Hidden Villain



""At last, the masks had fallen away. The strings of the puppets had become visible, and the hands of the prime mover exposed.""

- Legacy of Kain

A situation where a Big Bad exists in the Story Arc, but his identity is not known until much later. This Hidden Villain could be a result of the heroes going against The Faceless, requiring only a look under the mask to understand everything. In most cases, this is an inversion of the Hidden Agenda Villain, where we know that something bad is happening and the Driving Question is the identity of the one behind it all.

Usually a Magnificent Bastard post-reveal. Compare Man Behind the Man, except without the first man. It can only overlap if the first man is obviously a Disc One Final Boss.

If the Hidden Villain turns out to be a previously known antagonist, see Hijacked by Ganon. If it was someone who was never suspected at all, then the trope is The Dog Was the Mastermind.

Anime and Manga

 * 20th Century Boys
 * Bleach (It Was His Sled. Even so, this particular Reveal was quite the Wham! Episode.)
 * While Fullmetal Alchemist introduced its main antagonist quite early on, the 2003 anime plays this straight.
 * Lord Baan/Vearn from Dragon Quest: Dai no Daibouken. Of course, when he is revealed, he's pretty unimposing. Until much, much later, when you learn that
 * Trigun appears to have an obvious big bad at first: a fatalistic killer named Legato Bluesummers, who has seemingly assembled a private army just to destroy Vash. Midway through the Legato arc, we're given a flashback episode that reveals the existence of Vash's brother, Knives. A few episodes later, we finally learn that Legato has been acting under Knives' orders all along, and his true objective isn't to kill Vash, but to
 * One Piece:
 * Dr. Vegapunk, maybe. The brains behind most of the technology used by the World Government (such as artificial Devil Fruit, Seastone, and the Pacifistas), he has yet to appear in the flesh. However, while he works for the tyrannical World Government, his personal motivations and moral stance are unknown.
 * Also,
 * Yu-Gi-Oh! examples:
 * In the original series, the Dark Spirit of the Ring makes his presence known in the first season; however, its true identity of remains unknown to anyone until the final act.
 * Also, during the Virtual Nightmare Arc, Noah is a Dragon-in-Chief until the true Big Bad and orchestrator of the plot - Gozaburo - makes himself known in the final two episodes.
 * Similarly, in Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, Darkness/Nightshroud's influence is felt throughout the whole series, but he only actually appears in the final arc.
 * Also, in Season 1, Kagemaru's role as Arc Villain and leader of the Seven Stars remains concealed until the final two episodes of the arc.
 * In Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V, the true big bad and orchestrator of the dimensional war is, something that remains a secret until the final arc.
 * from My Hero Academia. While his dark shadow falls on the whole series, he doesn't officially makes an appearance until the end of Season 2.

Comic Books

 * Fables
 * The Comedian's murderer and the person responsible for the events of Watchmen. It turns out that . The picture at the top of the page is this hidden villain from the film adaptation.
 * The first Sin City hid the Serial Killer Kevin until halfway through and hid Cardinal Roark until just before the end. Because of The Movie, most people realize who they are but it was a specific mystery at first.
 * Spider-Man examples:
 * In the iconic Amazing Spider-Man #50, Spidey at first believes his foe - who has stolen medicine needed to cure Aunt May of radiation sickness - is "the Master Planner", a criminal mastermind who has been making a name for himself in New York; eventually, he learns that the Master Planner is none other than his old foe, Dr. Octopus.
 * It is not revealed until the finale of the Clone Saga that the Big Bad behind it all is long-thought-dead villain Norman Osborn.
 * Back in The Golden Age of Comic Books, Captain Marvel's foe Mr. Mind was this in the storyline where he was introduced. For a full two years (real time) everyone believed this Evil Genius directing the actions of the Monster Society of Evil (and most of the Nazis, Adolf Hitler himself his Unwitting Pawn) was a human villain, when in fact, he was a super-intelligent alien worm. There's even one well-known hilarious scheme where the the hero shoos away a worm that landed on his shoulder, as it's distracting him from investigating the villain's scheme, not considering that the worm might be the villain himself.

Film

 * The Element of Crime, made worse by the fact that the elusive child killer may actually {{spoiler|have been dead even before the events portrayed in the movie}.} And the whole movie is a flashback.
 * In The Usual Suspects, the mythical Keyser Soze is mentioned right from the beginning - yet his involvement in the events isn't at least somewhat understood until the climax, and only fully comprehensible at the very end.
 * It's pretty common knowledge by now, but...
 * The film version of Sin City has a scene similar to the one pictured above.
 * in Mystery Team.
 * In Kill Bill vol. 1, Bill himself (being the orchestrator of the attack on the Bride and initiating her revenge plan) is never fully seen, with scenes where he appears cropping out his head to avoid showing his face. He doesn't make a full appearance until the second movie.
 * The Blair Witch from The Blair Witch Project, assuming she even exists at all. Few movies use the Nothing Is Scarier Trope better than this one.
 * Palpatine (AKA Darth Sidious AKA the Emperor) in the Star Wars prequels.
 * The villain in Duel is a driver of an old, rusty tanker truck who, for unknown reasons, relentlessly pursues the hapless protagonist. Director Steven Spielberg is clearly trying to keep the guy hidden, the viewers only seeing his arms and boots in a few brief scenes.
 * In Hereditary, the face behind the evil force plaguing the protagonists remains unseen,

Literature

 * Despite adaptations that show otherwise, Sherlock Holmes' arch-enemy Professor Moriarty appears only once in the original novels by Arthur Conan Doyle. He is mentioned by Holmes - reminiscently - in five stories, and plays a direct role in "The Valley of Fear", but never actually shows his face. His one appearance in person is at the end of the final (chronologically) story in the original franchise, "The Final Problem", during a final showdown with Holmes in which both of them, presumably, perish. Even then, Dr. Watson - who narrates the story - never encounters him at all.
 * In The Dark Tower, the Crimson King isn't mentioned till book 4, from which point details are given bit by bit. However, readers familiar with King's greater universe (particularly those who have read The Stand) might be savvy enough to catch on a bit earlier.
 * The dragon-snakes from The Death Gate Cycle are the collective Big Bad and the incarnation of evil in that multiverse, given form by magic gone awry. As such, they're technically the ultiamte villains all along, but are only introduced directly in the fourth book, Serpent Mage.
 * For the first three-quarters of the first book of Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, it's obvious that there is a Big Bad - Evil Sorcerer Pryrates is an obvious villain, but as he's getting his power through a Deal with the Devil, he's also obviously not the ultimate string puller. Still, none of the main characters know who he is. It turns out to be the vengeful Sithi prince Ineluki, resurrected as the undead entity called the Storm King, who had only been mentioned in scraps of legends prior to The Reveal.
 * The Crippled God, Big Bad of Malazan Book of the Fallen, was only introduced in person in the third book, though in hindsight he'd been pretty heavily foreshadowed in the first two.
 * In Warbreaker, the Big Bad is hidden for almost the entire novel, and the most obvious candidates are eliminated one by one - either by proving harmless, or being revealed as only a cog in the big machine.
 * Also from a work by Brandon Sanderson, it was very obvious from the beginning of Mistborn that the Lord Ruler won his position by saving the world from something even worse. In the second book, it was revealed the entity was still around,.
 * In Fate of the Jedi, from the very first book something had started to make various Jedi go crazy, but none of the already introduced villains (President Evil Daala and an isolated but ambitious cult of Sith) seemed to have the power to cause it. In the third book, readers are introduced to an enigmatic woman with tremendous Force powers named Abeloth..
 * In the first of the Otherland books, the focus occasionally shifts to an Egyptian simulation ruled by someone using Osiris as an avatar, who gives out orders and makes commentary that bears suspicious relation to other events in the book, but these connections are never actually stated. Late in the volume, the user is revealed to be a man named Felix Jongleur, leader of the Grail Brotherhood and creator of the Otherland system.
 * Most of the plotline of the Inda series is driven by Evil Sorcerer Erkric's scheming, as he's the one driving the Venn to be more warlike and expansionistic - but he's not directly introduced until the last third of the second book, and his central role doesn't become apparent until later. This is at least in part because the Venn are initially portrayed as a faceless military juggernaut, though - he's introduced at the same time as Prince Rajnir and Commander Durasnir, the other two main Venn characters.

Live-Action TV

 * Lost, in which the fact that there even is a Big Bad is not immediately stated. After several possible major antagonists are introduced over the first five seasons, the true Big Bad is not revealed until the season five finale.
 * Desperate Housewives used this several times. The identity of the aggressor in season 6 was hidden this way until the reveal.
 * During the third series of Doctor Who, the subplots taking place in present day London throw around the name Mr. Saxon. In the three-parter that ends the season, he is revealed to be none other than
 * The events of series 5 are caused by someone or something capable of, accompanied by the Arc Words "silence will fall".
 * The reveal of just who was really behind the Dollhouse and the Rossum Corporation had a very high HSQ when it was revealed in season 2.
 * Happened in Gekisou Sentai Carranger: halfway through the season, the Bowzocks were believed to be the Big Bads until Exhaus finally shows his hand.
 * A really bizarre example comes from Breaking Bad, where the main character, Walter White, is the Hidden Villain Protagonist to his own brother-in-law, DEA Agent Hank Schrader.
 * Bones did this with the serial killer Gormagon as well as the Gravedigger, whose identities were only revealed late or in the end of their story arcs.
 * At least two members of the Person of Interest Rogues Gallery finally appeared onscreen, after several episodes of Foreshadowing and references, as that week's person of interest in disguise. Namely,.

Newspaper Comics

 * In Peanuts, the mean cat next door that Snoopy trolls (and always regrets doing so) is never seen on-panel. Also, while Snoopy often fights the Red Baron in his Power Fantasies as the World War I Flying Ace, the Baron himself is always offscreen.

Video Games

 * Planescape: Torment:
 * BlazBlue: The Big Bad isn't revealed until the console-only True Ending of Calamity Trigger, and isn't fought until Continuum Shift.
 * In Valkyrie Profile: Covenant of the Plume, we know that Hel is the Big Bad of the game having orchestrated all of the events for Wylfred to wreak as much sin as possible, and give Garm some fun. However, Hel is only mentioned, and when she talks, we never see her. She does show up in the first game when she is stopped by the Einherjar that have been sent to Valhalla. Easy to miss if you don't realize that each line of text in the review has a cutscene associated with it.
 * The Big Bad/Murderer of the first Laura Bow game turns out to be, when very little evidence suggests this.
 * and from Assassin's Creed and Assassin's Creed: Revelations, respectively.
 * Deadly Premonition has this with but alludes to the Raincoat Killer many times as being some unknown entity.
 * World of Warcraft: In the "Deaths of Chromie" scenario, the player has to prevent no less than eight assassins from killing Chromie and attacking the Bronze Dragonshrine. While Chromie believes some mastermind is behind it all, this villain is never identified, even if the player is successful.
 * Also, the "Shadowy Figures" who seem to be behind the trouble in the various Pet Dungeons. Given their voices, we can assume this group is made up of a tauren, a night elf, a blood elf, a troll, and a gnome (quite a diverse group) - but they are always, naturally, seen in shadow, and nothing is yet known of their motives.
 * In Don't Starve, Charlie is never actually seen in-game, because she can only attack the player in total darkness. No matter how fast the player is activating a light source, he will never see her in-game; in fact, Charlie has no game sprite, being more of an environmental hazard. She's only seen in the flesh in some cutscenes, including the trailer to the sequel when she tries - but fails - to reconcile with Wilson.
 * In the Carmen Sandiego franchise's original Edutainment games, Carmen herself does not appear personally until you reach the Ace Detective rank. Television and animated adaptations avert this however, having her show up quite a lot if not making her the actual protagonist.
 * The Big Bad of the Five Nights at Freddy's hidden for most of the run of the franchise, appearing as "the Purple Man" in some mini-games, appearing in person as Springtrap in the third game, albeit as a ghost haunting an animatronic. It isn't until the graphic novel The Silver Eyes that his name is revealed to be, the story also showing his true appearance and revealing much of his backstory.

Webcomics

 * MAG-ISA: Look at these guys with darkened faces sitting around a table planning nefarious schemes for you and me...
 * The Enemy in Harkovast is mentioned on the first page, but has never been shown in the comic. Who he is has only been hinted at on the comics forum, where his full title (The King in the West) has been stated.

Web Original

 * Broken Saints
 * Given the general aura of mystery surrounding the SCP Foundation, it has many:
 * The 05 Council combines this with Mysterious Backer and Evil Mentor; seeing how even rank and file members of the Foundation itself admit to being a Necessary Evil, it is likely its leaders feel the same. The 05 Council is composed of thirteen (probably) individuals who head the Foundation from the shadows, their very existence hidden to all but members with Clearance Level 2 or higher. The website itself gives at least three contradictory files for each member, suggesting all but one (at most) is a Red Herring, and whenever they appear in an adaptation, they are shrouded by dark silhouettes. Some are likely not even human, being SCPs themselves.
 * The same can be said of "the Administrator", who is mentioned in some stories. He (or she, or they or it) may be the 05 Council's superior, a pseudonym used by one of them, or just a fiction they created to distract anyone who might try to uncover their secrets. If the Administrator is real, they stay out of sight.
 * There's also the Ethics Committee, which may be less "villain" than the rest of the Foundation but still of the Well-Intentioned Extremist type; while they recognize the need for cruelty and torture on occasion to prevent greater evils, they're job is to assure the Foundation doesn't go too far. Should the Foundation's "necessary evils" become "unnecessary", they act to correct that and punish the member(s) responsible (via reprimanding, demoting, or in some cases, executing the offender.) As such, they have access to data and information even the 05 Council does not. (As in, they know all the info that's been [REDACTED] and [DATA EXPUNGED] in the documentation of each and every SCP.) As might be assumed, their identities are completely unknown (lacking even the deceptive files of the 05 Council), and most other members of the Foundation are terrified of them.
 * Dr. Wondertainment (a toymaker who has created many SCPs) is this - if he is a villain - although it's not clear if the name refers to the owner, president, and/or CEO of a company or the company itself. There are many suspects, with some actually believing Dr. Wondertainment is a member of the Foundation.
 * And there are many minor examples, such as whoever built SCP-1678, aka "Under London". The Foundation believes the creator of this underground city (who violated many crimes against humanity by doing so) is a member of British Parliament, but until solid proof is obtained, accusing any of them of such would be unwise. SCP-3999 is some sort of sadistic demon who tortured an unfortunate researcher for millions of years (to his point of view) until that researcher made a Heroic Sacrifice to destroy it; nothing more than that is known about the monster, although the victim's notes claim it is "indescribable".
 * The very existence of Salem in RWBY was hidden from the audience until the final minutes of Volume 3 -- and even then, exactly who she was and what she was planning was left for future episodes. And her existence remained a secret to the vast majority of the people of Remnant until the middle of Volume 8 -- some five years later.

Western Animation

 * Slade in Teen Titans starts out like this, being introduced in the first episode as a shadowy Chessmaster, but not even named or revealed to the heroes until later (and it's even longer before they meet him face-to-face and learn of his plans). He's also a Hidden Agenda Villain, ironically - meaning that for his first few appearances, all we know about him is that he exists and is up to no good.
 * In Wolverine and the X-Men, pretty much the whole first season was masterminded by . They're not introduced until just before the Grand Finale, and aren't truly The Man Behind the Man because the only character they were directly controlling.
 * During the third season of Ben 10, horror monster-themed aliens show up performing seemingly random tasks through several episodes. During the season finale, they are revealed to have been building a superweapon to allow Ghostfreak to achieve world domination.
 * The Hunter in Bambi - while many fans regard him as one of the darkest villains in Disney, he's never truly seen, with only a very distinctive Leitmotif indicating that he's there.
 * In Darkwing Duck, F.O.W.L (the Fiendish Organization for World Larceny) is headed by three shadowy figures that are never named, and only one of them has ever been heard to speak. For the most part, Darkwing only deals with underlings like Steelbeak,