During the investigation of recent hollers in the Complete Monster thread, it's become apparent to the staff that an insular, unfriendly culture has evolved in the Complete Monster and Magnificent Bastard threads that is causing problems.
Specific issues include:
- Overzealous hollers on tropers who come into the threads without being familiar with all the rules and traditions of the tropes. And when they are familiar with said rules and traditions, they get accused (with little evidence) of being ban evaders.
- A few tropers in the thread habitually engage in snotty, impolite mini-modding. There are also regular complaints about excessive, offtopic "socializing" posts.
- Many many thread regulars barely post/edit anywhere else, making the threads look like they are divorced from the rest of TV Tropes.
- Following that, there are often complaints about the threads and their regulars violating wiki rules, such as on indexing, crosswicking, example context and example categorization. Some folks are working on resolving the issues, but...
- Often moderator action against thread regulars leads to a lot of participants suddenly showing up in the moderation threads to protest and speak on their behalf, like a clique.
It is not a super high level problem, but it has been going on for years and we cannot ignore it any longer. There will be a thread in Wiki Talk
to discuss the problem; in the meantime there is a moratorium on further Complete Monster and Magnificent Bastard example discussion until we have gotten this sorted out.
Update: The new threads have been made and can be found here:
Please see the Frequently Asked Questions and Common Requests List before suggesting any new entries for this trope.
IMPORTANT: To avoid a holler to the mods, please see here for the earliest date a work can be discussed, (usually two weeks from the US release), as well as who's reserved discussion.
When voting, you must specify the candidate(s). No blanket votes (i.e. "
to everyone I missed").
No plagiarism: It's fair to source things, but an effortpost must be your own work and not lifted wholesale from another source.
We don't care what other sites think about a character being a Complete Monster. We judge this trope by our own criteria. Repeatedly attempting to bring up other sites will earn a suspension.
What is the Work
Here you briefly describe the work in question and explain any important setting details. Don't assume that everyone is familiar with the work in question.
Who is the Candidate and What have they Done?
This will be the main portion of the Effort Post. Here you list all of the crimes committed by the candidate. For candidates with longer rap sheets, keep the list to their most important and heinous crimes, we don't need to hear about every time they decide to do something minor or petty.
Do they have any Mitigating Factors or Freudian Excuse?
Here you discuss any potential redeeming or sympathetic features the character has, the character's Freudian Excuse if they have one, as well as any other potential mitigating factors like Offscreen Villainy or questions of moral agency. Try to present these as objectively as possible by presenting any evidence that may support or refute the mitigating factors.
Do they meet the Heinousness Standard?
Here you compare the actions of the Candidate to other character actions in the story in order to determine if they stand out or not. Remember that all characters, not just other villains, contribute to the Heinousness Standard
Final Verdict?
Simply state whether or not you think the character counts or not.
Edited by GastonRabbit on Aug 31st 2023 at 4:14:10 AM
Since people here encouraged me to do so, i decided to give OVA!Amon a shot
What's the Work?
Amon, The Apocalypse of Devilman is the third and final OVA in 3 part OVA series adaptation of Devilman manga. The first OVA adapted the first volume, where Akira transformed into a Devilman and ends there, so the only villain there are few generic bullies and a group of humans ar Ryo's party, who turn into demons and all they did was trying to kill Ryo and Akira. Second OVA adapts the chapter, where Akira fought Jinmen in prologue of the OVA, with several changes of where they fought and which loved of Akira Jinmen has eaten, then Akira fought Sirene, whose only notable deed is blowing up a street, killing at least a dozen of people. In the final OVA, which adapts the last volume of original manga in the first half and first chapter of Amon: The Darkside of the Devilman in its second half, Amon, demon who possessed Akira, managed to get his body under his control soon after Satan annihilated humanity and Akira killed the mob, that murdered Miki.
So here is OVAs version of Amon.
Who is Amon
The most powerful of demons, Amon was trapped in Hell along with all demons, before Ryo used him to give Akira his Devilman powers, essentially trapping him in Akira's body. Unable to do anything, Amon tormented Akira with nightmares, hoping to get free. He only managed to do it, after humanity were annihilated by Satan and his demons and where demons were battling Devilman group, whos leader was Akira. As Akira was still devastated by the loss of Miki, Amon was able to overcome him and get his body under his control. Immediately upon freeing himself, Amon destroys Devilman's base and viciously and sadistically kills dozens of demons, who were attacking him. Demons stopped, recognizing his power, after which Amon noticed the youngest of Devilmen, a young pre teen girl, he walked over to her and raised her from the ground and waited for her to wake up. As soon as she did and get sacred, Amon starts gleefully eating her, shocking the demons with this cruelty. Then he noticed another Devilman, a teenage girl, and jumped over to her and was apparently wanted to rip her head. Demons got scared and runned away, prompted angry Amon to leave this Devilman girl in her place and chase and kill them. Two survivors got killed by their leader for running away. Amon openly states his desire to find Satan and challenges the leader of that group of demons to a fight. During an fight, Amon managed to get a hold of that demon leader and tighten his grasp so hard, that demon's arms exploded, to Amon's enjoyment, after which Amon finished off the demon leader. Then Amon confronted Satan, openly stating that he is furious that Satan trapped him in a body of a "worthless human" and that he was "forced to protect humanity". Satan easily blocks Amon's attack and tries to summon Akira, leading to Amon retreating back to his mind to try to kill Akira and gain a complete control over his body.
There Amon tortures Akira with memories of Miki's death, showing her painful death from the hands of the mob in all details. Then he holds Miki's head in front of Akira's face and challenges him to a fight. During the fight, Amon sadistically beats and tortures Akira, when he starts to win, only for Akira to "power up" because of remembering Miki and finally defeats and destroys Amon, regaining control of his body.
Heinousness
Well, since we take OVAs as their own thing, due to various changes they made to a story and the fact that Amon's story goes in complete different direction than manga, heinous standard is lower than in original saga, but still pretty high, Jinmen and Sirene each have around a dozen of victims, Jinmen tortured his for a long time and in final OVA Satan destroyed most of humanity. Aside from that a mob killed Miki and her younger brother, due to believing them to be demons and one nameless demon in the beginning tried to eat a young Devilman girl. Amon stads out because despite his lack of screentime (he spends only around 7 minutes free on the Earth, before he is forced back to fight with Akira for control of his body), he shows off a lot of his sadistic side and personal awfulness. The murder of a preteen Devilman girl stands out, when he raised her and waited for her to wake up before he started eating her, making sure she would know what will happen and feel all the pain. A deed which shocked all the demons around him, in part because he did that without any actual reason, simply for enjoyment. He wanted to do the same to the second Devilman girl, being about to tear her head off. He slaughtered a big group of demons, even when they stopped attacking him and started running away. Him making the hands of the leader of that demon group explode before he was about to kill him and torturing Akira with vision of Miki's death also adds to his personal awfulness. Another argument is the fact that even when Amon is freed he does not have the full extent of his powers, due to Akira being still alive and he spends a very short time on Earth (as i said around 7 minutes) and he was only able to emerge after Satan wiped out most of humanity, something Amon was eager to do himself. So he has not much of a room to "go crazy", so the fact that he was sooo sadistic with any survivors, be it demons or Devilmen, stands out, showing off enough personal awfulness, even alongside the likes of Jinmen.
Mitigating Qualities
None. This version of Amon is simply a raging sadist, who wants to kill Satan for "forcing him to protect humanity and trapping him inside of a worthless human".
Conclusion
What do you think?
Ryo/satan loves akira in prety much all adaptations and contuities even ones like DEVILMAN crybaby That seem to more or less remove most of his other redeeming qualities.
"That's right mortal. By channeling my divine rage into power, I have forged a new instrument in which to destroy you."
Yeah. The only villains who could rival him here is sirene and jinmen with a dozen plus victims a piece but hey even they don't go after their own kind (other demons) from what I've heard. While amon does Kill quite alot of other demons.
Hmm I'll lean yes.
Edited by miraculous on Feb 9th 2020 at 9:10:28 AM
"That's right mortal. By channeling my divine rage into power, I have forged a new instrument in which to destroy you."
to Dre, Majesty, and William.
And considering Amon has only seven minutes of screentime, meaning he doesn't get much of an opportunity to show how horrible he is, I'd say he does more than enough with the reduced heinous standard. We added the Great Fusili in part because he went above and beyond despite only appearing in one episode. So
to Amon too.
Late
to Frank Costello. The Departed is full of mobsters, but Costello's the worst.
Also, Nicholson kills 2, will add to CM Killcounts.
"I'll show you the Dark Side." CM actors and killsAlso, looking at the C Ms By Actor Sandbox, is it possible to add another section for multiple actors playing a single CM in the same franchise, ie the many actors who played Voldemort, Emperor Palpatine or Michael Myers?
"I'll show you the Dark Side." CM actors and kills- Wild Knights Gulkeeva:
- Prince Zaza is the ruler of Norsetia and the leader of the Darknoid army. Destined to restore his home planet, Athaelia, to a more inhabitable state, Zaza decided to perform the Grand Transmutation, a dangerous spell capable of draining all life from planet Earth. With various Darknoid minions at his disposal, Zaza sent them to attack various cities around the world to find the magical Bouethers, resulting in thousands of deaths. After all the Bouethers were uncovered, Zaza transported a Darknoid fortress to Japan to destroy most of the military forces, while he slowly gathered more power to complete the Transmutation. When Queen Millennia and her forces surround Zaza and try to get him to surrender, he ignores her pleas and uses his powers to kill or wound the queen and most of her soldiers. Once the Transmutation starts, Zaza transforms into the Devil and tries to kill the protagonists when they arrive to stop him. Although he claims to care about Athaelians, Zaza was more than happy to kill any Athaelians who disagreed with his plans and showed no concern when his own soldiers were slaughtered.
- Dancer, from "The Nightmare in the Morning," is a Darknoid mercenary hired to kill the Legendary Knights and Beast Warriors. Against his employers' wishes, Dancer opted to use the Devil's Core to take out the heroes, despite knowing that it'll blow up planet Earth and exterminate the Darknoids as well. When the other Darknoids inform Dancer about how devastating the weapon is, Dancer chooses to activate it anyway since he was ordered to defeat the heroes by any means necessary. After Dancer is fatally wounded trying to escape from the Darknoids, he uses his last ounce of energy to transfer his powers to Onimaru, corrupting him and setting the Devil's Core to crash into Earth.
- EC Comics:
- Tales from the Crypt: Señor Pedro Tobosa, from issue 42's "The Bath", is the greedy owner of a South American silver mine, whose prime hobbies consist of horrifically brutalizing his workers and bathing constantly to relieve himself of their "filth". Viewing the people under him as lowly, diseased vermin, Tobosa would force them to mine in horrific conditions, personally whipping the starving workers for requesting food and water, and at one point ordered a man to have his mouth sewn shut for coughing in Tobosa's presence. When he and his men raid a village for more workers, Tobosa drafts a young boy to the mines, despite his parents' pleas. He then takes special pleasure in whipping the child and ultimately causes his death. Tobosa brushes off the boy as a weakling and later guns down his grieving parents when they attack him in revenge, simply for getting his clothes dirty. He then orders their bodies to be left in the sun to rot out of spite.
- The Vault of Horror: Dr. Perdo, from issue 18's "Dying To Lose Weight", is a Traveling Salesman who arrives in town with what he claims is a miracle pill that can cure obesity. After selling it to four overweight citizens for a large price, the pills initially seems to work and significantly improves their social lives, only for them to waste away and die from massive weight loss. It's soon discovered that these "pills" are actually mutant-tapeworm eggs, which when hatched would slowly eat away at the consumer's insides, one of whom was a teenage girl. Perdo showed no remorse for the lives he destroyed, and shortly after this truth came to light, tried to skip town with the money he had made from his customers' deaths.
- Grendel: Tujiro XIV is a vampiric Kabuki dancer from the 21st century who runs a Human Trafficking outfit where countless innocents are sold into slavery, as well as having his own taste for little boys. Tujiro favors kidnapping the boys, draining them and eating one eye while keeping the eye as a trophy, the fate that befalls the son of the second Grendel, Christine Spar. Escaping justice, Tujiro returns in a new guise as Pope Innocent XLII in the 26th century, where thousands are worked to death by the church. Tujiro runs a regime of despotic repression with countless innocents tortured, and children trafficked to loyal priests within the Vatican, all to keep others under his sway. Tujiro intends to use a gun to completely blot out the sun forever, allowing he and his vampires to reign over a world where human beings are nothing but cattle.
- Monster War:
- Edward Hyde, upon being separated from Jekyll, becomes his own being. Falling in to worship the Old Ones, Hyde helps to feed Magdalena and others to Dracula, experimenting on others to craft new monstrosities from them. Letting his vampires prey on other victims, Hyde intends on twisting humanity into monstrous shells while unleashing the Old Ones to consume the world in a symphony of bloodshed and madness.
- Dracula is an equally willing partner in Edward Hyde's plot to make all of humanity consume itself. Dracula spreads his vampiric curse to others in the hopes of furthering Hyde's plagues, trying to excruciatingly enslave Magdalena to his curse. At one point, Dracula slaughters over two dozen people in a brothel, all for thrills.
- Crepitus: Crepitus is a twisted, child-eating abomination that masquerades as a clown. Targeting children on their 10th birthdays, he takes them down to his Torture Cellar and mutilates them, eating each severed body part one by one before the child dies in order to sustain himself. With a history of depravity that goes back centuries, Crepitus has corrupted his descendants for generations, even sinking to raping his own daughter, Brandi, to father a pair of daughters for him with the intention of eating one and breeding the other to continue his food supply, turning Brandi into an insane, horribly abusive alcoholic and holding her captive in his house, using her to occasionally supply him with cops as snacks. In the end, he murders Brandi and possesses her younger daughter after he disintegrates, then chains down the older daughter to be raped and to continue his feeding cycle.
- The Gentlemen: Dry Eye is an enforcer in the Chinese mob. Introduced receiving humans to traffic for Lord George, Dry Eye gives a veiled threat to the seller when he does not have the money to pay him. The crime syndicate Dry Eye works for distributes heroin, which leads to the fatal overdosing of the teenager Laura Pressfield. Dry Eye helps Matthew Berger to try to undermine Mickey Pearson's own cannabis business for a lower price, but threatens him when he decides he wants it only for himself instead. Dry Eye then has Lord George killed when he confronts him about his betrayal and then later threatens and attempts to rape Mickey's wife Rosalind when she fights back. Despite mob violence from others as well, Dry Eye is the coldest and most uncaring by comparison.
- The Night Stalker (1986-1987): Chuck Summers is a former mercenary who discovered an ancient Chinese way of healing himself. Finding out that killing others grants him immortality, Chuck became a Serial Killer, gleefully murdering innocents to transplant their souls and strength into him. Moving to LA, Chuck started killing prostitutes for his rituals, murdering countless others who stand in the way on his quest for eternal life.
- American Gothic, by Robert Bloch: G. Gordon Gregg is a serial black widower who frequently murders his wives for money, opening the novel by killing his current one. A killer who runs a "murder hotel", Gregg traps his victims there to utterly vanish them, bleeding and dissecting them. Murdering two other would-be brides, Gregg seduces a journalist named Crystal while planning to dispose of her as well, having killed dozens of innocents within his walls.
- Every Stolen Breath by Kimberly Gabriel: Richard Stewart is Mayor Henking's chief of staff and the mastermind behind the Swarm, where he has a Death Mob of teens beat a target, usually to death, with at least 12 victims. A lot of Swarm members are forced to join under threat of blackmail, with many members being scarred for life or committing suicide. When Kellee Morrell refused to cooperate, Richard framed her father, Bill, as a fall guy and then had him killed. When Steven Finch came to close to the truth, Richard had him killed and his investigation shut down. When Steven's daughter Lia witnesses a Swarm attack, Richard has her stalked for over a month. Richard also frames a Latino gang for the Swarm's crimes. Richard forces Lia to watch her best friend Adam killed, before trying to do the same with her Love Interest, Ryan.
- Lyrec, by Gregory Frost: Miradomon, the monstrous archnemesis of Lyrec and Borregad, destroyed his and Lyrec's entire race in his pursuit to strengthen himself through the death energy of others. Miradomon moved on from cooking entire worlds alive by overcharging their suns to designing more meticulous ways to turn them against each other and destroy themselves, instead. In the High Fantasy world Miradomon and Lyrec find themselves leaping to, Miradomon gets up his usual habits: subverting religious authority to initiate a massacre against the magical Kobach population; murdering the country's king and possessing the young prince in order to author further bloodshed; and at one point musing he'll set up the homeless and destitute of a city he's about to have razed as human barriers to soak up the slaughter first. Miradomon tries to throw the entire planet into a series of violent wars, killing his servants one after another when they fail him or balk at his horrific demands, at one point flaying a corrupt pawn and leaving his skin to flap in the wind upon his castle. Miradomon even reveals he's captured Lyrec's lost love Alystroya purely to hurt him, and makes his final ultimatum to Lyrec: when he annihilates all existence and creates a new universe of chaos atop of it, Lyrec will be split into a billion agonizing, eternal deaths across it.
- The Folk of the Air: Prince Balekin Greenbriar desires the throne of Elfhame from his father, King Eldred. A psychopath from a young age, Balekin beat and abused his younger brother Cardan for his entire life, even trying to force him to kill someone, and when his father favors his other sibling Dain as his heir, launches a coup against him, personally murdering his family with only Cardan surviving. Imprisoned for his crimes, Balekin allies with the undersea and helps them lay siege to the land and its populace, kidnaps heroine Jude Duarte and has her tortured for weeks in order to break her into his pet assassin and only allows her return if Cardan forces his subjects to not fight back as he unleashes the undersea to slaughter many civilians, with Balekin targeting the court of King Roiben in particular due to a petty grudge, nearly having Roiben's consort burned alive out of spite. Balekin even tries to kill Cardan by poisoning him with a deadly drug and then frame Jude for the crime, willing to do anything to get the throne for himself.
- Pleasure of a Dark Prince: Crom Cruach the Broken Bloody One is the god of human sacrifice and cannibalism and this world's version of Satan himself. Cruach seduced a teenage Valkyrie named Lucia into being his bride before revealing his true form and having her raped and tortured, forcing her to consume flesh from some of his victims and nearly driving her to suicide. Lucia later sealed Cruach away, only for him to escape every 500 years to try and torment her. Cruach revels in spurring on his followers into sacrificing innocents to him—including children—and in the present intends to use his special ability to infect people with a need to kill their loved ones to infect the entire world. Cruach intends to start the apocalypse and watch as the entire of humanity descends into cannibalism and Human Sacrifice of their loved ones in his name. When Lucia and her new boyfriend Gareth MacRieve go to face him, Cruach tries to force Gareth into killing Lucia, and when he refuses, torments him with visions of him having actually killed her before making his intention to gang-rape and murder Lucia. Cruach is ultimately a monstrous god whose only reason for tormenting innocents is because he finds it fun.
- The Rise of Kyoshi: Xu Ping An is a Firebender warlord with a finely-honed, superficial sense of charisma he uses to reign in a loyal gathering of marauders with which he pledges to overthrow the law and let anarchy reign. Xu put entire villages of "abiders" to the sword, leaving countless corpses stacked behind him until his rampage was finally stopped by Jianzhu. When inadvertently broken out eight years later by the Avatar, Kyoshi, Xu muses that the land has forgotten his name and pledges to scar his name into history in a way they will never forget. To begin his new wave of bloodshed, Xu captures a family and forces them to watch as he dunks the father in and out of a pot of boiling water, gleefully intending to move on to slaughter the nearest town. Xu even uses his rare ability to bend lightning to savagely torture Kyoshi, proclaiming himself absolute and that all anyone can ever hope to do against him is obey.
- Uncanny, by David Macinnis Gill: The Shadowless, real name Malleus the Deceiver, has murdered hundreds of people with magical talents called "Norns" and then consumed their souls to add their powers to her own. Kidnapping a boy named Harkon, she molds him into a killer, with Malleus being the architect behind the Salem Witch Trials in a bid for more power through murder, even killing a 5-year-old child when her attempt to escape is foiled. Eventually killed, Malleus returns from the dead hundreds of years later to seek out an uncanny—a person with special magical talent—named Willow Jane, whose soul would give Malleus unlimited power. Killing the friends of Willow, Malleus twists them into her servants to use her in her hunt for Willow and even uses Willow's 7-year-old sister as hostage to draw her out, fully intending to kill both of them.
- Who Fears Death: General Daib is the true ruler of the Nuru and the father of heroine Onyewonsu by the rape of her mother. Having promoted a strategy of weaponizing rape against the Okeke people to destroy their culture, Daib also leads brutal genocidal and ethnic cleansing to destroy the Okeke, using Child Soldiers as well. Daib, upon meeting Onyewonsu, attempts to kill her, promising to find her mother and rape her again to obtain a son and heir he can train as a sorcerer to continue the extermination of the Okeke.
- The Escape Artist: Liam Foyle, on trial for murdering a young woman and savaging her corpse, initially seems aloof—admitting he's "not a very nice person"—but soon shows himself to be much worse. After defense barrister William Burton gets him Off on a Technicality and refuses to shake Foyle's hand, the latter begins stalking Will's wife Kate, files fraudulent complaints to hamper his career, then murders Kate. Later, once Maggie Gardner also gets him off on a technicality, he begins stalking her and leaving her disturbing gifts by breaking into her flat, rendering her a gibbering wreck. When finally confronted for his actions, Foyle has little excuse for his extreme pettiness beyond the fact that he is the way he is, and claiming that society should somehow accept him as some sort of lion amongst the sheep.
- Johnny Sokko and His Flying Robot (American International Television's English dub): Johnny Sokko and Jerry Mano have fought many evil foes in their fight against the Gargoyle Gang, with these being the worst they had to offer:
- Emperor Guillotine is a Galactic Conqueror with his sights set on Earth. Crashing into the ocean, Guillotine forms the terrorist group the Gargoyle Gang. Kidnapping Dr. Guardian to create an indestructible robot for the Gargoyle Gang, he plans on using the robot to assist in conquering the world. When Johnny Sokko gets the robot's controls and uses them to escape the island with Unicorn agent Jerry Mano, he orders it captured or destroyed with the sea monster Dracolon, despite Giant Robot flying towards Tokyo. Guillotine rules Gargoyle with an iron fist, using Child Soldiers, planting bombs in his men, and threatening to kill his commanders for their failures, eventually killing Dr. Botanus when he fails too many times. Throughout the series, Guillotine plays a hand in a number of the Gargoyle Gang's atrocities, such as trying to start a war, ordering experiments on captured Unicorn agents, and ransoming a princess of a small country to get his hands on a rare radioactive metal. In the final episode, he resurrects three monsters to drain Giant Robot's remaining energy, and reveals that if he were attacked, his body would detonate in an atomic explosion, taking the world with him, demonstrating this by destroying a field with a fingernail, and declares that the Earth will answer to him.
- The aforementioned Dr. Botanus is an egotistical alien scientist and surgeon hired by Emperor Guillotine to help him conquer Earth. Working with Commander Spider, he kidnaps Dr. Dorian to force him to grow a Gargoyle Vine, a dangerous plant that can destroy the world. When Dorian refuses to help him grow the plants, Botanus alters Dorian's brain to put him under Mind Control, ordering him to grow Gargoyle Vines. When Dr. Dorian returns to normal, Dr. Botanus mocks Dorian for unwittingly helping to create Gargoyle Vines. Later attacking oil production on the Middle East with Commander Spider, he lets his men massacre oil workers simply to force their foreman to give him the blueprints of a drill. He later kidnaps 60,000 people from a soccer game, where he gives Japan 24 hours to surrender to Guillotine or else he will kill the hostages. When one of his men begs Botanus to release his brother, who is among the hostages, Botanus coldly calls him an idiot, telling him that he will die with the rest of the hostages. Other acts include ordering the monster Amberon to destroy Tokyo; kidnapping and brainwashing the Unicorn Kyoto branch leader to attack a Unicorn conference; and using another Gargoyle Vine to cover the Earth in lava. Defined by his willingness to kill thousands with a feeling of smug satisfaction, Dr. Botanus represents the worst of Gargoyle.
- Harlequin is a brutal Gargoyle commander who appeared after the death of Commander Spider. Initially appearing to be a Gargoyle deserter seeking help getting his kids from Gargoyle custody, he lures Johnny and Jerry into a trap to be killed by the monster Dublion. When Jerry begs him to release the kids, Harlequin says that he doesn't care, as he had already killed two of his men to get the duo into his grasp. Later working with the aforementioned Doctor Botanus to attack a Unicorn conference, he kidnaps the Unicorn Kyoto branch leader, and personally controls his monster Lygon to attack the conference. Later he demolishes a Unicorn base in the arctic with Dracolon. After Johnny and Jerry investigate, he kidnaps them, and then attacks Tokyo under Guillotines orders, decimating Tokyo in a flood of sand. In his final appearance, he breaks Dr. Botanus out of Unicorn custody be sneaking in the monster Amberon into Unicorn headquarters, which kills multiple agents. When Johnny and another Unicorn agents Mari investigate, he ties them to trees and prepares to kill them with a firing squad before he is stopped.
- Dr. Snake, appearing in the episode "Torozan—An Enemy Robot", is a Gargoyle scientist who has been destroying Unicorn branches across the globe with his own giant robot, Torozan, with his new target being the Unicorn Japan branch. Wanting to destroy Unicorn's radar capabilities, he learns that the wife of the radar base's commander, Sebola, is in a coma. Using this, he threatens to put Sebola's children into a coma like his wife if he doesn't give Dr. Snake the location to the radar base. When the attack fails due to Johnny and Giant Robot's interference, he has Sebola lead him to the radar base, having him kill his men with a gas bomb when they refuse to leave. Using the radar base as a place to control Torozan, he begins demolishing Tokyo. Whenever Sebola objects to any of his demands, Dr. Snake threatens to kill his family, and almost destroys Giant Robot before he is stopped.
- Quincy, M.E.: Otto Rottermeyer, from season 7's "Stolen Tears", is a Nazi who was nicknamed "Der Teufel"—German for "The Devil"—because his treatment of the prisoners at Auschwitz was "worse than Hell". When two inmates named Isaac Kroviak and Hyam Sigerski tried to bribe Otto into sparing them and their families, Otto took the bribe, and then made Isaac and Hyam watch as he raped their wives before shooting them and every other member of the two men's families, who were among the thousands of Jews who Otto proudly claims to have murdered during The Holocaust. After the war ended, Otto fled to America, where he lived under the name Charlie Wilson. When Isaac recognizes him on the street one day, Otto steals a car owned by a Jewish man named Leopold Ackerman and uses it to run over Isaac. He then kills Ackerman and leaves him to take the fall for murdering Isaac before going after Hyam. After Hyam is saved from him, Otto agrees to testify on his behalf in a libel lawsuit that was filed against Hyam by a Holocaust denier named Cornelius Sumner. Otto is not remorseful or looking for a deal, he merely wants to brag about his crimes, and call out men like Sumner who have the audacity to question the existence of the Final Solution, which Otto proclaims was "the most courageous act in modern history."
- Bloodbath's "The Soulcollector
": The titular Soulcollector is a tortuous and hateful entity that lures his victims to his world in their dreams. Once he claims their souls, he tortures them in as many ways he can think of, reducing their physical bodies to dead husks and going on to find his next victim. Further, he implies himself to be especially cruel to his victims who escape him.
- Machigerita's "Pierrot
" (English translation
): The titular Pierrot was once a Non-Ironic Clown who loved to entertain children. After being mocked by his audience, Pierrot's heart "became filled with a murky darkness" and he decided that he must kill the children. Kidnapping the children and trapping them in his room, Pierrot sadistically persists in torturing his victims before finally killing them—one child is described as having their face "shaved off". Pierrot expresses great delight in their suffering, enjoying the smell of their blood and the look of their pained expressions, and states that he'll never stop even as they become disfigured. Pierrot proclaims how much he "loves" everything about the children he kills, and the song ends with one of his victims screaming.
- Monster War:
- Edward Hyde, upon being separated from Jekyll, becomes his own being. Falling in to worship the Old Ones, Hyde helps to feed Magdalena and others to Dracula, experimenting on others to craft new monstrosities from them. Letting his vampires prey on other victims, Hyde intends on twisting humanity into monstrous shells while unleashing the Old Ones to consume the world in a symphony of bloodshed and madness.
- Dracula is an equally willing partner in Edward Hyde's plot to make all of humanity consume itself. Dracula spreads his vampiric curse to others in the hopes of furthering Hyde's plagues, trying to excruciatingly enslave Magdalena to his curse. At one point, Dracula slaughters over two dozen people in a brothel, all for thrills.
- Bludgeon, debuting in Stormbringer, is the leader of a nihilistic cult and a former Decepticon war criminal. Trying to awaken Thunderwing, Bludgeon attempts to unleash him upon countless worlds to erase them of life. Eventually falling in line with Shockwave, Bludgeon liberates Jhiaxus on his behest, butchering Wheelie and Garnak in the process, and aids Shockwave in his grand, universe-destroying plans. Returning later when confronted by the Dinobots, Bludgeon performs horrible experiments upon sparks and Transformers to twist and mold them into monsters, while attempting to awaken and control the monstrous Trypticon to go on a killing spree. Later switching allegiance to Unicron, Bludgeon happily intends to spread the destruction of the Chaos-Bringer across existence to consume all in their path. A psychotic nihilist with a fetish for destruction, Bludgeon ranks as among the worst of the Decepticons.
- Alice Mare: The Cheshire Cat is a quirky yet sadistic demon who feeds on human souls. Preferring the souls of children because they are easier to break, the Cat helps his fellow demons spread Nightmare Syndrome—a condition where a person is trapped in a nightmare and never wakes up—then removes a body part from his victims to add to his own body. After making a deal with Teacher/David to help him study the syndrome, the Cat works with the White Rabbit to pull Teacher's five adopted children into the dream worlds in order to psychologically torment them with memories of their dark pasts and deceive Allen Llewellyn into helping them by opening the childrens' hearts. After each nightmare, the Cat warps the bodies of the children into grotesque forms and leaves them so traumatized that they cannot speak, then eventually forces Allen to either sacrifice one of their souls to him or allow himself to be possessed by him. If Allen does not sacrifice the children, the Cat eventually takes Teacher's soul instead. In the endings where Allen agrees to give himself up in return for the safety of the others, the Cat expresses his intentions to go back on the deal and eat them, hoping to make Allen suffer even more. Despite admitting that he could eat animal souls instead, the Cheshire Cat simply prefers the despair of human souls.
- Kong: King of the Apes: Doctor Richard Remy is a nature-hating bionics expert, and the twin brother of conservationist Lukas Remy. Despising his brother's pet gorilla, Kong, from the moment that they first met, Richard blames Kong for the childhood accident that cost him an eye, even though he caused the accident himself, and only survived it thanks to Kong. Richard uses a painful Shock Collar to make Kong go on a rampage before framing him and Lukas for the destruction of a military warehouse, the contents of which Richard sells on the Black Market. Richard also sells weapons-grade uranium on the black market; uses a virus to turn people into rage zombies; tries to melt the arctic to get at the resources buried beneath it; attempts to kill Kong by blowing up an African volcano, not caring that this will destroy all of the surrounding villages; and convinces various governments to purchase his Bionobots, which were secretly programmed to turn on their buyers in a violent coup that would allow Richard to implement his "New World Order". Richard frequently abuses his android assistant, Botila, at one point uploading her consciousness into a Bionobot against her will while ensuring her continued obedience through the use of an Agony Beam. Eventually renouncing his humanity completely, Richard turns himself into a grotesque mutant cyborg before trying to murder all of his enemies all at once on Kong Island.
- "Assault on the Mountains of Madness": SS-Sturmbannführer Matilda Griess is a high-ranking member of the Black Sun occultist group who intends on triggering a "psychic scream" apocalyptic event. Upon discovering the Elder City, Griess has her own men executed to keep its secrets and helps to feed souls to trap them in agony, intending on harnessing the pain to trigger an apocalypse and slaughter everyone in the world save only those left to serve her and the Black Sun.
- "Kontamination": Major Wolfram Engel is a vile, sickly-looking Nazi who experiments in exposing people to another realm merely called the Beyond, resulting in a slew of people Driven to Madness and death from his experiments. Engel devises a way to create a contagious form of madness he infests in a series of captured American soldiers, breaking their minds, intending to unleash them onto their own Allies and spread it to destroy the minds of the enemy soldiers and have them kill each other in waves. Engel happily demonstrates the virus on an Allied-occupied German town to kill as many American soldiers as he can. Barely even loyal to his own side, Engel is happily willing to exploit and even kill his duped allies through his strategies.
- "Three Kings" (part 1 of "Zero Point"): In a setting replete with Nazi mad scientists, few are as unrepentantly wicked as Dr. Graf Ernst von Kammerstein. The leader of an operation based near a town in occupied Czechoslovakia, Kammerstein murders and reanimates countless dozens in his laboratory for the purpose of creating unkillable Super Soldiers for Germany. Many are simply added to Kammerstein's ever-growing menagerie of mindless, shambling zombies that Kammerstein keeps locked up in a pen, and other failures literally fill a graveyard. Kammerstein shows a sinister predilection for children in his experiments, and when a local priest starts saving as many as he can from Kammerstein's wicked clutches, Kammerstein has a man suspected to be him captured and tortured to death. Utterly without scruples, Kammerstein is willing to use the innocents he hasn't already murdered as human hostages, and may even let the zombies spill out onto the surrounding town to kill everything in their path.
- "The Trellborg Monstrosities": Ludwig von Obertorff is a Black Sun member and Thule Society occultist who uncovers, in Trellborg, the cult of the Hanged God. Making himself part Drottnar, von Obertorff sacrifices all his slave laborers and enacts a theocracy where he begins having many innocents sacrificed and hanged to slowly break down a soul wall to the weapon Gugnir. Willing to depopulate the entire countryside, von Obertorff intends on using Gugnir to slaughter everyone and everything until he is left alone as the ruler of a new and eternal Reich.
- Carolyn Williams, from season 5's "She's Not There", is a leader in a Human Trafficking ring. Carolyn lures in girls from around the world who are aged 14-21 and promises them jobs as models. Carolyn befriends them and brings to a party where she and her partner drug and then kidnap them. They then take them a warehouse where the girls are beaten and drugged into submission using heroin. They are then forced into prostitution for money, with this operation having run for years and with an estimated victim count in the dozens.
Edited by ACW on Feb 10th 2020 at 6:35:44 AM
Berserk Button: misusing Berserk Button
Honestly,
to Amon. The thing that makes him stand out, to me, is the part where even the other demons are appalled by his cruelty. That alone marks him as unique, and combined with his other crimes makes him a case of quality over quanitity. And I watched the OVA in question, so I would know.
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Also, I proposed another quote (or two) for Fenrir Greyback sometime ago, could that go up as well?
Edited by k410ren on Feb 9th 2020 at 1:02:09 PM
"I'll show you the Dark Side." CM actors and killsSure to Amon.
ACW: Would you mind adding how the Swarm have twelve publicly known victims somewhere in Richard's write up.
Edited by Bullman on Feb 9th 2020 at 12:17:41 PM
Fan-Preferred Couple cleanup threadI have a question regarding Vicious from Cowboy Bebob. Judging by his entry he only kills couple of people and tries to kill few more. The entry goes more about how despicable he is than describing his actual deeds, to the point that the other Monster from that anime, who appeared in only one episode seems to blow him out of the water.
Like here is Vicious entry:
Here is the entry of a monster from one episode:
Bullman and Mir: Check it now.
k410ren: Add the approved quote to the Drafts, and I'll include it.
Here's the old Amon entry:
- Amon is a powerful demon who was known as the God Of War in Hell. Amon was trapped inside the body of Akira Fudo after trying to possess him, existing as Akira's Superpowered Evil Side. Amon finally emerges in the OVA Amon: The Apocalypse of Devilman, after Akira crosses the Despair Event Horizon. Amon murders both humans and demons alike, even devouring a young girl alive, an act that horrifies even the other demons, and would have killed Mikiko as well if he wasn't distracted by the other demons. He later mentally tortures Akira by showing him images of his beloved Miki being killed, and proceeds to physically torture Akira by tearing off his wing and stomping on his wound.

Abstain on Dre and Majesty.