get rid of his foes.
  • Not So Above It All: Generally, he's one of the most composed and competent villains on the show, with all of Drakken's ambition and all of Shego's fighting skills, but he's also been known to break into uncontrolled fits of gloating laughter and blow his top spectacularly, and once descended into a slap-fight with Ron over a minor slight.
  • Not-So-Harmless Villain: Downplayed. He was never harmless, but come Season 4, he proved himself much darker and more threatening than his peers. If it weren't for the fact that he was beaten twice by a toddler, he might have reached Knight of Cerebus status.
  • Primal Stance: His default state when he's not fighting or engaged in battle is a disturbing crouched monkey stance.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: In Kim Possible: Legend of the Monkey’s Eye, after claiming the Monkey's Eye and preparing to unleash its powers on the world to turn everyone into a monkey, his eyes turn red until the Eye is taken from him.
  • Red Right Hand: Had monkey hands and feet grafted onto him by DNAmy.
  • Running on All Fours: Often done to mimic Simian movements. Even lampshaded by Ron when he first revealed his villainous nature.
  • Steven Ulysses Perhero: His real name is Montgomery Fiske, or Monty for short, and his villain name is an anagram of "Monty Fiske".
  • Taken for Granite: His final play for the Mystical Monkey Power ended up getting him turned into a statue. The very last scene of the series indicates that he didn't get better.
  • That Man Is Dead: In Legend of the Monkey's Eye, he remains tranquil but reacts agressively when Kim tauntingly calls him Monty Fiske.
  • Villain Decay: His final (major) appearance has him reference this trope at the very beginning, as he's stewing over the fact that on his last outing, he got his ass handed to him by a baby. Incidentally, he's one of the most serious villains on the show, an air that has generally been maintained throughout four seasons.
  • We Can Rule Together: Monkey Fist tries to get Hana to join him after he realizes who she is.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: His valet, Bates, never reappears after "Monkey Fist Strikes", leading many to speculate what happened to him. Since Monkey Fist said he spent a great deal of money on his monkey modifications, it's likely that he couldn't afford one anymore after the first episode.
  • Worf Effect: On paper, he's the most powerful of Kim and Ron's enemies given all the skills and latent Mystical Monkey Power abilities he has, yet he's constantly beaten in embarrassing ways, distracted, or forced to retreat by Ron and his allies while undergoing steady Badass Decay. This is actually lampshaded-in verse by Monkey Fist after he's beaten by Ron's infant adopted sister despite having never lost to Ron or Kim in a one-on-one fight.
  • Would Hurt a Child: He ordered his monkey ninjas to throw baby Hana into a volcano along with Ron and Rufus.

    Señor Senior, Senior 

Señor Senior, Sr.

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___11mkv_snapshot_1748493.png
Voiced by: Ricardo Montalbán ("The New Ron"-"The Cupid Effect"), Earl Boen ("Coach Possible"-"And the Mole Rat Will Be CGI")

A practically infinitely wealthy older gentleman. After a friendly encounter with Kim and Ron, he decides to take up supervillainy as a hobby.


  • Affably Evil: As Ron put it, "Bad man...Good manners." Justified as he harbors no real malice to his foes and his villainy is simply a hobby.
  • Anti-Villain: He's only a villain as a pastime to enjoy with his son and doesn't really care if the heroes win or not.
  • Cool Old Guy: Despite his age and the fact that he often carries a cane, it turns out in "Triple S" that he is very fit and also very skilled at extreme sports. He also tattooed his initials on the back of his neck.
  • Contractual Genre Blindness: He is well aware of the Evil Overlord List but deliberately makes all of the mistakes anyway, because that's just how a "proper" villain does things. Since it's just a hobby to him, he cares more about "good form" than actually winning. Even when Junior outright suggests ways to do their villiany more effectively by Stating the Simple Solution, Senior always just admonishes him by explaining that "effective" is not the "proper" way to do things.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: A club for rich people banned him for publicly getting into fights with a teenage girl and he tried to get even by freezing the club and all its members. He even explained to Junior that villains are supposed to fit this trope.
  • Eccentric Millionaire: He became a supervillain to alleviate his boredom, after Ron pointed out how much his mansion resembled a supervillain lair.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: He may be evil (even if only as a hobby) but he loves his son, and often treats their villainous sprees as father-son bonding activities.
  • Evil Laugh: He even takes time to practice it with Junior.
  • Evil Plan: They gave the "take over the world" thing a try but are more into smaller scale plans like tweaking other rich guys that offend them.
  • Fair-Play Villain: It's just a hobby and he cares more about doing it right than about actually pulling off a successful Evil Plan.
  • For the Evulz: He took up villainy on a whim and liked it so much it became a part of his millionaire lifestyle.
  • Graceful Loser: Since villainy is just a hobby for him, he tends to be rather unvexed when his plans are inevitably foiled.
  • Hidden Depths: He's great at extreme sports and very fit for his age. In one episode, after the Seniors lost their fortune to a conman, he tried to use these skills to steal their family fortune back.
  • Honor Before Reason: Since he clearly sees villainy as more of a fun hobby than any genuine desire to do harm, he follows the usual cliches of being a villain, whether it be not seeing Kim Possible killed by one of this traps to give her a chance to escape or firing a laser at the ice above her than directly at her. Junior even outright questions why he didn't just finish her off those times.
  • Ink-Suit Actor: Bears a distinct resemblance to Ricardo Montalban.note 
  • Island Base: He has his own private island.
    Ron: You could take over the world from here.
  • It Amused Me: His entire MO. He's a billionaire who became a villain just for the hell of it and doesn't really care if he wins or not as long as he gets a thrill out of it.
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Sr. Senior Sr. was in search of a thrilling new pastime when a young guest named Ron Stoppable pointed out that his billionaire home looked like a supervillain lair. In that moment, Sr. Senior Sr. realized what he could do for amusement.
  • Obliviously Evil: Kim and Ron first meet the Seniors because they think he's actively draining the power from a nearby city. Turns out they were simply overusing energy in mundane ways. Kim's first meeting is to introduce Sr. to more energy conserving habits. Then Ron started flapping his gums...
  • Repetitive Name: Three 'senior's.
  • Rich Boredom: He suffered from this, and it's part of the reason he turned to supervillainy. That and he thinks it's a good way to spend quality time with his son.
  • So Proud of You: Declares how proud he is of his son after Junior turns him in to claim his two billion dollar bounty, finding a way to legally restore their lost fortune, insuring that no one can take it from them on legal grounds. Especially since Junior plans on using the money to bust him out of jail later.
  • Tranquil Fury: When Junior stops him from freezing Kim Possible after he found out that she was a ‘Blue Fox’, the soulmate of the ‘Yellow Trout’, he does not raise his voice, but he makes it clear to Junior that he’s not happy with him.
    Señor Senior Sr.: Do you have any idea how angry I am?
  • Wicked Cultured: He's an older gentleman whose well-groomed, sophisticated and takes being a villain as a sacred sport.
  • Xanatos Gambit: As noted above, whether or not any of his plans succeed is irrelevant. He's just having fun with the 'Traditional Super Villain' role. Their inevitable failure never bothers him because he can still fulfill that role.

    Señor Senior, Junior 

Señor Senior, Jr.

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___11mkv_snapshot_0905782.png
Voiced by: Nestor Carbonell

Señor Senior's son and unwilling accomplice. He isn't nearly as interested in world domination as his father, but comes along anyway because he's family.


  • Abhorrent Admirer: Downplayed in the episode Animal Attraction after him and Kim are declared soulmates by a magazine horoscope. Kim is irritated enough to declare she's done reading horoscopes, yet she's only faintly bemused when he fills her locker with flowers at the end.
  • Aborted Arc: The episode Animal Attraction has him develop a crush on Kim Possible. Outside of one comic, it's never brought up again.
  • Affably Evil: Like his dad, but his reason is more he's not into evil and instead into partying.
  • Anti-Villain: He's only evil because his Dad is and drags him into it like a mundane dad would to a fishing trip.
  • Because Destiny Says So: Played for Laughs when Kim and he are declared each other's perfect soulmates via horoscope.
  • Betrayal by Offspring: Subverted. In "Triple S", his father racks up an astounding two billion dollar bounty after using his extreme sports skills to try and steal back the family fortune from the conman that stole it from them in the first place. At the end of the episode, Junior sells out Senior to the authorities for the bounty... to restore the family fortune and use it to break out Senior later. Once Senior learns of his plans, he loudly declares how proud he is of his son.
  • Brainless Beauty: Subverted. He seems to be one, but he occasionally has intelligent remarks and it turns out he's really just not all that motivated to be a smart villain.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: If he bothered to put in the effort, he'd be an even more competent villain than his father. (Un)fortunately, he's just not interested, only going along with it for his father's sake.
  • Camp Straight: He has a foppish obsession with personal grooming. He had a strong crush on Kim in one episode, and was ultimately paired off with Bonnie.
  • The Dragon: Sort of. Plotting fiendish acts of evil is supposed to be quality father-son time.
  • Dreadful Musician: There's a reason the prison ward set up a concert for him; the other imprisoned Rogues Gallery villains were likely being punished.
  • Dumb Is Good: He's a seeming Brainless Beauty obsessed with his looks and the least evil of the main villains simply because he's not all that interested in villainy.
  • Eccentric Millionaire: Obsessed with partying, looking good, and becoming a pop star, much to his father's annoyance.
  • Hidden Depths: While upon first glance he seems pretty dumb, he's also the first person to question why someone doesn't just go for the simple villainous solution and he rather intelligently turns in his own dad to secure their stolen fortune by legal means, intending to use it to break him out of prison and buy back their island.
  • Island Base: Though he thinks of it more as an island tanning salon.
  • Love at First Sight:
    • The moment he learned Kim was his supposed soulmate he fell head over heels for her.
    • Paid a programmer to find him the girl of his dreams, but then fell for Bonnie the very first moment he saw her.
  • Minion with an F in Evil: Played with. Junior could be pretty competent, but he doesn't have any desire to be a bad guy. He ups his game up in the fourth season, but mainly to please his father.
  • Mirror Character: To Ron. In Senior and Junior's debut episode, the similarities are pronounced as both Junior and Ron are more obsessed with their appearance. Later on, he parallels Ron as a less ambitious partner to a serious one (Senior and Shego for Junior, Kim for Ron). However, the two characters show a lot of potential when they're motivated. Amusingly, he was declared Kim's perfect soulmate. She later ends up with Ron.
  • Missing Mom: No mention is ever made of his mother.
  • Morality Pet: In some extent, to Shego. She enjoyed working with him and was less evil in that episode.
  • Muscles Are Meaningless: He's more buff than any of the other villains (except maybe Motor Ed), but he rarely gets into a fight and isn't very good at it. His elderly father is much more athletic than he is.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Came close to such a level when he tries to crash Kim and Ron to a building, before his father stops him from doing so.
  • Official Couple: He and Bonnie becomes a couple in the final season.
  • Pragmatic Villainy: He would be more efficient in dealing with heroes if his dad didn't insist that they follow Contractual Genre Blindness. Then again, the whole point is that it's just a hobby.
  • Smarter Than You Look: Junior looks and acts like a vain, Brainless Beauty and openly admits to being confused by logistics and economics when pressed by Vinny Wheeler, which left him vulnerable to signing over the Senior fortune to the conman. However, despite not being much of an academic, he's surprisingly cunning and crafty when he properly applies himself, notably when he finished restoring his family's fortune under Kim and Ron's noses by turning in his own father for the lucrative bounty with the full intention of using it and the rest of their ill-gotten goods to buy back their island and finance his father's prison breakout.
  • Spoiled Brat: Surprisingly subverted. While he is unquestionably spoiled and shallow, he's just as affable as his father and rather easy to get along with. No one really hates him, finding him irritating at worst. Even Kim is flattered by the absolute mass of flowers he fills her locker with when he developed a crush on her.
  • Stating the Simple Solution: Often such as "why don't you point the laser at their bodies?". This defiance of the villain code is a never failing disappointment to his father.
    • He also does this during the couple of episodes he partners up with Shego. When trying to decide what to steal, he just looks up on the Internet the most valuable and hardest-to-get items.
  • Took a Level in Badass: His main thing was being a reluctant accomplice to his dad's schemes; he learns to fight better when Shego tutors him and he becomes a bit more proactive in evil, to make his dad happy.
  • Villainous Friendship: He and Shego struck up a happy partnership-in-crime, but were pulled apart because each had prior commitments.

    DNAmy 

Amy Hall / DNAmy / Gorilla Fist

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___23mkv_snapshot_1447480.png
Voiced by: Melissa McCarthy
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Kimmunicator

An outwardly friendly genetic expert obsessed with "Cuddle Buddies", a brand of stuffed animal-crossings. This leads her to trying to make her own chimeric creations in real life...


  • Abhorrent Admirer:
    • In her first appearance, she drove Mr. Barkin to distraction with her unwanted attentions.
    • She turns out to be very much obsessive towards Monkey Fist, who tries to get as far away from her as possible.
  • Affably Evil: She's quite chipper, sweet and friendly though still a mad scientist and her obsessions tend to her being quite determined.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: Kim and Ron made this mistake, and they got tied up by her minions of combined animals.
  • Childish Tooth Gap: She has a noticable gap between her front teeth, which is fitting with her childish obsession with Cuddle Buddies and especially her Psychopathic Womanchild tendencies.
  • Collector of the Strange: Downplayed. While collecting Cuddle Buddies seems to be as normal as collecting Beanie Babies, her drive does hint at "strange".
  • Failed a Spot Check: In Kim Possible: Kimmunicator, she doesn't recognize Kim when she's infiltrating Drakken's old lair wearing only a basic HenchCo henchman jumper suit and sunglasses, not even bothering hiding her hair that is kept in its usual style. She does note that "Rona Wade" looks familiar, and she catches on later that it was Kim.
  • Girls Love Stuffed Animals: She obsessively collects Cuddle Buddies, stuffed animals based on Beanie Babies but as Mix-and-Match Critters. However, it gets more disturbing with her desire to making, real, living Cuddle Buddies...
  • Hair-Trigger Temper: While she's outwardly affable, she's prone to mood swings and can be set off easily when things stop going her way. It's one of several reasons why men tend to be terrified of her.
  • LEGO Genetics: This is how she makes life-sized cuddle buddies; add kangaroo feet to shark body and volia!
  • Mad Scientist: She's deranged enough to want to make her own living cuddle buddies, and smart enough to make a device that can do just that.
  • Maker of Monsters: Her obsession with Cuddle Buddies is enough to drive her into creating her own monstrous version through genetic engineering.
  • Mix-and-Match Critters: Her minions are full-sized living Cuddle Buddies.
  • Professor Guinea Pig: In her last appearance, she gave herself a gorilla body as a way of making herself appealing to Monkey Fist. All this managed to do was squick out everyone who discovered this. However, she's since reversed it by "Graduation", as seen at both the medal awarding ceremony and at the cafe in the credits scene.
  • Psychopathic Woman Child: She usually behaves more like a bubbly, spoiled preteen girl than an adult woman, and her intensive knowledge of cross-species genetics makes her mood swings and Hair-Trigger Temper very dangerous to anyone she comes across.
  • Stalker with a Crush: Toward Monkey Fist, having been the one to give him his monkey hands and feet. She describes him as her "newest little cuddle buddy", which suggests there may be slightly more going on there than just romantic affections.

    Duff Killigan 

Duff Killigan

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___04_06_a_sitch_in_timemkv_snapshot_002149125.png
Click here to see him as a preschooler
Click here to see his future self
Voiced by: Brian George
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: A Sitch in Time | Kim Possible 2: Drakken's Demise

A Scottish former professional golfer banned from every golf course in the world (even minigolf!).


    Motor Ed 

Edward "Eddie" Lipsky / Motor Ed

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___27mkv_snapshot_0854419.png
Seriously.
Voiced by: John DiMaggio. Seriously.
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Global Gemini

An engineer and monster truck enthusiast with a want of destruction. He's also Dr. Drakken's cousin. Seriously.


  • '80s Hair: Seriously, that Mullet. Seriously.
  • Abhorrent Admirer: Has the hots for Shego, who'd rather break him limb from limb. Seriously.
  • Air Guitar: He lives on this trope. Seriously. *Cue strings and wailing*
  • Amazon Chaser: Ed was already attracted to Shego just for her looks, but her zapping him into the ceiling just made it worse. Seriously.
  • Berserk Button:
    • Do not mess with his mullet. Seriously.
    • Kim stealing his motorbike and Drakken subsequently blowing it up also very quickly gets under his skin. Seriously.
  • Black Sheep: He's considered the black sheep of Drakken's family, mostly because he's open about his actions while the doctor has kept his family in the dark about his Mad Scientist ways. Seriously.
    • Though given how Mrs. Lipsky spoke of him along with Drakken before the reveal, it's implied he was already the Black Sheep before becoming a supervillain. With his attitude, it's not hard to guess why. Seriously.
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Cares mainly about rock music and cruising down the highway in a "sweet ride," spending his time fashioning his mullet and playing air guitar. He's also widely regarded as the most brilliant mechanical engineer in the country. Seriously. Like everything it's lampshaded, seriously.
    Wade: He's not as dumb as the hairstyle would have you believe.
  • Casanova Wannabe: Constantly hits on Shego, and is Oblivious to Hints (up to and including plasma blasts) that she wants nothing to do with him. Seriously.
  • Didn't Think This Through: His plots tend to boil down to "cause random destruction"; Kim pointed this out in his first appearance. Seriously.
  • Gadgeteer Genius: He may sound like a total goofball, but he's a very talented mechanical engineer. Seriously.
  • Genius Bruiser: A large, muscular, mullet-haired mechanical genius who even outsmarted Wade at one point. Seriously. As Wade put it, "He's not as dumb as the hair-cut would lead you to think."
  • Genius Ditz: Totally boneheaded rocker stereotype, yeah, but this dude is seriously the "most brilliant mechanical engineer in the country." Seriously.
  • He-Man Woman Hater: He's extremely masculine and constantly makes sexist remarks, no matter how many times Shego pummels him for it. Seriously.
  • Ink-Suit Actor: His character design is based on John DiMaggio's looks and personality. Seriously.
  • Love at First Sight: Attempts to invoke this on Shego when he first meets her. Shego rejects the idea in her own unique way. This only seems to make him like her even more. Seriously.
    Motor Ed: So, uh... do you believe in love at first sight, or should I walk by again? Because I'll totally walk by again, if I have to. Seriously.
    Shego: Mhmm, mhmm. Walk and... keep walking! *cue plasma blast*
    Motor Ed: *after recovering from being blasted into a wall* Man, do I dig a woman who can scrap! I think I'm in loooove! *cue Air Guitar*
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: Though he was very much so an Amazon Chaser who only found Shego even more attractive every time she beat him up or blasted him, he had a sexist streak to him specifically concerning women and driving. In "Steel Wheels" he mentions that "babes don't drive, dudes drive", inciting Shego's ire, and later again when Drakken was getting snippy with Shego being late to enter the Doomvee due to being busy fighting Kim Ed made a mention about how making a woman angry while she's driving will only make it worse - her driving, he meant. And in "Car Alarm" he had her dress as a Hood Ornament Hottie and she was effectively broken out of prison just to be an "accessory" to the ride. Seriously.
  • Punny Name: A pun on "motorhead" - a double reference as slang for a car nut, and also a metal band. Seriously.
  • Tattooed Crook: He has "Ed" tattooed on his left arm. Seriously.
  • Top-Heavy Guy: not as glaring as some examples, but he is this. Seriously.
  • Verbal Tic: In case this entire folder didn't clue you in, "Seriously"! Seriously. He seriously cannot use one sentence without that adverb, seriously.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: His mechanics don't show up again after "Motor Ed". Seriously.

    Synthodrone #901 (SPOILERS

Synthodrone #901 / "Eric"

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s03___12_14_so_the_dramamkv_snapshot_010525039.png
Click here to see him in civilian clothes
Voiced by: Raviv Ullman

A synthodrone created by Drakken during Kim Possible Movie: So the Drama, he pretends to be a young man named Eric in order to keep Kim busy while Drakken completes his plan. He then lured her into a trap which revealed his true allegiance and sent Kim into a Heroic BSoD.


  • Asshole Victim: Nobody is going to miss this Jerkass of a boyfriend when destroyed (the school doesn't even acknowledge his absence when Kim and Ron return from it). Heck, Kim and Ron are both gleeful and supportive of Rufus's grudge for being insulted by Erik. Even his creator, Dr. Drakken, doesn't use this Synthodrone model again.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: When introduced, he appears to be a Nice Guy who has a Love at First Sight with Kim. But over time, his more jerkass colors appear as he mocks Ron and grows impatient with Kim when she decides to investigate on the diablo toys coming to life. He's revealed to be a smug Jerk with a Heart of Jerk when he captures Kim.
  • Body Horror: When Rufus bites him, syntho-goo starts gushing from the wound, causing his body to shrivel up like a deflated balloon.
  • Co-Dragons: With Shego once he's revealed to be a synthodrone. And then he melts, leaving Shego back to being Drakken's sole Dragon.
  • Cool Bike: He has a motorbike that shares the same color scheme as the synthodrones.
  • Domestic Abuse: Makes usage of gaslighting tactics in order to keep Kim distracted from Drakken's plot, attempts to discredit Ron again with gaslighting, and finally when Shego is unable to defeat Kim he gets into the fray himself and electrocutes her while her guard is down in order to capture her.
  • Dying Vocal Change: As his syntho-goo drains from him, his voice is distorted into a mechanical-sounding screech as he shuts down.
  • Elite Mooks: The So the Drama snythodrones are shown to be superior to both Drakken's usual henchmen (who are relegated to technical duties) and his original, instable synthodrones, though they still have one glaring weakness in regards to puncture attacks. They have had numerous performance upgrades, and in a straight fight can actually hold their own against Shego. 901's own personality upgrades took him further than his counterparts, turning him into a Ridiculously Human Robot capable of mind games and enjoying the suffering he causes to others, and allowed him to be elevated to Co Dragon.
  • Evil All Along: He appears to be a civilian but he's actually a sleeper agent.
  • Evil Counterpart: Appears to be one to Yori, to a certain extent. They are both Romantic False Leads to Kim and Ron, sparking feelings of jealousy from the other. However, while Yori is a truly Nice Girl who is actually attracted to Ron, Eric is a Jerk with a Heart of Jerk bastard boyfriend to Kim who is using her feelings to play her. Ron remains Oblivious to Yori’s feelings, despite obviously being attracted to her himself, Kim and Eric’s feeings for each other are blatant… at least until it is revealed that Eric was Evil All Along. Eric also despises Ron and after The Reveal, insults Ron and Rufus, Yori is quite understanding towards Ron’s relationship with Kim and quickly gets over her feelings for him (much to Ron’s dismay). While Eric remains antagonistic towards Ron, Kim and Yori actually bond over after Ron starts dating Kim. Also, once Yori and Eric were out of the picture, Kim decides not to reveal how she feels about Ron, whereas, Ron actually makes his Love Confession towards Kim. It is also interesting to note that Kim initially suspected Yori to be evil and working for Monkey Fist, out of jealousy and concern for Ron, but she was Good All Along. That description however accurately describes Eric.
  • False Soulmate: To Kim. 901's only purpose was to keep her distracted during Drakken's plan, then gaslight or kill her afterwards.
  • Flat "What": Being exposed to "Monique-speak" for the first time left him visibly confused.
  • Foil: While pretending to like Kim, his personality was very similar to Ron's, only he was more mature and active.
  • Hate at First Sight: Rufus hated 901 from the start, mainly because he stole Ron's spot in the carpark and nearly ran Rufus over.
  • Hate Sink: He's an absolute bastard for trying to distract and kill Kim to help Drakken win. And even beforehand, he's a major hazard to Kim's friendship with Ron. Don't expect anyone to feel the least bit sorry for him when he is destroyed anytime soon.
  • I'm Melting!: Not as literal, but after Rufus bit his foot he leaks syntho-goo and drains away until all that's left is the skin shell that is soon destroyed when the signal tower blows up.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Jerk: All of his seemingly nice moments with Kim and Ron were an act.
  • Karmic Death: When he calls Rufus "gross" in a smug tone, Rufus bites him in the foot, causing his goo to drain .
  • Kick the Dog: When he reveals himself to be a synthodrone, he tazes her in sadism. And then he calls Rufus "gross", leading to his death.
  • Knight of Cerebus: His appearance in So The Drama is that of a much darker threat—his interactions with Kim bordered on Domestic Abuse, going as far as keeping Kim away for a while, and he's willing to resort to murder in order to help Drakken's plan.
  • Logical Weakness: Synthodrones are kept operational by the syntho-goo inside them. If they're pierced or punctured, it drains away and they shut down. So when Rufus took a bite out of his leg, the goo drained out and he was destroyed.
  • Love-Interest Traitor: He pretends to be the perfect guy for Kim and gets her to fall for him, before revealing that he's a Synthodrone working for Drakken.
  • Made of Iron: As a synthodrone, he is far more durable than the average henchman. Amongst other things, Kim leaped straight off his face, and he had his neck twisted in a 180 by Ron's backflip kick. He just twisted it back into place.
  • Metaphorically True: His mission really is to take her to the prom.
  • More Despicable Minion: He lacks any of Drakken or Shego's more humorous traits and is arguably the single most repugnant villain in the show.
  • Nice Guy: Friendly, charming, it's no surprise Kim fell for him. It's all a ruse.
  • Oh, Crap!: When Rufus pops out of his boot and bites him, he has enough time to be horrified before he's drained of his syntho-goo and shuts down.
  • Psycho for Hire: More like Psycho For Build, but while being programmed by Dr. Drakken to be a sleeper agent, he enjoys it a little too much for him to have the just following orders excuse.
  • Ridiculously Human Robots: As The Reveal explains, he is really a synthodrone but it's really hard to tell.
  • Robotic Reveal: The goo from his foot reveals him as a Synthodrone.
  • Romantic False Lead: Drakken weaponized the trope to distract Kim and strain the Kim-Ron teamwork. His teenage wasteland research allowed him to create the perfect boyfriend for someone of Kim's tastes, allowing 901 to easily infiltrate her social life.
    Drakken: Aha! But I discovered Kim Possible's weakness! "Boys, boys, boys! Who should I go to the dance with? Who's the perfect boy?"
  • Sadist: A Punch-Clock Villain, 901 is not. He evidently takes great pleasure in revealing his true allegience to Kim while still in the middle of hugging her, beating up Ron and mocking Rufus.
  • Smug Snake: After The Reveal, his personality becomes that of a devil smug.
  • The Sociopath: Despite being a robot, he's shown capable of enjoying how he fooled Kim.
  • Static Stun Gun: Has an inbuilt one that he uses to tase Kim when he drops his disguise.
  • The Mole: Draken's man inside Middleton High.
  • There's No Kill like Overkill: Gets bitten by Rufus, causing the fluids inside 901 to drain out. Then he's electrocuted alive when the Diablo Tower is destroyed, ensuring this demon of a boyfriend never comes back.
  • Undignified Death: He's not defeated by a vengeful Kim in her battlesuit, or Ron getting a Heroic Second Wind, but by Rufus simply biting his leg and letting all of his fluids out until he was complete drained.
  • Villainous Breakdown: Once he's punctured, he starts screeching "No! Noooooo!" as he's drained and shuts down.
  • Walking Spoiler: Most of the tropes about him come after the reveal.
  • Would Hit a Girl: 901 is of both the "abusive boyfriend" and "unrestricted villain" examples.

    Camille Leon 

Camille Leon

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___03mkv_snapshot_0446683.png
Voiced by: Ashley Tisdale, Christy Carlson Romano (disguised as Kim), Will Friedle (disguised as Ron)
Appearances: Kim Possible

An heiress who's very well known around the celebrity circuit. However she's revealed to be a shape-shifter (via an experimental surgery) who steals to fund her lifestyle. She only shows up in season 4.


  • Dumb Blonde: Though she has mannerisms and dialogue that imply that she's not exactly the most intelligent of Kim's foes, she's surprisingly clever in developing strategies to take full advantage of her abilities, combining her acting experience and natural confidence to accurately mimic anyone. If not for her constantly taking Debutante with her, Camille would have been even harder to distinguish from the genuine people she impersonated.
  • Evil Is Petty: All of her plots are usually for her own benefit.
  • Gender Bender: Seemingly not a limitation to her nanomorphing, as she's able to seemlessly look like Ron.
  • Humanshifting: Via an experimental plastic surgery she can look like any human being she wants.
  • Inadequate Inheritor: Her father disinherited her for some reason.
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: Her appearance was heavily based on Paris Hilton, another heiress who's had run-ins with the law.
  • Punny Name: Camille Leon → Chameleon
  • Right-Hand Cat: Debutante, a hairless Sphynx that has a crush on Rufus. One he does not return.
  • Running Gag: Her paparazzi entourage that seems to follow her around no matter where she goes, including prison.
  • Shapeshifting Failure: Spraying her in the face with tracking powder partially morphs her out of Ron's appearance. She kept his hair, skin and eye color, but her face and hairstyle defaulted to her normal.
  • Spot the Imposter: Both Kim and Ron utterly flub telling her apart when she's disguised as the other. She's just that good. However, Kim was able to distinguish Camille from Ron thanks to help from Rufus.
  • Standard Female Grab Area: Actually a plot-relevant weakness, as tightly squeezing her elbow/upper-arm area forces her out of whatever disguise she's in into her true form.

    Warhok and Warmonga 

Warhok and Warmonga

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___05mkv_snapshot_0646042.png
Warmonga
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___22mkv_snapshot_1443044.png
Warhok
Warhok voiced by: Ron Perlman
Warmonga voiced by: Kerri Kenney-Silver
Appearances: Kim Possible

Two Lorwardian warriors (a giant, green-skinned species similar to humans) who appear to have the same goals as Dr. Drakken/Shego/Dementor, except they seem much more intent and capable of fulfilling them... and destroying Earth in the process.


Both

  • Aliens Speaking English: They both inexplicably speak English, though Warmonga somewhat crosses over into You No Take Candle with her Third-Person Person.
  • Battle Couple: The creators say they are married and they conquer together.
  • Captain Ersatz: Their character histories and designs are modeled after Mala and Jax-Ur from Superman: The Animated Series. Warmonga shares Mala's long ponytail and stilted way of speaking, while Warhok is the no-nonsense commander and romantic interest of Warmonga, as Jax-Ur is to Mala. Hell, Warhok and Jax-Ur even share the same voice actor.
  • Egomaniac Hunters: They talked about the times they hunt. They even have a trophy room.
  • Final Boss: Despite Warmonga having one appearance in season 4 prior and Warhok having not even a mention prior, they seve as the final villains of the series.
  • Happily Married: The creators say they are married. This supports the fact that part of their battle with Team Possible felt like a double date!
  • Hunting the Most Dangerous Game:
    Warhok: Come Warmonga, we will take this one as a trophy. She will look handsome mounted beside your Thorgoggle spine.
  • Killed Off for Real: According to the creators their Character Death is permanent.
  • Knight of Cerebus: They're pretty much the only villains in the entire series that are taken seriously and pose a massive threat to innocent people that Kim is not able to stop on her own, and unlike Kim's regular Rogues Gallery they're almost never played for laughs.
  • Meaningful Name:
    • Their names are puns on terms for political leaders who favor warfare: "warhawk" and "warmonger."
    • This extends to their planet's name, which is a pun on "Warlord."
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Unlike Kim's usual enemies, they don't bother coming up with some elaborate, complex scheme to take over the world. Instead, they just outright attack with their full military might.
  • Not So Above It All:
    • They never bothered to get rid of the "off" switch on their technology. Warmonga even questions the wisdom of giving their ship such a thing.
    • Like Kim, they mock Shego denying any romance between her and Doctor Drakken, to the point where Warhok even knows about the saying about denial and the Nile River.
  • Outside-Context Problem: Unlike a majority of the other antagonists, they're Alien Invaders with a greater strength, endurance, and size advantage, and lack the desire to banter like Kim's other foes.
  • Proud Warrior Race Guys: Conquering a planet is a routine thing for people like them.
  • Secondary Color Nemesis: Green skin and purple clothes dominate their appearances.
  • Shipper on Deck: They both comment on how close Drakken and Shego are. When Shego vehemently informs both them and Kim that there's nothing between them, niether they nor Kim buy it (largely because at this point the Ship Tease was in full force). Warhok even lampshades it.
    Warhok: Denial. It's more than just a river on this planet which we now control.
  • Significant Anagram: Their race is called the Lorwardians. "Lorward" is a spoonerism of "Warlord".
  • Underestimating Badassery: In truth, they underestimated the entire human race, but they really underestimated Ron and what he would do if they threatened his girlfriend. Seriously, their first clue should've been when Ron sent them flying the first time. Their reaction, smirking at each other, implies "Lucky shot" and they proceed to fight him as before. Needless to say, it didn't end well for them.
  • Undignified Death: For a race of warriors and the most physically powerful characters featured, they're defeated with little effort by a fully empowered Ron Stoppable. Furthermore, they met their end via the character everyone saw as the comic relief sidekick.
  • Unholy Matrimony: They are married and their favorite activity is to conquer planets together.
  • Would Hurt a Child: The two have no problems fighting teenagers. In fact, in her first appearance, Warmonga would have put the final blow on Kim if Shego hadn't interfered. In "Graduation", they appear exuberant when they plan to take Kim to their homeworld to be mounted on their trophy room, with the intention of killing her.

Warhok

  • Diabolus ex Nihilo: Being introduced in the last episode, he's not given a backstory or any build-up.
  • Evil Is Petty: Comes to Earth to capture the girl who stopped Warmonga and the doctor who tricked her and planned on taking it over for these reasons.
  • Generic Doomsday Villain: He's an evil conqueror of worlds, but has less personality than Warmonga.
  • Facial Markings: Meant to evoke 'barbarian warlord'.
  • Knight of Cerebus: There's nothing comical about this guy. He is serious and causes a lot of damage.
  • Last Episode, New Character: Introduced in the Grand Finale.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: He's even more serious than Shego, instantly silencing Drakken upon appearing and has no tolerance for tomfoolery as seen when he was chasing Ron who was trying to have a light discussion with him. Any humorous lines he makes are sarcastic and dry. Finally, he managed to overwhelm both Shego and Kim with frightening efficiency.
  • Smug Super: Warhok boasted himself as 'the most fierce warrior in the galaxy', indicating he believed no one in the universe would ever defeat him. The smirk he shared with Warmonga after Ron struck seemed to indicate they believe they finally found someone who could give him a real challenge.

Warmonga

Minor Villains

    Gill 

Gil Moss / Gill

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s01___08mkv_snapshot_1312800.png
Click here to see him as a human
Click here to see his second mutated form
Voiced by: Justin Berfield
Appearances: Kim Possible

A former attendee of Camp Wannaweep, Gil took Ron's swim time in exchange for his arts and crafts slot at the camp as Ron didn't want to swim in the disgusting water, but this resulted in Gil mutating into a fish-like creature. This inspired a long-running vendetta, with Gil (who 'renamed' himself 'Gill') returning on two occasions to torment Ron for his perceived role in the mutation.


  • Arch-Enemy: He is a much more personal enemy to Ron than Monkey Fist, to the point that he actively made a plan to trap him. And he doesn’t care about Kim, as all he wants is revenge on Ron.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: In a sense. He is very clearly a jerk in his first appearance. His next appearance on, the other hand, portays him as having turned over a new leaf and wanting to be friends with Ron. However, past event leave Ron not to trust him, and his distrust is right as Gil reveals his intent on causing disruction as Gill again.
    Dr. Lurkin: I thought Gil had changed.
    Ron: Oh he did, in an evil "take over the world" kind of way.
  • The Bully: He spent most of his time at Camp Wannaweep making fun of Ron and calling him a ‘squeeb’.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Gil blames Ron for his mutation when all Ron did was refuse to go swimming in Lake Wannaweep.
  • Driven by Envy: His original motive, he was envious and jealous of Ron having a nice life as a regular human whereas he was stuck as a mutant, choosing to blame Ron for it when Gil willingly accepted to switch classes so he could keep swimming.
  • Evil Feels Good: In his second appearance, he appears to have become nicer, but he is actually even worse than before. He tells Ron that after getting turned human again, he missed his mutation to the point where he decided he wanted to be a mutant again and reign terror and turn others into mutants.
  • Fish People: Gil's entire appearance is based on this.
  • Foil: To Ron. Camp Wannaweep is the symbol of all of Ron's fears, while Gil eventually embraces his connection to Wannaweep and the mutation it gave him.
  • Hulking Out: His second mutated form in "Return to Wannaweep" is noticeably more muscular than his leaner original mutated form.
  • Lured into a Trap: Gil goes to great lengths to lure Ron into a position where he can get his revenge, ranging from a fake cheerleading competition to learning enough tech skills to jam even the Kimmunicator.
  • Misplaced Retribution: Blames Ron for his mutation instead of the adults in the camp who should have checked if the water was safe.
  • Never My Fault: Ties into Disproportionate Retribution above; Gil acts as though Ron knew what the waters of Lake Wannaweep would do to him after long-term exposure when Ron just refused to go into the disgusting water. In addition, Gil decided to keep swimming in the water of his own volition, Ron simply using it as an opportunity to avoid swim time.
  • Terms of Endangerment: When he is not calling him a Squeeb, he refers to Ron as “Ronnie” and once calls him his “old camp buddy”.
  • That Man Is Dead: Gil attempts this when he reveals his new name, but it falls flat considering that he just added an 'L' that doesn't change how it's pronounced.
  • Toxic Waste Can Do Anything: Gil was mutated due to overexposure to toxic run-off from the nearby science camp that contaminated Lake Wannaweep.

    Frugal Lucre 

Francis Lurman / Frugal Lucre

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s01___21mkv_snapshot_1550559.png
Voiced by: Richard Kind
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Kimmunicator

A low-budget supervillain-wannabe employed at Smart-Mart. Becomes Dr. Drakken's annoying Cell Block D cellmate during Season 4, and often drives him nuts. Ironically, Lucre is driven nuts when Motor Ed replaces Drakken in his cell.


  • Affably Evil: Even if he is evil, it's hard to say he's not friendly. Even his demand in his first appearance, though it would have made him very rich, likely would not have inconvenienced most people that much (aside from people in very poor countries, but he probably didn't think about that).
  • Ascended Extra: If it weren't for the show getting un-cancelled for a Post-Script Season, Frugal would've only had one appearance in the show. After the renewal, he took on a recurring role as Drakken's jail cellmate.
  • Basement-Dweller: He avoids the expense of maintaining a lair by living in his mom's basement.
  • Boring, but Practical: Surprisingly, the scheme he came up with in his first appearance is a textbook example of this, as he uses a virus he launched from every Smart-Mart using a bar-code that he tampered with to hold the internet ransom, demanding that every person on the planet send him a single dollar or he would permanently shut it down, crippling global communications world-wide. It should be noted that, if his scheme had succeeded, he would've been a billionaire.
  • Do Not Adjust Your Set: His first scheme was to go on all channels and broadcast a demand that everyone send him a dollar, or else he'd destroy the Internet.
  • Loony Fan: To Dr. Drakken. When they're stuck in prison together, he drives the bad doctor up the wall with his non-stop talking and gushing.
  • Motor Mouth: He will not shut up; ever. He drives Drakken to distraction when the two of them share a cell for the first part of the Post-Script Season.
  • Mirror Character: To Ron. Both are connected through Smart-Mart; Ron as a frequent shopper and Lucre as an employee and are underestimated due to their unorthodox approaches.
  • Punny Name: On Frugal and Lucrative, due to his non-existent budget and focus on getting rich. Lucre is also a colloquial word for "money."
  • Techno Wizard: Despite his shoestring budget, he's capable of hijacking the TV networks with his ransom demands and creating a computer virus that can be uploaded from an ordinary checkout scanner.
  • Wig, Dress, Accent: He tried to hide his identity behind a fake accent and beard in his first appearance.
  • You Get What You Pay For: His cheapskate ways make him even more unthreatening than the rest of the Rogues Gallery. For instance, he has to settle for threatening Kim and Ron with a kiddie pool full of snapping turtles rather than something more intimidating. However, his tampered barcode to infect the net with a virus and cripple global communications was rather genius in itself despite working on a shoestring budget.

    Hank Perkins 

Hank Perkins

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___12mkv_snapshot_0334789.png
Voiced by: Rob Paulsen
Appearances: Kim Possible

A business-smart young temp originally hired to assist Duff Killigan, and then Dr. Drakken. His exposure to evil convinced him that being bad had big promise, so he styled himself as a "Villainy Consultant" to get in on the ground floor.


  • Affably Evil: Quite a pleasant, polite and upbeat fellow, he seems like the last person who would be associated with evil.
  • Ambition Is Evil: Though he was only a temporary lackey at first, he described himself as a self-starter and later said that "a little birdie told [him he] might be kept on" as associate. His ambition leads him to becoming a villainy consultant to take advantage of the untapped market he saw in the evil business.
  • Amoral Attorney: He has a degree in law.
  • Dirty Coward: Had no qualms about shooting Jim and Tim with the Ray X while they were held captive, and was about to shoot Kim with it while she had her back turned to him due to being occupied with fighting Shego, only to turn it back on the twins when he noticed they were trying to stop him. When Shego was knocked out and the plot was foiled, he tries to run away.
  • Evil Costume Switch: When he started out as a temporary lackey just starting in villainy, he wore a simple grey dress shirt and tie. When he reappeared as a full-time villainy consultant, he switched it out for a darker-colored business suit.
  • Evil Lawyer Joke: When asked by Duff Killigan if he has any prior evil experience, Hank mentions that he has a law degree. The golfer's response? "Eh, close enough."
  • Hyper-Competent Sidekick: Hank was able to turn Dr. Drakken's typical, easy-to-foil operation into a highly successful evil business behind the extremely convincing cover of a cupcake company, to the point where even Wade was stunned when he discovered the true minds behind Hank's Gourmet Cupcakes. Hank accomplished this all without attracting much suspicion, and with little effort also solved Drakken's frequent issues of a lack of finance and poorly motivated henchmen.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Both times he assisted with an evil plot, he made a break for it when it went south, though he failed in escaping the first time.
  • Slowly Slipping Into Evil: Though he started simply as a young man with a law degree who graduated with honors from business school, working as en evil temporary lackey for Killigan and Drakken is what convinced him that evil was the growth industry of the next ten years.
  • Tom the Dark Lord: A temporary lackey-turned villainy consultant named Hank. You wouldn't expect it from the name, but he's actually one of the more dangerous villains on this page.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Though he said that he hated having to do it, he had no further qualms with shooting Jim and Tim with the Ray X, not even knowing what it does, simply to "score some points with the boss".

    Jack Hench 

Jack Hench

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s03___05mkv_snapshot_0736426.png
Voiced by: Fred Willard
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible 3: Team Possible | Kim Possible: Kimmunicator

A mysterious figure with a lot of money, no one in the public really knows what he does. In truth, he's the CEO of HenchCo Industries, which supplies villains who can afford his prices with weapons, tools, and henchmen.


    The Bebes 

The Bebes

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___17mkv_snapshot_0925143.png
Voiced by: Kerri Kenney
Appearances: Kim Possible

The Bebe robots are Dr. Drakken's attempt to create the perfect woman. However, because of his noted ineptitude at programming artificial intelligence, the Bebes began to think for themselves and deemed his leadership inadequate. They proceeded to devote their considerable skills toward their own goals, and very little was able to stand in their way.


  • A.I. Is a Crapshoot: They turn on Drakken after he declares that the Bebes are perfect and that their purpose is to obey him and they question why they should obey him if they're perfect and he clearly isn't.
  • Gone Horribly Right: Drakken wanted to create the perfect robot. Unfortunately for him, they were so perfect that they outgrew their programming and turned on him.
  • It Only Works Once: Dr. Possible's ultrasonic signal jamming only worked in their debut episode. When Kim tries it again in "Queen Bebe", they No-Sell it.
  • Killer Robot: The Bebes were equipped with a host of robotic abilities, including superhuman strength, considerable resistance to injury, and hyper-speed movement. They also demonstrated the capacity to learn from past mistakes and effectively guarded against them in future encounters.
  • Super-Speed: They could initially move at incredibly high speed, though only in short bursts. In "Queen Bebe" they seemingly have no limitations to their super speed and now move so fast that they're practically invisible, which Kim has to counter with the use of super-speed shoes.
  • Unexplained Recovery: How they came back online was never revealed. A scene that explains it in "Queen Bebe" was cut from the episode.

One-Shot Villains

    Adrena Lynn 

Adrena Lynn

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s01___16mkv_snapshot_1417873.png
Voiced by: Rachel Dratch
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible: Global Gemini

A TV teen actress known for her death-defying stunts. She turned to a villainy after being exposed as a fraud.


  • Attention Whore: The way she makes a spectacle of herself while performing dangerous stunts on her show, which are all fake, screams this. Eventually, she takes this up an eleven by jamming every satellite transmission to televise her revenge against Kim and Ron for exposing her as a fake.
  • Back for the Finale: After four seasons of absence, she finally has a non-speaking cameo in the series finale, "Graduation".
  • Character Catchphrase: "Freaky!", putting more emphasis on -eaky.
  • Dirty Coward: She talks big, but ultimately she wouldn't be able to pull off her stunts if there were any real risk to them. As soon as Kim gets a hold of her and starts flying her around the amusement park on her jetpack, Lynn is utterly terrified and immediately complies when Kim tells her to admit on live television that she's a cowardly fake.
  • Do Not Adjust Your Set: She uses her broadcasting equipment to hijack all the channels on the television to show her fight with Kim. It ends up being used to make her publicly admit she faked her stunts.
  • Foil: Similar to Kim, who can "do anything", Adrena Lynn is known for her death defying stunts. But whereas Kim's "stunts" are real and done for the sake of heroism, Lynn's are fake and done for the sake of her reputation.
  • Miles Gloriosus: Puts on a flashy spectacle to make herself look good but faked all her stunts. When put in a real death-defying situation, she admitted her cowardice.
  • One-Shot Character: Unlike the rest of the rogues gallery, she was in only in one episode, "All the News". The creators have confirmed that she was meant to be a recurring villain (hence her prominence in early promo-art and the show's Disney Channel minisite), but got cut due to not being popular enough.
  • Punny Name: Adrena Lynn → Adrenaline.
  • Psycho for Hire: In Global Gemini, she's broken out of prison by Worldwide Evil Empire to support Gemini's plans to brainwash Global Justice agents across the world.
  • Redemption Rejection: Ron tries to appeal to her to stop with the lies and not needlessly put the innocent Brick in danger, being the one responsible for her show being cancelled and having also twisted the truth to make an appealing story for people. She says that he's right and now she'll be more truthful... and then declares that she'll start with her "very real" defeat of Kim Possible.
  • Younger Than They Look: She looks and sounds like a young adult, but she's described as being a teen.

    The Jackal 

Jackie Oakes / The Jackal

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s01___12mkv_snapshot_1312428.png
Click here to see him as the Jackal
Voiced by: Bill Barretta
Appearances: Kim Possible

The founder and promoter of the GWA (Global Wrestling Association), he had ambitions to become a wrestler himself. Unfortunately for him, he wasn't taken seriously as a result of his height, and took initiative to rectifiy that matter by stealing a number of Egyptian artifacts that would allow him to become an avatar of the god Anubis.


  • Ambition Is Evil: Being the founder and promoter of a very successful wrestling organization wasn't enough for him, and he wanted to take part in it himself - even if it meant becoming a criminal to gather the items needed for his ritual.
  • Blow You Away: Amongst his powers is the ability to conjure strong forces of wind.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: He tries to murder Pain King and Steel Toe for not thinking he could fight them in the ring due to his size.
  • Eye Beams: One of the powers granted by the spirit of Anubis.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: Glowing yellow eyes after his transformation into the Jackal.
  • Oh, Crap!: When Rufus snaps the talisman off and he's back to being powerless, pint-sized Jackie Oakes... and he gets cornered by the pissed off Steel Toe and Pain King who proceed to throw him out of the ring.
  • One-Man Army: As the Jackal, he's powerful enough to take on Kim, Ron, Steel Toe and Pain King all at once.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appears in "Pain King vs. Cleopatra".
  • Sudden Eye Color: Interestingly enough, he switches between Black Bead Eyes and full pupils as Jackie. He instead has Glowing Eyes of Doom as the Jackal.
  • That Man Is Dead: After his transformation, he claims that he is no longer Jackie Oakes, and that he is now "the Jackal".
  • The Napoleon: Pre-transformation, Oakes is short enough that he needs to stand on a crate while making a public appearance at the Middleton Mall, and he's absolutely dwarfed by Steel Toe and Pain King. He doesn't take it too kindly when Steel Toe accidentally says a short joke in front of him.
  • Touched by Vorlons: He transforms into the Jackal after going through an ancient Egyptian ritual that allowed the spirit of Anubis, the Egyptian god of mummification, to possess him.
  • Tranquil Fury: He obviously didn't take it too well when Steel Toe and Pain King laughed off his suggestion that he join them in the ring, especially after Steel Toe's Freudian Slip involving his size, but other than grumbling he kept it inside until his Who's Laughing Now? moment after his transformation.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: As the Jackal, he is all-powerful, with high strength and agility along with a range of magical abilities. However, this requires him to be in physical contact with the Talisman of Anubis. As soon as Rufus snaps the chain off his neck, he transforms back into Jackie Oakes.
  • Who's Laughing Now?: Before picking up Steel Toe and Pain King, he mocks them for having made fun of his size.
    Jackal: You all said I was too small to get in the ring! Well, here I am! You still think I'm too small?!

    The Wraithmaster 

Malcolm Nevious / The Wraithmaster

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___12mkv_snapshot_0319689.png
Click here to see his Wraithmater avatar
Voiced by: Martin Spanjers
Appearances: Kim Possible

An avid player of the Everlot MMORPG, he sought to take over the digital world and rule it as supreme overlord, and had a crush on fellow player Zita, whom he sought to be his "queen" when he took over the game.


  • BFS: Wields one as the Wraithmaster. He has the power to change it's size, leading to a "sword-enlarging" contest with the Tunnel Lord.
  • …But He Sounds Handsome: All the other players think of the Wraithmaster as a griefer, but Malcolm seems all to eager to compliment and admire the Wraithmaster instead.
  • Defeat Means Respect: When all is said and done, he apologizes for trapping Ron and Zita in the game. Ron doesn't take it too personally, and when Malcolm wondered what to do now, Ron suggested trying out for the drama club since he already has all the shirts. He genuinely thanks Ron for his advice.
  • Evil Nerd: His true self is far less impressive-looking than his Wraithmaster persona, but his knowledge of Everlot and the immersion caps designed by his father are what allow him to be a threat.
  • Evil Overlord: He looked the part as the Wraithmaster, and it was ultimately his goal to achieve it within the world of Everlot.
  • Graceful Loser: Takes his final defeat in stride and mainly wondered what to do now that it was all over, when Ron suggest trying out for the drama club.
  • Griefer: He didn't exactly make the game fun for other players, preying on them and using them to enhance his own powers to further his goal to take over Everlot.
  • Grievous Harm with a Body: After losing his sword, the Wraithmaster attempts to battle the Tunnel Lord using Ron as a weapon.
  • Not So Invincible After All: Up until the climax, the Wraithmaster was practically unstoppable, capturing countless players and bringing them to his castle to force them to grant him their powers. He gets outwitted at certain points by Zita and Ron, and then the cracks begin to show when he gets a sound bruising when the heroes team up to attack him, though he still defeats them ultimately. Enter Rufus, who takes him on one-on-one and was starting to win before Malcolm was disarmed and decided to use Ron as a weapon. Then Zita gets powered up by all of the other players, growing more powerful than Malcolm and defeating him once and for all.
  • One-Handed Zweihänder: Due to being on horseback for much of the time, the Wraithmaster wields his massive sword with one hand, a fighting style he maintains when fighting on foot. As a result of the disparity in power between him and his opponents, the style remains fairly effective and allows him to spell cast with his off hand. He switches to two-handed fighting when confronted with the Tunnel Lord, who proves to be more than a match for him.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appears in "Virtu-Ron".
  • Perma-Stubble: Wraithmaster has a few isolated hairs on his upper lip, but not enough for a full mustache. Unlike most characters with such facial hair, he’s actually pretty nerdy.
  • Stop Hitting Yourself: Temporally subjected to this by Wade, who uses his character's magic to force Malcolm to smack himself in the face repeatedly with his BFS.
  • Take Over the World: Unlike most villains, he didn't seek to take over the real world, rather he sought to rule over the world of Everlot.
  • We Can Rule Together: Offered this to Zita. She refused.

    Falsetto Jones 

Falsetto Jones

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___11mkv_snapshot_0750343.png
Voiced by: Phil Morris
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible 2: Drakken's Demise

A skilled cat burglar and the only breeder of Lithuanian Wolfhounds in the world, he hosts dog competition shows at his mansion annually. He's the thief who stole the Kimber diamond.


  • Crazy-Prepared: Asked for Rufus' autograph and then used his paw prints to make a full background check that revealed not only that he was bought at Smarty Mart, but that he was bought by Ron Stoppable, leading him to realize that Kim was most likely at his mansion.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: His plan to steal the Kimber diamond is foiled and he isn't shown getting arrested, but in Drakken's Demise he's arrested after he steals money from the Middleton Museaum in order to lure Kim to his mansion.
  • Meaningful Name: He's called "Falsetto" because of a freak helium accident he had, leaving him with a very squeaky voice.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Falsetto is one of the smartest villains Team Possible has ever faced; he was clever enough to double check Rufus' paw print to prove he wasn't a dog, and confirm Ron's identity, and he averts Bond Villain Stupidity by actually sitting around to watch the two be destroyed.
    Kim: Um, aren't you going to leave now?
    Falsetto: Leave? What do you mean?
    Ron: Usually, the bad guy says his lame pun and walks out. You know, leaving us to our doom.
    Falsetto: But then I'd miss the whole thing, where's the fun in that? I'm not going anywhere!
    Kim: Okay, but I feel I must warn you that you're really breaking a supervillain tradition here.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appears in "Rufus in Show".
  • Pet the Dog: Literally. Falsetto is quite affectionate toward the dogs he raises.
  • Revenge: In Drakken's Demise he steals money from the Middleton Museaum so he can lure Kim to his mansion and get revenge for her foiling his previous theft of the Kimber diamond.

    Vincent Wheeler 

Vincent "Vinny" Wheeler

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___29mkv_snapshot_0206364.png
Voiced by: Rob Paulsen
Appearances: Kim Possible

A businessman and financial advisor for extremely rich individuals, he became rich by using his position as financial advisor to steal the fortunes of his wealthy clients, including Señor Senior, Senior and Señor Senior, Junior.


  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Wheeler made people get at ease with him by acting easy-going, relaxed and familiar with his clients and insisting that they call him "Vinny". However, behind the laid back facade was a conman who takes advantage of every opportunity to enrich himself.
  • Bullying a Dragon: Vinny Wheeler made the mistake of antagonizing a man known to be an international supervillain. Senior decided to take it upon himself to retake his fortune from Wheeler, stealing from one of the conman's business at a time until he had rebuilt his fortune.
  • Con Man: Got himself hired as financial advisors for rich clients, then tricked them into granting him power of attorney and signing over their fortunes to him.
  • Karma Houdini: Despite having some of his merchandise stolen, Vincent Wheeler ultimately doesn't face any federal repercussions for swindling his rich clients.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appears in "Triple S".

    Gemini 

Sheldon Director / Gemini

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s02___09mkv_snapshot_1429236.png
Voiced by: Maurice LaMarche
Appearances: Kim Possible | Kim Possible 2: Drakken's Demise | Kim Possible: Global Gemini

The leader of the Worldwide Evil Empire, or WEE, he is also the evil fraternal twin brother of Dr. Betty Director, head of Global Justice.


  • Artificial Limbs: His right hand is replaced with a mechanical one that can fire missiles.
  • Captain Ersatz: If Dr Director is Nick Fury, that makes Gemini, her evil brother named after a star sign, equivalent to Jake Fury/Scorpio.
  • Bad Boss: Pulls You Have Failed Me a lot for petty reasons.
  • Big Bad: Of Global Gemini, in which he kidnaps his sister and tries to brainwash Global Justice into his service.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Cares a lot for his pet chihuahua, Pepe.
  • Evil Is Petty: The only reason why WEE exists is because Sheldon needs to one-up his sister. Indeed, the organization seems to serve no real purpose other than being an Evil Counterpart to Global Justice.
  • Evil Twin: To Dr. Director. Evil fraternal twin, specifically.
  • Eyepatch of Power: Wears one to cover his left eye.
  • Not So Above It All: Dr. Director and Gemini at first seemingly have a typical antagonist relationship, before the reveal they are twin siblings, revealed when they call each other by first name (Betty and Sheldon respectably). Cue the two bickering like children over childhood disagreements and Gemini was even going to get their mother involved. Ron lampshades the goofiness of it all.
  • One-Shot Character: Only has a major role in "The Ron Factor". He cameos in "Grande Size Me" and "Graduation, Part 2".
  • Sibling Seniority Squabble: Gemini attributes his conflict with his sister to the fact that she didn't defer to his status as the elder twin (by four minutes).
  • Talk to the Fist: Has a variation of this by launching missiles from his mechanical hand.
    Gemini: Talk to the hand!
  • You Have Failed Me: His response to his agents' failures is to invite them to "have a seat". Said seat is attached to a trapdoor that sends the unlucky agents to an unknown fate, from which we never hear from them again.

    Chester Yapsby 

Chester Yapsby

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s03___07mkv_snapshot_1510753.png
Voiced by: Stephen Root
Appearances: Kim Possible

A former lab assistant to Professor Acari, he was let go for having outlandish ideas and then turned to evil to pursue his new goals. He stole the Roflax from Acari's lab, and used it to create an army of giant cockroaches that terrorized Middleton.


  • The Beastmaster: Through the use of the Roflax, he took control of an army of cockroaches that he mutated to gigantic proportions. He loses control of them when Kim knocks it out of his hands.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: Between his lisp, general appearance and his initially less-than-impressive dog-sized cockroaches he doesn't seem too impressive. However, he is the only villain to have induced actual genuine terror in Kim Possible.
  • Mad Scientist: Plotted to Take Over the World through the use of his cockroach army that he mutated with the use of the Roflax, starting with the Tri-City regions of Middleton and Upperton.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appears in "Roachie".

    The Yono 

The Yono

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_kim_possible_s04___20mkv_snapshot_1259927.png
Voiced by: Clancy Brown
Appearances: Kim Possible

An evil monkey entity used by Monkey Fist to take over the world.


  • The Dreaded: Just the mention of his name scares Wade and the fear of him causes the evacuation of the Yamanouchi School.
  • One-Shot Character: Only appears in "Oh No! Yono!"
  • Power Glows: The Yono has a yellow aura around him when using magic.


 
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Monkey Fist vs Hulk Ron

In "Grande Size Me", Monkey Fist feels confident that his superior fighting skills and agility will fair against the hulking strongfat Ron's brute strength. Unfortunately, even after aiming for Ron's "weak spots", Monkey Fist is still outmatched in power.

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Main / MusclesAreMeaningful

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