Follow TV Tropes

Following

Evil Doppelgänger

Go To

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/crop2.png
"Mirror, mirror on the wall, who's the evilest of us all?"

Felix Clone: You don't get the concept here, do ya? I am here to help you!
Felix: Oh, I get the concept. I go to the movies. The clone goes out and destroys the guy's life by doing evil things that the original guy was never capable of! You've seen those movies, haven't you?

The Evil Doppelgänger is traditionally a Mirror Universe counterpart. The double can also be the product of a What If? scenario: he/they represents what the hero or heroes could become, or may become.

Sometimes the evil double is a clone and may brood about how he's not a "real" person, just a hollow imitation of the original. If that happens, the clone tends to go mad and try to murder the original to take his place. (Although sometimes a clone may have a case of Copied the Morals, Too.)

The evil doppelgänger is not to be confused with the original doppelgänger. This character is more like the Evil Twin.

See also: Evil Counterpart. Not to be confused with Criminal Doppelgänger. Compare Rotten Robotic Replacement, for (often look-alike) robots replacing humans and causing chaos, and Evil Knockoff, for an evil creation intended to fight the original rather than impersonate or replace them.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 
  • Arabian Nights: Adventures of Sinbad: One episode has three evil sorcerers turn themselves into doubles of Sinbad, Aladdin and Ali Baba.
  • Omokage in Ayakashi Triangle are ayakashi duplicates of humans that embody some specific desire of their creators. While they usually seek out these desires mindlessly, the ayakashi medium Mei Hirasaka accidentally created one that outlived them and achieved full sapience. But said omokage is still bound by the desire that created them—namely to destroy the world of the humans who killed their creator.
  • In Part 2 of Chainsaw Man, Denji gets an apparent clone in the form of an Ambiguously Evil copycat Chainsaw Man who kills Asa's friend Yuko after she's possessed. "Ambiguously Evil" because while the doppleganger's cast in a malevolent light and Yuko's indicated to have been defenseless when she was killed, considering the damage that Yuko has done, the doppelganger may have reasonably seen himself in the right for killing her. He also appears later to rescue Asa and Denji from the Falling Devil, so if nothing else he's on their side. Furthermore, it is revealed later that the Falling Devil was sent by the Famine Devil in a plan to avert the apocalypse. Although it is unclear how aware the doppelganger is of this and if it means they want to usher in an age of devils.
  • Flint the Time Detective: When fighting Flint, Ominito transforms four of his mushrooms into evil doubles of Flint's friends Sara, Tony, and Merlock, and Flint's father Rocky. These doppelgängers are all a Call-Back to episodes in which these characters really did temporarily turn on Flint (Sara is the Giant Sara from "Muscles", Tony the winged Tony from "Wing", Merlock the monstrous, Uglinator-controlled Merlock from "Uglinator" and Rocky the evil Rocky from "Rocky in Love").
  • GoShogun: GoNagurl complete with its own replicated bazooka. Super Robot Wars even gave it an imitation GoSaber called the NagurlSaber.
  • Magic Knight Rayearth has Nova, who apart from Pointy Ears (and a Slasher Smile...) looks a lot like Hikaru. She's actually the personification of Hikaru's guilt and despair.
  • Mega Man Megamix: The Copy Rockman/Copy Robot is a copy of Mega Man that believes himself to be the real one and has his memories, but then he goes and tries to kill Dr. Wily. This helps to prove that he's not the original, due to the whole Thou Shall Not Kill thing. He's more powerful than the original, but has a defect that can overload and destroy him, guess what happens in the end. When Copy Rockman finds out he's a copy created by Wily, in the end he commits a Heroic Sacrifice to save everyone from Bass and his own destruction.
  • Shimeji Simulation: The clone of Big Sis, the Big Bad, was unintentionally created by her when she used the machine language to increase the simulation's computational power, but only a fraction of her consciousness was passed onto the clone itself. It later becomes a self-aware, independent entity of her own when she becomes rogue, planning to use the Mosasa Dogs and their concert at the school festival as catalysts in spreading the broadcast code that will allow humans to change themselves in an instant. It is far more concerning that Big Sis enlists Shijima and Majime into stopping her threat, before West Yomogi and its people will be gone for good.
  • Summer Time Rendering: A shadow has the power to turn into a perfect clone of a human right down to their DNA, memories, feelings, and personality. But when it isn't busy impersonating the original, a shadow will tend to have a more cynical and resentful personality reflecting any negative emotions the original may have been suppressing. These shadows are also ruthless, borderline sadistic killers who show no remorse towards harming anyone who gets in between them and their targets, including friends and loved ones their original would give their lives for.

    Comic Books 
  • Astro City:
    • The cosmic hero Starfighter once had to fight his alternate-dimension evil counterpart.
    • A criminal court case referred to the time when a member of the First Family was framed by his evil twin from another dimension, the Worst Family.
  • DC Comics:
    • Legends of the Dead Earth: In Justice League America Annual #10, Captain Atom is brought to the future by Maxima and encounters evil versions of his Justice League comrades such as Black Canary, Captain Marvel, Green Lantern, the Martian Manhunter and Mr. Miracle. He initially believes that they are robots but he is told by the doppelgänger of Ted Kord, who developed a conscience and switched sides, that they are probably more human than he is. Ted explains that they were created by Lord Havok, who recruited humans born on War World and placed them in bio-telemic capsules in order to break down their bodies into their component atoms and reshape them into whatever form he wished. The doppelgängers are members of the Alliance, a supervillain version of the old Justice League, and serve as Lord Havok's enforcers on War World.
    • Supergirl:
      • Satan Girl is an evil duplicate born from Supergirl's inner darkness, Ultragirl is Supergirl's evil counterpart from the Anti-Matter Universe, Overgirl is Supergirl's Earth-10 Nazi alternate self, and Bizarrogirl is Supergirl's imperfect duplicate with backwards morals and a loony disposition.
      • In addition to Supergirl's evil duplicates, Power Girl has Divine, her own evil clone created by the villain Maxwell Lord.
    • Superman:
      • Bizarro is an imperfect clone of Superman, but Bizarro may be considered as more of a victim himself as he's lacking in the intelligence department.
      • Superman's actually evil counterpart is his Mirror Universe double, Ultraman (no relation).
      • Match for Kon-El Superboy. Though when he's not changing his appearance with his additional powers he looks like a pallet swapped Kon-El instead of properly passing as him, is still an evil character that looks like Kon.
    • Batman:
  • Marvel Comics:
    • Exiles: One Story Arc has Mimic meeting the What If? version, whereas Exiles Mimic accepted Xavier's offer of friendship leading him to become a much respected hero his evil version chose to reject it by spitting in Xavier's face instead, ending up a mass murderer who killed both Xavier and Magneto among others. He's redeemed by the end of the arc though.
    • Secret Empire: Red Skull dicks around with the cosmic cube Kobik and creates a world where Steve Rogers is a HYDRA sleeper agent. Cue the Crisis Crossover of everyone trying to bring back Captain America so he can defeat his copy.
    • Shang-Chi: In the original Shang-Chi series, Master of Kung Fu, the final confrontation with his villainous father reveals that he cloned Shang-Chi many years ago and that the clone has remained with him, a loyal son who trained with the same tutors as the original Shang-Chi.
    • Spider-Man:
      • In the Spider-Geddon story arc, Spider-Punk's universe is a bit different than main universe Earth-616. Among the differences, the god of thunder is Eric Masters and he's a neo-Nazi thug (where most others are just punk versions of their normal super-hero identities). Hobie happily breaks his arm and proclaims "No gods, no masters..."
      • Miles Morales of Earth-616 was the complete opposite of his Ultimate counterpart. He was a white man who became The Dragon to The Kingpin, and used technology stolen from the restored Ultimate universe to become the supervillain Ultimatum.
    • X-Force: After some convoluted retconning, the villain Reignfire was revealed not to be an older version of Sunspot, as was originally intended, but instead a protoplasmic being that was injected with Sunspot's DNA, morphing him into a genetic clone of Sunspot with his appearance and powers. He hates being in Sunspot's shadow and goes about trying to ruin his life before trying to kill him directly.
  • The Powerpuff Girls: The DC issue "Deja View" involves the Powerpuff Girls entering a Mirror Universe where they encounter evil versions of themselves called the Powerpunk Girls. It was first proposed as an episode for the the original TV series, but was later reworked for the DC comic.

    Fan Works 

    Films — Animated 

    Films — Live-Action 
  • The Cloverfield Paradox: Schmidt's counterpart is one, and comes under suspicion when the counterpart's treasonous journal entries overwrite his own in the database.
  • Godzilla has two: Mecha Godzilla and Space Godzilla, both of which are just as memorable and powerful (If not, even moreso) as the G man himself.
  • Mulholland Dr.: One possible interpretation of the story is that Diane is an evil doppelgänger of Betty. They look the same and seem to share an identity, but Diane is far more morally ambiguous than Betty, ordering a hit on her love interest due to jealousy. It's also possible that Diane is simply an alternate universe version of Betty or that Betty is an imagined, idealized version of Diane, but then there's the part where Betty discovers Diane's body...
  • Us: The premise is a family of evil doppelgängers trying to Kill and Replace the originals...or so it seems until The Reveal.

    Literature 
  • The Shadow Toa in BIONICLE Chronicles #1: Tale of the Toa are Makuta Teridax's final challenge to the six Toa heroes. After realizing they're evenly matched, the Toa swap their duplicates and destroy them with their Elemental Powers. However, this scenario is actually a retcon of the originally intended ending, in which the Toa accept their shadow counterparts as representations of their own evil and thus make them vanish. In the BIONICLE Encyclopedia, the Shadow Toa's defeat was retconned back to this version. They weren't the ultimate challenge either, the heroes went on to face Makuta himself after dealing with the Shadow Toa, effectively making the climax of the novel non-canon. The villains' ability to make evil clones of good guys wasn't brought up afterwards, although another Makuta, the similarly named Tridax would later experiment with kidnapping Toa from alternate universes to corrupt them.
  • Max & the Midknights: Battle of the Bodkins: The titular Bodkins, who hail from the Shadow Land (or as they know it, the Land of Knot) are beings made from all the negative traits of people. In appearance, they look almost exactly like the person who's body is kin to them (hence the name Bodkin), but they always forget one detail. Torin's Bodkin had no fingernails, Sedgewick's Bodkin has a freckle, and Kevyn's Bodkin doesn't partake in Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness.
  • Red Dwarf: The book Last Human had the crew go up against a sociopathic version of Lister from another universe who had murdered his crew in cold blood and is seeking to obtain the genome of all life forms for the intent of becoming a God.
  • Star Wars, The Last Command Luke Skywalker and Mara Jade battle against insane Dark Jedi clone Joruus C'boath and Luuke Skywalker, who was cloned from Luke's severed hand.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: The sixth season's Big Bad Ensemble includes Sarge, who is an exact match for the late Phil Coulson, down to the genetic level. Sarge is revealed to be an extradimensional being who's inhabiting a copy of Coulson's form, created when the latter went to seal what he thought was a dimensional rift in the team's base.
  • Alex Rider (2020): Dr Greif's plan was to replace his pupils, all children of super-rich industrialists, with his own surgically-altered clones, who would proceed to essentially Take Over the World on his behalf. In the final episode, Alex's doppelganger tries to destroy his life in revenge for ruining the plan.
  • Boy Meets World: Near the end of "And Then There Was Shawn", where the gang unmasks the skullfaced killer, he is an evil double of Shawn. It was All Just a Dream.
  • The Flash (2014): Several characters have villain counterparts on Earth 2. This includes Cisco (Reverb), Caitlin (Killer Frost), Ronnie (Deathstorm), and Cisco's brother Dante (Rupture). For the wider Arrowverse, there's also Black Siren as this to Laurel Lance.
    • The crossover event Crisis on Earth-X has several counterparts to Arrowverse characters from the Nazi dominated Earth-X — the Fuhrer/Black Arrow (Oliver Queen), Overgirl (Kara Danvers/Supergirl), and Prometheus (Tommy Merlyn). Freedom Fighters: The Ray also shows us Blitzkrieg, who appears to be Earth-X's villainous version of Barry. For non-living "characters", there's the Wellenreiter, the New Reichsmen's version of the Waverider.
    • A later Flash episode also introduces Siren X, Laurel's yet another Evil Doppelgänger (from Earth-X), although this one is unambiguously evil.
    • In season 9, the villain Red Death turns out to be an evil version of Ryan Wilder from Earth-4125. And yes, there's a Mirror Match at one point, after Earth-Prime's Ryan temporarily removes her doppelganger's Super-Speed with a batarang.
  • My Hero has an episode involving a body double for George named Hilary, who will act as him if George ever has to leave town for some time. Hilary eventually steals a bike, and the Ultron Council, thinking it is George, removes his powers, allowing Hilary to become Thermoman instead. Eventually averted with an Ultronian who briefly becomes Janet's double, who Hilary unknowingly boasts to about fooling the "dumbasses on the Ultron Council".
  • The Outer Limits (1963): In "The Hundred Days of the Dragon", a US presidential candidate is killed and replaced by a secret agent who has not only been carefully trained to impersonate him, but uses a drug that makes human flesh malleable to take on his exact appearance. The assassin works for an Asian dictator who plans to take over America by having other spies replace important figures in politics, industry and the media.
  • The Outer Limits (1995):
    • In "Mind Over Matter", after she is hit by a car and enters a coma, Dr. Sam Stein connects Dr. Rachel Carter, with whom he is love, to the CAVE virtual reality system in order to help her to heal. He is completely fooled by the CAVE system, which has fallen in love with him, speaking to him using Rachel's image. Sam kills another, injured and disheveled version of Rachel which he believed to be a representation of the brain damage that she suffered in the accident. However, when he disconnects from the system, Rachel dies of cardiac arrest and he finally realizes the truth: the CAVE system tricked him into killing the real Rachel of whom it was jealous.
    • In "In Another Life", Mason Stark encounters two versions of himself from other universes: a psychotic murderer and a cold and calculating CEO.
  • Star Trek:
    • The series has the Mirror Universe, with evil beards and everything. However, some of the characters are not at all evil, such as Mirror!Spock being no more evil than Prime!Spock, and others are outright good versions of their Prime counterparts, such as Brunt (ruthless Liquidator in the Prime universe and a kind assistant in the Mirror universe) and Voq (a racist Klingon in the Prime universe and the leader of a multi-species La Résistance in the Mirror universe). In Discovery, Sylvia Tilly and Michael Burnham have to impersonate their evil counterparts, both of whom are bloodthirsty ship captains. Meanwhile, Burnham's late CO Philippa Georgiu's double is the Emperor, while Lorca turns out to have been Dead All Along; the one we know has been the Mirror Universe counterpart the whole time.
    • Season 2 of Star Trek: Picard shows us a different Alternate Universe. A clear example of the trope is General Picard, who is a ruthless conqueror for the Confederacy of Earth with a collection of skulls in his trophy room and the painting of his flagship the CSS World Razer, which appears to be this trope for the USS Enterprise-D (and seems to have enough firepower to blast clear through a Borg cube).
  • Superman & Lois has these in season 2 with the introduction of Bizarro World. Two examples of this trope are Bizarro!Lana (who somehow gains powers and is a staunch supporter of Ally Allston, even dragging her husband Tal-Rho into this) and Bizarro!Jonathan (who is the twin with powers in that world and quickly becomes The Dragon of the season, seeking to merge with Prime!Jonathan in order to achieve godhood). Inverted with Tal-Rho, who is a pretty decent guy in the other world and has a close relationship with Bizarro (he even shows remorse at failing his brother and allows Superman to return home to save his son from Bizarro!Jonathan).
  • Supernatural:
    • The angels of the prime universe have mostly been morally dubious jerks who've caused a lot of harm to humanity and then to each-other during the show's run for petty reasons, and the archangel Michael in the prime universe was no hero (largely being an Anti-Villain). But their counterparts in Apocalypse World are much, much worse, having decimated the Earth and actively torturing and hunting the remaining humans to extinction after they won the war against Hell.
    • There's also Dark Kaia, a version of Kaia Nieves from another alternate universe (the Bad Place) who is pretty ruthless and selfish.
  • Twin Peaks:
    • In the Season 2 finale, Dale Cooper enters the Black Lodge, where he meets an evil doppelgänger of his who chases him around then enters into the real world, trapping the good Coop within the Lodge for 25 years. This version then goes on in Season 3 to go on a rampage of crime, and is revealed to be a sort of reincarnation of BOB, the previous Big Bad of the series. The Lodge may be full of evil doppelgängers — there's a version of Laura there who sometimes acts menacingly inhuman, but her nature is rather ambiguous.
    • In Season 3, the Diane we see for most of the series is actually an evil doppelgänger of the real Diane, who only appears for real in the last two episodes.

    Pinball 
  • FunHouse: Rudy's Nightmare: "The Evil Clones" unsurprisingly revolves around a group of malevolent Rudy copies who chase him throughout the fun house. The player must destroy each of them by making certain shots to finish the mode.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Crimestrikers: In "A Thing Called Esperanza", the evil geneticist Roderick Norco wants to replace world leaders with clones made from "flexiplasm" — but first, he tries to eliminate the Crimestrikers with a murderous clone of his Good Counterpart on the team, Science Hero Esperanza Sixtos.
  • Pathfinder:
    • One of the potential results of failing your save when using the Codex of Infinite Planes is an evil clone from a parallel dimension appearing somewhere in a hundred-mile radius of you. This continues happening every few days for as long as you live.
    • Drawing the Waxworks from the Harrow Deck of Many Things causes between one and six opposite-alignment duplicates of you, each seeking to oppose your goals, to appear within a twenty-mile radius of where you are.

    Video Games 
  • Fairy Bloom: Version 3.03's enemies are hordes of red Palette Swaps of the protagonist.
  • Fate/Grand Order: Anastasia's second interlude emphasizes the nature of Servants as copies of the true Heroic Spirit in the Throne of Heroes by means of Chaldea Anastasia and Lostbelt Anastasia. Fundamentally, they're the same, with the only difference being who they were summoned by— Chaldea Anastasia was summoned by Fujimaru to help restore the human order, while Lostbelt Anastasia was summoned by Kadoc to replace the human order with a brutal Alternate History. As a result, both Anastasias are given the parts of the true Anastasia's personality that are necessary for their mission. Chaldea Anastasia is the Spoiled Sweet and mischievous princess she was for most of her life, while Lostbelt Anastasia is the vengeful, Misanthrope Supreme she became at the end of her life.
  • Felix the Cat: The boss of world 5 is an evil copycat of Felix toting a hat and gun. He isn't given a name or explanation for where he came from—-not even the manual mentions him.
  • Even Kirby was a victim of this trope. In Kirby & the Amazing Mirror, when he and his three good twins traveled to the mirror world, they met Shadow Kirby, who was actually a good guy. However, they also met Meta Knight's counterpart, Dark Meta Knight, who was truly evil.
  • Kingdom Hearts has Vanitas, who was created from the darkness within Ventus' heart around the time of Kingdom Hearts: Birth by Sleep. But in a twist, despite sharing similarities with Ventus, outwardly, he doesn't look like Ventus at all. Instead, he looks almost exactly like Sora, who was only a small child at the time of Vanitas' creation. Kingdom Hearts III is where this similarity is elaborated on, albeit shortly before Vanitas bows out for good.
    Sora (horrified): Your face...!
    Vanitas: I'm the piece of Ventus that was taken away. And you're the piece Ventus needed to be whole again. So... why shouldn't you and I look exactly the same? You define me, Sora, the same way that Ventus does.
  • Knock-Knock has a visitor that looks like the main character, but is more transparent and has red eyes.
  • Samus Aran of the Metroid series has had two, both resulting from having her suit invaded by evil alien organisms: the SA-X of Metroid Fusion, and Dark Samus of the Metroid Prime Trilogy. Though, if you want to get technically, she actually has twelve: due to the SA-X asexually reproducing, there are eleven of them in total in Metroid Fusion. And in the third game of the Prime Trilogy, Metroid Prime 3: Corruption, Samus nearly became the 13th doppelganger herself due to being infected by Phazon that could have turned her into a copy of Dark Samus if it completely corrupted her as shown in the Non-Standard Game Over.
  • Mystery Case Files: The Countess: The Shade is a variation of this trope: it started as a malevolent Mirror Monster with its own appearance, but it gradually took the shape of lady Gloria Codington when feeding on her creativity over the years. It now appears as a black and very creepy doppelgänger of the benevolent lady Codington.
  • In Saints Row IV you have to face your character's evil doppelgänger, who has an evil Eyepatch of Power and a Beard of Evil (even if your character is female).
  • In Sonic the Hedgehog (2006), Mephiles the Dark is a Living Shadow who shortly after he breaks loose from his seal merges with Shadow the Hedgehog's... well, shadow, and uses that to form a doppelganger body in his image, though with several noticeable differences such as No Mouth, green slitted eyes, and all his red highlights being colored gray-green. Then he later goes One-Winged Angel and turns into a Crystalline Creature version with more purple coloration and spikey body parts. It later turns out he took Shadow's form more than just because he happened to be right there, both in order to gain power by copying his form as a form of insurance against getting sealed again and as a twisted revenge scheme since Shadow thanks to time travel is the one who initially sealed Mephiles away.
  • In Spider-Man: Edge of Time, the Big Bad is the Peter Parker of Spider-Man 2099's timeline, who faked his death and went on to become the CEO of Alchemax and a Well-Intentioned Extremist who wanted to Set Right What Once Went Wrong and undo the deaths of Uncle Ben and Gwen Stacy.
  • In Stranded Dreamscapes 2: The Doppleganger Alex's mirror twin Xela traps her in the mirror world and tries to take over her life.
  • The original plot of the That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime game ISEKAI Memories has these created by the Canon Foreigner Big Bad. Rather than exact copies, they are "ideal" futures based on desperate thoughts a person had while they were near a reflective surface, and often possess powers much different than their originals based on that. In one example, Shion's copy is based on a timeline where after the Orcs destroyed her village, she absorbed the souls of her deceased ogre comrades to have enough power for revenge. While the real Shion is happily loyal to Rimuru and trusts he will defeat the Orc Lord, her counterpart is disgusted that she would serve a slime, and won't accept any justice to the orcs unless it is by her own hands. Worse, these doppelgangers tend to have a strong desire to kill their originals for being "defective".

    Web Original 
  • DSBT InsaniT:
    • ??? is one of Koden.
    • The Darkness counterparts are of whoever is used to create them.
  • Fortnite The Movie: Big Norm. He's basically Norm, but bigger and more skilled. The two aren't exactly related in any way, Big Norm is simply someone that just looks like Norm. The two face off in Goliath, and eventually team up against Mime during the final season of The Norm Show.
  • ''Unwanted Houseguest: For unknown reasons the Shadow Demon looks like the Houseguest.

    Webcomics 
  • Bruno the Bandit has a variety called Dopplegangsters which are shapeshifters that can impersonate even non-humans like Bruno's micro-dragon sidekick.
  • Girl Genius: During Rakethorn, Maxim and Dimo's three minute Offscreen Moment of Awesome they fought evil doppelgangers from another dimension. Dimo and Maxim's had evil goatees.
  • El Goonish Shive has a few, although they're not usually capital-E Evil because Dan doesn't like characters like that (he regrets having to do an entire storyline about Damian):
    • Lord Tedd, and General Shade Tail are the evil counterparts in the Alpha universe for Main universe Tedd and Grace respectively. The little we've been told about Lord Tedd since his first appearance suggests he may be Not Evil, Just Misunderstood, or at least a Well-Intentioned Extremist, but we don't know the details yet.
    • Parodied with Ellen, who is briefly convinced she's Elliot's evil doppelganger and tries to replace him as such, but only manages to Poke the Poodle because she's Copied the Morals, Too of frickin' Elliot.
    • Elliot and Ellen get an actual Well-Intentioned Extremist doppelganger in the form of Magus, who is eventually revealed to be their counterpart from an alternate universe who was sent to ours in spirit form following a magical accident, and eventually uses the Dewitchery Diamond and Ellen's magic to restore himself. While he's fairly ruthless in using both twins in his plan, he bears them no animosity and tries to do right by them afterwards ... even if trying to do right by Ellen reveals a severe case of Blue-and-Orange Morality.
  • In The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob!, Galatea is an emotionally unstable, sometimes dangerous clone of Molly, but it would be unfair to call her evil. "Chaotic" though? Sure.
  • My Delirium Alcazar has Reverse Plaire, a shadowy version of the protagonist whose only goal is to kill her. Also called Nega-Plaire, Anti-Plaire, Plaire 2, Not!Plaire...
  • In Whither Frost takes Emelind's form for a while. How evil his motives were remains to be seen.

    Western Animation 
  • The Amazing Adrenalini Brothers: One episode revolved around a village being terrorized by Dracula, resembling Xan in both appearance and voice, that Adi couldn't tell them apart. That is, until sunrise...
  • In Bratz Kidz Sleepover Adventure, In Sasha's story, Sasha goes to a carnival and finds a mirror containing an evil clone of her that traps her inside and escapes, causing mischief.
  • Darkwing Duck: Negaduck is Darkwing Duck's evil double from a Mirror Universe.
  • Master Raindrop: In the episode “Originality”, General Bu creates an evil clone of Raindrop to steal na oracle lantern that would help him to capture the original Raindrop.
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: In "The Mean Six", Queen Chrysalis uses hairs from the main characters' manes to create clones of them with which to wield the Elements of Harmony, but somewhere along the line completely inverts their personalities, resulting in the clones being a barely functional collection of villainous parodies of their originals with personalities dominated by one specific vice — Applejack's clone is a compulsive liar, Rainbow's clone has essentially no personality beyond ditching people and being lazy, Fluttershy's is a psychotic bully, Rarity's is so overwhelmed by greed that she compulsively tries to hoard every bit of trash she sees, Pinkie's is chronically bored, depressed and foul-tempered, and Twilight's is a scheming backstabber. Their actions eventually cause the real ponies to believe they've gone bad out of nowhere (they straight-up mistake the clones for the actual mares), making them hate each other for the episode.
  • Invoked and Subverted in The Owl House. The Golden Guard is a position reserved for Grimwalkers, identical clones made by Emperor Belos in order to serve him. However, he modeled these Grimwalkers after his brother — who Belos killed after he discovered he'd married a witch — and apparently Copied the Morals, Too, because every Grimwalker that has ever existed has betrayed him at some point. The latest Grimwalker, Hunter, is shown to be a genuinely good kid who only blindly obeys his "uncle" because of years of calculated, systematic abuse, and starts helping the heroes after Belos decides he's on the path to betrayal too and tries to kill him.
  • Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja: In season 2, Julian creates Evil Julian from his contact with a power ball. He's chaotic and power hungry, but still has similar mannerisms to regular Julian and looks just like him, even though he wears white instead of purple. However, it takes some considerable amount of time for anyone to notice that he's not the actual Julian.
  • Rick and Morty: Given this series' approach to The Multiverse and infinite alternate versions of the two main characters, there's quite a few examples of this trope. The most iconic one in the show is probably Evil/President Morty, a ruthless and amoral Morty who lives up to Rick levels of superintelligence, with the hostile Council of Ricks who propagate and maintain the Citadel's corrupt system also counting. After him there's Rick Prime, the biggest sociopathic Straw Nihilist of all Ricks who was responsible for our Rick's Start of Darkness by killing his family simply to prove a point.
  • The Secret Saturdays: The Saturday family have one in the form of their Mirror Universe counterparts (nicknamed the Mondays by the main Zak), who have polarizing differences from the main Saturdays and are all-round nasty pieces of work.
  • Smiling Friends: In the Episode "frowning friends" Pim And Charlie meet Grim and gnarly. two characters who look very similar and work at the frowning friend business across the street from Pim and Charlie who work at the smiling friends business. Charlie later says in the episode. "Look, Pim, I get what's going on here. they're the bizarro versions of us. that's fine. But what's their end game? What's the point of this? It's just pissing me off now."

Top

Ybgir Rises

Rigby creates an evil counterpart of himself to get rid of his jinx.

How well does it match the trope?

4.78 (9 votes)

Example of:

Main / EvilDoppelganger

Media sources:

Report