This thread is for requesting edits or unlocks to Locked Pages or for requesting locks. It can also be used for technical requests to moderators such as:
- creating new pages in the Main/ and other restricted namespaces without going through Trope Launch Pad
- moving discussion pages
- moving reviews
Please keep the following guidelines in mind:
- Check Locked Pages and Permanent Red Link Club first. They can provide guidance on what are good and bad requests.
- Include working links in your request to the page(s) in question.
- If asking for edits, state your changes exactly as they should appear on the page, including proper Example Indentation, namespacing, and pothole and quote formatting. And make sure that what you want to add is actually a valid example.
- We do not edit archived articles, even to correct links.
- If you need to have the capitalization of a page title or namespace of a work fixed, ask here
.
- If you need to remove a ghost wick, go here
.
- To request a page to be moved along with its history, go here
.
- The Complete Monster and Magnificent Bastard tropes aren't currently adding or removing examples. Wick changes and other minor corrections to the locked trope pages can be made via this thread, but more significant changes will be declined.
- Inappropriate pages that keep being recreated, pages banned under The Content Policy and subpages that are disallowed (like Headscratchers pages for tropes) are valid reasons for requesting page locks.
NOTE: Edited with OP's permission.
Edited by Mrph1 on Oct 22nd 2024 at 8:06:39 PM
From here
:
- First thing replaces the Mercenary entry at the Killzone tree at Video Games G To P.
- Claymore tree (replacing current entry) and Jinmen rewrite (Devilman) go to Anime & Manga: A to F.
- Next tree replaces the current entry at Anime & Manga: G to N.
- Combs goes to Batman (Miscellaneous).
- Ghostbusters tree replaces the current entry at Comic Books: A to H.
- Karpan goes to Comic Books: I to Z.
- Ganor goes to Film D To G.
- Kouzuki goes to Film H To L.
- Gorgos rewrite and next entry (the latter to films, between Gaoh and Prospect) go to Kamen Rider.
- Atropos goes to Literature A To F.
- RWBY duo goes to Literature M To Z.
- Devil rewrite (American Horror Story tree); The Five (replacing current entry) go to Live Action TVA To L.
- Next entry goes to Marvel Animation, end of Avengers Assemble tree.
- Skull goes to last group, between Robot Master and Ivan.
- Combs goes to Superman (Miscellaneous).
- Devourer goes to Video Games: 0 to F.
- Star Fox header goes to Video Games: Q to Z.
- Tree goes to Visual Novels.
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles:
- Traquer goes after Skonk in the Mirage group.
- Crainiac goes at the end of the Adventures group. Also, for Null, please cut that quote and change his last sentence to this: When asked why he does what he does, he responds that death and destruction are his "favorite things, the things [he does] best".
- Next 3 entries go between Ch'Rell and Tengu Shredder (2003 series).
- Rest of the stuff goes to the end of the page.
Thanks
Edited by ACW on Aug 13th 2019 at 6:21:18 AM
YMMV Ultron is leaving a ghost wick to Complete Monster. I was told this was the right place to remove ghost wicks, so can I request that it be cut?
Speaking of ghost wicks, I have one, too. Manga.Pokemon Special (itself a redirect for its US title, Manga.Pokemon Adventures) is reporting that it's being linked to from Sandbox.{{Sh?jo}}. The page doesn't exist, I don't think, and clicking the link brings me to Sandbox.Sh.
Edited by DragonRanger on Aug 13th 2019 at 12:57:00 PM
~ACW, done except for Skull, as you didn't include a page.
~DragonRanger, sorry, but ghost wicks that have illegal characters (such as a question mark) can't be removed by mods. It would take an administrator to delete it, and they've got other priorities at the moment.
Got the YMMV Ultron ghost wick.
Shit, sorry about that. Skull's Marvel Literature.
Also, at Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, for Adventures, something weird happened with Null and Crainiac. You can just replace the entries with this:
- The aforementioned Mr. Null was introduced as an unseen tycoon, who enslaved a remote South American tribe to work in some of his mines and tries to dump toxic waste into the ocean. However, we soon discover that Null is actually a demon and has sold the Earth to the aforementioned Queen Maligna and her hordes of insectoid aliens, who plan to destroy humanity and colonize Earth. After the Turtles and their allies the Mighty Mutanimals thwart this alien invasion, Null seeks revenge on them. Null takes control of the Horsemen of the Apocalypse and captures the two groups. Null is planning to make the female members of the Mutanimals into his harem, while the others will be slowly electrocuted to death. Null plans to force Kid Terra, one of Null's former underlings who turned against him, into pulling the switch that electrocutes his enemies, wanting to torment his former employee. After this scheme is thwarted, Null later returns and hires some cyborg assassins, who manage to kill most of the Mutanimals. Null decides to torment Candy Fine, who the girlfriend of Mutanimal Mondo Gecko, by showing her images of the Mutanimals burning in hell. Null then mind-controls her and makes her into his slave. Null had the Mutanimals killed so he can continue what he started, trying to help Maligna destroy the human race. When asked why he does what he does, he responds that death and destruction are his "favorite things, the things [he does] best".
- Crainiac is the main villain of the "Dreamland" arc, set in a future where the world has been ravaged by Global Warming. Crainiac, a mercenary who works for extradimensional aliens who cannot dream, heads to Earth to steal brains to sell to his alien clients to help them dream. Crainiac also knows that an asteroid is heading towards Earth, which would destroy all life on the planet, but has no intention of stopping it or warning anyone, taking pleasure in Earth's coming destruction. Crainiac teams up with another villain named Verminator-X and steals brains from dead bodies, turning them into zombies that he orders to gather more brains for him, not caring who the zombies kill in the process. It is later revealed that the zombies are in pain and wish for death, one begging the Turtles to kill him. Later Crainiac kidnaps Leonardo's students, planning to steal their brains.
Please also add Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to Film AND Video Games for examples with their own pages.
At Video Games: Q to Z, for the Wolfenstein tree, please replace The New Colossus entry with this:
- The New Colossus:
- B.J.'s greedy, racist father, Rip Blazkowicz, married B.J.'s wealthy mother for money, then abused her and B.J. out of anger at his own poor business decisions ruining his enterprise. Attacking B.J. for playing with a black girl, Rip knocks his wife out for trying to defend their son,then tries to make B.J. shoot his dog. When America is conquered by the Nazis, B.J. betrays his Jewish neighbors and wife by selling them out, leading to their internment and death in concentration camps. Attempting to kill B.J. when they meet again, Rip also wiretaps their phone conversation in an attempt to have B.J. captured and executed by the Nazis.
- The Freedom Chronicles Episode 1: The Adventures of Gunslinger Joe: Übercommander Roderick Metze was a white supremacist who became a dentist for the thrill of torturing people legally. Happily joining the Nazis, Metze relished in a chance to lord over minorities, subjecting them to slavery and death. Taking an interest in sports, Metze abducted a number of athletes, torturing them in ghastly experiments to harvest their abilities for his own side. Metze also intends on activating a superweapon to annihilate the entire American Midwest, driven by his desire to rise ever higher in the ranks of the Reich.
- The New Colossus:
At Literature G To L, please remove The Juniper Tree and add this:
- Grimms' Fairy Tales:
- "The Robber Bridegroom
" (KMH 040): The Robber Bridegroom himself appears to be a charming suitor seeking the hand of the heroine in marriage. In truth, the Bridegroom is the head of a group of bandits and a cannibalistic Serial Killer who tricks the women into coming to his home whereupon they are murdered and carved up for food. When the heroine visits and hides, she witnesses a young captive dragged in and killed by her fiancé and his men, realizing the fate that would await her, with the Robber Bridegroom being a dark reminder that evil may hide beneath kind and trusted faces.
- "The Juniper Tree
" (KMH 047): The evil stepmother, upon marrying the husband, grew to resent her stepson, knowing that he would inherit the family's wealth when he got older. Forming a plan, she convinces her stepson into looking into a chest for an apple, only to then decapitate him by slamming the lid onto his neck. The stepmother uses a bandage to reattach her stepson's head, and she manipulates her daughter, Marlinchen (or Marlene in some versions), into thinking that she killed her own brother. She then takes the body, cooks it into a stew, and she serves it to her unsuspecting husband. The story repeatedly makes it clear that the stepmother cared only for herself, and that she committed these actions out of greed, as well as a genuine hatred for her stepson.
- "The Robber Bridegroom
Please replace the content at James Bond with the content inside this folder:
The James Bond franchise features a lot of Diabolical Masterminds and Corrupt Corporate Executives who want to either get rich, start World War III or fund various terrorist plots. Most villains avoid falling into this trope due to redeeming qualities, but some go above and beyond the call to establish their pure malevolence.
Entries in each group are by release date.
All spoilers are unmarked. You Have Been Warned!
Films
- Goldfinger: The titular Auric Goldfinger is a man whose wit and politeness only mask the dangerous psychopath that he is. Obsessed with increasing his wealth at any cost, Goldfinger plans on poisoning an army barracks and the surrounding town, which would kill 60,000 people—for which he cares nothing about—and then detonating a nuclear device in Fort Knox to trigger a major economic crisis for his own profit. He punishes his assistant, who becomes a Bond girl and costs him a rigged card game, by having her murdered with golden paint that suffocates her, and later tries to have James Bond sawn in half with a laser. He gloats to his mob partners even though he was always planning on killing them and does— simply to bask in his own ego at his plan. Despite being one of the earliest villains that Bond ever faced, Goldfinger still remains one of the worst.
- Ernst Stavro Blofeld, head of Special Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion (SPECTRE) , is an icy sociopath interested only in what profits him. Running SPECTRE with an iron fist, Blofeld facilitates terrorism around the world, and any underling who fails dies a painful, ignominious end. When he and Bond finally come face to face, Blofeld is attempting to start a nuclear war to have the Soviets and the Americans wipe one another out, allowing SPECTRE to blackmail the newest superpowers. When this fails, Blofeld undergoes plastic surgery and attempts to swindle his way into a pardon and a noble title, with brainwashed women spreading a bacteria to annihilate the world's agricultural supply. When this fails, Blofeld takes revenge by murdering Bond's new wife on their wedding day. Later having plastic surgery again, Blofeld has multiple diamonds stolen to power a satellite with an orbital laser. Blofeld calls an auction between the Soviets, Chinese and Americans: The winner will possess nuclear supremacy in the world. The losers will be wiped out by the satellite.
- Thunderball: Emilio Largo is the sadistic, cruel Number Two of SPECTRE. Plotting to blackmail the world at large, Largo has a pilot murdered to have an agent steal his identity, leaving the man to drown when his usefulness is expended, and stealing two NATO warheads. Largo showcases a willingness to feed failed agents to sharks, and is an enthusiast for torture, with one British agent taking cyanide to avoid that fate. Later torturing his mistress Domino, Largo reveals he plans to nuke Miami when his ransom isn't met.
- Moonraker: Hugo Drax is a cold, snobbish, understated executive who wishes to exterminate the human race, except for those he considers "superior beings". To this end, Drax captures men and women whom he sees as physically perfect, planning to keep these people in his giant space station while he covers the earth in a rare toxin that will kill every human being on Earth. When one of his Moonraker space shuttles is hijacked, Bond is sent to investigate. Fearing that Bond will discover his plans, Drax sends his assassins to kill him, not doing the job himself because he wants Bond's death to amuse him. When he discovers that his personal pilot, Corrine Dufour, helped Bond uncover his plan, he fires her, then sends his dogs out to rip her apart. After he tells Bond his plan, he traps him and one of his scientists, Dr. Holly Goodhead, under one of his rockets, planning on burning the both of them. When he discovers Bond and Goodhead on his space station, he threatens to shoot them both out the airlock. When Bond corners him after his plans are failing, Drax finds a gun and threatens to shoot him, knowing that he'll at least "have the pleasure of putting [Bond] out of my misery". Drax is a chilling, dark villain who stands out in such a campy, silly movie.
- A View to a Kill: Max Zorin is by far one of the most psychopathic villains Bond has ever come across. A French-German microchip tycoon who used to work for the KGB after he and his mentor, Dr. Carl Mortner, real name Hans Glaub, were whisked out of defeated Nazi Germany by the Soviets, he goes rogue to pursue his own plans for domination. His plot involves triggering an earthquake to flood Silicon Valley so his tech company can get a monopoly on the world's supply of microchips, killing millions of people in the process. He drops a businessman to his death when the latter disagrees with Zorin's plan, throws a captured spy into an underwater fan to be ground to mush, and kills the San Francisco mayor before blaming Bond for the murder and leaving him and Stacy behind to die in a fire. He's so psychotic that he gleefully machine guns his own mine workers to death and betrays his lover and henchwoman May Day, all of whom were nothing but loyal to him. When his plan is eventually foiled, he goes berserk as he tries to hack Bond and Stacy up with an axe in a fight atop the Golden Gate Bridge.
- Licence to Kill: Franz Sanchez can be charming, but he's also uncommonly brutal and ruthless in dealing with his enemies or those he perceives as disloyal to him. He brutally whips his mistress, Lupe Lamora, with a stingray-tail whip as a punishment for infidelity, and also orders his top henchman Dario to remove the heart of the man she has slept with. He feeds Bond's best friend, Felix Leiter, to a shark (he had his newlywed wife raped and killed right before), and he kills one of his collaborators, locking him in a decompression chamber, believing he stole his money. Towards the climax, he also decides to start "cutting overhead" and shoots his financial advisor. While lacking the body counts of other villains that Bond has faced, Sanchez makes up for it by having a visceral cruelty that is unmatched.
- GoldenEye: Xenia Onatopp, a psychotic Russian assassin working for the Janus Syndicate, has the dubious honor of being the most depraved Femme Fatale Bond has ever come across. Initially seen as a charming, elegant woman, Xenia reveals her true nature when, in bed with her target, she kills him by crushing him between her thighs to suffocate him, getting clear sexual ecstasy from the murder; she later tries to kill Bond the same way. She steals his security clearance and murders several innocent sailors before eluding Bond. Later, when Xenia arrives in a Russian facility, she massacres all the techs with machine gun fire, getting very visibly aroused by the killings; even her partner for the mission looks a bit stunned at this. Xenia has one of the largest body counts for a Dragon in the franchise, and unlike the majority of her male counterparts, Xenia is in it for money and thrills. She has no issue helping to use the GoldenEye satellite to plunge England into the dark ages as long as she gets rich from it. The fact that this gives her the ability to express her sexualized love for killing is just a bonus.
- Tomorrow Never Dies: Elliot Carver is a media mogul and head of the Carver Media Group Network. The actions of himself and his group range from releasing software with bugs in order to require constant updates, releasing stories about mad cow disease involving a British beef baron who lost money to Carver in poker and keeping those stories running after getting paid by the French, blackmailing the President to sign a bill only to release the tape anyway, and causing "floods in Pakistan, riots in Paris and a plane crash in California". His latest and most heinous project involves sinking a ship and killing the survivors, sinking a Chinese jet, and attempting to use a stolen British missile to destroy Beijing, leading to World War III; all of this is so he can gain exclusive broadcast rights in China. When James Bond investigates this, he murders his wife when she gets too close to Bond and orders the brutal torture of Bond and Wai Lin by Richard Stamper. Already a wealthy man, Carver is willing to cause millions of deaths just to satisfy his greed.
- Quantum of Solace: General Medrano raped and killed Camille's family in front of her, and burnt down the house. He conspires with Dominic Greene of the organization Quantum, deliberately engineering a nationwide drought in Bolivia to allow Quantum to get its hands on his nation's water supply and having the gall to frame the government for selling off its rainforests. Medrano is willing to plunge his nation into drought and famine, dooming multiple innocent people, just so he can have an excuse to seize power. When Greene informs Medrano how expendable he truly is to Quantum, Medrano buckles under pressure and acquiesces to Greene's demands before trying to rape his maid out of frustration. When Camille intervenes, Medrano tries to rape and murder her as well, mocking her about her mother and sister.
- Spectre: Franz Oberhauser, real name Ernst Stavro Blofeld, was once a sociopathic boy who murdered his own father for loving a young, orphaned James Bond the Oberhauser family took in. Faking his own death and adopting his new name, Oberhauser built up the criminal organization SPECTRE, which finances and facilitates terrorism around the globe, allies with interested parties to topple governments, prolong civil wars, horde natural resources, and eventually involves itself in the sex trade where hundreds of thousands of women and children are trafficked to feed SPECTRE's accounts. Oberhauser gleefully reveals himself as the architect of James's pain, having arranged various events to result in the deaths of Bond's friends, and loved ones. He was also the one behind Raoul Silva, having wanted M herself to die to hurt Bond. With Bond himself, Oberhauser has small needles drilled into his head to torture him and even threatens to steal his ability to recognize faces by drilling in the right place. When this fails, Oberhauser holds Bond's Love Interest in a rigged chamber—also forcing her to watch the footage of her father committing suicide—so Bond must either try to save her and die in an explosion, or abandon her to save himself and live with the shame of it. Obsessed with destroying his stepbrother and devoted only to his own massive megalomania and eagerness to condemn the world to chaos or tyranny if it suits his purposes, Oberhauser is the ultimate villain of the rebooted chronology to date.
- Moonraker: Though his plan is smaller in scale than his film counterpart's, Ian Fleming's original version of Sir Hugo Drax is no less vile. Born "Hugo von der Drache" in Germany and an avid fan of Hitler, Drax ran undercover missions against Britain for the Reich until he was mistakenly wounded by his own side and nursed back to health by the British. Stealing the identity of a MIA soldier with a similar name and feigning amnesia, Drax murdered the first rich man he could find after leaving the hospital for startup money and began plotting to avenge Nazi Germany's defeat. Using his family's holdings in rare metals, Drax paid out of his own pocket to design the Moonraker, a state-of-the-art nuclear missile meant to defend Britain from the Russians, with Drax's philanthropy elevating him to a national hero. The only problem was, the missile was set to destroy London on its first test-firing with a real atomic bomb. When Drax describes the intended death toll for this catastrophe to him, Bond, a hardened killer himself, is left almost catatonic. Other crimes include running a motorist off the road and over a cliff due to the mere possibility he might've been a spy, and having people tortured for information with welding torches. For Drax, the mere destruction of their greatest city was not enough; he made himself into the British people's greatest hero just so their collective spirits would be crushed when the nuke hit.
- From Russia with Love: Donovan "Red" Grant has been afflicted with a burning urge to kill during the full moon since his youth. Starting with animals, he graduated to vagrants and tramps before becoming a Serial Killer who targeted young woman in his native Ireland. Escaping justice by joining the military, Grant would defect to the Russians after he realized they could offer him the bloodshed he craved. A ruthless, efficient killer, Grant rose to the position of head executioner of the clandestine group SMERSH and was indulged in being allowed to murder with impunity during the full moon. This even extended to Grant being allowed access to prisons with chainsaws during those nights. Bond's chosen executioner, Grant kills his ally Darko Kerim and proceeds to try to murder Bond and his lover, admitting that all he cares about in life is his ability to murder people.
- Scorpius: Vladimir Scorpius is a weapons dealer who mostly trades with terrorists, making him indirectly responsible for over a thousand deaths before the book even begins. The main story of the novel concerns of him using the cult he has established—The Meek Ones—to produce generations of suicide bombers for sale, simply for more profit. He declares a "holy war" against mankind, inducing his cultists to commit several terrorist acts to kill hundreds of people in the United Kingdom in particular. He is treated with utter revulsion by those who know the real man beneath his persona as Father Valentine, and Bond even states he is the worst criminal he ever had to deal with.
- Young Bond: Dr. Perseus Friend is a cold, cruel man. In SilverFin, he helps Randolph Hellebore create a Super Serum despite its ugly results. In By Royal Command, he stages a car crash with Graf Otto von Schlick to graft his skin onto himself, and has Otto's wife killed. He joins up with the Third Reich and participates in a scheme to inspire the workers of Britain to revolt against their leaders with a Communist front, resulting in the assassination of King George V, which would place the Fascism-friendly Edward VIII back on the throne, allying with Hitler's Germany against Russia. When he has Bond and his Love Interest Roan captive, Friend decides to repay Bond for their previous encounters by flaying Bond alive while recording it for later viewing and forcing Roan to watch, just for the amusement that he'll gain.
Comic Books
- Serpent's Tooth, by Doug Moench, Paul Gulacy, et al.: The madman Indigo is a reptilian-looking man running a base called New Eden. Abducting women from their families to serve as brainwashed concubines, Indigo experiments on them to eventually make them breeding stock for his new world, also converting innocents into degenerated neanderthal-like brutes to serve as muscle. Indigo plans to detonate nukes upon sea cradles, causing waves that crash down on all coasts, 100 miles inland, wiping out 83 percent of all terrestrial life and leaving a new people he can rule himself.
- Dynamite Comics comic, by Warren Ellis
- Slaven Kurjak, from the first arc, VARGR, seems to be a respected Serbian inventor, but in actuality is a former worker at concentration camps during the Kosovo War. Longing to replicate the series of contained tortures and experiments on an unprecedented scale, Kurjak starts peddling a flesh-eating drug throughout Britain as a test pool, resulting in countless lives being agonizingly lost to the drug. Once ousted, Kurjak slaughters the totality of his own staff and gloats to Bond as he leaves him to die in a decontamination chamber that his intention is to turn the entire world into a grand system of horrific torture and cruelty, where he and other like-minded sadists can slake their thirst for hurting people with full impunity.
- Hammerhead Spin-Off, by Andy Diggle & Luca Casalanguida: Victoria Hunt intends to usurp her father's company and take the railgun project Hammerhead for her own by having her father murdered. Secretly the underworld mastermind "Kraken", Victoria seduces Bond and arranges a nuke to be delivered to Yemen to be detonated there. When this fails, Victoria opts to nuke London to wipe the city and everyone in it off the map while blackmailing Britain's allies to fall behind her in a resurgent British Empire. Upon seeing the approach of British forces, Victoria has Hammerhead simply begin vaporizing all of them, intending to rule the world from the shadows in a brutal regime.
- Rafael/Raphael Drake is a beloved philanthropist who secretly plots to remake the would into a corporate dystopia answerable only to himself. The CEO of the environmentally-friendly corporation Phoenix International, Drake poses as a respected anti-nuclear weapons activist who uses his company's wealth and resources to decommission nukes; in reality, he takes these weapons for himself to be used in a private arsenal against anyone who resits his takeover. Key to his plan is a new space weapons platform developed by the US; James Bond is put on Drake's case after it is discovered the latter has stolen the weapons guidance chip for the satellite. When one of his subordinates tries to turn informant for MI6, he orders not just the man's death, but those of his innocent household servants as well; he later murders his mistress by defenestration, forcing Bond to watch, after she is exposed as a deep-cover French agent. As his plan commences, he rockets into space to commandeer the weapons platform personally, the platform and his private arsenal giving him enough power to wipe any dissenters off the face of the Earth.
Edited by ACW on Aug 14th 2019 at 4:51:22 AM
At Power Rangers, please remove the spoiler from Samurai and add the !All spoilers are unmarked. You Have Been Warned!
Please also remove the !!The TV Series thing, and replacing everything after Vrak with this:
Other Media
- Boom! Studios comic & Shattered Grid: Lord Drakkon is an Evil Counterpart of Tommy Oliver who chose to serve Rita Repulsa instead of joining the Rangers, assisting her in conquering the world and destroying the Power Rangers, with him personally killing Zordon, Jason and Billy and becoming a White Ranger after stealing their powers. Killing Rita after she taught him magic and ruling the world in her place, Drakkon also brainwashes a vengeful Kimberly to uses her as his Ranger Slayer. Defeated due to overconfidence, Drakkon ends in the main world and is incarcerated by the Promethea Company. When Saba tries to execute him, Drakkon kills him and uses his remains to create portals to kill the Tommy of the main world before searching Ninjor and tricking him into rebuilding his Morpher to recover part of his powers, before imprisoning and brainwashing him. In a crossover with Hyperforce, Drakkon beheads one of the hostages to force them to help him to get the Serpentera before heavily injuring one of their members while they try to avoid it. Invading the worlds from multiple series to get their Morphers, Drakkon kills multiple versions of himself until almost defeated, saved by his loyal servant Finster 5, who Drakkon kills after Finster tells Drakkon, for his own safety, to stop empowering himself. A cruel tyrant secretly envious towards his counterparts, Lord Drakkon destroyed the multiverse to create a world where everyone loved him.
- Justice League/Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: Brainiac is an android who teams up with Lord Zedd to collect Angel Grove. To do this, Brainiac allows Zedd to enlarge some of his collection as a distraction while he takes the Zords and Coins. Brainiac leaves them stranded on the DC earth as he and Zedd escape to their dimension to take their home city. The Rangers and the League arrive in time to see him collecting Angel Grove and planning to destroy their Earth. When a group infiltrates his ship, Brainiac forces Cyborg to attack his friends. The group eventually find a room full of other captured cities. Taking Alpha 5 prisoner, Brainiac tries to turn him to his side, before trying to kill Superman with Kryptonite. An egomaniac who believed he could foresee every outcome, Brainiac thought all as beneath him.
- Power Rangers (2017): Rita Repulsa, the former Green Ranger, was once a noble hero before her ambition drives her to slaughter her comrades and mortally wound her former friend Zordon. Resurfacing countless years later, Rita descends on the fishing town of Angel Grove and starts brutally murdering innocent people for their gold to regain her powers—in one instance tearing a homeless man apart to get at his gold teeth—burning down an entire populated building to demonstrate the power of her Putties. Capturing and then killing a man to draw in the Rangers, Rita tortures the location out of Earth's Zeo Crystal out of the Rangers and then callously kills Billy (temporarily) in front of the others once he wears out his use to her. Finally rising up a monstrous Zord of her own making that she calls Goldar, Rita starts decimating Angel Grove to find and take the powers of the Zeo Crystal. Rita's ultimate goal is nothing short of absolute godhood by harnessing the power of the Zeo Crystal—consequentially killing off all life on the planet, something Rita is only too gleeful to do. Barely resembling her original iteration, Rita brings a level of incredible seriousness to this otherwise lighthearted and fun film and is ultimately nothing less than a psychotic, murderous monster.
Edited by ACW on Aug 14th 2019 at 10:03:06 AM
Saints Row: Gat Out of Hell is a red link for some reason, but it's a legit page.
What's a Null Edit? Just click on edit page, then save without changing anything?
Edited by ACW on Aug 14th 2019 at 12:09:35 PM
On Administrivia, please remove the index tags around Circular Redirect so that it's properly indexed, as discussed here
.
Edited by Twiddler on Aug 14th 2019 at 11:45:29 AM
May you please make Sinkhole Magnet as a redirect to Pothole Magnet? It makes sense because the page says those tropes are potholed usually when they do not fit.
Limpin' with the bizkit.At Internet Backdraft please add Christmas Rushed and Damsel Scrappy entries thanks.
- Christmas Rushed: Production of the work was forced to finish faster so that the final product could be released in time for the holidays.
- Damsel Scrappy: The Distressed Damsel is more trouble than she's worth, making the audience wonder why the other characters keep rescuing her.
Please add:
- In Flawed, Logan and his family are highly religious, and part of his hatred of Celestine stems from her being a "sinner". He forces her to repent before leaving her alone, and his alibi is that he was at Bible Study with his parents.
On MagnificentBastard.Film, fix the last line in the Con Air entry.
"A compelling villain who retains a few moral standards such as his fears of rapists," to "A compelling villain who retains a few moral standards such as his hatred of rapists, Cyrus constantly plays the government for fools and comes perilously close to a free and clear escape."
Why so serious?Few quick things.
Please cut Monique from The Vampire Diaries.
Please remove the James Bond stuff from Comic Books: I to Z and add James Bond to Comic Books for examples with their own pages.
Thanks.
Edited by ACW on Aug 16th 2019 at 5:28:30 AM
After a move to a disambiguated title, the page Film.The Maltese Falcon is now a disambiguation.
However, just as I was about to add it to the Ambiguity Index, I realized it doesn't cover just the films, and thus it should be in Main/.
Thus, please create the page in Main/ The Maltese Falcon with the current content of Film.The Maltese Falcon. The latter page can then be turned into a redirect toward Film.The Maltese Falcon 1941, as it's what most of the wicks are about (don't worry, they're in the process of being corrected too).
Thanks in advance.
Hi all,
I was going to edit Horny Devils because I found a link to a dead Imageshack account. But it is locked. So if anyone cares, in: Tabletop Games -> Dungeons And Dragons
In earlier editions, the Erinyes were still quite sensual.
The image link can be changed to: upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/ff/D%26DErinyes.JPG
Which is the correct AD&D Monster Manual image for Erinyes captured by the other wiki.
Edited by Kompera on Aug 16th 2019 at 3:13:44 PM
If you want to change any image, it has to be taken to Image Pickin' Forums
.
Ah, sorry.
Edited by DelphineTheDelphox on Aug 16th 2019 at 1:34:45 AM
RIP KissAnime.I don't think he wants to edit the page image, he just wants to update a link to an image website, which is something anyone can do.
By the way, the Visual Novels folder should come before Webcomics on that page.
Edited by Piterpicher on Aug 16th 2019 at 10:39:32 AM
Currently mostly inactive. An incremental game I tested: https://galaxy.click/play/176 (Gods of Incremental)![]()
He's not talking about the page image. He's talking about an example under Dungeons & Dragons, which includes a link to imageshack.
Edit:
Edited by bitemytail on Aug 16th 2019 at 1:32:35 AM


Game of Thrones S8 E6: "The Iron Throne": Please pothole "Bran's rule could conceivably last for multiple lifetimes" to Immortal Ruler.
You've got roaming bands of armed, aggressive, tyrannical plumbers coming to your door, saying "Use our service, or else!"