Special:Badtitle/NS90:Talk:Complete Monster/Power Rangers/Examples that should remain here.


 * Dark Specter - There's nothing to his character that mitigates his status as the Ultimate Evil who is culpable for all the evil done by Astronema and other villains in the first four series'.


 * Master Org - As Narmy as one might find his Peter Lorre/Tommy Wisseau-esque acting and the tone of the Wild Force series overall, the fact that Adler was a human beings who had friends, a career, and humanizing qualities yet chose to become a monster who shed all such qualities makes him one of the franchise's most despicable villains. His actions are suitably heinous, he's feared and reviled by other characters, his excuse is (as covered) very flimsy, and he shows absolutely no regret for what he became and what he did to his former friends.


 * Mesogog - He's one of the franchises' most dead serious villains, was motivated by racism and trying to commit a form of genocide against humanity (turning an entire species into his own species still counts as the removal of an entire species from existence), and the casual Mind Rape gives him additional heinous points. And despite starting off manifesting as a Split Personality, he gained enough sentience to split from his host and become his own being with full moral agency and capacity for choices. He's around the same level of evil as pre-Villain Decay Lord Zedd, but unlike Zedd, he gained no mitigating features in his entire run.


 * Flurious - He cared nothing for his own brother, dealt out nasty torture and attempted homicides to enemies and allies alike, froze other an entire populated city ala Ghetsis, and murders his own allies for entirely selfish reasons. He was deemed so evil by the narrative that no eyebrows were raised when the Red Ranger killed him while he was down and defenseless, 'cause he was that bad and needed to be taken out.


 * Serrator - He shares culpability in some of Master Xandread's crimes, and his own solo crimes plus the lack of redeeming features puts him in this trope's territory.