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Everyone else who appears in DC Super Hero Girls

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Other Antagonists

    Mr. Freeze (Victor Fries) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_late_batsby_mr_freeze.jpg
Voiced by: John de Lancie

  • Adaptational Backstory Change: "#TheWarriorAndTheJester" has Harley imply that Mr. Freeze had a similar origin to the Joker's of becoming how he is now after undergoing a chemical bath at Ace Chemicals (or in his case, one of its affiliates), rather than his usual backstory of becoming unable to survive outside cold temperatures without his special suit as a result of cryogenically freezing his terminally ill wife to find a means of curing her.
  • An Ice Person: He has ice powers, or at least ice weaponry.
  • Freeze Ray: His only shown weapon is a freeze ray.
  • Pungeon Master: Like Arnold Schwarzenegger's infamous portrayal of him, his only dialogue is ice puns to Batgirl.

    Lex Luthor 
Voiced By: Will Friedle, Shunsuke Kubozuka (Japanese)

The beloved leader of the world's largest company, and not secretly a supervillain out to conquer the world.


  • Adaptational Heroism: Downplayed. He's still a conniving villain with evil ambitions, but his parents are still alive, meaning that he didn't have them killed by cutting their car's brakelines.
  • Age Lift: He's a teenager in this continuity, as opposed to being an adult.
  • Arc Villain: He's the central antagonist of the #AllyCat two-parter, scheming to use an enchanted book able to see into the future to use his resources to help Metropolis recover from the damage it will sustain from a meteor strike so he will be seen as the hero.
  • Ascended Extra: Relative to the Shea Fontana continuity, he is actually a recurring character this time, when in the previous canon his only appearance besides occasional mentions was in the tie-in graphic novel Finals Crisis.
  • Badass Normal: While most of his feats have been thanks to his wealth, he also proves to be this in his first confrontation with the main heroines, taunting them by dodging all of their attacks on him simply by dancing, thanks to a book that lets him control the future.
  • Bald of Evil: As usual, Lex is a bald villain.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: He initially appears to be the central antagonist of Teen Titans Go! & DC Super Hero Girls: Mayhem in the Multiverse by forming the Legion of Doom and scheming to banish all the superheroes to the Phantom Zone, but ultimately becomes a pawn to the real antagonist Cythonna.
  • The Dragon: Luthor ended up becoming one by working for Cythonna, unaware that the goddess's true plan was not to conquer Earth but to take over the universe using Supergirl as a host.
  • Genius Sweet Tooth: Funny story: When Babs connects the destruction of Sweet Justice to his company, when the question is raised of what Lex'd have "against cupcakes," she's got nothing. As it turns out when the situation makes it back to him, he sounds as if he genuinely wants to see it up and running again; they make the best snickerdoodles in Metropolis.
  • It's All About Me: Much like his comic book counterpart, Lex won't hesitate to allow millions of people to die just so that he can be a hero and a savior to the rest of the world.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: After plotting to allow Metropolis' destruction by a meteor so that he can "rescue" its survivors, Lex seems to get away with his crimes by pointing out that the Super Hero Girls were the ones who trespassed onto his property in the first place. When he gets home, Lex learns that Catwoman has stolen everything from his penthouse, from his inventions to the first-class food in his refrigerator! Losing his composure for the first time, Lex gives a Skyward Scream. Although the girls do not get to see this, the viewers get satisfaction knowing that Lex has at least received some punishment for his evil deeds.
  • Narcissist: This IS Lex Luthor we're talking about, so of course he'd be vain and egocentric as hell.
  • Offscreen Moment of Awesome: Unknown to the Super Hero Girls, Lex also managed to imprison the Invinci-bros and Superman to prevent them from stopping the meteor heading towards Metropolis. It was never shown how Lex managed to achieve this, but they're still imprisoned after the girls managed to destroy the meteor.
  • Prematurely Bald: Very prematurely, since he's still a teenager.
  • Self-Made Man: Implied, as judging by Lex's parents' clothing style and mannerism, they are country farmers. So Lex may have created his company out of nothing, a rather impressive feat for someone who is still a teenager.
  • Take Over the World: The endgame of Lex's various evil plots is to turn the Earth into his Egopolis.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: Like all the male characters, he doesn't have his own doll in the toyline.
  • Teen Genius: He's a teenager, but he's apparently still managed to create a company and become a billionaire.
  • Unnecessarily Creepy Robot: Even before Lena starts reprogramming Lex's robots to be more destructive they are far more imposing than simple demolision machines have any reason to be.
  • Villain with Good Publicity: He's well-liked by the public at large, and his mother raises no eyebrows at the fact Lex has a warsuit (which she calls by name).

    Lena Luthor 
Voiced By: Cassandra Lee Morris, Yui Ogura (Japanese)

Lex's little sister.


  • Age Lift: As opposed to the 2015 continuity, where she's roughly the same age as the main characters, she's now a child here.
  • Arc Villain: She's the central antagonist of the #SweetJustice four-part premiere.
  • Bait-and-Switch Boss: The audience and the girls are led to believe Lex is behind the robot army but it’s really Lena, his little sister. A similar twist is used in the Teen Power video game, having her hide in mechas and speak with her voice distorted to once again mislead the audience into thinking her brother Lex is the one pulling the strings.
  • Bratty Half-Pint: She's a young girl who's hella unpleasant and never takes it well when she doesn't get her way.
  • Divergent Character Evolution: In the previous continuity, due to being the de facto member of the Luthor family, she took most of her brother's traits. Here, she's made much younger and more immature, differentiating her a bit more from her brother.
  • Embarrassing First Name: Her given name is actually Lutessa.
  • Enfant Terrible: She's a brat who wants to destroy popular teen hangouts due to her extreme hatred of adolescents.
  • Evil Plan: One Lena is disappointed she actually has to explain to The Super Hero Girls when they assume Lex Luthor is the one piloting his own war suit. Her goal is to destroy every location in Metropolis teenagers enjoy hanging out at so that the town will only be a fun place for children her age.
  • Humongous Mecha: She steals Lex Luthor's War Suit, which in this show is gigantic.
  • Mecha-Mooks: She reprograms demonlition robots Lex Luthor built for the city to target places she specifically wants demolished.
  • Sibling Rivalry: Has a rivalry with her brother.
  • Starter Villain: She's the first villain the heroes face in the show, and what finally allows them to work as a team.
  • Tantrum Throwing: After being caught and forcibly taken away by her parents Lena falls on her back and starts kicking at the ceiling of their car.
  • Teen Hater: Her plan is to overthrow teenagers and lead a tweenage revolution (though she seems to have neglected the adults).
  • Tiny Tyrannical Girl: She's as small as she is mean.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: No toy for her.

    Cheetah (Barbi Ann Minerva) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cheetah_dcshg.jpg
"Let go of the green-eyed monster, eh Diana? And why would I ever want to let go of this?"
Click here to see her civilian identity
Voiced by: Tara Strong

The top student in all things...until Diana appeared. Her jealousy causes her to turn into the Cheetah and target whoever she gets her eyes on.


  • A Glass in the Hand: Diana scoring higher on a test makes Barbi shatter a compact mirror in her hand, and not the glass part.
  • Adaptational Badass: The Cheetah has been suffering heavy Villain Decay in DC animation thanks to being no match for Wonder Woman or even against any of her fellow heroes. However, this incarnation of Cheetah might be the deadliest yet since she's able to take down Diana in her civilian guise before Diana even knows Cheetah is her enemy and then defeat all of the heroes (sans Supergirl) with relative ease (and Supergirl still loses). When Diana does confront Cheetah as Wonder Woman Cheetah finally tastes defeat herself but still has enough speed to get away from the heroes in flash and is intelligent enough to trick Diana and hide her identity.
  • Alpha Bitch
    • She's a star of the school's gymnastics team, but is very rude to her teammates and seems to feel entitled to the position of team captain. Bonus points for being wealthy.
    • Academic Alpha Bitch: She does seem to care about her high-grade point average. One of the reasons she despises Diana, even more, is when her rival gets a higher grade on a test than her.
  • Always Second Best: She was the best in school and gymnastics until Diana came along, and this causes her to try to curse Diana with the Cheetah's curse. However, it affects Barbi instead, making her a Cat Girl intent on taking out Diana.
  • Animal Motifs: Cheetahs, wearing a yellow fur coat with spots, and her eyebrows looking like a cheetah's.
  • Artistic License – Biology: She meows in the shadows, like most cats, to lure Green Lantern into a false sense of security. Thing is that cheetah are not like most cats; they chirp.
  • Asshole Victim: She's fallen prey to Leslie Willis, Catwoman and Harley Quinn, the former and latter without any provocation whatsoever. It's hard to blame Leslie's audience for laughing at Barbi's expense even if she didn't deserve anything from Leslie specifically.
  • Backhanded Compliment: When Selina Kyle gets to a purse Barbi Minerva wants first, Barbi compliments Selina by comparing to a purse Barbi saw a beauty queen who happened to be Barbi's grandmother carrying, knowing thought would repulse Selina so that Barbi could buy it instead.
  • Be Careful What You Wish For: She didn't specify that she wanted to be the only captain of the gymnastics team when objecting to being co-captain to Diana, which is why the coach made Diana team captain.
  • Composite Character: She's the third Cheetah, Barbara Ann Minerva, but her lifestyle and motivation (anger at being upstaged) is based upon Priscilla Rich, the first Cheetah. She also transforms into a cheetah/human hybrid, but her Cheetah form looks most similar to Priscilla's costume and gains the green eyes Golden Age Rich is known for.
  • Evil Brit: She speaks with a posh English accent, as a nod to the citizenship of the original Barbara Ann Minerva, unlike the previous incarnation with an American accent.
  • Evil Feels Good: Even after Diana advises her to let go of jealousy and hate, she decides Cheetah's rush of power is too great to give up.
  • Evil Is Petty: She tries to put a curse on Diana Prince for upstaging her.
  • Fake-Hair Drama: After being held by the Lasso of Truth in the short "Lost and Found", she forcefully admits that she's not a natural blonde and uses hair extensions.
  • Freudian Excuse: Babs speculates, In-Universe, that Barbi's need for outside validation is likely based in "absentee parenting and a lack of proper modeling in childhood." Judging by the brief glimpse of her home earlier in the episde, Babs is right on the money.
  • Fur and Loathing: As a Rich Bitch, she has a golden fur coat with white collar and cuffs.
  • Green-Eyed Monster
    • She's jealous of Diana's achievements and attention, and tried to curse her for that reason. Even when Diana tells her to let go, she affirms to herself in private that she won't, partly because she enjoys the power that comes with being Cheetah (which might be the curse reaffirming Evil Feels Good).
    • Eye Colour Change: When Barbi feels the power rush, her eyes go from their normal brown to a glowing green.
  • Hartman Hips: Her hips are noticeably wider than her shoulders, most noticeable in her gym uniform and when she stands with one hip out.
  • I'm a Humanitarian: It's not as overt as her comic counterpart, but from the looks of it, Cheetah was going to devour Bumblebee before Diana confronted her.
  • Jerkass: Even before becoming the Cheetah, she's not a nice person. Hell, the very first thing she does in the series is to insult one of her fellow gymnasts who complimented her on a near-perfect vault.
  • Jerk Jock: A Rare Female Example that's not a Cruel Cheerleader. She's a talented gymnast, but also very arrogant, petty and unpleasant.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty
    • She gets away with her actions, only for most of Barbi's following appearances — not as Cheetah — have her hit by pranks (and by a dodgeball), almost making her the series' other Butt-Monkey.
    • And then as Cheetah, she takes on Catwoman... and loses. Villain Decay indeed, as mentioned above.
  • Knight of Cerebus: Played with. Barbi herself is pretty Laughably Evil thanks to her petty tantrums and rivalry with Diana, but as the Cheetah, she manages to be terrifying. Her Cheetah form is the first antagonist to be treated dead seriously and she proves herself as a real villain by effortlessly taking out half of the Super Hero Girls without breaking a sweat. She was even intending to eat Bumblebee before Diana came along.
  • No-Sell: The first member of the team to land a hit on Cheetah is Bumblebee, and Cheetah just shakes her head to right some displaced fur.
  • One-Steve Limit: Averted for her and Barbara Gordon. To avoid confusion with this, she's exclusively known by the nickname Barbi.
  • Outside-Context Villain: Subverted. Barbi Minerva acquires super powers none of the Super Hero Girls have any frame of reference for and assaults their leader in her civilian guise instead of her much more famous public identity over a grudge none of them are even aware exists, but Barbara Gordon nonetheless is able to deduce what kind of monster Cheetah most likely is and make a pretty good guess about what Cheetah's problem is likely to be, against all odds.
  • The Perfectionist: Barbi hates Diana for being a perfectionist, when it's clear Barbi herself is a perfectionist.
  • Privileged Rival: Diana Prince may be daughter of an immortal queen, but she can to the world of man with nothing but a boat, weaponry and her uniform. She was living in the tree tops of a part while Barbi Minerva was living out of a mansion with her own car.
  • Rich Bitch: She's a wealthy blonde with a fur coat and a sports car and an Alpha Bitch attitude.
  • Sadist: Barbi considers murdering Diana Prince with a sacrificial knife for being more of a perfectionist than Barbi, only reconsidering because Barbi decides that won't make Prince suffer enough(a reference to Priscilla Rich's second attempt to murder Wonder Woman in the Golden Age).
  • Silver Spoon Trouble Maker: Granted, Barbi only overtly causes trouble as Cheetah, which she claims is a monster she summoned on accident.
  • Strong as They Need to Be: Played for Laughs during #PurseScratcher, where Cheetah is able to punch and cut through walls but can't so much as bend a coat hanger.
  • Taxidermy Terror: The interior of the Minerva mansion is covered in hunting trophies and animal skin decor, befitting Barbi's villainous nature.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: She does not have her own doll in spite of her prominent rivalry with Wonder Woman.
  • Unknown Rival: She serves as this to Diana, but her "rival" actually views her as a friend. Unlike the rest of the villains, she's not a bully harboring obvious hatred towards the heroic girls but does pass herself off as a nice girl, fooling them even more.

    The Penguin (Oswald Cobblepot) 

A teenage mob boss at Metropolis High.


  • Adaptational Wimp: The parasol-wielding villain of the comics he is not, as he focuses more on threats than combat.
  • Big Entrance: Oswald Cobblepot makes a flashy entrance into the school cafeteria to announce his candicacy for class president during #CruzControl
  • Blackmail Backfire: What happens to him at the end of "#EmperorPenguin" after Babs erases his phone.
  • Engineered Heroics: After the tarnishing of his reputation Oswald Cobblepot hires a criminal with an even worse reputation to rebuild his own
  • Fat Bastard: As always, the Penguin is overweight and very unpleasant.
  • Malicious Slander: Oswald runs a smear campaign after Jessica's numbers start gaining on his own in #CruzControl
  • The Man Behind the Man: He apparently controls the elections to the student council, attempting to install one of his goons as Student Council President before Barbara thwarts his attempt at rigging the election so Jimmy Olsen wins instead.
  • No Smoking: For obvious reasons, the Penguin's trademark cigarette holder is replaced by a pencil here. By "#CruzControl", he doesn't have anything in his mouth.
  • Un Evil Laugh: He's got the squawky guffaw of the Batman (1966)'s Penguin.
  • Wicked Pretentious: Despite being sleazy, barely groomed and wearing a T-shirt with the design of a dress shirt on it rather than the real thing, Oswald Cobblepot is confident enough to dismiss Barbara Gordon's concerns as "blue collar problems".

    The Joker 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/joker_dcshg.png
Voiced By: Jeremiah Watkins

Batman's biggest foe.


  • Age Lift: He's been deaged to a teenager.
  • Badass Normal: A teenager with no powers who's able to command She-Bat, Solomon Grundy and Gentleman Ghost.
  • Delinquents: In this continuity, Arkham is a reform school.
  • Karma Houdini: His episode ends with him escaping with Harley Quinn and not facing any punishment for the havoc he's wrought.
  • Laughing Mad: As always, he's prone to cackling like a maniac.
  • Made of Iron: Takes punches and kicks from Wonder Woman.
  • Monster Clown: He IS the Joker, after all, so of course he'd be a sinister clown-themed villain.
  • Older Hero vs. Younger Villain: He's a teen and Batman's an adult, but he's still regarded as the Dark Knight's greatest enemy.
  • Omnicidal Maniac: His idea of the ultimate joke on Gotham is to release monsters to cause chaos and then blow up the city.
  • Teens Are Monsters: His ultimate plan was to blow up Gotham, which would be the largest act of terrorism and mass murder in American (possibly world) history.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: One thing Harley has that he doesn't is a doll in the accompanying toyline.
  • Unseen No More: He was mentioned several times, mostly by Harley, but hadn't appeared in person until the second season.

    Shaggy Man 

An ape-like giant monster.


  • Adaptation Species Change: There's no indication in "#StainedFighter" that Shaggy Man is an android.
  • Adaptational Wimp: Shaggy Man often does get his butt kicked rather easily in the comic books, but this is usually done to show how much more skilled or more powerful the hero in question has become after previously struggling with Shaggy Man. In the Rebirth comics running at the same time of the show Shaggy Man was able to defeat the entire Justice League the first time they fought him due to his Adaptive Ability, with Superman and Batman being dumb founded when Wonder Woman had seemingly grown beyond his ability to adapt and cleaned his clock single handedly. Instead of an intimidating Starter Villain this show just uses him for a couple of gags and show him to be less of a threat than Cat Woman.
  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: It resembles a stereotypical depiction of Bigfoot, only taller than most of the buildings.
  • Metal Muncher: He tears down a radio tower and starts chewing on it. Supergirl does not give us enough time to see if Shaggy Man would have gone all the way and actually ate it or not.
  • Scary Teeth: His teeth are razor sharp.

    General Zod and His Forces 

Voiced By: Liam O'Brien (Zod), Tara Strong (Ursa)

Villains from Krypton who were imprisoned by Kara's mother, Alura Zor-El. They have resurfaced on Earth to conquer it.


  • Ambiguously Brown: Ursa has darker skin than Zod and Non.
  • Arc Villain: Of the #DCSuperHeroBoys two-parter.
  • Arrow Catch: Zod manages to do this with a piece of kryptonite.
  • Authority Equals Ass Kicking: Zod, the trio's leader, is the most dangerous one, capable of fighting both Supergirl and Wonder Woman at once with relative ease, and, unlike Ursa and Non, he manages to Fight Off the Kryptonite.
  • Bad Future: They successfully conquer the Earth and turn Metropolis into a Police State where criticism of Zod is not allowed in one of the undesriable alternate timelines created by Barbara Gordon.
  • Beard of Evil: Zod has his signature goatee and Non has a full bushy beard.
  • Catching the Speedster: The Flash can only evade Ursa for a short while.
  • Comic-Book Fantasy Casting: These are very much the Terence Stamp, Sarah Douglass and Jack O'Halloran versions of our terrible trio.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: They easily outmatch the heroes in a straight battle. It takes teamwork, tactics and exploiting the Kryptonite Factor for the heroes to stand a chance.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Ursa has quite the dry wit at the heroes' expense.
  • The Dreaded: Supergirl is perfectly willing to surrender herself at the sight of them for the sake of the world. It is only when Zod accidentally pokes her Berserk Button that Supergirl resolves to fight instead.
  • Dumb Muscle: Per tradition, Non turns out not to be the sharpest knife in the drawer, and is exaggeratedly large.
  • Fight Off the Kryptonite: The heroes manage to use kryptonite to weaken Ursa and Non and send them back into the Phantom Zone, but Zod manages to do an Arrow Catch and crush it to dust before it can weaken him enough for them to try. It takes a massive water construct that Garth makes to do the job.
  • Kneel Before Zod: The Trope Namer commands his enemies to kneel several times over.
  • Knight of Cerebus: They are among the most dangerous villains to appear in the show. They almost crushed a Bus Full of Innocents and it took two superhero teams working together to defeat them.
  • Long Bus Trip: Very long one. Except for one video game appearance, this seems actually to be the very first time that all three have appeared together in other media outside the comic books since 1980.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Non is not only distracted from crushing a bus by an incongruous magic show, he watches as Zatanna shoves arrows into a "basket trick" box, and is unhappy when Oliver Queen reappears without a scratch; Zatanna infers a bit late that it looks like he "wanted some gore".
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: Allura managed to imprison Zod in the Phantom Zone; although they briefly escape, the heroes manage to seal them away again.
  • Smug Super: Non, Ursa and Zod in ascending order. Zod claims that even Superman can't beat him in a straight fight, and at the very least is the most justified for his smug attitude based on the fight with The Super Hero Girls and Invincibros.
  • Would Hit a Girl: Zod and Non were more than willing to kill Allura, and don't hold back when facing the Superhero Girls.

    Starro 

A (literal) Starfish Alien that conquers worlds.


  • Bad Future: Starro's back and busy ripping the Earth apart in one of the undesirable timelines created by Barbara Gordon.
  • Composite Character: He has the name and appearance of Starro, except comic book starro is starfish sized and mostly operates by controlling people after latching onto their faces. This Starro's size and tactics bring to mind The Star Conqueror, a different member of Starro's species...except Star Conqueror is even larger than this guy.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Despite initially being captured, when Batgirl leaves to take a phone call, Starro quickly overwhelms the other heroines and is only "defeated" by being sent to another dimension.
    Batgirl: Hooray! You beat Starro!
    Bumblebee: No. Starro beat us.
    Green Lantern: Over. And over again.
  • Funny Background Event: The above-mentioned Curb-Stomp Battle happens in the background while Batgirl is talking on the phone to Harleen.
  • Unseen No More: Mentioned in "#ShockItToMe" before actually appearing in "#PhotoOops" and "#Frenemies".

    Dex-Starr 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dex_starr_dcshg.png
Voiced By: Fred Tatasciore (cat sounds), Kevin Michael Richardson (ring)

A particularly unruly cat who ends up wielding a Red Lantern ring.


  • Adaptational Angst Downgrade: There's no trace of comic Dex-Starr's tragic origins that drove the cat to villainy. Rather than being driven to animosity by some crooks killing his owner and attempting to drown him, he's nasty to begin with.
  • Adaptational Intelligence:
    • His internal dialogue often shows him as thinking in broken English in the comics. This incarnation can speak more coherently.
    • Rather than the ring making him an Uplifted Animal, Dexter seemed just as intelligent when he was a regular cat.
  • Adaptational Ugliness: When not wearing the Red Lantern ring, he looks more disheveled than his comics incarnation, to play up his anti-social personality and scary reputation.
  • Adaptational Villainy: The original Dex-Starr fell to the Red power ring after his owner was brutally murdered, the police kicked him onto the streets, and two thugs tossed him off the Brooklyn Bridge to see whether the impact or drowning would kill him first. This version succumbs to the ring because... Jessica dressed him in cute clothes. He's also far more pointlessly sadistic than the comics' Dex-Starr, who tends to target his rage on those who deserve it.
  • Berserk Button: Very irritable in general, but he particularly hates having his tail grabbed.
  • Cats Are Mean: Instead of a tragic backstory, he's just a very cranky old cat. When he gets a Red Lantern ring he plans to burn down the world.
  • Complaining About Rescues They Don't Like: He isn't grateful of Jessica saving him from getting euthanized in the least.
    "Forcing me into a forever home? My forever home is suffering! My forever home is pain!"
  • Crush the Keepsake: Dexter immediately identifies what Barbara Gordon values and proceeds to try and destroy it.
  • Evil Sounds Deep: He "speaks" with a very deep voice after acquiring the Red Lantern ring.
  • Hates Everyone Equally: Except for Jessica, whose overbearing attempts to get him adopted earn his particular distaste, and Hal, who he unaccountably actually likes when he gets his ring back, even though he tried to turn Hal to mince in their previous meeting. Jessica, like everyone else, is baffled.
  • Jerkass: Even before acquiring the Red Lantern Power Ring, he deliberately tries to destroy Barbara's Batman memorabilia, intentionally continues to set off Diana's allergies once he learns about them, and eats Garth's fish. He has a very notorious reputation of tormenting volunteers at the animal shelter and is considered unadoptable because of it.
  • Leave Me Alone!: One of his grievances against Jessica is how overbearing her efforts to get him adopted are.
  • Mr. Exposition: He explains what the Red Lantern Corps are during his Motive Rant to Jessica Cruz and not only why he was upset with her but why a power ring seemed to come out of nowhere to him. He's bemused at the existence of a Green Lantern when Jessica activates her own power ring.
  • Nearly Normal Animal: Even without the ring, Dexter could understand human speech and concepts (like which of Barbara's things she'd most hate him for breaking), but he still acts like an animal.
  • Not So Above It All: Despite having human level intellect, he briefly plays with a cat toy that Jessica conjured up in their fight before he angrily destroys it.
  • Outside-Context Villain: Jessica Cruz learned her's wasn't the only Lantern Corps with Star Sapphire but by her reactions Hal didn't know or didn't bother to tell her anymore than that, assuming any of the Green Lantern Corps know of Red Lanterns. Dex-Starr seemed just as surprised by Jessica's own green ring.
  • Renamed the Same
    "Dexter? Ahuhuha. I'm afraid not. From this day forward I will be known as Dex-Starr, of The Red Lantern Corps!"
  • Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: Dexter never gives up his hatred of Jessica Cruz, but he's reduced to merely being uncooperative and sullen after she manages to De-power him.
  • Super Spit: Rather than shoot beams from his ring or form objects the way Green Lantern and Star Sapphire do, "Dex-Starr'' appears to vomit vibrant glowing kool-aid.
  • That Man Is Dead: As Jessica tries to talk him down he rejects being called "Dexter" and demands to be called Dex-Starr
  • Translator Collar: The Red Lantern ring translates his growls into human speech (which clearly comes from the ring and not his mouth). At one point he can still be heard audibly meowing while his words are not even close to his mouth flaps.

    Bizarro Supergirl 
Voiced By: Nicole Sullivan

A Bizarro version of Supergirl.


  • Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad: The mindset of everything being opposite, especially standards of morality, comes with the territory of being a Bizarro.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: She's proud of her evil and wants to be a greater villain than Bizarro.
  • Evil Counterpart: To Supergirl. She has opposite powers like freeze vision, flame breath, and super-inhaling, and has reversed morality, but is otherwise exactly like Supergirl.
  • Friendly Enemy: While Bizarro Supergirl remains destructive, she becomes friends with Kara Danvers after the conclusion of her debut episode and almost behaves herself when Kara's around.
  • Humans Are Ugly: Being a Bizarro, she often refers to Kara as "Ugly Me".
  • Mirror Character: She feels as overshadowed by Bizarro's fame as Supergirl does Superman's. Through this, she and Kara come to an understanding and an unlikely friendship. Batgirl even comments on how such a thing is not opposite.
  • Psycho Serum: We're finally introduced to a harmless variety of kryptonite (periwinkle kryptonite) #DoubleDanvers, except that it comes into contact with a Bizarro and ends up having a negative effect on her anyway, increasing her strength and making her more aggressive.

    Bizarro 

A backwards copy of Superman.


  • The Ghost: Doesn't appear, but is mentioned throughout "#TheGoodTheBadAndTheBizarre"; Superman defeated him some time ago and Bizarro Supergirl's whole motivation is trying to be a bigger villain than Bizarro.

    Cavalier (Mortimer Drake) 

Voiced By: Griffin Puatu

An actor who will steal the spotlight, whatever it takes. He has a villainous, swashbuckling alter ego artistically named Cavalier.


  • Awesome Anachronistic Apparel: This is Cavalier we're taking about. His costume is right out of The Three Musketeers.
  • Commonality Connection: "#DramaQueen" ends with him bonding with Oliver Queen over their mutual hatred of Zee.
  • Evil Counterpart: While Oliver Queen openly admits to sabotaging Mortimer Drake for a part in a play and did so in a manner that ensured Mortimer would suffer no physical harm Mortimer tried to kill Oliver and denied any subterfuge. And while Oliver is Zee's Sitcom Arch-Nemesis Mortimer fancies himself her actual arch foe and hates her more than he does Oliver.
  • Friendly Enemy: After being defeated in battle by Green Arrow the two guys end up bonding over everything they dislike about Zee Zatara.
  • Graceful Loser: Mortimer Drake verbally accepts it when Zee Zatara dismisses him for the lead role in her production of "Swashbuckler On The Seven Seas" and even appears to accept it when she demands Mortimer serve as Oliver's understudy on top of it, but then he secretly starts trying to murder Oliver. Cavalier truthfully admits defeat when bested by Green Arrow, however.
  • Foil: He's everything Oliver would be without a conscience, and a sword in place of a bow.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: Cavalier is set up as Green Arrow's arch-rival, when the character was created as a Batman foe.
  • The Resenter: He was declared a mediocre actor back in middle school and is now out to murder all of those who were considered better than him back then. The fact that Mortimer has since developed as an actor and is now considered an equal to his peers does not matter.
  • Stalker without a Crush: Mortimer Drake has been trying to get close to Zee Zatara for a long while, and while he is happy to gain her approval as an actor Mortimer has no interest in her affections.
  • Trauma Button: He was laughed off the stage in primary school, and now the sound of heckling incapacitates him.

    Deathstroke (Slade Wilson) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/deathstroke_dcshg.png
Voiced By: D.C. Douglas

One of the world's deadliest assassins and mercenaries.


  • Adaptational Nice Guy: Unlike most of his incarnations, Slade isn't an Abusive Parent and genuinely loves Rose.
  • Age-Stereotypical Food: When Barbara Gordon shows up with donuts, and especially after she does not immediately take to Slade's meticulously prepared dinner, he taunts her about what he preceives to be a preference for childish foods. He's not entirely wrong, as a lot of what Slade Wilson serves is new and strange to Barbara, but what is really killing her appetite is how menacing Slade is.
  • Composite Character: Slade's care for his daughter and desire to be a good father to her may be lifted from DC's second most notorious hitman, Deadshot.
  • The Dreaded: Batgirl isn't afraid of him at first because she's never seen Deathstroke before. Once she sees his name she freaks out.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Vicious killer and all-around jerk? Yes, but he loves his daughter Rose with all his heart.
  • Eye Scream: He apparently lost his eye in a harrowing domestic dispute, and does not take the compliment well when Barbara Gordon calls his eye patch "awesome".
  • From Camouflage to Criminal: Babs deduces Slade's military background after seeing a display case full of medals in his bathroom, which sticks to his backstory from the comics.
  • Jerkass: Kinda comes with being an assassin, but even when he’s off the clock, he comes across as haughty, condescending, and quick to anger when Babs visits his house.
  • Knight Templar Parent: Slade Wilson ultimately wants what is best for his daughter. Barbara Gordon immediately makes a poor impression on him when he arrives to see Rose Wilson late. It turns out the reason he let Barbara live so long is that Rose made Slade promise he would stop trying to murder her friends.
  • Knight of Cerebus: He is a coldblooded professional with no trace of fun, humor, or silliness whatsoever. When Deathstroke is after someone, he comes with the intent to kill. The threat he poses grows tenfold when Barbara learns that his current target is her own father.
  • Man of Wealth and Taste: He lives in a luxurious, spotless mansion, dresses in immaculate suits, and enjoys haute cuisine as everyday dinner.
  • Obviously Evil: Even before learning that he's an assassin, Babs can't help feel that there's something off about Mr. Wilson after meeting him in person.
  • Professional Killer: He's in the business of assassinating for the paycheques and thrill of the chase. He outright tells Batgirl going after James Gordon is Nothing Personal, just a job he's being paid handsomely for.
  • Real Men Can Cook: The second thing Barabara Gordon does to rub Slade Wilson the wrong way was to bring store bought donuts into his house when he was painstaking preparing a high class meal.
  • Real Men Wear Pink: Slade takes great pride in his skills as a chef.
  • Silver Fox: Quite handsome in spite of white hair and the eyepatch.
  • Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: He ends up downgraded to merely antagonizing Barbara Gordon impersonally after Rose stops Deathstroke from killing Batgirl and makes him promise to stop trying to assassinate her friends.
  • Slobs Versus Snobs: The main source of conflict between Slade Wilson and Barbara Gordon is Slade's lack of societal respect towards Gordon as a fellow citizen and struggling to give her benefit of doubt while Barabara's is lack of personal respect for Wilson, clearly not knowing who he is or why she should care beyond "new girl Rose's dad" and while recognizing that he expects more of her at a loss at how to give it to him. The second source is that Slade is metaphorically dripping with murderous malice, and according to Rose, this is Slade trying to be nice. (Granted, his murderous intent is not for Barbara initially, he's just extremely annoyed with her until she finds out he's Deathstroke)
  • Snooty Haute Cuisine: Slade Wilson has a very expensive taste in food, and he prepares it all himself to ensure it is up to his standards. Even when Slade does "lower" himself to cheaper foods he still insists on preparing them himself, referring to mass produced foods as "sawdust".
  • Toyless Toyline Character: No toy for him.
  • "Well Done, Dad!" Guy: Slade Wilson does not just want to provide the best life for Rose that he can, but he also wants Rose's company and approval. To that end he restrains himself from murdering friends of hers that he doesn't approve of and eventually gives up assassinations altogether.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Emphasis on "would". When Batgirl catches Deathstroke breaking into James Gordon's house and cuts Deathstroke with a Batarang he is willing to punch her, and throws a ladel in her direction hard enough to lodge it into a wall, but then flees when the commotion wakes James up. Deathstroke is willing to cut Batgirl with his sword when she pursues him, but once Deathstroke determines Batgirl is beaten he simply departs without doing causing any serious harm to her. Deathstroke will do it, but he won't go out of his way to hurt a minor...unless he deems them bad influences on his daughter, which Barbara later becomes in his eyes.

    Fuseli 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fuseli_dcshg.png
Voiced By: Steve Blum

A gremlin who invades dreams to manipulate fears into nightmares.


  • Adaptational Dye-Job: Comics Fuseli had black hair and red nails, where here his hair and nails are green.
  • Adaptational Species Change: In the comic books he was an imp, not a gremlin.
  • Brought Down to Normal: He has no powers when he's dragged out of the dream world and trapped in the real world.
  • Burger Fool: His ultimate fate is becoming an employee at the Burrito Bucket, which he clearly isn't happy about.
  • Dream Walker: Fuseli enters and crosses over into others' dreams while they sleep.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: He undoes the lock on Zatana's suppressed fears of what kind of damage she could be doing with her magic. The problem is that Zatana has absolute no reservations about the kind of damage she could be doing to Fuseli!
  • Nightmare Fetishist: He feeds on the fear of his victims. Zee makes his own fear reality: being trapped in a dimension where he has no power and forced to survive in it.
  • Sadly Mythtaken: Gremlins are spirits of the air believed to be responsible for sabotaging air planes when mankind finally had the means to invade their domain. While one becoming a Nightmare Weaver shouldn't be out of the question, especially not in a Fantasy Kitchen Sink like the DCU or parody thereof, a gremlin wouldn't be thought of as powerless outside of the dream world to people who actually believed in the creatures.

    Casey Krinsky 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/casey_krinsky_dcshg.png
Voiced By: Lara Jill Miller

A very shy girl who desperately craves attention. She also turns out to be a power and identity snatcher.


  • Aborted Arc: Her debut episode ended with her desperately trying to expose the Super Hero Girls identities. Although she initially failed, there’s nothing stopping her from succeeding. She knows where their hideout is and could get any photographic proof she wants, yet she never appears in the show again. It’s unknown if she’s still trying to get revenge or if she just went back to being sad and alone.
  • All Your Powers Combined: Manages to copy the powers of the Super Hero Girls, with her appearance temporarily becoming an amalgamation of the six of them.
  • Adaptational Superpower Change: Changed from a kind of elemental shapeshifter who can leech the properties of whatever or whoever she touches into a Power Parasite that can steal appearances and powers at close range.
  • Adaptational Sympathy: Whereas her comic counterpart was downright insane with no reason or remorse, here she is a sad, emotionally unstable girl who is driven by a desperate desire to be noticed and appreciated.
  • Accidental Misnaming: No one seems to be able to remember her name.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: She seems like a nice, if obsessive girl that she just wanted to be Zee's friend. But once Zee rejects her, she steals her appearance and uses what she learned of her social life to steal her identity.
  • Cassandra Truth: She was the only villain who knew about the Super Hero Girls' identities by the end of her debut; she shouts them in the hallways, but thanks to her low social status and the things Zee said while in her body, nobody believes her.
  • Dramatically Missing the Point: After taking all the powers and gadgets of the Super Hero Girls Casey claims to be the most powerful hero on the world while demanding the people of Metropolis kneel before her and proceeding to do nothing heroic or even incidental with the things she's stolen.
  • Drunk with Power: Once Casey learns the alter egos of Zee and her friends, she doesn't hesitate to steal all their powers for herself.
  • Eyes Are Mental: Her green eyes stay the same no matter what shape she wears.
  • Fat Bitch: A mild example. She's a little chubby and eventually revealed to be a villain.
  • Freudian Excuse: Being a nobody ignored by all left her with no self-esteem.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: Casey is obsessed with/jealous of Zee for being one of the most popular, beautiful girls in school with an abundance of friends, so she steals her body to finally know what it feels like.
  • Her Own Worst Enemy: Casey hates herself. Viewing herself as unattractive or unnoticeable leads her to desperately trying to become someone more popular.
  • How Do I Shot Web?: Casey doesn't immediately know how to use the powers and gadgets she steals. She didn't even know Zee Zatara could do real magic at first. Luckily for Casey, Zee quickly taught Casey a spell that made Zee's situation even worse. Luckily for Zee, Casey's still too inept to finsh her off.
  • I Just Want to Be You: When Casey decides being Zee's friend is not enough, she uses her powers to switch identities with her.
  • I Hate Past Me: And unfortunately for Zee, accidentally taught Casey a spell that made Zee look like past Casey, leading Casey to attempt to murder her out of self-loathing after becoming Drunk with Power
  • Ignorant of Their Own Ignorance: Casey Krinsky mocks Zee "Princess of Prestidigitation" Zatara, for being forced to rely on smoke and mirrors to survive Casey's onslaught...but expert use of smoke and mirrors is the highest form of prestidigitation!
  • Mythology Gag: Her Mega Casey form brings to mind the obscure Justice League villain Superduper, an artificial being that had the head of Wonder Woman, torso of Batman and Green Lantern, Wings of Hawkman and Flash's legs.
  • Near-Villain Victory: Casey had every member of the team down, most of their powers and gadgets for herself and would have blown Zee to pieces if her aim had only been slightly more accurate.
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain: If she hadn't used her (and Zee's) powers to switch identities with Zee, people might've actually believed her when she tried to expose the girls' alter egos.
  • Power Parasite: Her powers allow her to not only steal the identity of the target but also their powers.
  • Psycho Active Powers: Casey's powers stop working after she has a nervous breakdown.
  • Rage Against the Reflection: How she's defeated. Zee lures her into a house of mirrors, and while Casey is destroying the mirrors trying to find her, she's hammering in what she hates about herself.
  • Redemption Rejection: Zee tries to have a fresh restart with her, only for Casey to reject it, swearing vengeance on Zee and her friends one day.
  • Rogues' Gallery Transplant: Comic Casey went after Firestorm. Here, her obsessiveness is targeted at Zatanna.
  • Shrinking Violet: Until her true nature is revealed, she is very shy, especially upon meeting Zee.
  • Statuesque Stunner: Casey ends up just as tall as Diana Prince.
  • Unskilled, but Strong: Casey has most of the Super Hero Girl's physical attribute, gadets and powers, but none of that helps her aim. While she becomes far too powerful for the weakened Super Hero Girls to handle in a direct confrontation, she only hits Zee once by dumb luck. Even when Zee is fleeing out in the open in a straightline Casey manages to thrown several batarangs that come nowhere near Zee and only comes slightly closer when she uses Bumblebee's targeting systems. Karen by constrast was able to hit the much quicker, more agile and quieter Cheetah using inferior equipment.
  • Voices Are Not Mental: When she takes someone's powers or appearance, the voices come with. This resulted in a Voice of the Legion when she took all the team's powers at once.

    Killer Moth 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/killer_moth_dcshg.png

A monstrous moth creature who spawns legions of children to wreak havoc on Metropolis.


    Ra's Al Ghul 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ras_al_ghul_dcshg.png
Voiced by: Sendhil Ramamurthy, Jason C Miller (singing voice)

The singer of the metal band, the League of Shadows, which is secretly a cult planning on destroying what Ra's Al Ghul considers impure.


  • Adaptational Attractiveness: Ra's Al Ghul typically looks like an older man in most incarnations. This version looks younger and more attractive, possibly to make his role as frontman more convincing. Like most adaptations, this Ra's also has eyebrows.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: Like most incarnations, this version of Ra's has the goal of wiping out humanity so he can rebuild society on his terms, but lacks his well-intentioned motivation of wishing to combat the harm humanity is causing the environment he usually has and seems to want to kill most of the human race just because he doesn't like the way they live their lives.
  • Adaptational Wimp: This Ra's doesn't demonstrate the mastery of combat his comic counterpart is legendary for, as he prefers to sit back and let mind-controlled Supergirl do the fighting and does nothing but sulk in defeat after Supergirl is freed from his control.
  • Arc Villain: He is the central villain of the #LeagueOfShadows two-parter, using a piece of red kryptonite to control Supergirl's mind and make her an instrument of his schemes to wipe out humanity.
  • Evil Brit: He's a villain with a British accent.
  • Evil Is Petty: His first order of business in destroying the world to rebuild it anew? Destroy a boy band (Up Past 8) because he hates "bad music".
  • Fan Community Nickname: He calls the fans of his band "Shadow Puppets".
  • I Call It "Vera": His legendary guitar pick, The Demon's Fang.
  • Knight Templar: Ra's Al Ghul is using his band to build up supporters and finances for his ultimate goal of killing most of the people on Earth. He believes human civilization is fundamentally flawed and evil, needing to be restarted under his leadership.
  • Mind-Control Music: He has a red kryptonite guitar pick and a necklace whose centerpiece is the same subtance, which when used together with alluring music makes Supergirl supsceptible to his commands and eventually results in her personality being overwritten with active malevolence instead of selfish buffoonery.
  • Misanthrope Supreme: True to form, Ra's wants to wipe out most of humanity.
  • Obviously Evil: The lyrics to one of his band's songs blatantly state that they're planning on decimating the world and ruling the populace left, and even state that it isn't metaphorical.
  • Rotten Rock & Roll: Ra's is the frontman for the rock band, the League of Shadows, and he's a villain. Notably, the League of Shadows is contrasted with the boy band Up Past 8, whose music (performed by Hal, Garth, and Barry) is used to break Kara out of the hypnotism induced by Ra's' Villain Song.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: He has no doll.
  • Villain Song: "You're Mine!" sung when he is hypnotizing Supergirl.
  • Villain with Good Publicity: Ra's Al Ghul is open about his intentions for society, but no one takes him seriously and in fact many enjoy the music played by him and his band.
  • Yellow Eyes of Sneakiness: Ra's has golden eyes, and uses his popularity as a rock star to further his goals of world domination.

    Sinestro (Thaal Sinclair) 
Voiced by: Keith Ferguson

Hal's former partner and friend.


  • Adaptational Hairstyle Change: He is clean-shaven when he is ordinarily depicted with a mustache.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: While still a villain, here, the reason he turned evil was because he was best friends with Hal and Hal ghosted him. In the comics? Sinestro was a monster. He let the previous Green Lantern of his sector die just so he could inherit his ring and proceeded to abuse his abilities as a Green Lantern to conquer his home planet and impose dictatorial order over the entire world. He was kicked out of the Corps because he showed Hal his "Orderly Paradise," and Hal turned him in. And even when he was a Lantern, he was still a smug jerkass.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: Most versions of the character are a mentor and instructor to Hal, but this version was his old partner in the Corps.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Pretends to be a nice, polite, gentlemanly young man until Carol dumps him.
  • The Ex's New Jerkass: He's only subtly a jerk to Hal Jordan though while being as nice as he can to Carol Ferris and outwardly kind to everyone else he comes across. He then tries to pull this again by wooing Jessica Cruz, but she mistakes his advances for attacks.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: Had this relationship with Hal. Well, "life partners" definitely, at least. The heterosexual part is pretty sus, given he laments the "bromance" and tries to kill Hal for it.
  • Operation: Jealousy: Dates Carol in a plan to make Hal jealous for ghosting him.
  • Puddle-Covering Chivalry: One of the kind gestures he makes towards Carol is using his jacket to cover up a puddle in Carol's path.
  • Real Name as an Alias: Thaal Sinestro disguises himself as... Thaal Sinclair.
  • Skin-Tone Disguise: He passes himself off as a human by covering his scarlet complexion with flesh-colored makeup.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: Like all male characters, he doesn't have a doll.

    Hath-Set 
Voiced by: Sean Rohani

The Egyptian priest destined to kill all of Hawkman's reincarnations.


  • Adaptational Badass: While always a threat to Hawkman, he never has been as dangerous as he is in this version, to the point where Hawkman and Bumblebee combined can't take him down and have to resort to loophole abusing to beat him (that is, Hawkman making the sacrifice of not being with Hawkgirl in order to break the cycle of their romance always ending with Hath-Set murdering them).
  • Animal Motifs: Jackals. No meaningful name here, given those were associated with Anubis rather than Set.
  • The Comically Serious: Menacing and threatening, even when complaining about coming too early.
  • Godhood Seeker: Wishes to kill Hawkman and Hawkgirl at the height of their love to gain the power of the gods.
  • I Believe I Can Fly: He doesn't need the help of wings like Hawkman to fly. The Nth Metal is enough on its own, and Hath-Set can in fact outfly Hawkman and Bumblebee!
  • It's All About Me: Treats Hawkman's romantic troubles as a massive imposition against him.

    Silver Banshee (Siobhan McDougal
Voiced by: Cristina Milizia

A ghost that haunts the prestigious McDougal Academy, which was once a castle in Scotland that belonged to the McDougal clan before it was moved, brick by brick, to Metropolis.


    Ember (Ember Taylor) 
Voiced by: Amanda C. Miller

A centuries-old dragon who shapeshifts into a teenage girl and works/lurks at renaissance fairs while trying to find a princess to eat.


  • Adaptational Badass: Comic book Ember can barely expel fire, is laughably weakened by any amount of water beyond what is necessary to sustain her human body and is basically an Elite Mook Zatanna has to put slightly more effort than normal into dispatching. Ember's comic book successes come from being an assassin vamp more than winning direct fights. This show's Ember has all sorts of ways of expelling fire, produces flames that only get more intense with attempts to douse them, traps four superheroes at once, then takes on Zatanna and Wonder Woman at the same time before going down for good. Justified, as Ember here is far closer to physical maturity than in the comic books.
  • Adaptational Sympathy: Ember is still a cruel being who plays too much with her food, but she doesn't target Zee for purely malicious reasons the way her comic book counterpart did.
  • Age Lift: Comic book Ember is an unborn fetal dragon puppeteering a human body. This show's Ember is the draconic equivalent of a teenage girl.
  • Animals Hate Him: When Diana tries to teach a falconer how to properly direct his bird towards "worthy" game, the bird zooms in on Ember's human guise.
  • Arc Villain: Of the #TheFreshPrincessofRenFaire two-parter.
  • Composite Character: Her draconic status and magical properties clearly identify Ember as the Zatanna villain from the comic books, but much of her fighting style is taken from an unrelated Green Lantern antagonist who also just so happened to be named Ember. Her refusal of Wonder Woman's merciful offer to surrender and resulting Giant Flier form also bring to mind Drakul Karfang.
  • Culture Clash: Ignoring that most of Ember's properties seem to be lifted from the Disney Animated Canon, Ember seems to be a Western European dragon with little knowledge of Hellenistic culture while Diana of Themyscira has few points of reference that aren't Hellenistic. As such Ember doesn't identify Diana as a princess despite identifying her scent and Diana identifies Ember as a daemon rather than a dragon.
  • Death by Adaptation: She ends up vanquished and reduced to ashes, when in the comics Zatanna only incapacitated her by using her magic to disable her fire breath.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Played for a joke. She has to halt her stalking of a potential victim... because there's a customer she has to serve at her food stall. And afterward puts the "closed" label at the stall when she resumes hunting.
  • Flying Brick: As it happens with many dragons in fiction, she's a super-strong, Nigh-Invulnerable flying creature.
  • Flying Firepower: A flying fire-breathing dragon.
  • Gatling Good: Produces rotary hand cannons in her attempts to cook Wonder Woman, which you know, plays right into Wonder Woman's Signature Move.
  • Killed Off for Real: Diana, with some assistance from Zee, kills her, apparently for good.
  • Knight of Cerebus: While she has some Laughably Evil moments, Ember is a genuinely dangerous, vicious monster who has killed and devoured several princesses in the past, and her powers make her a tough opponent for the whole team.
  • Knows the Ropes: Ember quickly binds and gags Zee Zatara in a fashion the best scouts couldn't hope to duplicate and produces a lariat out of fire to impede Green Lantern's attempt to free Zee.
  • Near-Villain Victory: The only things that save Zee's life are the gluttony of Kara Danvers driving her to track down "Amber" and Zee's extremely unroyal status causing Zee to taste like bile to Ember. Wonder Woman would have been too late otherwise due to Diana and Zee agreeing to be as far away as they could from one another that day, and Ember literally has every Super Hero Girl restrained and Wonder Woman between her jaws after assuming her final form.
  • The Nose Knows: Can detect a genuine princess by smell (and taste) but not sight, since she zeroed on cosplaying Zee instead of an actual one, Diana.
  • Picky People Eater: Only likes to eat princesses, and thinks everyone else tastes absolutely disgusting.
  • Playing with Fire: Besides the standard Breath Weapon, Ember can shoot fireballs from her hands, and manipulate the fire into assorted forms, including a cage to imprison most of the heroes during the final battle. The fire is magical so it can hurt even Kara.
  • Pronouncing My Name for You: Repeatedly points out that her name is Em-ber, not Am-ber.
  • The Snark Knight: When she's on the warpath everything she says is all snark.
  • Scaled Up: She at first turns into a reptilian Winged Humanoid and then becomes a gigantic quadrupedal winged dragon to free herself from The Lasso of Truth.
  • Smoke Out: Ember uses a smoke screen to confound and defeat Supergirl. Wonder Woman turns Ember's smoke against her to subdue Ember's second form.
  • Sssssnaketalk: When she reveals herself to Zee.
  • Voice of the Legion: When transformed her voice sounds that way.
  • Weredragon: She can shift between a human form and a giant dragon one, plus an intermediate form that combines human and dragon traits.

    Riddler (Edward Nygma) 

Voiced by: David Hornsby

An enemy of Batman's who traveled to Metropolis.


  • Adaptational Wimp: While most versions of Riddler can handle themselves in a fight, this version is helpless once in close quarters, getting caught by Batgirl and Robin on separate occasions, and being knocked out in a single punch by Robin.
  • Arc Villain: Of the #AmBatgirl two-parter.
  • Out-Gambitted: When cornered by Batman and Batgirl, he threatens to blow up the building, but can't, thanks to them gluing his hands to the book he was trying to steal.

    Toyman (Winslow Schott) 

A pro MAMX player-turned supervillain with a serious grudge against Garth after the latter got him disqualified for cheating at a recent tournament.


  • Berserk Button: Hates being called a kid.
  • Composite Character: He's Winslow Schott, but uses a mecha resembling one used by an alternate future version of Hiro Okamura in Sean McKeever's run on Teen Titans and wears a jester costume similar to Jack Nimball's in his second appearance.
  • Deus ex Machina: Played for Laughs: A nagging itch he can't reach eventually drives him mad and throws off his aim, preventing him from killing Bumblebee and Supergirl in #Powerless
  • Disproportionate Retribution: "#Powerless" has him try to kill Garth for ruining his reputation as a MAMX champion by outing him as a cheater.
  • Experience Entitlement: His reasoning for being Garth's partner for the upcoming MAMX competition instead of Kara Danvers. He's got a point, but then takes it a step further and wants Kara out of the MAMX club altogether, going so far as to cheat to make sure she loses his wager.
  • Fat Bastard: This incarnation has a portly physique and is a real prick to everyone around him.
  • Friendly Enemy: He dislikes Supergirl and hates Garth Berntein, but Toyman has professional respect for Bumblebee. Not enough to keep him from trying to kill her, but enough for him to give her compliments and ask for advice.
  • Humongous Mecha: His MAMX robot can turn into one of these.
  • Jerkass: He considers himself to be superior to everyone when it comes to MAMX and has no qualms about cheating in tournaments.
  • Nerdy Bully: Wanting to be Garth's partner in the MAMX tournament is a reasonable enough desire but Winslow Schott crosses the line into bullying when he also decides to goad Kara Danvers into leaving the MAMX club altogether.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: He treats MAMX as extremely Serious Business, goes on a rampage when Garth gets him disqualified for cheating, and throws a rather childish tantrum when Supergirl calls him a kid.
  • Rube Goldberg Hates Your Guts: Building elaborate delayed murder devices is the subject of a board game called Death Trap in this setting. As revenge for exposing him as a cheater, Toyman places Garth Bernstein in a life sized version, which, among other things, involves heating soup to a boil with a lightbulb.

    Night Sting 
Voiced by: Kimberly Brooks

A future version of Bumblebee, having come back in time to warn her past self of an unknown danger regarding something she lost and needs to get back.


  • Aesop Enforcer: Night Sting's entire reason for going to the past is to teach a hard lesson, and she has everything at her disposal to teach that lesson to except the one person she actually wants to learn it. Night Sting inadverdently does teaching her younger self two valuable lessons however. The first is not to let lamentation of past mistakes lead to the waste of knowledge gained from them. The second and most important, think your plans through.
  • Anti-Villain: Her motives aren't evil, but her actions end up almost destroying Karen's relationship with her friends and causes her much distress.
  • Bee Hive Barrier: She has a deployable shield of interconnected hexagons.
  • Braids of Action: Given the show's artstyle, they could just as easily be dreads, but Night Sting definitely styles her hair more practically than her past self and is far more aggressive.
  • The Corrupter: Her whole plan was to have Karen become less of a pushover and more aggressive, which ends up straining her relationship with her friends.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: She defeats the other SHGs effortlessly after Kara Danvers attacks her. She doesn't even give Jessica Cruz and Diana Prince the chance to try and attack.
  • Exact Words: Tries to claim that technically everything she told her past self was true in the context all of her words were only meant for her past self. This falls apart under her own past self's scrutiny.
  • Future Badass: She's an experienced enough fighter to easily deal with the SHGs.
  • Grew a Spine: Her true motive was to have Karen undergo this and become like her.
  • Hoist Hero over Head: It's Played for Laughs with Barbara Gordon, but nonetheless shows future Beecher is far more physically imposing than past Karen.
  • In the Hood: Night Sting already wears a mask that conceals more than Karen's helmet, but has a hood over that just to look more menacing.
  • Irony: Karen Beecher was already voicing some gripes with her friends before Night Sting showed up to increase the tension between them, and one of those was that they started watching a movie without Karen. Night Sting ends up spoiling the yet to be released sequel to the movie, along with a franchise Barbara Gordon is a fan of.
  • Ret-Gone: She is erased from existence when Karen tells her that she will never be like her.
  • Self-Disposing Villain: It was literally herself who ended up disposing of Night Sting, but had Night Sting gotten her past self to behave exactly how she wanted the result really wouldn't have been too different, as she'd still be destroying her own history.
  • Shout-Out: To Nightwing, the more aggressive and brooding future self of Teen Titans leader Robin. However, Nightwing retains healthy relations with most of his associates, really only falling out with Batman and Red Hood.
  • Super Heroes Wear Capes: Added as part of Night Sting's more aggressive image.
  • Time-Traveling Jerkass: Night Sting abuses time travel just to make herself happier. Barbara Gordon thinks it's cool until she learns Night Sting was lying about it.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: Her increase in aggression also made her colder and more aloof, with her planning to do the same to her past self.
  • Tron Lines: Her suit has glowing green lines running through it.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: She wants her past self to become more assertive so people won't walk over her all the time, but she resorts to violence and manipulation in order to make it happen.

    Condiment King (Mitchell Mayo) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/condiment_king_dcshg.png

A former fast food restaurant worker turned demented supervillain.


  • Adaptational Badass: While the Condiment King in the comics was hardly a threat, Mitchell as the Condiment King is much more dangerous. On top on being unhinged, Mitchell utilized a glue cannon and a flamethrower as weapons, disguised as condiment containers. Because of this, he was able to catch Batgirl off guard during their first encounter.
  • Adaptational Hairstyle Change: He has a mustache when his DCAU and mainline comics counterparts were clean-shaven.
  • Atrocious Alias: He legitimately intimidates the current and former employees of Burrito Bucket alike, but that doesn't make any of them take his name seriously.
  • Basement-Dweller: In the flashback of Barbara asking him to return to the Burrito Bucket, he is shown to be still living with his mother.
  • Composite Character: Much like in Harley Quinn (2019), the Condiment King combines the name "Mitchell Mayo" like the In Name Only version introduced in Birds of Prey, yet has the stocky appearance and blue and white costume of the original Buddy Standler version. He also shares the comic Mitchell Mayo incarnation's backstory of being a former fast food employee.
  • Consummate Professional: Exaggerated Trope. He is extremely passionate when it comes to fast food service, to the point that employers fired him for disturbing customers and disrupting the other staff. At Burrito Bucket, Mitchell was Employee of the Month for several consecutive years. He can even tell what the ingredients of fast food dishes are by smell.
  • The Dreaded: To Metropolis' fast food restaurants, according to the Burrito Bucket manager Shane O'Shaughnessy. Mitchell's background and notorious enthusiasm for his job are well-known among his former workplaces.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: Mitchell Mayo is already unhinged, but he goes mad at the sight of a new employee of the month getting on the wall of fame after he had previously won the Burrito Bucket award so often they retired it, and tells Karen Beecher she'll never live up to his legacy.
  • Porn Stache: Typically clean-shaven, this version wears a bushy mustache.
  • Slasher Smile: Most of his scenes have him grinning in a very unnerving manner.

    Bane (Diego Dorrance) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bane_dcshg.png
Voiced By: Eric Lopez

A supervillain masquerading as Metropolis High's art teacher in order to steal chemicals from the science lab to create Venom.


  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Pretends to be a cool art teacher while stealing school chemicals to make his strength enhancement chemical.
  • Genius Bruiser: Smart enough to make his strength enhancement formula using school chemicals.
  • Growing Muscles Sequence: He goes through this twice as he injects more and more venom.
  • Improvised Lock Pick: Dieog Dorrance uses the bristles of a paintbrush to escape his handcuffs while the officers apprehending him are not looking.
  • Likes Clark Kent, Hates Superman: Diego Dorrance at least pretends to like Barbara Gordon but Bane has no respect for Batgirl.
  • Named by the Adaptation: He is given the civilian name Diego Dorrance, when in the comics Bane's actual name is unknown (with some sources giving Dorrance as his surname solely on the basis that his father is Sir Edmund Dorrance, also known as King Snake).
  • Pretender Diss: He negatively contrasts Batgirl to Batman, viewing the latter as far more dangerous and far more pleasant.
  • The Dreaded: He's feared by the Gotham City Police, has defeated Batman once and is too much for Commissioner Gordon and Batgirl to defeat as individuals once he gets hopped up on venom.

    Lyssa 
Voiced By: Kari Wahlgren

The goddess of rage, frenzy, and envy, having come to Metropolis to feed off Diana's envious desire for her mother's approval in order to become more powerful.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: Downplayed: Mythological Lyssa believed herself to be Blessed with Suck and didn't enjoy victimizing people with her powers, usually being coerced to by equal, more powerful or more numerous figures. In particular Lyssa resented Hera sending Lyssa down the path that lead to Hippolyta's ruin. Here Lyssa enjoys using her power on those she deems "enemies" and has labeled Hippolyta as one of them for reasons unrevealed.
  • Amazing Technicolor Population: She has purple skin
  • Composite Character: She presides over far more domains than Lyssa traditionally does. Assuming the show is combining the Greek and Roman pantheons this can be excused by The Romans being unable to decide which of their goddesses was Lyssa's equivalent.
  • Cute Little Fangs: In her default state. Once Lyssa completes her feeding and tranforms her fangs disproportionately enlarge to become more fearsome.
  • Emotion Eater: Feeds off the envy of her enemies to grow stronger, with her target in #MotherKnowsBest being Diana's legendary desire for Hippolyta's approval. However, once her victims let go of said envy, she becomes weaker.
  • Evil Virtues: Lyssa has been waiting at least two hundred years for the chance to feed on Diana's insecurities. One has to at least applaud her patience.
  • Evil Red Head: She wants to torment the royal family of Themyscira, exploits a schism between queen and princess to do it, and has red hair.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: While concealing herself in smoke Lyssa's eyes glow white.
  • Knows the Ropes: Once powered up, Lyssa turns her staff into a bladed lasso that she uses to bind Hippolyta, stake into a roof and place Hippolyta in Unwilling Suspension so Hippolyta can watch as Lyssa beats up Diana. It turns back into a staff when Lyssa starts to weaken. It's basically Nubia's weapon from DC Rebirth.
  • Mobile Menace: Lyssa's vanishing gives her a great mobility advantage over Hippolyta and Diana even before her transformation turns her into a flight capable Winged Humanoid.
  • "Oh, Crap!" Smile: She smiles nervously once she realizes Supergirl is about to punch her away.
  • One-Winged Angel: Once she consumes enough of Diana’s envy, she turns from her elderly appearance into a gigantic demonic figure strong enough to effortlessly smack around Hippolyta, Wonder Woman and Supergirl at the same time.
  • Smoke Out: Lyssa conceals herself in and disappears into clouds of green smoke. The emotions she pulls from her targets to feed on and grow from take the form of green flames.
  • Stalker without a Crush: Lyssa has been shadowing Diana of Themyscira, right out of sight, vanishing when Diana happens to glance in Lyssa's direction.
  • Truer to the Text: DC's comics had always removed Lyssa's role in the downfall of Amazonia, usually giving it exclusively to Ares or Hera, having them share the role, or splitting it between one of them and their various all too eager associates or underlings. While we don't know what Lyssa's problem with Hippolyta is here, they definitely were connected in Classical Mythology and Hippolyta would understandably have an issue with Lyssa!
  • Twinkle in the Sky: In her first appearance once she's defeated, courtesy of Supergirl.
  • Wind from Beneath My Wings: Lyssa becomes so strong she can send Wonder Woman and Supergirl tumbling down the street just by moving her wings in their direction.

    Enchantress / June Moone 
Voiced By: Ashley Spillers (June Moone), Kari Wahlgren (Enchantress)

Mild-mannered art teacher by day, evil sorceress by night, but not by choice. June Moone is possessed by an evil spirit known as the Enchantress, which Zatanna only finds out after she set her father on a date with them.


  • Cute Clumsy Girl: June is shy, sweet, and somewhat of a klutz, which gets Zee thinking that maybe her father will like her.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: Enchantress's eyes glow green when she start performing a prolonged spell, not unlike the Zataras. Unlike the Zataras, the victims of her spells will also suffer glowing eyes of doom, and not because of any Mind Manipulation like Zee's "dark" magic.
  • Helpless Good Side: June can only beg the Enchantress to not do any evil, something Enchantress laughs at.
  • The Mirror Shows Your True Self: Whoever isn't in control of their shared body appears as their reflection in the mirror.

    She-Bat (Dr. Francine Langstrom) 
Voiced by: Tara Strong

A scientist who invented a serum with the effect of turning the user into a humanoid bat. She's kidnapped and used as an attack dog by the Joker on Halloween.


  • Adapted Out: In the comics, it was Francine's husband Kirk who invented and tested the Man-Bat serum. Here, Francine herself invented it and tested it on herself.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: It wasn't enough for the Joker to turn her into a feral bat-monster; he also uses a sonic frequency to get her to obey his orders.
  • Composite Character: She mutated herself into a humanoid bat with a serum of her own creation, when in the comics the transformation serum was created by her husband Kirk and he used it to become Man-Bat before she ever became She-Bat.
  • Magic Pants: She appears to be naked after turning into She-Bat, but has her clothes intact after Bumblebee successfully gives her the antidote to return her to human form.
  • Professor Guinea Pig: Batgirl mentions that Francine tested the formula on herself, which means she already has an antidote prepared. The problem is getting She-Bat to take her medicine.

    Gentleman Ghost (Jim Craddock) 
Voiced by: Fred Tatasciore

A undead criminal from 19th Century, ally of the Joker and the great-grandfather of Victoria Craddock.


  • Sealed Evil in a Can: He was imprisoned in a trunk before his descendant Victoria Craddock unleashed him, afterwards she later re-imprisoned her ancestor.

    Solomon Grundy 
Voiced by: Fred Tatasciore

An immortal zombie from 19th Century, ally of the Joker and member of the Legion of Doom.


  • Adaptation Name Change: Downplayed. If his headstone is anything to go by, Solomon Grundy is his actual name rather than Cyrus Gold.
  • Hulk Speak: Like most versions of Solomon Grundy, he speaks in sentence fragments and refers to himself in third person.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: His eyes menacingly glow red as he rises from his grave.

    Cythonna 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/d84cb362_2756_4ad4_b78b_83c187c25961_5.jpg
Voiced by: Missi Pyle

The goddess of darkness, blight and suffering. She was known on Krypton to be a cruel, evil, ambitious, and sadistic Goddess who delighted in filling the hearts of her victims with evil in order to become stronger.


  • Adaptational Modesty: Her attire here covers up more, her comics counterpart wearing little aside from a leotard.
  • Ancient Evil: She is a Kryptonian Goddess who has lived for centuries, even after being imprisoned in the Amulet she was encased in. And being a Goddess, Cythonna cannot die in any way she can only be locked up but never killed.
  • Artifact Domination: She can mentally dominate any villain through her amulet, and further control other villains her thrall brings it to.
  • Big Bad: Of Teen Titans Go! & DC Super Hero Girls: Mayhem in the Multiverse.
  • Black Magic: Cythonna is also known as the goddess of darkness as she can manipulate dark magic and negative energy which manifests itself in a mass of spheres of bright indigo and violet colors.
  • Blue-Skinned Space Babe: She has blue skin, and is a goddess originally from Krypton.
  • Composite Character: Being The Corruptor while trapped in a crystal all seem to evoke Eclypsa.
  • The Corrupter: Cythonna can control the minds of her victims and turn them evil or their servants. Also she can possess people and make them her hosts.
  • The Dreaded: Cythonna was so feared that the legend of her amulet drifting through space inspired stories on Krypton that shooting stars, instead of things you make wishes on, were her returning to get naughty children. Kara is notably fearful as she recounts this to the Girls.
  • Evil Will Fail: She planned to use Supergirl as a host to take over her universe; but her plan failed because she underestimated the strength of Supergirl who also locked her in another crystal. Not to mention, she was banished to the dimension from Teen Titans Go!, where she tried to retrieve the crystal again and destroy that universe; but she was banished again this time to the dimension of the Super Friends. So she failed twice in her plans to destroy the universes of the two series.
  • Final Boss: The Big Bad of the movie that serves as the Grand Finale of the series.
  • God of Evil: They don't call her the goddess of plague and suffering for nothing. Cythonna was known to be delighted in stuffing the hearts of her victims with evil in order to become stronger. She can be quite manipulative and persuasive, as she was able to persuade and manipulate Lex Luthor himself.
  • Icy Blue Eyes: She has blue eyes, which represents her coldness and her association with darkness. And the most resonant thing is that she is the only character without pupils, reflecting the utter inhumanity of her.
  • Impossible Hourglass Figure: She is curvaceous, and as with Supergirl, her upper body, hips, and legs are wide, with her waist only slightly wider than her neck.
  • Leaking Can of Evil: Cythonna was sealed away by her brother Rao into an amulet that was flung into space. She can enthrall anyone who is truly evil that touches it and it's apparently an endless source of pellets that open temporary portals to the Phantom Zone.

Invinci-Bros

    Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20190906_005913.jpg
Click here to see his civilian identity
Voiced By: Jason Spisak

A student at Metropolis High School and star of the football team. Like Jessica, he has been chosen to defend the Earth as a Green Lantern.


  • Adaptational Dumbass: While Hal Jordan in the comics wasn't exactly a rocket scientist, this version of the character is stupid enough to not know the proper spelling of his surname or the proper spelling of the phrase "I love you" and thinks that Jessica's name is spelled with a silent P.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: He's more self-absorbed and vain than most other versions of Hal. However, he never actually means any harm and is mostly just a bit insensitive.
  • Adaptational Wimp: While his comics counterpart is defined by his ability to overcome fear, here the sight of Star Sapphire makes him so scared his ring stops working. On the other hand, it's not like he doesn't have good reason.
  • Age Lift: In the source material, he's older than Jessica, enough to be her mentor. Here, he's a teenager like the previous series, and they are peers both mentored by Kilowog.
  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: Gender inverted. In "#ScrambledEggs", Hal appears to be attracted to Selina Kyle, even more so when she smashes the egg they were assigned to take care of after one too many comments from him, and storms off.
  • All Part of the Show: When Green Arrow crashes the set of "Swashbuckler On The Seven Seas" and challenges Cavalier to a duel, Hal Jordan just thinks Zee Zatara chose a weird play to direct.
  • Big "NO!": At the end of "#AsteroidBelter", he gives one when his beloved hot dog cart is destroyed by an asteroid fragment. When Jessica tells him that a salad bar is still open, this is coupled with a Skyward Scream.
  • Comically Missing the Point: Hal Jordan teases Karen Beecher for liking boy bands like "Up Past 8" and asks if she's fourteen. She is.
  • Composite Character: As Jessica Cruz's contemporary who's far more headstrong than she is, he's more similar to Simon Baz than the comics Hal Jordan. He also has Guy Gardner's like of sports and self-absorbedness.
  • Deflector Shields: In the same style as Jessica Cruz's of course, except Hal Jordan's are even weirder, with an overturned wheelbarrow and a giant chillie dog being the highlights.
  • Dumb Jock: Zig-zagged; shows varying levels of both competence and cluelessness, and then it's revealed that he can't spell his own last name right.
  • Embarrassing First Name: He doesn't like his real name, Harold, and prefers "Hal".
  • Fatal Flaw: His self-centered and inconsiderate nature. He's a good guy at heart so he isn't malicious about it, but he's so egotistical he thoughtlessly hurts other people involved with him because his first priority is himself and what he wants.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • He's a sap for the same Twilight rip-off that the girls are, to the point of being an expert at the official game.
    • When faced with Zod, he's got the self-awareness to know that Diana's a better leader than he is, and that since she's pretty much useless when Steve Trevor's around, the common sense to send him off on a doughnut run so she can focus and call the play.
    • In "#LeagueOfShadows", it turns out that despite (supposedly) hating boy band Up Past 8, he's not only capable of singing their songs on stage once the heroes kidnapped and replaced them to protect them from a mind-controlled Kara, but improvising one to use the Power of Friendship and Power of Rock to break through Ra's mind-control. Not bad for someone who can't even spell his own name.
    • He actually read (the last page of) Jessica's report about an alien that was Not Evil, Just Misunderstood, something the rest of the Green Lantern Corps didn't do, allowing him to know she was in the right and win a trial in her favor.
  • In Touch with His Feminine Side: He has some surprising interests for someone played as a (mostly) idiotic narcissist jock. In "#LeagueOfShadows", it's noted he gets unusually into his role of impersonating a member of a popular boy band, and demonstrates a certain amount of glee in doing better than Garth at an Otome Dating Sim.
  • Jerk Jock: Downplayed; Hal is a football star, and fairly affable, but only if you can get past his incredible ego.
  • Literal-Minded: He almost does a good job reading his lines during "#DramaQueen", but Zee immediately passes on him when he says "enter stage right" out loud.
  • Narcissist: Hal personally believes he's the best-looking guy at Metropolis High. Under the Lasso of Truth's grip, he admits that's a lie. He thinks he's "the best-looking person in school, guy or girl... best-looking guy in all of Metropolis... in the whole tri-state area".
  • Perma-Shave: Him being too young to need shaving would be plausible, but #ScrambedEggs reveals that Hal Jordan is maintaining it.
  • Platonic Life-Partners: He's Vitriolic Best Buds with Jessica, but any romantic tension between them is purely in Carol's imagination.
  • Psychosomatic Superpower Outage: When Carol got in the picture, Hal began to cower in fear so much his ring begins to crap out.
  • Reading the Stage Directions Out Loud: In "#DramaQueen", he blows his audition for Zee's play by mistaking stage directions for lines.
  • Real Men Wear Pink: "#DetentionClub" shows him enthusiastically reading a Princess Pumpkin Pants comic book.
  • Secret-Keeper: He knows Jessica Cruz is a Green Lantern and Carol Ferris is Star Sapphire.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: He thinks himself the greatest heroes in town, but among the upper echelon of heroes like Superman, he's merely The Friend Nobody Likes.
  • Smart Ball: Despite his general incompetence he's smart enough to send Steve Trevor out for donuts when the team needs a lucid Diana to come up with a plan.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: A doll of him does not exist.
  • Transformation Trinket: Like his fellow Green Lantern Jessica, he uses his ring to transform.
  • Unkempt Beauty: Early attempts to make him unattractive to Carol fall flat before he even goes out as it turns out that he can't help effortlessly pulling off any hairstyle. However, it's got a limit (which involves clothing several years too small for him and actively throwing his best features off). But catching him on a Sunday morning just after waking up (like in "#ScrambledEggs") will do the trick.
  • Wrong for the Right Reasons: Hal Jordan's defense of Jessica Cruz in "#TheGreenRoom" is incompetent to the point he is only allowed to continue for The Guardian's own amusement, but Hal Jordan is right that Jessica's faith in the system is misplaced and that she does need a defense. A better defense.

    The Flash (Barry Allen) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/barry_allen_as_the_flash.png
Click here to see his civilian identity
Voiced By: Phil LaMarr

A student at Metropolis High School who works part-time at the Sweet Justice ice cream parlor. He brings superspeed to the Invincibros as the Flash.


  • Adaptational Dumbass: He's not as intelligent as his comics counterpart, as he has trouble understanding Batgirl's verbose explanation for using his speed to achieve time travel in "#BackInAFlash" before she dumbs it down and in "#ScrambledEggs" believed it was a good idea to put his and Carter Hall's assigned egg under Carter's rear using the flawed logic that Carter's alter ego Hawkman being avian-themed and birds normally hatching eggs would make Carter good at keeping the egg safe.
  • Adaptational Job Change: Due to being too young to be a forensics scientist, this version of Barry Allen instead has a part-time job at the Sweet Justice ice cream parlor.
  • Age Lift: He's a teenager in this continuity, as opposed to an adult, just like the previous series.
  • Attention Deficit... Ooh, Shiny!: Easily distracted by whatever fun thing is going on nearby, like a chess game, kids on a playground, or a burrito cart.
  • Badass in Distress: In "#BurritoBucket", Batgirl finds him tied up by bank robbers with animal masks.
    Batgirl: Flash?! What happened?!?
    Flash: Dude, I'm as surprised as you are.
  • The Bartender: A G-rated version, even telling Babs she's had enough.
  • Big Eater: He eats 1000 burritos in a few minutes in "#SpeedyDelivery". In "#LetThemEatPie" he's in a pie-eating contest and manages to eat 181 pies before losing to Diana.
  • Burger Fool: Averted; he works the counter at the Sweet Justice ice cream shop, but seems to enjoy his job.
  • Composite Character: His name is Barry Allen, but he's a teenager a la Wally West.
  • Cordon Bleugh Chef: As Barbara Gordon explains, Barry Allen does a good job with the invidual components of his original ice cream desserts, but mixes them together in ways that do not complement each other.
  • Deus Exit Machina: He goes to get his bosses' lawyer rather than help the girls fight the robots.
  • Dumb, but Diligent: He is a very studious individual who is eager to learn new things and apply his acquired knowledge. Despite this he remains shockingly ignorant of the world and makes many poor decisions.
  • Dumb Is Good: The Flash has a much poorer understanding of Time Travel than Batgirl, despite being the engine for it in #BackInAFlash. All of The Flash's alternate selves resulting from their time travel abuse all get along while Batgirl's form two rival camps that fight over wanting to avert their bad futures or wanting to keep them. Also, while Batgirl made several small but seemingly harmless changes to the timeline, they were all for her own self benefit in some way. The one change The Flash made was to show more appreciation for his aunt.
  • Malicious Misnaming: In "#DCSuperHeroBoys", he mockingly addresses Ursa as "Worse-a".
  • Motor Mouth: He talks as fast as he runs.
  • Mundane Utility: He uses his Super-Speed to serve ice cream and make deliveries extremely fast.
  • Nice Guy: He's a very nice and altruistic person.
  • Perpetual Smiler: Unless things get serious, Barry will always have a wide, happy smile on his face.
  • Platonic Life-Partners: One of his very best friends is Barbara Gordon, but they're clearly just friends, and there's no attraction whatsoever between them.
  • Smart People Play Chess: Plays both sides of a chess game in seconds, ending in a checkmate.
  • Spanner in the Works: Kara Danvers tries to use her speed to sort all of the books in the library in time to get to a League Of Shadows concert but a speed reading Barry Allen dishevels the books as quickly as she can put them in their proper places.
  • Super-Speed Reading: Can go through dozens of books in seconds, as seen in "#Booked".
  • Toyless Toyline Character: No toy for him.

    Aqualad (Garth Bernstein) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vlcsnap_2019_09_27_02h10m25s963.png
Click here to see his civilian identity
Voiced By: Jessica McKenna

A student at Metropolis High School, a huge nerd, and the football team's water boy. He uses his (sometimes) powerful hydrokinesis to fight evil as Aqualad.


    Green Arrow (Oliver Queen) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20190906_005719.jpg
Click here to see his civilian identity
Voiced By: Eddie Perino

A student at Metropolis High from a wealthy family with dreams of becoming a stage actor. He fights crime in style as the Invincibros' master archer, Green Arrow.


  • Antagonist in Mourning: Green Arrow nearly has a breakdown when he believes he has killed Cavalier, and when Cavalier reveals he was simply beaten and playing dead for dramatic effect the two of them proceed to bond over everything they hate about Zee Zatara.
  • Commonality Connection: "#DramaQueen" ends with him bonding with Mortimer Drake over their mutual hatred of Zee.
  • Cultured Badass: The emerald archer likes referencing Shakespeare.
  • Long List: When auditioning for Zee Zatara's production of Swashbuckler on the Seven Seas in "#DramaQueen", Oliver Queen produces a list of credentials that hits the floor and proceeds to roll of the stage to where Zee and Karen are sitting.
  • Mr. Vice Guy: Oliver is very selfish and regularly blinded by his own ego, but he'll do the right thing when it counts.
  • Mustache Vandalism: He spitefully doodles on posters to a Zee Zatara show after it falls on the same date and time as one of his own.own in the short "#AdBlockers", drawing an eyepatch and a mustache on Zee as well as writing that the audience should see his show instead.
  • The Prima Donna: Let's just say Oliver thinks he's in a league above high school productions.
  • Properly Paranoid: Oliver Queen is convinced Mortimer Drake is trying to sabotage his acting career and decides to sabotage him more thoroughly. Karen Beecher tells Oliver Queen to take it as a lesson in maturity and become a bigger man after Oliver is caught by Zee and loses the role but it turns out Oliver wasn't paranoid enough.
  • Shameless Self-Promoter: Exactly as much as Zee, to the point that both of them forget to put on their scheduled performances because they're so busy sabotaging each other's advertisements.
  • Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: He returns this sentiment with Zee. After the climax of "#DramaQueen", Oliver Queen finds himself with another one in the form of Mortimer Drake.
  • Stealth Pun: As stated above, he can be a huge Drama Queen, which is very fitting considering his surname is Queen and he has a fondness for performing in stage productions.
  • Trick Arrow: He wouldn't be Green Arrow without them. Even the legendary boxing glove arrowhead makes an appearance!
  • Too Much Alike: He and Zee are Sitcom Arch-Nemeses because they're both Spoiled Sweet Attention Whores.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: He has no doll.
  • Unknown Rival: Zee doesn't initially recognize him when they first meet in costume.
  • Waistcoat of Style: To accentuate his high-class background.

    Hawkman (Carter Hall) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20190906_005835.jpg
Click here to see his civilian identity
Voiced By: Phil LaMarr

A student at Metropolis High known for his intimidating demeanor. As Hawkman, he intimidates criminals with his giant wings and Nth metal mace.


  • Ambiguously Brown: He has an olive skin tone, similar to Diana's. His original life was an Ancient Egyptian prince, so there's that.
  • Anti-Magic: Hawkman's mace appears to retain Nth metal's magic disrupting properties since he uses it to parry Zatanna's magic blasts.
  • The Big Guy: The Super Hero Boys' heaviest hitter.
  • Blessed with Suck: He and Shiera Sanders are literally cursed to reincarnate across history, find each other, fall in love, and then get killed by Hath-Set. Carter figures it's probably best to leave Shiera alone this life, to prevent that happening to her.
  • Carry a Big Stick: Hawkman wields his signature mace made from Nth metal.
  • Does Not Know His Own Strength: Karen Beecher suggest Carter Hall get Shiera Sanders's attention by pelting her window with pebbles. Unfortunately Carter's "light" throw enrages Shiera after it shatters her window.
  • Eyes Out of Sight: In his civvies, Carter's Messy Hair covers his eyes, and Hawkman's helmet is an Irisless Eye Mask Of Mystery.
  • Fastball Special: He weaponizes Steve Trevor against Wonder Woman.
  • Foil: To Supergirl. Both are the muscle of their respective teams, but Supergirl is loud and quick-tempered while Hawkman is quiet and reserved.
  • Gentle Giant: Hawkman may be brutal in battle, but Carter is very sweet in private.
  • Past-Life Memories: While he reincarnates, the memories don't always come with. Apparently a few lives ago Shiera remembered while he didn't, and she wasn't terribly happy about it.
  • The Quiet One: Rarely makes a sound other than a grunt. In his debut two-parter, he says (disregarding his team's Battle Cry) a total of two words. In "#TheBirdAndTheBee" he starts saying more.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: He doesn't have a doll in the toyline.

    Steve Trevor 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/videocapture_20190909_160205.jpg
Voiced By: Yuri Lowenthal

A cadet from the local military academy whom Diana is attracted to. He becomes a "leader" of sorts for the Invinci-Bros.


  • Amazon Chaser: Par the course for Steve. He meets a tall, buff girl who can lift him like a loaf of bread (and is an actual Amazon on top of all that), and his response is to ask her for a date.
  • Bad "Bad Acting": When he takes over as Romeo, he reads his lines woodenly right off the script.
  • Commuting on a Bus: Barbara made sure he made it into the military academy so he wouldn't be a distraction to Diana. He still ends up showing up afterward as leader of the Invinci-Bros.
  • Fantastically Indifferent: For a regular joe, he's completely unfazed by his friends' double lives.
  • The Generic Guy: He has very little in the way of personality or defining traits outside of being a generally Nice Guy. This is lampshaded when Babs struggles to find something to say about him during his character promo.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: Blond, and very much a Nice Guy whom Diana is hopelessly smitten with.
  • Humble Hero: Steve Trevor has five super-powered beings regularly singing his praises, a super-powered warrior princess practically drooling over him whenever she is around, and does not let it go to his head at all.
  • Kryptonite Factor: He effectively is Diana's Kryptonite in that while he's not actively harmful to her, his mere presence will render her lovestruck to the point of utter uselessness.
  • Nice Guy: Polite, cheerful, and friendly to a fault, with seemingly not a mean bone in his body.
  • Oblivious to Love: While Steve is also attracted to Diana at first sight, he's completely oblivious of the effect he has on her every day.
  • Perpetual Smiler: He's always smiling, probably always in a good mood.
  • Ridiculously Average Guy: Trevor's rather ordinary among most of the men in the show in looks, popularity, and talent. None of the Super Hero Girls could figure out what makes him stand out so much to Diana, barring the fact he was the first boy she ever saw.
  • Satellite Love Interest: That he has little going on besides being the nice guy Diana's crushing on is played extensively for humor.
  • Secret Public Identity: Though not a superhero himself, Trevor leads a team of them, and doesn't bother with any kind of disguise or alter ego.
  • Simple-Minded Wisdom: He's taken for a brilliant strategist by the Super Hero Boys just by recognizing the obvious without overthinking. It's why they made him their leader.
  • Team Dad: He's not much of a team leader, but he is quite emotionally supportive.
  • The Team Normal: He lacks any powers or special equipment his teammates have.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: No doll for him.

Justice League

    Superman (Clark Kent) 
Voiced By: Max Mittelman

The last son of Krypton and Kara's cousin. Unlike her, he is already a recognized and beloved superhero.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: He's still a well-intentioned superhero, but this Clark is a showboat who doesn't respect Supergirl all that much. At least until "Mayhem in the Multiverse" reveals he does indeed respect her.
  • Age Lift: Downplayed compared to most of the cast, but he's only just a few years older than Kara, having been Superboy two summers previously.
  • Ascended Extra: Relative to the Shea Fontana continuity, he actually appears here instead of just being occasionally mentioned.
  • Bait-and-Switch: Word breaks out on the street that Batman and Superman are fighting in #WorldsFinest, and we see an enraged Superman delivering a smackdown Batman would probably not be able to survive, until it's shown Superman is just frustrated at losing to Batman at an arcade game.
  • The Cape: An annoying, somewhat smug one, but genuinely noble and heroic.
  • Celebrity Endorsement: On request from Kara Danvers, Superman endorses Jessica Cruz's campaign for class president
  • Jerkass Has a Point: When Kara finally snaps and demands he stop hogging the limelight in #SuperWho?, complaining that she's been busting her ass to prove that she's as good a hero or better, while he's just been... well, as he points out, he's been being a hero.
  • Mister Exposition: He often only figures in the plot to explain things like different varieties of kryptonite and Bizarros to the less experienced Supergirl.
  • Not So Above It All: Despite his reputation, Clark can be as stubborn and irritable as his cousin Kara, to the point of getting in a childish fight with her. He also seems to love the limelight and showing off while saving people.
  • Pale Females, Dark Males: Inverted, at least costume-wise; The blue of his costume is much lighter than Kara's.
  • Pet the Dog: In "#PowerSurge", he plays along with Kara's new "Power Girl" identity and improvised alternate-universe origin. Before that, he texts her to ask if she's dead after her fight with Livewire and sends a thumbs up after she confirms she's still alive.
  • Smug Super: His egotism and showboating somewhat justify the ire of Kara, who is chronologically older but less aged and experienced only because she spent years adrift in space in hypersleep as Clark beat her to Earth.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: In "Teen Titans Go! & DC Super Hero Girls:Mayhem in the Multiverse", it is revealed that he always respected Kara and how her will makes her stronger than him, and at the end they are in better terms.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: He doesn't get his own doll.

    Batman (Bruce Wayne) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unknown_2_2.png
Voiced By: Keith Ferguson

The Dark Knight of Gotham City. His actions unknowingly inspire Barbara Gordon to become Batgirl ever since she was a kid.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: While Batman is still as heroic as ever, this version of his Bruce identity is a vain reality TV star who neglects Robin and leaves Alfred to suffer through having to deal with him whenever the poor brit can't get a babysitter for the arrogant brat while Bruce is partying. Even in his harshest depictions, Bruce cares about Alfred, Dick, and his other sidekicks, but gives no indication of such feelings here. In-Universe, Barbara claims to hate Bruce despite watching Make It Wayne, and likely wouldn't even consider that this guy might be Batman.
  • Age Lift: He isn't a teenager, but is still more youthful than most versions of Batman (outside of origin stories).
  • Ascended Extra: He actually appears a few times, when in the Shea Fontana continuity all he got was an indirect mention by Damian Wayne in "Kid Napped" and a cameo as a plushy in the Finals Crisis tie-in graphic novel.
  • Celebrity Masquerade: As part of his billionaire-playboy shtick here, "#SoulSisters" reveals that Wayne plays himself (with Alfred and Dick as his co-stars) on a Reality TV show called Make It Wayne. The show seems an acquired taste; it makes Jim Gordon fall asleep, Barbara will not admit to liking it, and Pamela Isley and Harleen Quinzel both seem to really hate it.
  • The Cowl: Significantly downplayed here. Batman still stalks the streets at night, saves people and apprehends criminals before darting out of sight, but he also makes public daytime appearances and is shown to be very kind and approachable to his adoring fans when there is no crime to stop.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: Par for the course with most Batman interpretations, and the little we've seen of this one is no different. Barbara picks up on his good nature despite never formally meeting the guy.
  • Fiction 500: Bruce Wayne owns a house so large individual rooms can house monster truck demonstrations.
  • Mythology Gag: Bruce's Idle Rich characterization is true to how he has occasionally portrayed himself in the comics as a persona. Here, this seems to be his actual personality.
  • Pet the Dog: By their reaction Bruce Wayne paid Jessica Cruz and Karen Beecher a little more than expected for a job well done baby sitting Dick Grayson and his friends.
  • Photo Op with the Dog: Batman kisses a baby one of his fans pushes in his face.
  • Pretty Boy: As Bruce Wayne. It has him two fans among the main cast in Karen Beecher and Zee Zatara.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: He listens to and believes Diana Prince's story when he catches her at the site of vandalism against him.
  • The Smart Guy: He isn't fooled by Barbara's impersonation of her father and calls him again after she leaves.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: He doesn't have a doll.
  • The Unintelligible: His appearances as Batman either have him as a silent person or speaking through a garbled voice over Gordon's Bat Phone. We hear him talk properly on TV as Bruce Wayne later. He's equally as unintelligible when seen in person, although everyone can understand him just fine (except Aquaman).

    Aquaman (Arthur Curry) 
Voiced By: Will Friedle

The king of Atlantis. Garth looks up to him and wants to be his apprentice.


  • Gratuitous Foreign Language: Aquaman greets Garth in Hindi. It is the only time he or anyone else uses the language.
  • Heroic Build: Downplayed: Aquaman has big arms and gigantic pectoral muscles but a skinny waist and legs.
  • Hidden Depths: Turns out he's also a dedicated player of Garth's favorite fantasy game, and Garth actually unseated him from his top ranking.
  • Kangaroo Court: Aquaman openly admits to presiding over a biased tribunal
  • Making a Splash: Aquaman doesn't seem to directly control water like Garth, but the presence of water does make Aquaman stronger.
  • Non-Indicative Name: "Aquaman's Boat" is a jeep.
  • Surfer Dude: He's extremely laidback, and his civilian design is a white muscle shirt, shorts, and sandals with a shell necklace.
  • Toyless Toyline Character: As with all male characters, there's no doll of him included in the toyline.
  • Worthy Opponent: Downplayed; he and Supergirl aren't really rivals, but after they get into a brief scuffle, they both complement each other's fighting prowess.

    Green Lantern (John Stewart) 
Voiced By: Phil LaMarr

The oldest Green Lantern on Earth, and one of Jessica's mentors.


Other Characters

    James Gordon 
Voiced By: Fred Tatasciore

The former commissioner of the Gotham Police Department, now commissioner of Metropolis... and Barbara's dad.


  • Absurdly Elderly Parent: He and Mrs. Gordon (who is around, but only appears in the series in a family photo) both look rather elderly to be parents of teen Barbara.
  • Boxing Battler: His fighting style
  • By-the-Book Cop: He has his moments of incompetence in the field, but Gordon is portrayed as a strict abider to the law.
  • Disaster Dominoes: He becomes a substitute science teacher at Metropolis High despite knowing nothing about science. He quickly shows how inept he is when his first demonstration causes a progressively worse series of messes that all land on his daughter Barbara.
  • Distressed Dude: He has to be saved from Diana Prince, who tries to kill him while sleep walking
  • Donut Mess with a Cop: Sometimes seen with one or a box of donuts to munch on the job.
  • Doting Parent: He acts this way around his daughter out of general love. Hilariously, he does this to Barbara even when she's Batgirl, without realizing they're one and the same.
  • Embarrassing Relative Teacher: He becomes a substitute teacher at Metropolis High in "#AcceptNoSubstitute" and wastes no time embarrassing Barbara.
  • Not So Above It All: Like Batgirl, he also calls Robin a twerp out loud. And they agree not to tell Batman that Poison Ivy escaped under both their noses, rather than face criticism and embarrassment.
  • Older Hero Versus Younger Villain: He finds himself having to step out of retirement to help apprehend Poison Ivy and Bane.
  • Parent-Induced Extended Childhood: He's not particularly controlling, but is otherwise clingy and overprotective of Barbara Gordon, at one point changing the channel after becoming disturbed by Stop Sign Massacre 5, which Kara Danvers had tuned into.
  • Real Men Wear Pink: He has no problem wearing a pink apron while whipping up some popcorn on a daddy-daughter movie night. He also doesn't mind watching Princess Pumpkin Pants, a primarily sweet girl-targeted show, with Barbara. He co-opted it into his nickname for her.
  • Retired Badass: While Commissioner Gordon is unable to defeat Bane on his own, it is implied James Gordon is actually the better fighter between the two and Bane does need a dose of venom to win their fight.
  • Stout Strength: Commissioner Gordon has a noticeable gut, but he proves to be quite strong by human standards.
  • Vanity License Plate: His license plate reads COMMISH.

    Giovanni "John" Zatara 
Voiced By: Phil LaMarr

Zee/Zatanna's father, a stage magician.


  • Adaptational Wimp: Subverted. While not a superhero, he's still basically a wizard. His deflector shield is able to hold off a dark magic-filled Supergirl, only cracking when the other controlled Super Hero Girls join Supergirl's assault.
  • Color Motif: He's also associated with the color purple.
  • Depower: He has his magic stolen by The Enchantress but still tries to confront his murderous and more powerful than ever adversary without it.
  • Diving Save: Leading to a Bridal Carry of June Moone
  • Does Not Like Spam: Giovanni does not share Zee's tastes in snack food.
  • Good Parents: He's a great father to his daughter. Not perfect, but he's quick to admit his imperfections when he thinks they give Zee trouble and tries to balance her happiness with her educational development. He even pretended to not have powers just in case she never developed them.
  • Leave Him to Me!: In #OneEnchantedEvening Giovanni insists that The Enchantress is out of Zee's league and that he handle her. Unfortunately for him an unwitting Zee has just helped Enchantress get even stronger.
  • Magicians Are Wizards: He's a stage magician with magical powers. Subverted since his acts, especially when he was hiding his powers from Zee, used typical tricks that didn't rely on real magic.
  • Poor Communication Kills: Giovanni's efforts to avoid offending Zee in OneEnchantedEvening lead to her to assume he is lonely and try to hook him up with June Moone. This is mostly harmless until Giovanni ends up being targeted by The Enchantress.
  • Rags to Riches: Zatara built his magician career from the ground up, starting as a traveling showman living in an RV. Now, he's the headliner for a ritzy casino.
  • Sand In My Eyes: Inverted, in that Giovanni is telling the truth but doesn't want to elaborate on what physical substance is making him cry, so Zee assumes Giovanni is being overly sentimental even though she knows it is wildly out of character for him.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: He is still alive, when the comics killed him off when he sacrificed himself during a seance in the "American Gothic" storyline of Alan Moore's run on Swamp Thing.
  • Technicolor Eyes: Unlike Zee's neon purple, Zatara's are a soft violet. His eyes glow the same shade of purple Zatanna's do, however, when Giovanni is performing a prolonged spell.
  • Unequal Rites: Giovanni can only use "light" magic, which is fueled by a positive state of mind, while his wife could only do dark magic, which is fueled by destructive thoughts. When his wife left them she also locked away Zee's dark magic, as Giovanni wouldn't be able to handle her potential Power Incontinence otherwise. Zee becomes incontinent anyway, but John initially handles it, since it turns out she inherited his light magic too, but Zee can still tap into dark magic if she gets angry enough, which gets worse when Fuseli briefly unlocks Zee's dark magic to torment her. This naturally leads to trouble Giovanni can't stop.

    Eliza and Jeremiah Danvers 
Voiced By: Kimberly Brooks (Eliza Danvers), Keith Ferguson (Jeremiah Danvers)

Kara's foster parents/legal guardians.


  • Actually Pretty Funny: They get along with the clearly not house broken Diana Prince right away, even enjoying her running them down after they pry her into revealing "the nightly listing of deficiencies" Diana was subjected to back home and becoming the subjects there of.
  • Air Quotes: Mrs. Danvers use these to "Agree" with Kara that she "didn't do anything" to be transferred to Metropolis High.
  • Amazingly Embarrassing Parents: The way they spout platitudes in a nice, loving and passive-aggressive way would make even the most loving and proper daughter cringe.
  • Bungling Inventor: Jeremiah comes up with a string of teen-oriented inventions, most of which malfunction in different ways or just aren't very useful. However, Ted Kord sees promise in his scientific work and hires him as an R&D specialist.
  • Chekhov's Gun: Jeremiah's boomerang comes back perfectly every time it is demonstrated in #DoubleDanvers and ends up playing a crucial role in the episode's climax.
  • Composite Character: Averted. Many adaptations, including the web-series and Faust's original shorts, have the Kents as Kara's guardians. This version bucks the trend, though the tie-in graphic novels still establish the Kents as being Kara's foster parents.
  • Foil: To their rocker foster child.
  • Hippie Parents: If the dress they foisted on Kara for picture day is any indication, they certainly were.

    Queen Hippolyta 
Voiced By: Cree Summer

Queen of the Amazons, and Diana's mother.


  • Abusive Parents: Apparently a nightly ritual of hers was castigating Diana for all her flaws and failings, in front of everyone. Yikes...
  • Action Mom: Being an Amazon makes this a given, though all the others are doing much of the action for her during the first two episodes she appears in, and when we see her finally try too fight someone Hippolyta gets subdued quickly, though it was a powered up goddess.
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: Comic Hippolyta's hair is usually either black like Diana's or blond. Here is is a light brown.
  • Adaptational Badass: This Hippolyta lacks both her own trademark girdle and the Girdle of Gaea Hippolyta wore in the Post Crisis comic books. She's nonetheless has Super-Strength relative to Supergirl, something that could not be said of an ungeared comic book Hippolyta prior to ascension.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: Compared to most versions of Hippolyta from the comic books, especially the then most recent one, this show's Hippolyta is far more stern, controlling and insulting.
  • Affectionate Nickname: Kara Danvers can't get Hippolyta's name right and just calls her "Poly".
  • Bearhug: Hippolyta's not the first one on the show to involuntarily hug Kara Danvers, but she is the first to make it hard for Kara to breathe.
  • Chest Insignia: Hippolyta frequently wears a "w" chest plate similar to Diana's.
  • Crushing Handshake: Hippolyta has a reputation for breaking hands. When Supergirl (barely)manages to match her grip Hippolyta becomes convinced Supergirl is a great warrior and wants to learn more about her.
  • Ermine Cape Effect: Unlike Diana Hippolyta was always wearing her cape until Kara Danvers got her some civilian clothing.
  • Final Boss: Barbara timidly comments that the Queen looks like one. (The episode's actual one turns up soon after.)
  • Just a Kid
    "You are only three hundred and seventeen years old! A girl who is too young to make her own decisions!"
  • Knight Templar Parent: Hippolyta is openly breaking the laws of her own society for the sake of protecting her daughter.
  • My Beloved Smother: Diana resorted to running away to find her destiny, so her mother then tried to drag her back home "...for the grounding of your immortal life!".
  • Neat Freak: Hippolyta commanded Diana to scrub rooms until her fingers bled, though Hippolyta still displays the same Jabba Table Manners everyone else from Themyscira has.
  • The Perfectionist: To the point that when Lyssa reveals herself Hippolyta quickly shifts from concern for Diana's safety to angrily berating Diana for the lack of fighting skills she is displaying, indifferent to the fact this plays right into Lyssa's plan.
  • Screw the Rules, I Make Them!: Diana did legitimately beat all the other amazons in "The Tournament of Aprodite and Athena", proving she was the most qualified representative of Themyscira to the outside world, but Hippolyta said she didn't give Diana permission to enter so it didn't count. Once Diana is convinced to stand up for herself, the other amazons are unsure whether they should follow the queen or the law before ultimately deciding on "law".
  • Statuesque Stunner: Diana is not exactly on the short side herself. Hippolyta towers over her.
  • Wall of Weapons: And it is one of the outside walls of Hippolyta's palace! And for two straight years Diana had to regularly polish everyone of them for the right to wield a sword!

    Shane O'Shaughnessy 
Voiced by: Keith Ferguson

Manager of the Burrito Bucket.


  • Character Catchphrase: "Gordon!" He even yells it when he knows Barbara isn't around.
  • Everyone Has Standards: He may be a complete jerk, but even he is disturbed by Mitchell Mayo's insanity and excessively high standards on fast food quality.
  • First-Name Basis: Karen Beecher is the only employee we see him call both by their correct and their first name.
  • Hates Being Touched: Shane O'Shaughnessy is as off put by Barbara Gordon's displays of affection as he is by her short comings as an employee. He is justified in being wary, as she is both a minor and his employee.
  • Jerkass: He is very unpleasant to work with and threatens to fire Barbara even when Jessica temporarily replaces her.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: His anger towards Barbara is somewhat justified, as she overfills napkin holders and overstuffs burritos, causing messes. He's perfectly pleasant to Karen when she briefly works there in "#WorkingStiff" because Karen does what she's asked the way she's asked, and he isn't wrong to tell Barbara that she's a terrible employee.
  • Younger Than They Look: He looks like he could be a clean shaven thirty but Shane O'Shaughnessy is in his mid-twenties at most.

    MacNair Chapin 
Voiced By: Fred Tatasciore

Perpetually dour Metropolis High teacher/principal who is often the only staffer in the school that the Girls interact off of.


  • Adaptational Dye-Job: The comic book character had a head of white hair. This one has a mix of white and grey hair.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: In the Bronze Age Pre-Crisis Comic Books, Principal Chapin is the embattled but patient principal of Garfield High School. The building is located in "Suicide Slum", one of the worst areas of Metropolis. Members of Tobias Whale's gang treat the school building as their own territory and have to be periodically driven out. This show's Chapin works at Metropolis High in one of the greener parts of the city, where the worst he regularly has to deal with are food fights, and yet he's an embittered jackass who behaves exactly how one would expect his comic book counterpart to, except he does nothing when the school grounds are encroached upon, at one point complaining about the mess made when apprehending the thieving murderous Bane.
  • Expy: This version of Chapin has the same function in this series as Steve Barkin did on Kim Possible, and has a similar personality.
  • Goofy Print Underwear: Zee's magic once accidentally made his pants disappear, revealing that he wears boxers decorated with Batman logos.
  • Horrible Judge of Character: He claims he knows the students of Home Economics care about their grades, only for Leslie Willis and Pam Isley to immediately attempt to fail his assignment on purpose. Barbara Gordon has even celebrated failing a test just to get out of class before and only cares about making her report card spell "BABS".
  • Hypocrite: Rather than learn anything about Home Economics or find a suitable substitute teacher, Principal Chapin just searches online for lessons, settles on Egg Sitting and leaves the class to their own devices while lecturing the students about how they know nothing about responsibility. If he had bothered to just read the blackboard he'd at least know the class was supposed to be learning how to bake! All the same, he isn't wrong about a rather large swath of the class.
  • Jerkass Has a Point:
    • On the first day of school he sends six students to detention when two of them did nothing wrong and one of them wasn't even a student. All the same, one can't blame the principal for being in a bad mood after seeing a food fight on his first day and being hit with food himself when he asked the students to stop.
    • MacNair Chapin is unfairly harsh to Kara Danvers, but the audience only knows that because we follow her perspective and know she doesn't cause nearly as much mayhem as she's accused of. The fact of the matter is Danvers is an idiot who does a poor job defending herself, to the point she has a record of getting expelled from schools, regardless of whether or not she deserved it, is a terrible student to boot, and can't be bothered to hide her contempt for Chapin even though holding her tongue would go a long way in making her school days more pleasant.
  • Loners Are Freaks: He insults Carol Ferris about being a loner in front of a captive audience of her classmates.
  • Loves My Alter Ego: In a non-romantic variant, "#DetentionClub" shows that while he has disdain for Hal Jordan, he's a huge fan of the male Green Lantern.
  • Skewed Priorities: After Bane gets arrested in "#AcceptNoSubstitute", he's more upset that he has to hire a new art teacher now than he is at the revelation that a supervillain had infiltrated the school by impersonating a teacher.

    Kilowog 
Voiced By: Jason Spisak

Jessica and Hal's trainer in the Green Lantern Corps.


  • Character Catchphrase: No matter the incarnation, he's still Kilowog, and thus we see him call Lantern Recruits "Poozers".
  • Drill Sergeant Nasty: Still serves this function as we can see with him sparring with Jessica.
  • Fighting Your Friend: He doesn't hold back against Hal Jordan and Jessica Cruz while acting as the prosecuting attorney for Jessica's trial, but Kilowog does keep begging Jessica to give up and take a plea deal under his breath.
  • Persecuting Prosecutor: When Hal Jordan calls on Kongulon of Giddalorpia to take the stand Kilowog attacks her on sight, which a hammer. He stands down once Kongulon explains that she too is part of a Space Police force, though.

    Lois Lane 
Voiced By: Grey DeLisle

A student at Metropolis High School who is head of the school newspaper, The Daily Planetoid, and anchor of the school's TV news program.


  • Adaptational Hairstyle Change: Atypical to most incarnations of Lois Lane, she wears her hair in a bun.
  • Age Lift: In the comics, Lois Lane is already a veteran of the Daily Planet by the time Clark moves to Metropolis, here it's reversed with Lois still in High School and Clark being the Planet's newest intern.
  • Crush Blush: In "#SuperWho?", she's shown blushing quite a bit when Superman notices her.
  • Da Editor: Of the Daily Planetoid, with the "Noo Yawk" accent and '40s jargon to match.
  • Expy: Lois is channeling Katharine Hepburn in her reporter roles, like "Woman of the Year".
  • Failed a Spot Check: Lois Lane keeps asking everyone in her office where all the pencils are while all of them are stuck in her hair.
  • Give Me Back My Wallet: After Karen Beecher and Jessica Cruz fail as a convincing body double for Wonder Woman, Bumblebee just decides to steal Lois Lane's notes to keep her from publishing their secret identities, only to find Lois purposefully planed a spare notebook to mock her team.
  • Going for the Big Scoop: It just wouldn't be Lois Lane if she weren't a dauntless reporter. She hopes to build a big name for herself, with which she will get an internship at the Daily Planet.
  • Hartman Hips: She has the curvy pear-shaped body.
  • I Shall Taunt You: She gives mocking advice to Diana Prince in an attempt to make the pie eating contest more interesting, and Lane ends up getting more than she bargained for.
  • Intrepid Reporter: Wouldn't be Lois if she wasn't this, though its not until "#BreakingNews" that we get to see how good of an investigator she is.
  • Likes Clark Kent, Hates Superman: A downplayed-but-literally-inverted variation. She has a crush on Superman, but sees Clark Kent as a rival for her Daily Planet internship.
  • Mean Is Not Evil: Lois Lane is pretty mean, but she's not mean-spirited. She bluntly speaks her mind but has no desire to and takes no joy in hurting people, putting her in direct contrast with Leslie Willis, who lives for others' pain.
  • No Budget: Discussed In-Universe: After introducing Diana Prince in "#LetThemEatPie", Lane warns Prince not to give a speech because they do not have the budget for it.
  • The Nose Knows: She immediately identifies "Garth's" library card as Barbara Gordon's by smell. And that was with Barbara trying to hide her scent among trash and discarded pieces of pizza. Not even Supergirl can identify scents that well.
  • Pet the Dog: She mercilessly criticizes Jimmy Olsen for everything he does that falls below her standards, but when he does meet them Lois Lane is quick to give him positive reinforcement. Far more often than she does for Jessica Cruz.
  • Pretender Diss: She thinks Garth is a cosplay Aquaman.
  • Seriously Scruffy: Lois is constantly disheveled, wearing an oversized cardigan and her hair in a messy bun, showing she is more focused on chasing stories than her appearance.
  • She Cleans Up Nicely: While normally scruffy as mentioned above, her newspaper photo has her dressed more professionally.
  • Secret Secret-Keeper: In "#BreakingNews", she finds out who the Super Hero Girls are pretty easily, but ultimately decides it isn't right to reveal their identities for personal gain. The girls think she just never found out and gave up.
  • Technicolor Eyes: Keeping up what has become traditional in animation and the comics for over two decades now, Lois has violet eyes though she's a normal non-albino human.
  • What You Are in the Dark: In "#BreakingNews", she finds all the evidence proving the real identities of the Super Hero Girls, and writes a report that is guaranteed to get her an internship at the Daily Planet. But as she gets ready to send the e-mail, she remembers all the heroism the girls have done, and realizes she couldn't live with herself if she ruined their lives by exposing their identities just to get ahead herself. So she deletes the e-mail and pretends like their attempts to fool her worked.

    Jimmy Olsen 
Voiced By: Ben Giroux

A student at Metropolis High School who works in the school newspaper department. Tends to hang around Lois Lane when reporting.


  • Apathetic Citizens: He does not consider Supergirl and Batgirl saving a bus from Giganta newsworthy because they were no people inside of it. Nevermind they still saved Metropolis hundreds of thousands of dollars in property damage.
  • Butt-Monkey: His attempts to get photos of the girls in action backfire in every possible way.
  • Camera Fiend: On the field, he's usually the guy handling the camerawork for anything.
  • Cute Mute: Has no lines in the first season, and is utterly adorable. Though he does have lines in the graphic novels, which rolls over to him speaking in the second season.
  • Going for the Big Scoop: Comes with the territory when Lois Lane drags you to dangerous incidents in progress just for a picture of Superman.
  • Number Two: His job at the Daily Planetoid appears to largely be "Lois's lackey".
  • Redhead In Green: He's a redhead teenager wearing a green vest.
  • Suddenly Speaking: After not speaking in the first season, he has written lines in comic books based on the show and finally starts speaking in Season 2.

    Robin (Dick Grayson) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unknown_1_7.png
Voiced By: Keith Ferguson

The pompous sidekick to Batman.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: Surpasses the Teen Titans Go! Robin for the title of the most unpleasant incarnation of Dick Grayson in any media, seeing that there are no redeeming qualities from this version and he is always depicted as an unapologetically mean brat who couldn't be less worthy of being Batman's sidekick if he tried.
  • Adaptation Personality Change: Dick Grayson as Robin, in most incarnations, can be a bit cheeky and rough around the edges, but he's generally a good-hearted kid who becomes one of the most well-connected superheroes of the DCU. This Dick Grayson, however, is such an obnoxious bullying little twerp that it's a wonder Batman puts up with him to begin with.
  • Adaptational Ugliness: The Tall, Dark, and Handsome Chick Magnet of the comics he is not; he's very cartoonish in this version, with huge buck teeth and a generally goofy, wimpy look.
  • Adaptational Wimp: Rather than a very competent crime fighter, Robin is a Boisterous Weakling who's shown no actual qualification to be a sidekick. Harley Quinn is able to casually mug him and would have easily killed him before he even noticed she was trying without Batgirl's intervention.
  • Age Lift: Most other incarnations of Dick Grayson usually don't have a particularly large age gap between themselves and Batgirl (small enough for them to get together in some continuities). This version is a child while Batgirl is a teenager.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: On Make It Wayne, he acts as a polite soft-spoken young lad, quite the opposite of his costumed self.
  • Composite Character: Is Dick Grayson but has some characteristics from both Jason Todd (post-Crisis) and Damian Wayne, particularly being as brash and arrogant as either have been on their worst days.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Normally a poor excuse for a hero in attitude and skill, he's at least able to punch out the Riddler.
  • Deliberately Cute Child: As Dick Grayson, he puts up the facade of being a sweet and endearing young boy who wouldn't hurt a fly.
  • A Dick in Name: Confirmed to be Dick Grayson in "#TweenTitans". A "dick" is exactly the way he behaves and treats others.
    Lauren Faust: How could anyone make a character like that and not use their chance to call him Dick.
  • Dirty Coward: Hides under a table when Harley's bomb lands in his hands.
  • Ensemble Dark Horse: In-Universe; On Make it Wayne Babs absolutely adores how sweet Dick Grayson is.
  • Fake Ultimate Hero: For a superhero who has a reputation and a fanbase, Robin hasn't been seen doing anything that would warrant him being called a superhero, let alone a particularly good one. Nor does he try beyond putting down others, mostly Barbara, and bragging. A viewer may question if he's Batman's sidekick for any reason but being his adopted son.
  • Hate Sink: This Robin is basically Dick Grayson with all of Jason and Damian's negative traits, but none of their positive ones. He is also extremely unlikable, having humiliated Barbara twice in her life, cowers when faced with real danger, and talks down to every person he meets.
  • In Name Only: Despite being the Dick Grayson incarnation of Robin, he is the exact opposite of his comics counterpart.
  • Jerkass: He was unnecessarily rude and mocking towards a young Barbara trying to be a Kid Hero, and wasn't from a place of concern for being over her head. He's shown to be even worse later, beckoning an entire room to laugh at her cruelly, possibly remembering her, for attempting to ask an in-depth question about Batman's detective process. He's rude to everyone in general, including those who shower him with the attention he demands. Harley Quinn comes out looking like a more sympathetic person than he does, and she was trying to murder him because of how obnoxious and mean he was towards Barbara.
  • Jerkass at Your Discretion: Dick Grayson behaves himself while Bruce Wayne is around but does not take long to drop the act once he's sure Bruce is away.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Jerk: "#AmBatman" shows him to not handle it well when Batman starts to prefer having Batgirl as his partner in crimefighting and tearfully admitting to Batgirl that Batman is the closest thing in his life to a friend. When Batgirl responds by handing him her ice cream cone, he then rudely complains about it not being a flavor he likes.
  • Kid Hero: We last see him in this role in the "#FromBatToWorse" flashback.
  • Loves My Alter Ego: While Barbara Gordon can't stand Robin, she thinks Dick is such a sweetheart (from what she's seen on "Make it Wayne").
  • Small Name, Big Ego: He arrogantly believes himself to be a better sidekick for Batman, one who won't "cramp his style". That being said, even Commissioner Gordon doesn't find him very tolerable at the role. He also carries himself as a huge celebrity who people should always be excited and honored to see.
  • Smug Snake: Supremely arrogant and bullying, but folds like a tissue in the face of any actual danger.
  • Straw Loser: Barbara may be an overeager Ditzy Genius, but she couldn't look more qualified to be Batman's sidekick when compared to the guy who has the position now.
  • Ungrateful Bastard: Batgirl saves his life in "#GothamCon" and he repays her by ordering security to throw her out.

    The Tween Titans 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2020_05_04_at_21107_pm.png
Voiced By: Grey Griffin (Starfire), Phil LaMarr (Cyborg), Tara Strong (Raven), Kari Wahlgren (Beast Boy)

Robin's group of friends.


  • Adaptational Dye-Job: Both Beast Boy and Starfire have normal human skin and hair colors at first, but change back to their traditional ones when in costume.
  • Adaptation Personality Change: All four of them have been turned into rambunctious, trouble-making little goblins as opposed to their previous animated incarnations. Instead they're much closer to their Teen Titans Go! counterparts.
  • Adaptation Name Change: From the Teen Titans or just Titans to Tween Titans, representing their new ages.
  • Age Lift: Since Robin is still a preteen in this show, so are all of the Titans. This mostly comes into play with Bumblebee, who is traditionally a member of the Teen Titans but has not been aged down with them.
  • Babysitter's Nightmare: As soon as Bruce Wayne is out of earshot they declare their intentions to disobey their baby sitters and start wrecking Wayne Manor seemingly for the sake of it. Judging by Alfred Pennyworth's reactions, they are recurring nightmare for him.
  • Big Ball of Violence: Robin deliberately attacks the other Titans with a stick meant to break a pinata, causing a fight.
  • Creepy Child: Raven. She keeps spontaneously appearing behind Jess and Karen to exposit about her unsettling childhood in "the dark realm of Azarath". Even Beast Boy gets started by her at one point.
  • Demoted to Extra: Relative to the Shea Fontana iteration of the franchise, this continuity's Titans only appear in a single episode, when the previous canon prominently featured Cyborg, Starfire, Raven and Beast Boy as recurring characters.
  • Drama-Preserving Handicap: Jessica Cruz is adamant that she and Karen Beecher refrain from using their gadgets even after the Tween Titans reveal their identities and begin trashing Wayne Manor. Beast Boy then steals her ring and Karen's pendant while Jessica is reconsidering.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Appeared in one of the Graphic Novels, Powerless, before appearing in the show proper.
  • I Believe I Can Fly: Three out of five Titans have some method of flight, and Jessica is convinced Cyborg will figure one out himself soon enough.
  • Kiddie Kid: While they're said to be tweens, they behave more like six-year-olds.
  • Morphic Resonance: Both Beast Boy and Cyborg display Voluntary Shape Shifting. Beast Boy into various animals that are always green, while Cyborg folds parts of his body become various vehicles for the other Titans but always leaves his head intact.
  • Motormouth: Raven mutters incredibly fast.
  • Reused Character Design: Raven looks mostly the same as her Teen Titans Go! counterpart, in contrast to the other Tweens.note 
  • Rocket Jump: Cyborg uses an arm cannon to launch himself into the sky.
  • Sleepwalking: Raven walks, talks and casts spells in her sleep. She's better behaved in her sleep, and explains that in Azeroth responsible social behavior is a sign of sleep walking.
  • Sweet Tooth: Starfire. Alfred instructs Jess and Karen not to give her any sugar, and they find out why when she eats her way through a five-layer cake and releases a massive energy explosion.
  • Summon Magic: Raven summons cephlapodic creatures to get out of doing chores herself.
  • There Was a Door: Doors are optional to Cyborg.
  • Thinking Up Portals: Raven by passes the floor when dropping things on it to prolong the object's fall and ensure it breaks when it finally stops.
  • Unwilling Suspension: They end up hanging Jessica and Karen upside down from the ceiling when Karen tries to discipline them.

    Ace the Bat-Hound 

Commissioner Gordon's former police dog, now Barbara's pet.


  • The Ace: This is a dog that can perform parkour, deliver babies, and use batarangs.
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: He's now a few varying shades of brown rather than gray or black. Subverted since some versions of Ace in the comics are like this.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: He's Barbara's companion instead of Batman's. Since she's unaffiliated with Batman, that means neither is Ace.
  • Not So Above It All: When another dog is declared the "Best in Show" instead of him and Krypto, both express astonishment, then shrug and move on. Later he also can't resist joining Krypto in chasing a cat.
  • The Stoic: In contrast to Krypto and, of course, Barbara.

    Krypto the Superdog 

Kara's super-powered dog.

    Katana (Tatsu Yamashiro) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/katana_dcshg.png
"I am Katana! My mission is to find villains and punish them for their evil deeds! That is what a hero does."
Click here to see her civilian identity
Voiced by: Rina Hoshino

A young woman from Japan who turns out to be a vigilante with a magic sword known as Soultaker.


  • Adaptational Badass: Soultaker now only needs to hit its victim once to steal their soul, and can fire a Sword Beam with the same soul-stealing ability. This is also one of the strongest, toughest and fastest takes on Tatsu Yamashiro herself. In the comics she's a Batman associate in The Outsiders no more physically capable than he is. Here she can shatter asphalt and concrete bare handed, more or less being Wonder Woman's equal unless that gets in the way of a good joke.
  • Adaptational Heroism: Unlike her comic incarnation, this Katana overcomes her Pay Evil unto Evil ideology.
  • Adaptational Villainy: Subverted. She's antagonistic in her first appearance, but it's because she's a Knight Templar type of superhero. She improves by the end of "#SoulSisters" thanks to her friendship with Diana and seeing her ways aren't perfect, after nearly using Soultaker on an innocent man.
  • Arc Villain: Of the #SoulSisters two-parter, as a Knight Templar hero.
  • Bad Powers, Good People: After her debut, Katana still wields the Soultaker, but as a hero who defends the victimized rather than a vigilante who serves as Judge, Jury, and Executioner. Tatsu admits she has no idea how Soultaker's power can be of any good to her going forward but Diana promises to instruct Tatsu in more restrained uses of it.
  • Birds of a Feather: She and Diana are both exceptionally trained warriors with strong senses of honor and justice who recently moved to Metropolis from foreign locales.
  • Black Magic: The Soultaker can release projectiles that can sever Green Latern's plasma, negate the effects of Zatanna's spells, and draw the souls of those touched by them into the blade itself. Zatanna describes it as a most "icky" dark magic and only agrees to going against it because Wonder Woman had a plan...that Katana never gave her a chance to implement, targeting the Super Her Girls before they can determine who is even behind her attacks.
  • The Comically Serious: Watch as she tries to fight Harley Quinn with a balloon sword.
  • Creepy Good: Even when she's trying to be nice, she can be intensely scary. Diana is completely unable to notice this.
  • Friendly Rival: Tatsu Yamashiro is a friendly rival to Diana Prince from their first appearance onward, in both athletics and academics. Katana less so to Wonder Woman at first, but they eventually settle into this as well as Katana softens on her stances.
  • Guest-Star Party Member: Briefly brought onto the team in #AmBatgirl. She lasts about five minutes before quitting.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Does this after seeing Diana protect someone from losing his soul, causing her to later release Diana's soul and the others within Soultaker.
  • Kimono Is Traditional: She wears a red kimono and dark grey hakama pants when she frees all the souls she captured in Soultaker.
  • Knight Templar: She insists her method of "justice" is better than Diana's because it stops criminals from ever repeating offenses. Diana won't have it, warning her being Judge, Jury, and Executioner makes Katana no better than those she punishes.
  • Lady of War: Katana is as graceful as she is deadly, which is saying something.
  • Master Swordsman: Tatsu possesses great swordfighting skills.
  • Meaningful Name:
    • "Tatsu" is an archaic Japanese word for dragon. Like a dragon, Tatsu is powerful, swift and wise.
    • It also sounds like the verb tatsu meaning "to sever".
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Her reaction when Diana's soul is taken by Soultaker to prevent a car thief from losing his soul—and he turns out to be an innocent just locked out of his own car. In grief over someone as pure as Diana suffering like that, and from her nearly hurting an innocent man due to her own blind extremism, Tatsu says the incantation that releases the souls that Soultaker stole from the sword.
  • Mysterious Past: The only information Tatsu gives is that she can never go back to her homeland. Her backstory from the comics would clash too much with this series, so what drove Tatsu to become Katana will probably be an original element.
  • No Sense of Humor: Very intense and takes everything so seriously.
  • Not Even Bothering with the Accent: Averted. While less noticeable at times, her English is accented enough to infer Japanese is her first language, even if she is fluent in the former.
  • Not So Above It All: Even she gets scared silly when encountering a real ghost in "#SchoolGhoul".
  • One-Hit KO: Soultaker only needs to hit an opponent with an energy strike made by slashing the air to steal their soul, leaving the body in a catatonic state.
  • The Perfectionist: One of the reasons she gets on so well with Diana. She pushes herself to what by her own admission are unattainable standards. She doesn't gel with the others because she tries to do the same to them, and the minute they don't measure up, she walks.
  • Sacrificed Basic Skill for Awesome Training: Before Diana befriended her, Tatsu's whole life revolved around fighting evil and training to get better at fighting evil. Even the principles of "friendly" competition confused her.
  • Stealth Hi/Bye: Katana can sneak up on Supergirl!
  • Strong as They Need to Be: Expected when dealing with super heroes in general, DC super heroes in particular and parody show about DC super heroes especially, but Katana gets hit extra hard with it.
    • In her debut two parter she is more or less equal to Diana of Themyscira! Even this show's watered down version of Wonder Woman is fast enough to outrun a jeep and strong enough to lift it! Then in a short she's just barely a step above Harley Quinn, who got taken out by a head butt from the non powered dimunitive Bumblebee, the same Bumblebee who relies on Wonder Woman for things she cannot handle.
    • In #ScrambledEggs Tatsu Yamashiro can't escape a half crab applied by Carol Ferris, even though Tatsu has the leg strength to keep pace while mountain climbing with Diana Prince and Carol Ferris fails to out wrestle Jessica Cruz, someone Diana can move against her will with minimal effort. Yet in #SchoolGhoul Katana manages to out perform Batgirl and Supergirl, who basically contribute nothing beyond distractions for Katana to capiltilze on once the fight breaks out.
  • Sword Beam: Soultaker can blanket an area with projectiles rather quickly in Katana's hands and it only takes one hit for a target to lose their soul on this show.
  • Your Soul Is Mine!: Soultaker's power. Tatsu can also release the souls by using an ancient spell, but she can't release individual/particular souls, only all at once.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Her methods of doing so are questionable, but the reason she used the Soultaker was because with the souls stuck in her sword, no one would have to worry about villains constantly coming back again and again.
  • With Us or Against Us: Downplayed: She takes the souls of the Super Hero Girls along with those of the Super Villain Girls and vows to hunt Wonder Woman down when she is the only one to escape. However, Katana was of the belief that they were all villains. Overtime Katana does come to view Wonder Woman as an ineffectual hero, says she will let Diana go if she stops getting in her way and can't bring herself to actually use Soultaker's magic on Wonder Woman when they do fight, urging that she just give up.

    Rose Wilson 
Voiced By: Chelsea Kane

The daughter of Slade Wilson who makes friends with Babs.


  • A Friend in Need: Despite just meeting Barbara Gordon, Rose Wilson can tell Gordon is troubled, and after find out Gordon is feeling uneasy after a home breakin decides to ease Gordon's spirits by inviting her over for a night at the Wilson house.
  • Abled in the Adaptation Unlike most incarnations, Rose hasn't lost her left eye.
  • Adaptational Heroism: Most versions of her have Rose at least start out as a villain in support of Slade. Here, while she loves him, she is openly against his villainy and is very friendly to Barbara.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: Rose Wilson in the comics was a bit of a grouch even when she severed ties with her father and became an anti-hero, while this incarnation is significantly friendlier and more well-adjusted.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: She has a bit of a punk look, and is a sweet, polite girl.
  • Hartman Hips: Just like Lois Lane, Rose has a curvy pear-shaped body.
  • Implausible Hair Color: Rose's hair is pure white. According to a baby picture, unlike Slade's, she was born with the color.
  • Morality Chain: If it means Rose will think better of him, Slade will curb his violent tendencies.
  • Related in the Adaptation: This Rose is implied to be the daughter of Slade's ex-wife Adeline, not the product of his affair.
  • Secret-Keeper: She sees that Barbara is Batgirl and tells her she'll keep it a secret.

    Alfred Pennyworth 
Voiced By: Keith Ferguson

The Butler of Wayne Manor


  • Adaptational Hairstyle Change: He is one of the few animated incarnations of Alfred to still have a full head of hair rather than be balding.
  • Badly Battered Baby Sitter: When introducing Dick Grayson's friends to Jessica Cruz and Karen Beecher, Alfred Pennyworth subtly imples that they have given him a hard time in the past. When he returns to find Wayne Manor hasn't been destroyed Alfred immediately tries to arrange another day for Jessica and Karen to baby sit before dropping his hands to his knees and begging that they stay with him as the quickly depart.
  • Blatant Lies: Alfred claims the guidelines he gives Jessica and Karen are for the safety of the children they are to be watching. It turns out that while they are good things to keep in mind they are really for the safety of the babysitters.
  • In-Series Nickname: Bruce Wayne calls him "Freddy"
  • Long List: He lists off several instructions to Jessica Cruz and Karen Beecher when leaving them to watch Dick Grayson and the guests invited to his birthday party. Cruz needs to flip at least one page in her pocket book to record it all, while a horrified Beecher seems to retain it from memory.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Alfred Pennyworth seems to be more than capable of handling Dick Grayson, but when Dick's friends come by to celebrate Dick's birthday party, Alfred calls for three baby sitters(only two show up), gives them a list of instructions and bids them "Good luck" before taking a long step away and out of sight.

    Julia Kapatelis 
Voiced By: Kari Wahlgren

A professor of Greek archeology who becomes Diana's foster mother.


  • A Friend in Need: Diana is thrust into Julia's life right as Diana is swearing to reject her heritage to better adjust to Metropolis. Despite a painful start, things are signficantly easier on Julia in the show than the comic books, however, since this version of Diana has a Secret Identity and merely has the issue of not being house broken, rather than being hunted for being Wonder Woman.
  • Adaptational Late Appearance: In the Post Crisis comic books Julia Kapatelis is Diana's first friend in the world of man and the one who does the most to help her integrate into it. Here that role goes to Barbara Gordon and the rest of the team Barbara assembles. Julia shows up significantly later when Diana's friends find something they want to but can't give her; room and board.
  • Age Lift: She seems more elderly than her Post Crisis Comic Book counterpart, and when Julia meets Diana, Julia's daughter Vanessa had not even had her first menstration yet. Here Julia's daughter is already away at college, which wouldn't happen until issue 600 of the comic books.
  • Fan of the Past: Ancient Greece. So naturally, meeting a living Amazon is a dream come true for her.
  • Parental Substitute: Is more motherly to Diana than Diana's actual mother, taking her in when Diana's got nowhere to live.

    Shiera Sanders 

The current incarnation of Hawkman's eternal true love.


  • Color Motif: Lacking the wings of Hawkgirl (so far), the colors of Shiera's hair and outfit exactly match those of Shayera Hol in Justice League animated series.
  • Demoted to Extra: Relative to the Shea Fontana continuity, she only appears in one episode when she was a regularly recurring character in the previous canon. This version of her doesn't even become Hawkgirl.
  • Everyone Went to School Together: Averted this time; if she were also at Metropolis High like Carter, they would have met much sooner.
  • Fiery Redhead: Shows a bit of a temper at Carter's accidental antics.
  • Redhead In Green: Wears a green dress for her date with Carter.
  • Wistful Amnesia: She doesn't remember her past lives, except vaguely.

    Antiope 
Voiced By: April Winchell

Sister of Queen Hippolyta, and Diana's aunt.


  • Adapted Out: No mention or even allusion is made of Antiope's splinter tribe The Bana-Mighdall. This suggests Antiope had no role in its founding, it was never founded to begin with or the amazon nation was unified a lot sooner during this show's timeline than usual. Regardless, something was adapted out.
  • Adaptation Personality Change
    • Antiope of the comics is the tough but fair general of Themyscira's army, not this party girl.
    • Comic book Antiope tends to see what becomes of The Bana-Mighdall tribe in her death/absence and elect to stay dead/absent. This show's Antiope is almost every stereotype Themysica's amazons have of their Bana-Mighdall rivals, minus the misandry.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: In the Rebirth comic books Antiope secretly shadows Diana from time to time with the goal of ensuring Wonder Woman's good deeds don't get in the way of her, Hippolyta and Atalanta's grand designs of uniting the two/three amazon tribes as one nation under a new queen backed by a new patron goddess. On this show Antiope overtly bursts into Diana's life and tries to get Diana and her new friends to have more fun.
  • Broken Pedestal: Diana is crushed to learn the aunt she looks up to would shirk containing a kraken on the Superhero Girls.
  • Character Exaggeration: In the DC Rebirth Comic Books, Antiope is seen as a corrupting influence on Diana. She receives criticism from Hippolyta for introducing Diana to children's books, arts and crafts from "Man's World" and for encouraging Diana to indulge in other "childish" activities such as playing with giant sharks while the majority of the amazons on Themyscira want their princess training her body and burying herself in academic studies. Comic book Antiope still sees value in diligence and toil however, she just thinks Diana is coming along fine and deserves to enjoy some of her soon to be gone childhood as a reward. This show's Antiope just wants to skip to the reward without the work that comes before it.
  • Cool Big Sis: Acts like one to Diana's friends.
  • Cool Aunt: She's Diana's aunt, who she really looks up to. Deconstructed later on when Diana realizes that Antiope doesn't take her responsibilities seriously and has no concern for the consequences of her actions, which leads to the Kraken being set free because she forgot to change the lock for the Kraken's cage, a point which Diana chastises her aunt for.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: She drives a motorcycle and dresses in biker-chick style, but she's a fun loving delinquent at worst, not any kind of hardened criminal. Hotwiring cars, which she really does think are there for borrowed use, bar fights and gambling are her worst crimes. Evading arrest is technically an offense too, but Antiope wasn't actually guilty of the offense she would have been arrested for.
  • Drawing Straws: One of the three known ways of defeating a kraken is feeding it a beautiful maiden. Antiope suggest she and The Super Hero Girls pull straws.
  • Fire-Breathing Diner: Antiope chugs a bottle of chili sauce and nearly singes Diana and friends with stream of flame afterwards.
  • Foolish Sibling, Responsible Sibling: Hippolyta is traditional and regal, Antiope is rebellious and fun-loving.
  • Foreshadowing
    • Items once belonging to her are found by the archeologist Julia Kapatelis before Antiope shows up on screen.
    • Taken alongside everything established about Themysciran table manners, Antiope's hot sauce gag suggests Diana doesn't have her sisterhood with fire on this show. That becomes relevant during the first seasons finale.
  • Have I Mentioned I Am Heterosexual Today?: Apparently Antiope's favorite thing about the world of men, after breading, is the men! Comic book Antiope is traditionally the one most dedicated to making peace with men before Diana comes along...
  • Jabba Table Manners: Antiope is even worse than Diana in this regard, and encourages the other Super Hero Girls to engage in the same table manners.
  • Jerkass: Antiope makes bratty food demands for herself and the entire Super Hero Girls team, makes a mess of the restaurant and then takes the team out while leaving Diana with the bill despite eating out being Antiope's idea.
  • Lethal Negligence: Antiope forgets to change the locks on a kraken's cage, which results in it rampaging through Metropolis and smashing Metropolis High.
  • Meat Versus Veggies
    "There will be no leaves on my dinner table!"
  • The Corrupter: The Super Hero Girls besides Diana and Barbara are initially unwelcoming to Antiope, believing they need to be studying for tests. Diana encourages them to at least accept her introduction and then her advice to loosen up a little and eat out. However Diana then wants the girls to get back to studying but Antiope has them sold on one last stop, which happens to an introduction to the wanted Royal Flush Gang, which nearly gets the girls and Antiope arrested by association.
  • Womanchild: Antiope has zero sense of responsibility or self-control, forcing Diana to be the adult in the room.
  • You Remind Me of X: When a disappointed Antiope starts comparing Diana to Hippolyta, Kara asks if the two need the room to themselves for a minute.

    Max Lord 
Voiced By: P. J. Byrne

A public relations specialist once hired by Batgirl and Supergirl to improve their public image.


    Blue Beetle (Ted Kord) 
Voiced By: Max Mittelman

The young billionaire and CEO of Kord Enterprises, and a superhero ally of Supergirl.


  • Accidental Misnaming: Everyone mistakes his codename by calling him "Blue Beagle" instead of Beetle. It's even joked that Supergirl and Livewire don't find an insect like a beetle to be such a heroic name.
  • Adaptation Origin Connection: Instead of being successor to the original Blue Beetle Dan Garrett, this continuity's Ted Kord was inspired to become a superhero by Supergirl saving his life.
  • Adaptational Hairstyle Change: He has a goatee when Ted Kord is ordinarily clean-shaven.
  • Blue Is Heroic: Obvious because his suit is blue and he has that same word in his hero name.
  • Butt-Monkey: Since he's just getting into his new heroic role, Ted Kord has a hard time mastering his suit and performing acts on behalf of the citizens. Even when he first faced Livewire, she used her electic powers to treat him like a toy by making him dance.
  • Composite Character: He is Ted Kord, the second Blue Beetle, while the technology in his suit is more like the alien technology found in the suit of Jamie Reyes, the third Blue Beetle.
  • Harmless Freezing: One of his inventions explicitly generates ice that harms no one, even if they should end up encased in it.

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