- Ace Ventura: Pet Detective: Ace has a few recurring enemies who have been the villains of multiple episodes, such as Baron de Claw, Atrocia Odora, and the Griffin.
- The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius has a large cast of antagonists that tend to return at least once. These include King Goobot, Poultra, Evil Jimmy, Professor Calamitous, Beautiful Gorgeous, the Nanobots, Meldar, Zix, Travoltron, and Tee, the Twonkies, the Junkman, Baby Eddie, Eustace Strych and Grandma Taters.
- For a cartoon of The '80s, Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers had a pretty substantial Rogues Gallery; the Queen of the Crown (The Big Bad), Lazarus Slade, The Scarecrow, Jackie Subtract, Ryker Killbane (and the other rogue Supertroopers), Brappo, The Black Hole Gang (especially Macross and Daisy O'Mega), Nimrod, "Wild" Bill Krebbs, and more. Not bad for one season!
- Adventure Time: The series main heroes Finn the Human, Jake the Dog and Co. have faced several villains who appear over multiple episodes and pose a threat in them. These are Ice King, Gunter/ Orgalorg, Ricardo, Magic Man, The Earl of Lemongrab, Hunson Abadeer, Me-Mow, Kee-Oth, the Oozers, Maja, the King of Ooo, Martin Mertens, Betty Grof (after Sanity Slippage), the Flame King, Dr. Gross, Tiffany Oiler, Uncle Gumbald, Fern, Warren Ampersand and the series' Big Bad and Finn's Arch-Enemy The Lich as well as the Greater-Scope Villain GOLB. Though keeping with the A World Half Full nature of the series, many of them do in fact reform over time.
- Aladdin: The Series had quite a few recurring villains, including Mozenrath, Mirage, Mechanicles, Saleen, Sadira, Abis Mal, Amin Damoolah, Ayam Aghoul, and Queen Hippsodeth (although she made a Heel–Face Turn).
- Despite being a mostly-comedic series, All Hail King Julien has a few recurring enemies to the kingdom, including Karl, Uncle King Julien, Crimson, Becca and Abner, Mary Ann, Koto, Trent and Kipper, and Pam.
- Aqua Teen Hunger Force has the Mooninites, the Plutonians, MC Pee Pants, the Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past, Dr. Wongburger, and Markula.
- Atomic Betty has a large cast of recurring villains, including Maximus I.Q. (and his toady Minimus), Infantor, The Chameleon, Iciclia, Dr. Cerebral, and Nuclea, to name a few. And while they certainly aren't as dangerous as any of the alien supervillains above, Penelope Lang and Duncan Paine also antagonize Betty pretty regularly on Earth.
- Atomic Puppet: The eponymous duo's recurring villains are Mookie (aka Sergeant Subatomic), Professor Tite-Gripp, Queen Mindbender, Rudolph Mintenbergnote , Mudman, Zorp, Naughty Kitty, Dirtbag, Lacer, Harry Von Follicle, and an unnamed alligator-warrior.
- Aang from Avatar: The Last Airbender has a rogues gallery. Prince Zuko, Princess Azula, Fire Lord Ozai, Jet, Admiral Zhao, Combustion Man, Ty Lee, Mai, and Long Feng. While some of these turn to the side of good, all of them have at least once opposed Aang and Team Avatar, and most of them (save for Jet and Long Feng) belong to one group: the Fire Nation.
- His successor Avatar Korra has an impressive rogues gallery of her own. Amon, Tarrlok, Unalaq, Desna and Eska, Earth Queen Hou Ting, Zaheer and the Red Lotus, Kuvira, and Vaatu, a spirit of darkness and chaos and an enemy to all incarnations of the Avatar. Like the previous series, some of these antagonists have a Heel–Face Turn and some oppose the Avatar to the very end.
- The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes: Across this show's two-season run, the Avengers have battled numerous villains, including teams and solo operatives, the majority of whom make recurring appearances either in standalone adventures or as part of the driving plot of a given arc. These foes, major and minor, include Loki, Amora the Enchantress, Ultron, the Leader, Baron Zemo, Kang the Conqueror, General Ross, the Masters of Evil (ostensibly led by Zemo, but having really been formed and string-pulled by Enchantress), Absorbing Man, Whirlwind, A.I.M., HYDRA, the Kree Empire, Ulysses Klaw, the Skrulls, the Serpent Society, and the Wrecking Crew.
- Batman Beyond introduced a whole new line of villains exclusively for Terry, such as Derek Powers / Blight, Inque, Willie Watt, Shriek, Spellbinder, Curare, the Stalker, Mad Stan, and Big Time.
- Ben 10 has Vilgax, Kevin 11, Dr. Animo, Sixsix, Zombozo, the Circus Freaks, Hex, Charmcaster, the Forever Knights, Vulkanus, Zs'Skayr, Eon, the Highbreed, Darkstar, Argit, Sevenseven, Albedo, the Vreedle Brothers, Will Harangue, Aggregor, Dagon Malware, Khyber, Attea, and Dr. Psychobos. Ten of Ben's villains even teamed up against him, forming the Negative 10.
- Bravestarr: As the resident Marshal of New Texas, Bravestarr naturally has to defend the planet, and Fort Kerium especially, from the attacks of marauding outlaws and criminals. Recurring foes include Stampede, Tex Hex and his Carrion Bunch (Outlaw Skuzz, Cactus Head, Vipra, Sandstorm, Thunderstick, Hawgtie), the Krang, and several Dingo outlaws over the series' run (particularly Barker, an occasional henchman of Tex Hex but who's also served in other posses; Howler, leader of the Leaper Riders posse; and Goldtooth, an overweight coyote who's recognizable by his namesake tooth).
- While not in a true sense, in Bob's Burgers, there's quite a few recurring characters who torment or annoy the Belchers (but mostly Bob):
- Felix Fischoeder, the Cranwinkles, Dr. Yap, and Counselor Frond tend to antagonize the entire Belcher clan, yet take on Bob the most (though Frond also is against the kids as much as Bob, and in Felix's case, he nearly wrecked the town's economic lifeblood)
- Jimmy Pesto and Hugo the Health Inspector serve as Bob's rivals (in the area of food and Linda, respectively)
- Tammy and Millie serve as Tina and Louise's rival and stalker, respectively.
- Louise considers immature, bullying teen Logan her nemesis, while Linda hates Logan's My Beloved Smother Cynthia. Both pairs have managed to work together on occasion, but they just annoy each other too much to stay on friendly terms.
- Gene's recurring enemy is his Abhorrent Admirer turned rival Courtney Wheeler and her Jerkass father.
- In Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, Buzz and the Rangers faced such foes as Emperor Zurg, Warp Darkmatter, XL, NOS-4-A2, Torque, Evil Buzz, and Gravitina.
- Captain Planet and the Planeteers had to face a fairly small but still persistent number of "Eco Villains" who would carry out environmentally destructive practices out of greed for profit or just because they could. This list consists of Looten Plunder, Hoggish Greedly, Sly Sludge, Duke Nukem, Verminous Skumm, Dr. Blight, Mame and Stalker Slaughter, Zarm, and Captain Pollution. Also on the list by proxy are their various henchmen, including Argos Bleak (who often acts as The Dragon to Plunder but has also proven to be a competent standalone villain), Rigger (Greedly's henchman), Oakey and Dokey (two more henchmen of Plunder's who are far less competent than Bleak), Ooze and Tank Flusher III (Sludge's sidekick and strongman garbage collector, respectively), Leadsuit (Nukem's errand boy), the Rat Pack (Skumm's rat-man henchmen), and MAL (Dr. Blight's super-computer).
- ChalkZone: Rudy Tabootie and friends have to contend with with threats coming from both the titular Chalk world and the real world. In Chalk world, there's Skrawl, the Craniacs and Major Brand. In the real world, there's Reggie Bullnerd, Terry Bouffant and Vinnie Raton.
- Codename: Kids Next Door had a very large roster of villains including Father, the Delightful Children From Down The Lane, Mr. Boss, the Common Cold, Knightbrace, Grandma Stuffum, Crazy Old Cat Lady, Stickybeard, Chester, Mr. Wink and Mr. Fibb, Count Spankulot, the Toilenator, and many others.
- Cool McCool had six recurring adversaries—the Rattler, the Owl, Jack In The Box, Hurricane Harry, Dr. Madcap and Greta "Green Lips" Ghoul. They all teamed up against McCool in the episode "College of Crooks."
- Courage the Cowardly Dog had his own share of recurring enemies such as Katz (a red, sadistic cat heavily implied to be a Serial Killer), Le Quack (a French duck con artist), Benton Tarantella (a zombie director), the Snowman (a snowman trying to survive Global Warming by freezing everything) and The Chicken From Outer Space (Exactly What It Says on the Tin). The episode Ball Of Revenge also upgraded the Cajun Fox (a fox interested in cooking, including humans), the Clutching Foot (a foot fungus monster with a mobster mentality), the Queen of the Black Puddle (a siren-like demon living in a puddle world), the Weremole (a mole that acts like a typical werewolf) and Eustace to a Legion of Doom.
- Being a Super Hero show, Danny Phantom has its fair share of villains: Vlad Plasmius, Skulker, Technus, Ember McLain, Spectra, Freakshow, Desiree, Youngblood, the Box Ghost, etc. Most of the villains evenly contributed a dastardly deed at least twice. Which is largely Danny's fault, given that his standard method of dealing with villains is to just force them to go home. You'd think he'd try a more permanent method of containment for the dangerous ones.
- For a show that was only on for a couple seasons Darkwing Duck had a massive assortment of villains: NegaDuck, Megavolt, Bushroot, The Liquidator, Quackerjack, Steelbeak, Ammonia Pine, Tuskernini, Professor Moliarity, Splatter Phoenix, Jambalaya Jake, the Brainteasers, Taurus Bulba, and the Cheese Gang. This is not even counting the villains that appeared once or made a Heel–Face Turn. If you include the comic continuity, some of the show's one-shot villains returned to cause DW further trouble, including Dr. Fossil, Bugmaster, Camille Chameleon, Cement Head, Isis Vanderchill, Phineas Sharpe, and Paddywhack; while others started out in the comics as opposed to the show, such as Cat-Tankerous, Chronoduck, Muckduck, and Suff-Rage. In a variation, Wolfduck started as a Canon Foreigner in the NES video game, but later made an appearance in the comic.
- The DC Animated Universe's Justice League, naturally, had several enemies they had to fight, most notably from the heroes' respective comic book Rogues Galleries, but also a number of one-shot villains and a few original characters created for the show. Among the most recognizable and most recurring foes the League had to fight: Lex Luthor, Vandal Savage, Morgan le Fay and her son Mordred, Solomon Grundy, Copperhead, Star Sapphire, Cheetah, The Shade, the Joker, Sinestro, Killer Frost, Gorilla Grodd, Dr. Destiny, Metallo, Toyman, Brainiac, Weather Wizard, Mongul, Shadow-thief, Roulette, and Darkseid and the forces of Apokolips. Many of these enemies usually worked in groups, often as members of the Injustice League or the Secret Society, and many of them later joined the wider ranks of the Legion of Doom. Also, among the most notable of the one-shot villains: the Imperium, the Manhunters, Brainwave, the Justice Lords, Eclipso, Orm the Ocean-Master, Despero, Aresia, and Chronos the Time-thief.
- Dr. Dimensionpants has at least 4 recurring villains, namely Glass Skull, The Cortex, and a pair of evil wizards.
- The Fairly OddParents!:
- An odd example occurs within the show with the writers introducing a recurring series of antagonists who appeared in various episodes. Examples include Timmy's Sadist Teacher Mr. Crocker, his sadistic babysitter Vicky, Francis the school bully, popular kids Tad and Chad and their bouncer, Dark Laser, Norm the Genie, the Ben Stein-voiced Pixies, Anti-Cosmo and Anti-Wanda (and their son Foop in season 7), Cosmo's Wanda-hating mother Mama Cosma, Timmy's Depraved Dentist Doctor Bender and his son, Wendell (both voiced by Gilbert Gottfried), the Nega Chin, Remy Buxaplenty, and Imaginary Gary.
- A reoccurring gag is that Super Toilet is somehow a member of this Rogues Gallery, but whatever it did was a Noodle Incident, since whenever it's brought up all we get is Cosmo in a fetal position mumbling "so much clogging".
- The Comic Book within the Show Crimson Chin has a few of his own. Including the aforementioned Nega Chin there's also The Bronze Kneecap and H2 Olga, who are reoccuring extras whenever The Chin is involved. Lesser ones include the Golden Gut, Iron Lungs and Titanium Toenail. Even though they only show up once or twice in the actual show, Timmy implies that they are regulars in the comic itself.
- Freakazoid! has a modest sized one, composed of The Lobe, Cobra Queen, Candle Jack, Cave Guy, Gutierrez, Waylon Jeepers, Invisibo, and Longhorn. Other one-episode villains show up, but the above are recurring villains. Sometimes it does drift into Friendly Enemy and/or Enemy Mine.
- Futurama, when it isn't drifting to a Negative Space Wedgie or its Sci-Fi Kitchen Sink, often settles for Richard Nixon's head, Mom, the Robot Mafia, Robot Santa, the Robot Devil, Roberto, the Brain Spawn, and the Omicronians. Bender may or may not be an example, considering he's actually the Villain Protagonist.
- Grossology: The Grossologists have their own rogues gallery, which include Lance Boil, Insectiva, Sloppy Joe, Fartor, The Slim Slime Man, Darko Crevasse, Kid Rot, to name a few.
- The Gargoyles have as recurring enemies Xanatos, Demona, Fox, the Pack (including Coyote, Wolf, Jackal, Hyena and Dingo), Macbeth, Thailog, Sevarius, Oberon, the Archmage, Tony Dracon, Hakon, Fang and the Hunter(s). Beyond them, the Illuminati Society represented a Greater-Scope Villain, though they rarely took a direct hand in things. And that list is by no means exhaustive.
- Ghostbusters: While it was difficult for The Real Ghostbusters and Extreme Ghostbusters to have recurring villains, as the essential premise of the series was that every antagonist was gonna be deal with permanently in every episode, they do have their own gallery of recurring rogue spirits, most notably Samhain, The Grundel, Ghostmaster and The Boogieman, they all appear in more than one episode across the two series. Even more if the expanded universe is included as they appear also in comics, boardgames and videogames. The Stay Puft Marshmallow Man also appears in several episodes in the original series.
- In Jackie Chan Adventures, Jackie's most recurring enemies are the Dark Hand gang (consisting of the mob boss Valmont and his Enforcers - Finn, Ratso, Chow, and Hak Foo), who often served as mediocre henchmen working under greater bad guys. Seasonal antagonists included Shendu (who's also the overall main villain of the series), the Demon Sorcerers, Daolon Wong, Tarakudo, and Drago.
- Johnny Test has Johnny build up a decent-sized Rogues Gallery of his own. "Bumper" Randall, Bling-Bling Boy, Dark Vegan, Brain Freezer, The Tickler, and Mr. Mittens are among the most commonly recurring villains in the series.
- The original Jonny Quest had only one recurring villain: Doctor Zin. In the first season of the '90s revival, Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures, the writers introduced two comparable foes, Jeremiah Surd and Ezekiel Rage. When old-school JQ fans took over in the second season, they were promptly killed off in favor of bringing back Doctor Zin. Who also promptly died, leaving his previously unknown twin daughters to take over for him.
- The first season of Kaeloo had Mr. Cat as the only villain, but once Pretty and Olaf showed up, any one of those three could be the villain. In the event that Pretty or Olaf is the villain, Mr. Cat will suddenly be on the good side.
- Kim Possible has Dr. Drakken, Shego, Duff Killigan, Lord Monkey Fist, Senor Senior, Sr. and his son Senor Senior, Jr., Camille Leon, Motor Ed, Professor Dementor, DNAmy, and others. It's notable that only about three villains ever to appear on the show didn't return at least once.note There's even a literal Rogues Gallery of wanted posters taped to the inside of Kim's locker door. Some of them even teamed up at one point to beat Kim.
- Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness gives Po and friends a sizable roster of villains including Temutai, Taotie, Junjie, Hundun, Scorpion, Fenghuang, and Tong Fo.
- Loonatics Unleashed: The titular Loonatics face a variety of villains in their efforts to protect Acmetropolis; most (but not all), like the Loonatics themselves, are descendants of classic Looney Tunes characters, and many of them got their abilities courtesy of a meteor that struck Acmetropolis in the back-story. While a lot of the Loonatics' enemies show up as one-episode villains, they do have recurring foes including Optimatus, Rupes Oberon, Weather Vane, Dr. Dare, General Deuce, Massive, Mastermind, Otto the Odd, Drake Sypher, and Sylth Vester.
- Anyone in the original Looney Tunes could be this, depending on who you were. Lots of guns and dynamite, not a lot of continuity, and pranksters and Trolls galore.
- Bugs Bunny alone frequently has to deal with Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Marvin The Martian, Taz The Tazmanian Devil, Wily E. Coyote, Gossamer (a red furry monster wearing sneakers), Witch Hazel (a green-skinned Wicked Witch), Rocky and Mugsy (a pair of mobsters consisting of a short boss and his large henchman), Toro the Bull (the bull from Bully for Bugs), The Crusher (a wrestler/boxer Bugs fights in the ring), Beaky Buzzard (an absentminded Momma's Boy buzzard), Cecil Turtle (a turtle that Bugs often races against) and even Daffy Duck himself. All of them are recurring threats to his well-being.
- Its taken up to twelve in a promo for The Bugs Bunny Show where Bug's self-promotion as the star of the show leads a lot of his jealous co-stars to threaten him with whatever weapon they have at the moment. And members of the mob include not only the usuals like Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam and Wily E. Coyote but also Sylvester, Pepé Le Pew, Tweety and even Speedy Gonzales and the Road Runner. Ironically they all behave exactly like Daffy Duck who doesn't appear in the mob.
- Bugs Bunny alone frequently has to deal with Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Marvin The Martian, Taz The Tazmanian Devil, Wily E. Coyote, Gossamer (a red furry monster wearing sneakers), Witch Hazel (a green-skinned Wicked Witch), Rocky and Mugsy (a pair of mobsters consisting of a short boss and his large henchman), Toro the Bull (the bull from Bully for Bugs), The Crusher (a wrestler/boxer Bugs fights in the ring), Beaky Buzzard (an absentminded Momma's Boy buzzard), Cecil Turtle (a turtle that Bugs often races against) and even Daffy Duck himself. All of them are recurring threats to his well-being.
- The Mask also had a recurring gallery of villains including the arch-nemesis Doctor Pretorius, his henchman Walter, Kablamus, Chronos, The Terrible Two (Putty Thing and Fish Guy), The Tempest, The Shark and his gang of biker thugs, Gorgonzola the Cheese Witch, and the Devil himself, among others. There have been occasional supervillain team-ups.
- Mighty Mouse didn't have much of one in any incarnation.note Most of his "arch enemies" were little more than evil cats oppressing helpless mice (although he did have one recurring foe: Oil Can Harry, who usually just kidnapped or otherwise oppressed Pearl Pureheart), but in the Ralph Bakshi version, he did have one somewhat. His most recurring foe was The Cow. Others (mostly one time characters) include "Petey Pate", "Captain A-Crab", and "The Glove", among others.
- My Life as a Teenage Robot: The majority of Jenny's opponents are one-shot villains, but the biggest recurring villains include the Cluster (usually Queen Vexxus, Smytus, and Krackus), Kilgore, Armagedroid, and the Space Bikers. Other villains to have appeared in more than on episode include the Mudslinger, Vladimir, Lancer, the Mad Hammer Brothers, Dr. Locust, and Skippy the Evil Wonder Puppet.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic has a notable rogues gallery, even when just considering the major villains. This gallery includes Nightmare Moon, Discord, Queen Chrysalis, King Sombra, Lord Tirek, Starlight Glimmer, The Pony of Shadows, Cozy Glow, The Storm King, Tempest Shadow, and Grogar. That's not even considering all the lower-tier villains, jerks and bullies that the main characters have to face off against in the average slice of life episodes. Though it is worth noting the rogues gallery in this show is constantly in flux due to so many antagonists and villains reforming.
- Being a narrative centered around a sprawling Galactic race, Ōban Star-Racers boasts much deadly competition for the Earth racing team, each battling for the mysterious "Ultimate Prize." The Crog Imperium is Earth's main opponent, represented by Colonel Toros and General Kross. Other more prominent enemies include Lord Furter, Sul,Ondai,Ning and Skun, Muir, and Spirit. While most have otherwise noble motives, the ultimate villain is Canaletto who has been manipulating the race behind the scenes to take the power of the Avatar for himself.
- Plastic Man; his recurrent villains are The Weed, The Clam, Half-Ape, Dr. Superstein, Computerhead, Solex and Disco Mummy, though most episodes feature a Villain of the Week format.
- The Police Academy Animated Adaptation had a rather sizeable Rogues Gallery, with recurring villains including Kingpin, Numbskull, the Claw, Mr. Sleaze, Lockjaw and Amazona, and one-shot villains including the Phantom, Seedy McLeech, Flung Hi, Waxen Wayne, King Neptune, and Big Burger.
- Powerbirds: Ace and Polly have small ensemble of villains they fight in every episode, being Scrapper, Clawdette, Minerva, Nibbles, and Asher Stasher.
- The Powerpuff Girls' Rogues Gallery includes Mojo Jojo, Him, Fuzzy Lumpkins, Princess, The Gangreen Gang, Sedusa, and the Rowdyruff Boys. The Amoeba Boys only wish they were evil enough to qualify.
- The 2016 reboot adds Man Boy, the Derbytantes, the Fashionistas, Silico and the Gnat to the rogues roster.
- Regular Show has a new, crazy adventure each episode, but a few of the Park Crew's foes will often turn up again, ranging from friendly enemies to genuinely dangerous and powerful monsters. These include Klorgbane,the Geese,Garret Bobby Ferguson,the Internet, the Capricola Gang, Ranger Gene, Death and his son Thomas, Randall Ross, and Anti-Pops.
- Robotboy: Outside of Dr. Kamikazi and Constantine, there's villains like Affenkugel, Ludwig, Special Agent, Bjorn Bjornson, Bjornbot, Felonious Hexx, Protoboy and General Yakitori.
- Samurai Jack has Aku, the Beetle Drones, Demongo, the Black Mass (where Aku originated from), Scaramouche, the High Priestess and the seven Daughters of Aku (one of them, Ashi, goes over a Heel–Face Turn though), as well as several other one-shot villains.
- The SilverHawks, being essentially space cops, have a Rogues Gallery in the gang of space-criminals known as Mon*Star's Mob, consisting of the leader Mon*Star and his henchmen Yes-Man, Hardware, Melodia, Windhammer, Molec-U-lar, Mumbo Jumbo, Poker-Face, Buzz-Saw and Timestopper. Other villains in the series include Zero the Memory-thief (who worked occasionally with Mon*Star's mob), the Rhino, the Cyclops, the Space Bandit and the Bounty Hunter.
- The Smurfs (1981) have Gargamel, Hogatha, Balthazar and Chlorhydris, all witches and warlocks.
- SpongeBob SquarePants gives us Plankton, Bubble Bass, the Flying Dutchman, Man Ray and the Dirty Bubble. Mr. Krabs is also one of these, depending on the episode.
- Static Shock has a rogue gallery consisting of many teens who gained superpowers after a genetic mutant explosion and are known as "Bang Babies". Static would usually fight Ebon, Hotstreak, Shiv, Talon, Kangorr, Aquamaria, Ferret, Carmen Dillo, Puff, Onyx, Madelyn Spaulding, and many others. However some of these "Bang Babies" are just confused and stressed young kids who don't know what to do, which sometimes leads to a Heel–Face Turn.
- Most Storm Hawks villains are part of the same group (Cyclonia), these include Cyclonis, Dark Ace, Ravess and Snipe, who often work separately on their own individual schemes. There are also as less commonly fought foes like Repton and his Raptors, and The Colonel.
- For a short-lived series, SWAT Kats had an extensive list of cat-based villains: Dark Kat, Dr. Viper, the Metallikats, the Pastmaster, Hard Drive, Mad Kat, Rex Shard, Mutilor, and Turmoil.
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles:
- The 80s series had its fair share of recurring villains. Apart from the regular Shredder, Krang, and Rocksteady and Bebop there were also multiple appearances from Baxter Stockman, Butcher, Slash, Leatherhead, Rat King. The episode titled "Night of The Rogues" featured some of these recurring villains along with some who had previously only had a single appearance in the series such as Chrome Dome and Tempestra.
- The 2003 series has the Shredder (including the Utrom Shredder, the Tengu Shredder and the Cyber Shredder), Baxter Stockman, Agent Bishop, the Garbageman, Drago, Hun and his Purple Dragons, Karai, the Triceratons (Including Zanramon and Mozar) as well as the Federation (including Blanque and Lonae).
- The 2012 series yet again gives us Shredder and Baxter along with Karai and Rat King, but also has the Kraang (which are composite characters/expies of Krang from the 80's series and the Utroms); new Foot clan mutant lackeys Dogpound and Fishface and mutants Snakeweed and Spider Bytez and the alien Newtralizer. Later, they brought back Bebop and Rocksteady, too.
- Rise has Baron Draxum and Big Mama as the newcomers and initial major villains, though the Foot Clan and Shredder are still the ultimate main villains (as well as the Krang in The Movie).
- The Teen Titans had a Rogues Gallery including Slade, who usually employed Cinderblock, Plasmus, or Overload, the Hive Five with Jinx, Mammoth, and Gizmo, and several other reoccurring villains such as Mad Mod, Dr. Light, Mumbo, and Control Freak. Eventually nearly all of the previous villains teamed up to form the Brotherhood of Evil. Control Freak was particularly offended when the Titans didn’t include him on their list of villains to watch out for because, as he lampshades, “I'm a recurring villain!”
- The ThunderCats (1985), in their original incarnation, often had to face the threat of Mumm-Ra (and by extension, the Ancient Spirits of Evil who grant him his power), as well as the scavenging Mutants (Slithe, Monkian, Jackalman and Vultureman), who would either act independently or as henchmen to Mumm-Ra, but they also had to frequently fight Ratar-O (another Mutant who briefly took command of that group from Slithe), Grune (a Thundarian and old enemy of Jaga), the Berserkers (a cyborg pirate band), the Lunataks (a group of alien raiders consisting of Luna, Chilla, Alluro, Amok, Tug-Mug and Red-Eye), Captain Cracker (a robot pirate), Safari Joe (an intergalactic big-game hunter), Two-Time (a two-headed robot), and the Driller (a mechanical being with a drill-tipped lower body).
- In their 2011 incarnation, this list of rogues is greatly reduced, with Mumm-Ra and his henchmen (Addicus, Vultaire, Kaynor and Pumyra), Slithe (this time leading the Lizardmen) and Grune getting most of the recurring appearances. Ratar-O and the Driller do make one-episode appearances, however.
- El Tigre had a large number of recurring villains, including Sartana of the Dead, El Oso, Señor Siniestro, Zoe Aves/Black Cuervo and her family, Dr. Chipotle Jr., Dr. Chipotle Sr., General Chapuza, Che Chapuza, the Mustache Mafia, the Titanium Titan, Giant Robot Sanchez, and El Mal Verde.
- PJ Masks has the Nighttime Villains and their Mooks, which take turns (occasional Villain Team-Up episodes aside) to challenge the heroes. The show started with three (Romeo, Night Ninja and Luna Girl), with season 2 adding The Wolfy Kids, and Season 4 will add Octobella.
- Total Drama: All Stars' Villainous Vultures team is composed mostly of major antagonists and Jerkasses from the previous seasons: Heather, Duncan, Alejandro, Scott, Lightning, Jo and Courtney joining later (only Eva and Justin miss out. Gwen and Cameron, meanwhile, are the team's Token Good Teammates), while the real Big Bad Mal was on the heroes' team. And even when not trying to get rid of each other, the campers in general also have to deal with host Chris McLean, his sidekick Chef Hatchet, a bear, Fang the Mutant Shark, the Sasquatchanakwa, Ezekiel after becoming a monster, and several other horrors the island and hosts throw at them.
- Pahkitew Island also has a fair share of villains on one team including Amy, Max, and Scarlett. Dave's Sanity Slippage also leads him to pull a Face–Heel Turn in the finale, while Sugar serves as the season's chief villain.
- Like the Storm Hawks example above, most of the foes for Optimus's team of Autobots Transformers: Animated were Decepticons. However, only a few were able or willing to directly further the Big Bad Megatron's plans, and many of the Decepticons and their allies (Starscream, Blackarachnia, Lockdown, etc.) could serve as a major independent threat for any given episode. The minor human villains (Porter C. Powell, Meltdown, and Henry Masterson, for instance) also served as a more traditional Rogues Gallery.
- While Sam, Clover and Alex from Totally Spies! tend to face one-episode villains whose motives range from understandable to dubious to downright pathetic, they do manage to accumulate a sizable list of recurring foes over the course of the series. This list includes Terrence Lewis, Tim Scam, Helga Von Guggen, Geraldine Husk, Myrna Beesbottom, Jazz Hands, Boogie Gus, Candy Sweet, Diminutive Smalls, Sebastian Saga, Hayes, Dr. Grey, Granny, Dr. Gelee, Manny Wong, Violet Vanderfleet, Willard, Marco Lumiere, and to a lesser extent Mandy and Arnold Jackson.
- T.U.F.F. Puppy is building up a fair gallery of recurring villains. Along with Verminious Snaptrap and his D.O.O.M. colleagues, there is also Chameleon, Bird Brain, Caped Cod, Quacky and Jack Rabbit.
- In the same vein as the Looney Tunes, Woody Woodpecker had a small cast of recurring antagonists. The most popular and well-known were Wally Walrus and Buzz Buzzard, but Woody also regularly contended with Ms. Meany, Gabby Gator, Dapper Denver Dooley, and Professor Dingledong.
- Xiaolin Showdown has Jack Spicer (and his Jackbots), Wuya, Chase Young, and Hannibal Roy Bean as main villains as well as Le Mime, Mala Mala Jong, Katnappe, Pandabubba, Cyclops, Tubbimura, Vlad, and Gigi.
- Yin Yang Yo! also has its share of bad guys: The Night Master, Carl the Evil Cockroach Wizard, his brother Herman, Eradicus, Ultimoose, Yuck, Animesque Smoke & Mirrors, Saranoia and G.P who later became Fr-ped, Goldmember Expy Pondscüm, Fastidious the Hamster, The Powerpuff Girls expies Chung Pow Kitties, and Mastermind. Master Yo's original enemies: Kraggler and Badfoot.
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