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{{trope}}
[[File:cardcarrying.png|link=Checkerboard Nightmare|frame|A scene from Checkerboard Nightmare's [https://web.archive.org/web/20121122010826/http://www.checkerboardnightmare.com/retro/20060401.shtml concept] for a new
{{quote|'''Burns''': I'm absolutely evil.
'''Bart''': You're preaching to the choir, man.
'''Burns''': What do I have to do, grow a [[Beard of Evil|devil beard]]?
|''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]''}}
Appealing to my better nature? I'm a villain! Here is [[My Card]]! "[[Steven Ulysses Perhero|Eve L. Duehr]]: [[Academy of Evil]] graduate, [[Take Over the World|aspiring]] [[Evil Overlord|tyrant]], [[Kick the Dog|kicker of kittens]], and [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|spontaneous singer of]] ''[[Barney and Friends
Villains like this may be greedy, violent, [[Badass]], etc. but most importantly, they are [[Obviously Evil|Evil]]. It's in the job description. They refer to ''themselves'' as Evil, with a capital "E". Stretch it out to "Eeeeeevil" for emphasis. (They may even pronounce the "I" with emphasized shortness. Ee-vill. Like the froo-it of the dev-ill.) Terminal cases even require their minions to call them "[[The Magnificent|Your Evilness]]". In fact, calling them evil, vile, ruthless, or any generally negative epithet will be an [[Insult Backfire]] and be [[Arson, Murder, and Admiration|taken as the kindest of compliments.]]
The '''Card Carrying Villain''' demands [[Villain Cred|to be respected and feared and on top of the heap over everyone else]] because [[Evil Is Cool]] and [[Good Is Dumb]].
Thus, they are expected to [[Kick the Dog]] and never [[Pet the Dog]]. If they acted differently, [[Slave to PR|they'd lose their Evil ranking]]. Especially ironic if the reason they [[Face Heel Turn|fell]] was because they wanted freedom from constraints on their actions. Whatever action they as a good guy wanted to do is considered "bad", so they have to do other bad things as well now. After a while, they usually forget about [[Motive Decay|whatever goal it was that turned them Evil]] in the first place. So...in a very odd way, they're very much [[The Fettered]]; since their actions are bound by the expectation of Evil.
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# ''[[Despotism Justifies the Means|Control]]'' - the Villain wants to rule; be it a gang, a city, a state, the country, [[Take Over the World|the world]], or a similar goal, and have everyone else below them obey their every whim.
# ''[[The Corrupter|Corruption]]'' - the Villain wants to [[The Corrupter|turn other people Evil]]. Give in to [[The Dark Side]]!
# ''[[Chaotic Evil|Destruction]]'' - the Villain wants to destroy and kill [[For the Evulz|for its own sake]]. [[Omnicidal Maniac|Taken to the extreme]], the first and second spheres may recognize that this includes ''them'' as well, so this often results in [[Evil Versus Oblivion]] or [[Eviler Than Thou]] if the villain teams up with the heroes so they can [[Take Over the World]] at a later date. (You can't take over the world if it's [[The End of the World
A [[Black Cloak]], a low-ranking [[Terrible Trio]], an [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain]], or someone who's succumbed to [[The Dark Side]] is usually most likely to identify themselves this way.
A subversion is for these folks to ''not'' actually be cruel, greedy, or unnecessarily violent, but [[Punch Clock Villain|just doing their jobs]]. A [[Noble Demon]] is a
[[Tropes Are Not Good|If not done right (and it is very, very easily done wrong)]], that is to say, if the card is [[Narm|too serious or obvious]], the result can be cheesy, annoying, and [[Anvilicious]]. (Of all the evil people in [[Real Life]], how many have ever ''self-identified'' as evil? [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]], [[Joseph Stalin|Stalin]], and [[Mao
In the final stage, you have a villain who insists on justifying their actions because "it's what villains are ''supposed to do''"; see [[Contractual Genre Blindness]].
Not to be confused with [[My Card]], where the villain emphasizes their evilness in this trope, [[My Card]] actually deals with a business card (and is not always for villains). For people who fight using cards, see [[Death Dealer]]. Oh, and this is also not to be confused with the villains in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'', as ''everybody'' [[Serious Business|seems to carry cards]] in that series.
Contrast with [[Knight Templar]], a villain who completely believes that they are good. They can become a Card Carrying Villain if they have a [[Heel Realization]] and decide to keep being a villain anyway. Also contrast [[Moral Myopia]], where the villain doesn't consider the evil he's doing to others to be wrong. taken too far, the villain might become a [[Complete Monster]], especially when he/she has no moral restraints.
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Expect them to have [[Dark Is Evil|relations with the dark]] and/or have [[Bad Powers, Bad People|evil powers.]]
See also [[
Why "card-carrying"? See [[Card-Carrying Villain/Trivia|the Trivia page.]]
{{examples}}
== Advertising ==
* In [https://www.ispot.tv/ad/AqCt/etrade-benedict-arnold this commercial] for E*TRADE, Benedict Arnold seems proud of his reputation as the "infamous traitor".
== Anime and Manga ==
* ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!]]'' gives us [[Bigger Bad|Yami Marik]], the [[Super-Powered Evil Side]] of [[Big Bad|Marik Ishtar]] in the Battle City Arc. While Marik is primarily motivated by {{spoiler|wanting revenge on the Pharoh, the man he believed responsible for killing his father}}, Yami Marik is primarily motivated by [[Omnicidal Maniac|wanting to kill the universe]], kicking as many dogs as he can along the way.
** In the 4Kids dub, Marik Isthar also falls into this trope, going from a sympathetic motive to simply wanting to [[Take Over the World]].
* The Digimon Kaiser from ''[[Digimon Adventure 02]]'' refered to himself as evil...{{spoiler|before he [[Sixth Ranger|became a good guy]].}}
** However, his entire over-the-top villainous persona makes sense when you discover that {{spoiler|1=he thinks the Digital World isn't real, more like a very interactive [[Video Game Cruelty Potential|video game]]. His constant [[Kick the Dog]]-ery is similar to any ''[[Marathon
* Happōsai from ''[[Ranma
* Pixy Misa in the ''[[Pretty Sammy]]'' series is the self-professed evil mistress of chaos and destruction
* Ladd Russo from ''[[Baccano
* Lelouch from ''[[
* ''[[Mobile Suit Gundam 00]]'' has the freaking incarnation of the third sphere, Ali Al-Saachez. Gundam series generally (pretend to) have multidimensional villains with some understandable motivations. Or, at least, villains that are good at self-justification and excuses. Ali is probably the only villain in the entire franchise to readily admit that he loves war for war's sake, that he commits his (numerous) crimes [[For the Evulz]], and that this makes him the worst sort of person in the world. He has absolutely no problem with it.
* Xellos from ''[[Slayers]]'' is this whenever he isn't siding with the protagonists. Being a powerful demon in the service of powers that want to destroy the world and feeding off from negative human emotions does that to a person. He makes an effort to avoid killing the good guys because they're such fun, though.
* Dio from ''[[
* Evangeline of ''[[
* ''[[Majin Tantei Nougami Neuro]]'' has Neuro, an actual demon who enjoys eating mysteries; while he claims to be evil, he never kills humans and tends to be more an amoral ''[[Troll]]'' than a "monster". On the other hand, we have Sicks, who is a [[Complete Monster]] and doing it [[For the Evulz]].
* ''[[
* Most of the major villains in ''[[
* The Huckebein family in ''[[
{{quote|
'''Fortis''': ''(While smiling and doing an [[Smug Snake|"Oh, please" hand gesture)]]'' Didn't we introduce ourselves like that? }}
* Hagurou Dou is one of these in ''[[Wolf Guy Wolfen Crest]]'', as his goal in life is to be seen as a cold blooded monster. A rare example that is NOT [[Played for Laughs]], considering [[Complete Monster|what he is]].
* Mint from "Trouble Chocolate" is a parody of this.
* Several villains (and [[Protagonist-Centered Morality|heroes]]) in ''[[
* Lust from ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist (
* Team Rocket (the whole organisation, not the [[Terrible Trio]]) in ''[[Pokémon (
{{quote|
== Comic Books ==
* [[Darkseid]] openly admits to being an evil god and that he desires to crush all happiness and free will in the Universe.
* [[Miracleman
* Most supervillain teams have names which identify them as evil; The Masters of Evil, the [[Justice League (animation)|Injustice League]], the Secret Society of Super-Villains, etc. Occasionally, as with the [[X-Men (Comic Book)|Brotherhood of Evil Mutants]], it's explained later that the characters [[What Is Evil?|don't see themselves as evil]], but are aware others do and [[Dangerously Genre Savvy|feel they can use this to their advantage]].
** The film version of ''[[X-Men (
** Similarly, recent issues of [[Savage Dragon]] have subverted this a bit with the new [[Overlord]] referring to his team (the Vicious Circle) simply as The Circle. Since there are a number of similarities between Magneto's Brotherhood and [[Overlord]]'s Circle, it's arguable that one is in response to the other.
** In the comics, one version of the Brotherhood working for the US Government and led by Mystique takes a smart idea and calls itself by the innocuous moniker "Freedom Force" (Predating [[Freedom Force]] by almost 20 years).
* Ava Lord from the ''[[Sin City]]'' story "A Dame to Kill For" identifies herself as evil in her [[Evil Gloating]] speech to Dwight McCarthy, who she has just manipulated into {{spoiler|murdering her husband Damien so that she can inherit his money}}:
{{quote|
* In Rick Veitch's early-2000s run on ''[[
* ''Queen of the Universe'': [http://www.eyebeam.com/Queen1991/index.php?num=278 Dober-Man].
* Herr Starr of ''[[Preacher (Comic Book)]]'' starts out as a [[Knight Templar]], but, in the end, admits, however unrepentantly, that he's become a "monster" obsessed with hatred and revenge.
* The very first appearance of [[Captain America (comics)]]'s archenemy, the Red Skull, had him exit stage left saying "I'll be back - with ''more murder!''"
* [[The Joker]] once identified himself to Black Canary as "genuine, card-carrying, lock-me-up-throw-away-the-key lunatic!" It sparked a letter column debate (remember those?) about whether or not insane people could recognize themselves as being, well, insane.
* Dirk Anger, Director of H.A.T.E in ''[[
{{quote|
* During [[Dark Reign (
* In ''[[Transformers Generation 2]]'', Starscream ends up begging Optimus Prime to take the Matrix back, as he ''doesn't want to be good!''.
* In ''[[Judge Dredd]]'', Pa Angel is openly trying to raise his sons to be the "meanest, orneriest, baddiest bunch a' men that ever lived." The boys are only too happy to learn from him.
* Contagion, the villain of the first arc of ''[[Wolverine]]: The Best There Is''.
{{quote|
* Set, apparent leader of [[The Syndicate|The Order]] in ''[[
{{quote|
* [[Bomb Queen]]
* In ''[[X-Men (Comic Book)|X-Men]]'', Sabretooth thinks himself a violent, animalistic savage who lives only to hunt and kill, and is ''very'' proud of this fact. [[Complete Monster|He does]] [[Ax Crazy|a very good]] [[Psycho for Hire|job at living]] [[I'm a Humanitarian|up to this]].
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* In classic ''[[James Bond]]'' movies starring Sean Connery, the top villains are brought together by an organization named SPECTRE - that literally stands for "Special Executive for Counter-intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion".
* Parodied with Dr. Evil in ''[[Austin Powers]]'', who went to [[Morally-Ambiguous Doctorate|evil medical school]] and is disappointed that his son wants to be a non-evil veterinarian...or perhaps work in a petting zoo.
{{quote|
'''Scott:''' You always do that! (Storms off) }}
** Later in the movie:
{{quote|
'''Dr. Evil:''' DOCTOR Evil. I didn't spend six years in evil medical school to be called 'mister' thank you very much. }}
* The main villain of ''[[Time Bandits]]'' is the embodiment of evil and referred to simply as "Evil". It's interesting to note what the screenwriters consider evil. He's obsessed with efficiency, technology, and work. At one point, he [[Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad|laments feeling "good",]] and his minions sympathize.
* The Chief Blue Meanie in the movie ''[[
** The Chief subverts his "No only" order moments later when he summons the Flying Glove:
{{quote|
'''Max:''' Someone running, Glove.
'''Chief:''' Yes. But you'll soon put a stop to that, won't you Glovey? Go, Glove, point and having pointed...'''''pounce, go!''''' }}
* The villains in ''[[Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band]]'' are as card-carrying as it gets. "WE HATE JOY. WE HATE LOVE. WE LOVE MONEY." "[I am] such a dirty, dirty old man!", etc.
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*** They love (in the sense of "really like a lot") money, and they hate love (in the sense of "experiencing literal love for a person or pet").
* The 'cult' (see [[The Other Wiki]]) film ''Evil Roy Slade'' features this in <s>Slade</s> spades. He even yells at one of his henchmen who stays loyally at his side when the law offers a reward for him. Before that operation, he goes over the basics for his gang: 'Sneaking, Lying, Arrogance, Dirtiness and Evil. Put them all together and they spell "Slade!" '
* A somewhat...[[Narm|jarring]] variant in the first [[Spider
{{quote|
'''Green Goblin:''' *Dramatic entrance* [[Evil Is Hammy|"FINISH IT!!"]]
'''Aunt May:''' "From EEEVIL!" }}
* Ratigan of ''[[The Great Mouse Detective]]'' is no [[Harmless Villain]], but in the spirit of Shakespearean villains, he loves boasting about how good he is at being bad.
* In ''[[The Mummy Trilogy|The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor]]'', the First Chinese Emperor's motive for taking over the world is, get this, that ''he hates freedom''.
* Mr. Freeze in ''[[Batman and Robin (
* In the ''[[Dragnet]]'' movie, the villain heads the organisation P.A.G.A.N. - [[Fun
* In ''[[A Nightmare
** Though he eventually did succeed at his [[Ghostly Goals]]...and continued killing anyway, since, hey, it's fun, and just because his revenge is complete, that doesn't mean he can't just go on slaughtering.
*** At ''first'' it seemed that way. Then ''Freddy's Dead'' revealed that he had an agenda against pretty much all the parents of Springwood for lobbying to have his daughter taken away from him for her own safety, and he wanted to get back at even those parents who weren't among his killers by taking ''their'' children away from them. And then in ''Freddy vs. Jason'', a character mentions, contrary to Nancy's assessment in Part III, that some of the kids of the town still ''are'' related to his killers. [[Continuity Snarl|You see how it goes.]]
* El Nebuloso in ''Yellowbeard''.
* Most [[Disney Animated Canon|Disney villains]] are far too self-deluded to even ''think'' of labeling themselves as villains or just flat-out don't care. Then there's Maleficent, who, [[Evil Is Cool|magnificently]] and [[Chewing the Scenery|scenery-chompingly]] enough, proclaims herself "mistress of all evil."
** Mad Madam Mim in ''[[The Sword in
** ''[[Aladdin (Disney film)|Aladdin]]'''s Jafar doesn't carry quite as big a card as Maleficent, mainly because [[The Grand Vizier]] can't actually ''say'' he's evil (though he ALWAYS is), but he doesn't seem to take offense when called "Your Rottenness" or "Oh Mighty Evil One" by [[Polly Wants a Microphone|his parrot]] and...calling him a snake leads to an ''epic'' [[Insult Backfire]].
*** "That's ''Sultan'' Vile Betrayal to you!!"
* ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean]]'';
{{quote|
'''Jack Sparrow''': Pirate. }}
** In that case, it was more because Jack was being pragmatic than evil. As he points out later, the only things that matter in the world "are what a man can do and what a man ''can't'' do", and points out that if he'll die in fair combat, "well then, that's not much incentive for me to fight fair, now is it?"
{{quote|
'''Blackbeard''': I'm a bad man. }}
* Bluto in the ''[[Popeye]]'' film, who has an entire song number boasting of his being mean.
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* Wilson Croft from ''[[Flubber]]''. "I'm petty and corrupt...I have profited from your ideas. To be honest, I'm here this weekend to steal your fiancee and make her my wife."
* Lampshaded and then fully embraced by Tony Montana in ''[[Scarface]]'' in the restaurant scene.
{{quote|
* Jean-Baptiste Emanuel Zorg from ''[[The Fifth Element]]'' is a great example, though he tries to justify this behavior by claiming that life comes from chaos and, therefore, destruction actually creates and improves life.
{{quote|
'''Zorg:''' *Smirking* I know. }}
* Bowler Hat Guy from ''[[Meet the Robinsons]]'' aspires to be one of these. He's [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain|not very good]] [[Hilarity Ensues|at it]].
* In ''[[Kung Pow! Enter the Fist]]'', [[Fluffy the Terrible|Betty]] is the loyal enforcer of the [[Omniscient Council of Vagueness|Evil Council]]. And there's also the fact that he is formally known as Master Pain.
{{quote|
'''Betty''': [[Department of Redundancy Department|It is evil. It is so evil. It is a bad, bad plan that will hurt...many people...who are good. I think is great, because it is so bad.]] }}
* Gnorga, the Queen of Trolls in [[A Troll in Central Park]], even goes so far as to sing a [[Villain Song]] about what a nasty person she is and how much she enjoys it ("It feels delicious, to be so vicious, I'm Gnorga, the queen of mean!"). When she explains why she hates Stanley so much, she angrily ''complains'' "he is good, he is kind, he is GENTLLLLEEEEE!"
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* While not the main villain, or even doing anything horrendous (when you take the film's nature into consideration), some of Fat Sam's goons in [[Bugsy Malone]] proudly sing about just how rotten they are in the aptly named song "Bad Guys".
* The self-identified Seven Evil Exes from [[Scott Pilgrim vs. the World]].
* Ming The Merciless in the 1980s ''[[Flash Gordon (
* In ''[[Hudson Hawk]]'', when Hawk asks [[Big Bad]] Darwin Mayflower who he is, Mayflower shoots back, "Isn't it obvious? I'm ''the villain''."
* ''[[Megamind]]'' lived and breathed this trope.
* Benedict in ''[[Last Action Hero]]'' knows he's a villain and has no problem showing it. Of course, he's an actual villain in the [[Show Within a Show]] ''Jack Slater IV''. Once he gets out into the "real world", he realizes it works by different rules (such as the cops ''not'' showing up immediately after he shoots a random guy on the street, and the neighbors not caring) and tries to subvert many villain tropes, except, of course, for the [[Evil Brit]], the [[Evil Is Hammy]], and the [[Evil Gloating]] ones (he can't exactly help the former, and the other two are too ingrained into him). He's played by [[Charles Dance]], who also played the card-carrying [[Big Bad]] in ''[[The Golden Child]]''.
{{quote|
* 1979's ''The Villain,'' a western comedy with Kirk Douglas as the hapless, [[Looney Tunes|Wile E. Coyote-esque]] titular character.
* Oba from the second [[Joshuu Sasori
== Literature ==
* ''[[Discworld]]'':
** Subverted in the
{{quote|
'''Vetinari''': ''Can I not? I'm a tyrant. It's what we do.'' }}
*** Greenyham has been calling Vetinari a tyrant through most of the book,{{context|reason=Which book? There are over 40 in the series.}} on the grounds that Vetinari runs the government. (Vetinari probably ''is'' a tyrant in the original Greek sense of the word: a guy who bosses the polis.) It's a [[Take That]] to libertarian propaganda.
*** Note that he also classifies ''everyone'' as "bad people". But some of them are on [[Evil Versus Evil|opposite sides]].
** Lady Felmut, in ''[[
** Also somewhat subverted with Dr. Hix (né Hicks), head of UU's Department of <s>Necr--</s> Post-Mortem Communication in ''[[Unseen Academicals]]''. Because necromancy is a so-called evil curriculum, he wears the skull ring and forces himself (if apologetically) to take an Evil stance on things, simply because it goes with his job description.
** <s>Sub--</s><s>Lampsh--</s> ''Done something with'' by Abrim, [[The Grand Vizier]] in ''[[Sourcery]]''. He points out that the evil things he does ''are'' expected of him. But he doesn't apologize for doing them, like Dr. Hix, or do them for the greater good, like Vetinari. Probably closest to lampshaded.
* Acheron Hades of the ''[[Thursday Next]]'' series ''literally'' wrote the book (''Degeneracy for pleasure and profit'') and extols the wonder of doing evil for its own sake. He also complains that profit "dilutes the taste of wickedness".
* Some of ''[[Redwall]]'''s villains clearly revel in this trope. Vilu Daskar, upon being praised by his crew for inventive sadism, modestly says "Oh, I do my best to be the worst." The trope gets even more obvious in ''Triss'', when the villainous pirate crew does ''three [[Villain Song|song and dance numbers]]'' dedicated to their own gruesome behaviour. The irony here being that Grubbage, one of the singers of the second song (''"'Tis nice to be a villain/wot all honest creatures fears/and terrorise the beasts for miles around"''), does a [[Heel Face Turn]] in a sadly ''very'' brief skimmed-over epilogue.
* The Nome King from [[L. Frank Baum]]'s ''[[
* Godelot, a historical personage in ''[[Harry Potter (
** Fenrir Greyback could also count. There's his memorable line towards the end of ''Half-Blood Prince'', in which he openly admits to coming to the castle without being invited, just because he wants to kill and eat children. While still in human form.
** The villain of ''[[
** If ''The Methods of Rationality'' is right, anyone creating a horcrux would pretty much have to be a completely unironic
* The poster-boy for [[Yellow Peril]], [[Fu Manchu]], started out as one of these ("They die like flies! And I am the God of Destruction!"), before turning into something closer to a [[Well-Intentioned Extremist]].
* The wicked duke in [[James Thurber]]'s ''[[
{{quote|
* When you're almost literally [[God|the Creator's]] [[Evil Twin]] and your most common name is [[Chronicles of Thomas Covenant|Lord Foul the Despiser]], it's pretty safe to assume that you aren't an [[Anti-Villain]].
* ''[[Emberverse|Dies the Fire]]'' by [[S.M. Stirling]]. The [[Big Bad]] who's turned Portland into a feudal dictatorship uses the [[The Lord of the Rings|Eye of Sauron]] on his flag. One of the protagonists comments how stupid this is, as it would make more sense to use the Stars & Stripes to give himself legitimacy. When his colleague points out that "[[Evil Is Sexy|Hey, it's cool to be bad!]]", he responds "What's the point of letting people know you're evil enough to backstab them at the first suitable opportunity?"
* One gets the impression that Pryrates, [[Evil Sorcerer]] and [[The Dragon]] to the [[Big Bad]] of [[Tad Williams]]' ''[[Memory,
* Alex DeLarge of ''[[A Clockwork Orange (
* Every villain of a Wilbur Smith novel basically lives and breathes this trope. They're so ''obviously'' evil that it's as if they all came from the same [[Kick the Dog|dog-kicking]] [[Incredibly Lame Pun|litter]].
* [[The Chessmaster|O'Brien]], the villain (of [[Crapsack World|many]]) of ''[[Nineteen Eighty-Four|1984]]'', gives a [[Hannibal Lecture]] to Winston, where he extols the virtues of a world of fear, torment, and treachery. One of the more well-executed [[Complete Monster
* A rare case of this trope being played both seriously and non-[[Narm
** Beyond that, he's getting his immortality through a [[Deal
* Don John in [[Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'' comes right out and says it. He's pissed that he can't rule because he's a bastard son, and will therefore do anything so long as it causes his brother grief: "I had rather be a canker in a hedge than a rose in / his grace, and it better fits my blood to be / disdained of all than to fashion a carriage to rob / love from any: in this, though I cannot be said to / be a flattering honest man, it must not be denied / but '''I am a plain-dealing villain'''." Played quite straight by Keanu Reeves in the 1993 film, the character has no purpose but to foil the good guys.
* Partially [[Subverted Trope|subverted]] in the ''[[Babylon
** On the other hand, several other Technomages definitely fit the trope. {{spoiler|Razeel}} willingly chooses to serve the Shadows for an unknown reason. {{spoiler|Circe}}'s motivation for betrayal is pure desire for power.
* Various characters in [[Andrew Vachss]]' Burke books, including the [[Anti-Villain]] [[Villain Protagonist]] himself, identify themselves as "thieves". How evil these characters are actually varies from person to person.
* Kurt Barlow from [[
* ''[[In Death]]'': some of the bad guys reach this level in the series. Casto from ''Immortal In Death'' admits that he is a selfish man. Reanna Otts in ''Rapture In Death'' cheerfully describes herself as [[The Sociopath]] and completely agrees with that diagnosis!
* Lieutenant Colonel Korn from ''[[Catch
{{quote|
* House Bolton in ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]''. Their house arms features a flayed man due to their history of flaying their prisoners alive. They wear pink and red capes because ages ago they used to ''wear the skins'' before submitting to House Stark. Their castle is called the Dreadfort. Lord Roose Bolton and his heir Ramsay commit numerous atrocities and eventually {{spoiler|betray their liege lords in a massacre that shocks the continent}}.
* Set in ''[[
{{quote|
* [[Complete Monster|Conrad Bland]] in Mike Resnick's ''Walpurgis III''. He's quoted as saying "Evil is its own justification," declares that a decent and honorable man is "the Enemy" he must destroy ... and he'd never make a pact with Satan, because [[Eviler Than Thou|he doesn't feel any need to own Satan's soul]].
▲== Live Action TV ==
* Taken literally in [[Hikonin Sentai Akibaranger]] where all the villains carry business cards that they toss to The Akibarangers
* The Janitor from ''[[Scrubs]]'' identifies himself as evil and takes great dislike in anyone who doesn't fear him, coining the phrase "Fearitude" for his presence.
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* ''[[Babylon 5]]'' was mostly pretty good about avoiding this, going by the motto "The monster never sees a monster in the mirror." In fact, there are still a sizable number of fans who believe that one or more of the show's villains was right. Except for President Clark, whose ideology was basically future human fascism, with [[Fantastic Racism|extreme xenophobia]] against the other races. When the rebellion is winning and he's about to be deposed, Clark is going to destroy everyone with him for spite and fear of its eventual fall, with the very appropriate order "Scorched Earth." It's actually a fairly prescient examination of how simple American-style patriotic conservatism could morph into fascism and, extending the analogy, Clark tries to do more or less what Hitler would have liked to have done had his domain been larger than Berlin/had there been much of Germany left to destroy anyway.<ref>Or rather, what he ''ordered'' Albert Speer to do, but [[Punch Clock Villain|Speer]], [[Peer Pressure Makes You Evil|despite his friendship and loyalty to Hitler]], [[Noble Demon|just couldn't get behind the order]], [[Pragmatic Villainy|seeing as it was pointless]].</ref>
** Early on, the Shadows seem to be this (deliberately maximizing the [[Nightmare Fuel]] of all their technology, always calling themselves "shadows" in the language of whomever they're talking to), but we later learn this is a mask, facing fear (of them) makes us stronger , and they're doing it [[Knight Templar|for our own good]]. Like most such people, they [[Motive Decay|eventually forget why it's for their own good]] and morph into [[Chaotic Stupid|general chaos-mongers]] intent only on antagonizing the Vorlons (who have themselves become [[Lawful Stupid|general order-mongers]]).
* The Trio from ''[[
** [[Not-So-Harmless Villain|At first]].
** Spike, on multiple occasions, proudly reminds the Scoobies that, although defanged, he is still a demon and therefore evil. Harmony (in ''[[
{{quote|
** See also Faith in season 3.
** And the First Evil does what she does because she is, well, evil.
** Buffy vampires are pretty much unapologetically evil in general, unless they [[Angel
* ''[[Doctor Who]]'' has too many to count, the most famous and recognizable being the Master, who came complete with a [[Beard of Evil]].
** The <s>Knacker's Yard</s> <s>Railyard</s> Valeyard.
*** Even more so, surely, Sutekh! "Your evil is my good. I am the Sutekh the Destroyer. Where I tread I leave nothing but dust and darkness. I find that good."
* ''[[Oz]]''. [[Complete Monster]] Simon Adebisi acknowledges this to Muslim inmate Kareem Said, the night before their final fatal confrontation.
{{quote|
'''Said''': Simon, I don't want to destroy you. I want to help you change.
'''Adebisi''': That ''is'' what will destroy me. You see I am who I am, just as you are. And I do what I do, just as you must. }}
* ''[[The Mighty Boosh]]'': The Hitcher loves to tell the audience he's pure evil and even raps about it in his theme tune. In ''The Mighty Boosh Live'', he spent a few minutes extolling his evil to the audience and didn't stop when he ran out of examples: "I'm -- I'm a ''knob''!"
Line 229 ⟶ 233:
** The radio version has Vince and Howard thrown in prison and in the cell next to them is a man who simply mutters threats to them for hours on end ("I'm gonna snap your nose off and toss it at a vicar", for example). Howard eventually plucks up the courage to talk to him and asks him why he's doing that, and he replies that "all I'm interested in is evil".
* [[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|Prince of Fire]] from ''[[Lexx]]'' gleefully described himself as "evil" and made a point to create as much pain and misery as possible [[For the Evulz]].
{{quote|
'''Prince''': Because it is full of good, and I am full of bad. I think that's all there is to it. I'm not very complicated really. }}
** While he's this trope, he chucks it off to being ''born'' a [[Sealed Evil in
* Alex Russo in ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]''. Whenever someone refers to her as evil, dark, or scary, she just grins and/or giggles, she actively encourages her [[Cool Loser]] status at school and deliberately provokes fights with her brother, Justin, because "that's how things are supposed to be".
* Flosso of ''[[
* The Big Cheese from the ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' "Secret Service Dentists" sketch, who not only shoots his own [[Right-Hand-Cat|Right Hand]] <s>Cat</s>[[Right-Hand-Cat|Rabbit]] but also makes death threats including phrases like "...and because I'm so evil..."
* Pretty much all the villains in most ''[[Super Sentai]]'' or ''[[Kamen Rider]]'' series.
* While the Goa'uld of ''[[Stargate SG
* John Bly, the [[Big Bad]] of ''[[The Adventures of Brisco County Jr]]'', actually cites uses this trope as the reason he refuses to free his now-useless hostage in the episode "Fountain of Youth". "Why don't you let me go? I'm no use to you anymore." "Because I'm evil, Professor."
* Doctor Chaotica from the ''Captain Proton'' [[Show Within a Show]] on ''[[Star Trek
* {{spoiler|Jim}} Moriarty from ''[[
{{quote|
''' {{spoiler|Jim}} Moriarty:''' [[Insult Backfire|You're just getting that now?]] }}
== Music ==
Line 251 ⟶ 254:
* The Diamond Head song "Am I Evil?". The answer is, unsurprisingly, "Yes I am!".
* The narrators of [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1kbH1QEmkU "Mr. Bad Example"] by [[Warren Zevon]] and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fELrliuqZvM "The Future"] by [[Leonard Cohen]].
* [[Blue
* Danish metal band Evil only released one EP, but half the tracks on there fit this trope perfectly: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fOy3n-MHAI their namesake track] and [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JNtQ4k96Vjc "Son of the Bitch."]
* Many songs from the point of view of a serial killer. For example, "The Ripper" by [[
== Newspaper Comics ==
* In ''[[Dilbert]]'', Catbert is the "Evil Director of Human Resources". That's right, he's got the word "evil" in his job title. And he lives up to it with glee:
{{quote|
'''Catbert''': That's outrageous! There shouldn't be any great jobs in this company. }}
** Equally <s>good</s> evil example:
{{quote|
'''Catbert''': All of them. Some are just more noticeable. }}
** Don't forget Phil The Prince of Insufficient Light.
== Professional Wrestling ==
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* [[Eddie Guerrero]] (along with nephew Chavo as a tag team) was pushed as a heel in 2003 as someone who would always "lie, cheat and steal" his way to victory. It backfired, as fans grew to ''like'' the fact that Eddie was honest about his dishonesty (and because it made him look smarter than his foes).
** And before Eddie, there was [[Ric Flair|Ric "The Dirtiest Player in The Game" Flair]]. There was really no difference between [[Face Heel Revolving Door|his heel and face personas]]: he'd low-blow and cheap shot heel and face alike and tell you beforehand he would.
* [[Kane (
* Kaientai (TAKA Michinoku and SHO Funaki). One guy would make an amusing speech that always ended with "[[Punctuated!
* [[The Undertaker]], when giving his [[Motive Rant]] upon one of his heel turns, said, "And I know that some of you are wondering how it is that I can join forces with such an evil, despicable, maniacal individual [as [[Paul Bearer]]]...well, if that isn't reason enough all by itself then I don't guess I can explain it to you folks any better!" He would go around calling himself The Lord of Darkness and saying things like, "Embrace the purity of evil."
* William Regal actually has the word "Villain" written on his tights.
== Radio ==▼
* The ironically named Mr Gently Benevolent in the Dickens parody ''[[
== Religion ==▼
* [[Satan]] is often depicted in this manner.▼
== Tabletop Games ==▼
* "Evil" is one end of one of the two "alignment" axes in the [[Dungeons
** 3rd Edition ''[[Dungeons
** And now 4th Edition has tossed out the second dimension of alignment. The law-chaos scale determining another portion of one's mindset is gone, so now alignment is simply determining just ''how'' good or evil you are.▼
*** Debatable, since alignment in 4th Edition has absolutely zero effect on your character (no penalties for acting out of alignment, no "Evil" or "Good" spell descriptors, etc.), it could be said that alignment is now only cosmetic.▼
* Volrath from ''[[Magic:
** They recently created a new variant for casual play called Archenemy, a one-vs.-many game where, by dint of being the [[Big Bad]] of the game, the outnumbered player gets a number of benefits, including use of a "scheme" deck, a set of cards (that actually have the type Scheme) maintained separately from the library that give special benefits (usually for free) once per turn. (The idea is that the Archenemy is such a threat that other Planeswalkers have put aside differences and banded together to stop him.) The kicker is that each Scheme has a grandiose title (usually accompanying an equally devastating effect), often degenerating into card-carrying villainy, and some darkly appropriate flavor text. For example, Behold The Power Of Destruction destroys all nonland permanents target player controls. The flavor text?▼
{{quote|
* Chaos and the Dark Eldar in ''[[Warhammer
* ''[[Exalted]]'' gives us the Infernal Exalted; while they aren't [[
** Also a subversion in that any given Infernal's [[Evil Plan|dastardly evil scheme]] could be [[Completely Missing the Point|"make creation into a utopia"]] and their [[Poke the Poodle|Acts of Villainy]] [[Good Feels Good|don't even have to be evil]]. All that matters is that they ''[[Dangerously Genre Savvy|act]]'' like a
**** Mind you, an Infernal could make such a deal solely [[Rule of Cool|for the sake of getting all the nifty powers]], with no intent to serve the Reclamation (and, in fact, with [[Faustian Rebellion|potential plans for a double-cross]]). Nothing forces the Infernals to truly be evil. The cards are ''supposed'' to be stacked against them, but the Ebon Dragon's [[Idiot Plot|so awful at planning]] that it backfires on every level...▼
** And then there's the whole reason they're like
== Theatre ==
* Many [[Shakespeare]] villains were motivated simply by wanting to be a villain:
** Most famously, ''[[Richard III]]''.
** Don John in ''[[Much Ado About Nothing]]'', counseled to act nice to remain in the Prince's good books, retorts that he's always believed in being true to your nature. Since his nature is that of a villain, he's going to go ahead and ''be'' one, rather than pretend not to
*** And, of course, in case you have any doubts about that true nature, he's also a [[Values Dissonance|bastard]]. Being born out of wedlock makes you inherently a jerk.
** Iago continually changes his reasoning for his actions in ''[[Othello]]''. Originally, it was out of jealousy because he was passed over for promotion; however, he eventually abandons not only this justification, but ''all'' possible rationalizations. He is identified simply as a "Villaine" in the list of characters in the first folio, and [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]] famously noted his "motiveless malignity". Iago himself, when questioned on his motivation, simply refuses to explain anything...though there are those who [[Epileptic Trees|attribute his actions]] to [[Ho Yay|less incomprehensible motives]].
*** Or there's the possibility that he's simply jealous of ''anyone'' who has anything good that he doesn't and fucks with Cassio, Desdemona, and Othello accordingly.
** Aaron in ''Titus Andronicus'' states outright that all he wants to do with his life is be evil; the only reason he aids the play's antagonist instead of working against her is because it gives him a chance to do very evil, uncouth things. It's because [[Values Dissonance|he's black, and black people are evil.]] His last line in the play is:
{{quote|
I do repent it from my very soul. }}
*** [[Alternate Character Interpretation|Modern interpretations]], including Julie Taymor's [[This Is Your Premise
* Captain Hook in [[Peter Pan]]. In pretty much any version (novel, play, or movie adaptation).
▲== Radio ==
▲* The ironically named Mr Gently Benevolent in the Dickens parody ''[[Bleak Expectations (Radio)|Bleak Expectations]]''. Also, the less ironically named Hardthrashers and their cousins, the Sternbeaters, Whackwallops, and Grimpunches.
== Sports ==▼
* Thoroughly embraced by Floyd Mayweather Jr., who actively and gleefully seizes the black hat in the build-up to any of his big fights. Initially, the boxing ur-example would have been Muhammad Ali, but he eventually became the most beloved figure in boxing, even today.▼
* During the 80s, the Miami Hurricanes reveled in being the college football team America cheered against. ▼
▲== Tabletop Games ==
▲* "Evil" is one end of one of the two "alignment" axes in the [[Dungeons and Dragons|AD&D]] setting. Most Evil characters recognize this. Not to mention how they are ''penalized'' if they ''don't'' act evil.
▲** 3rd Edition ''[[Dungeons and Dragons]]'' tossed out the penalties, but there are still races that are simply [[Always Chaotic Evil|unable to act otherwise]].
▲** And now 4th Edition has tossed out the second dimension of alignment. The law-chaos scale determining another portion of one's mindset is gone, so now alignment is simply determining just ''how'' good or evil you are.
▲*** Debatable, since alignment in 4th Edition has absolutely zero effect on your character (no penalties for acting out of alignment, no "Evil" or "Good" spell descriptors, etc.), it could be said that alignment is now only cosmetic.
▲* Volrath from ''[[Magic the Gathering]]'' was just absurdly over-the-top in how eeeeeevil he was. ''"I once had an entire race killed just to listen to the rattling of their dried bones as I waded through them."'' To be fair, he was R&D's first real attempt at creating a [[Big Bad]], and, as it turned out, he was [[The Dragon]] to someone just as evil but with no bloody time or inclination for theatrics.
▲** They recently created a new variant for casual play called Archenemy, a one-vs.-many game where, by dint of being the [[Big Bad]] of the game, the outnumbered player gets a number of benefits, including use of a "scheme" deck, a set of cards (that actually have the type Scheme) maintained separately from the library that give special benefits (usually for free) once per turn. (The idea is that the Archenemy is such a threat that other Planeswalkers have put aside differences and banded together to stop him.) The kicker is that each Scheme has a grandiose title (usually accompanying an equally devastating effect), often degenerating into card-carrying villainy, and some darkly appropriate flavor text. For example, Behold The Power Of Destruction destroys all nonland permanents target player controls. The flavor text?
▲{{quote| ''I'd call that a successful first test. Golem! Rearm the [[Doomy Dooms of Doom|Doom Citadel]]!''}}
▲* Chaos and the Dark Eldar in ''[[Warhammer 40000]]'' take delight in being on the extreme wrong side of the [[Moral Event Horizon]]. Considering the latter group literally ''lives'' off of [[Squick]] taken to the point of nightmarish, this is perhaps understandable. A quote from the nearest thing they have to a leader: "Death is my meat, terror my wine."
▲* ''[[Exalted]]'' gives us the Infernal Exalted; while they aren't [[Always Chaotic Evil]], the cards are stacked against them. For one thing, if they go against the will of their [[The Legions of Hell|Yozi]] masters, they accrue Torment, which can backlash and affect mortals in nasty ways. The only way to bleed off torment is to engage in Acts of Villainy -- stick your foes in death traps, force an innocent into an arranged marriage, monologue at your archnemesis, etc. This is what happens when the guy behind the plan is ''the cosmic embodiment of douchebaggery''. Mind you, it's doesn't say ''who'' you have to perform some of those Acts of Villainy on...
▲** Also a subversion in that any given Infernal's [[Evil Plan|dastardly evil scheme]] could be [[Completely Missing the Point|"make creation into a utopia"]] and their [[Poke the Poodle|Acts of Villainy]] [[Good Feels Good|don't even have to be evil]]. All that matters is that they ''[[Dangerously Genre Savvy|act]]'' like a [[Card-Carrying Villain]].
▲**** Mind you, an Infernal could make such a deal solely [[Rule of Cool|for the sake of getting all the nifty powers]], with no intent to serve the Reclamation (and, in fact, with [[Faustian Rebellion|potential plans for a double-cross]]). Nothing forces the Infernals to truly be evil. The cards are ''supposed'' to be stacked against them, but the Ebon Dragon's [[Idiot Plot|so awful at planning]] that it backfires on every level...
▲** And then there's the whole reason they're like that -- the Ebon Dragon had an active hand in their creation. Each of the Primordials represents a principle of Creation, and the Ebon Dragon once represented betrayal. Every thing he does is based around screwing someone over, even if it screws him as well.
== Video Games ==
* Joey Rottenwood, the [[Big Bad]] of ''[[The Spellcasting Series]]''. He [[Genre Savvy|firmly believes in all time-honored villain traditions]], including [[Bond Villain Stupidity|telling Ernie his plot while he has him captured]], and he has a knack for making [[Villain Exit Stage Left|absurdly easy escapes]] when his plans are foiled. He even reads a villain's manual to ensure he's doing everything correctly.
* Charnel of ''[[Sacrifice]]'', occasionally taken to rather humorous levels given he's an evil god of slaughter.
{{quote|
'''James''': ...What if he tells me you're a villain?
'''Charnel''': Don't believe anything ''else'' he has to say! }}
** Another bit with him:
{{quote|
'''Persephone''': Charnel! Death is not the answer to everything...
'''Charnel''': Yes, [[Cold-Blooded Torture|torture]] also has its merits. }}
* In ''[[Super Mario Bros
** The Smithy Gang from ''[[
{{quote|
'''Axem Black:''' We live for disorder!
'''Axem Green:''' We like what we do!
'''Axem Pink:''' We struggle for chaos!
'''Axem Yellow:''' We are...
'''All:''' [[Power Rangers|...the AXEM RANGERS!!]] }}
* In ''[[The Legend of Zelda (
* Every single evil-affilated racer in the ''[[F
** Bonus points: his voice actor in the [[Anime of the Game|anime adaptation]] is [[Norio Wakamoto]].
* Luca Blight from ''[[Suikoden II]]'', even after [[Annoying Arrows|being showered with arrows]], [[Climax Boss|battling three squads of the opposing army's most powerful soldiers simultaneously]], being showered with ''[[No One Could Survive That|even more]]'' arrows, and [[Duel Boss|losing a duel to the death with the main character]], still has the strength to roar triumphantly in his [[Final Speech]] that even though it took hundreds to kill him, he [[Omnicidal Maniac|slaughtered humans by the thousands]], and that he is probably [[Complete Monster|the single most evil man who has ever lived]] (which is probably true), before finally dying.
* [[Complete Monster|Yuuki Terumi]] of ''[[
{{quote|
** [[Justified Trope|He does explain later on that people's hatred of him is what keeps him from]] [[Ret-Gone|disappearing]]. [[Double Subverted|Still, when he enjoys everything else he mentioned and specifically does it as his only source of entertainment with no regrets or]] [[I Did What I Had to Do]]...[[Complete Monster|There's just no excuse]].
** However, if it suits his plan, he would still present himself as a 'mild mannered' officer of NOL, as shown with anyone else not Hakumen, Ragna, Kokonoe or Rachel. He still gave off the vibes of 'suspicious and is dangerous to trust' regardless.
* Most demons from the ''[[Disgaea]]'' series actively try to cultivate an evil and [[Badass]] image for themselves through means that vary from [[Kick the Dog|wanton acts of violence and depravity]] to [[Poke the Poodle|not recycling and playing Ding Dong Ditch.]] Most of them [[Noble Demon|fall into the latter category]] - place them next to the former, and they will [[Even Evil Has Standards|recoil in disgust.]]
* ''[[Devil May Cry]]''
** Arkham
** Bob Barbas, head of the Raptor News Network. Yeah, a network named after a well-known predatory dinosaur, you can expect the news to have [[Understatement|a slight editorial slant]], especially since Bob himself is one of the 72 members of the Ars Goetia and his title is Great President of Hell, and his true form is - supposedly - a bestial lion-demon, another predatory animal, although for the [[Boss Battle]] he looks more like the MCP from ''[[Tron]]''.
* Murray The Demonic Skull from ''[[Monkey Island]]''.
** [[Big Bad|LeChuck]] from the same series.
* Doctor Regal from ''[[
** Despite not being played for laughs, there are quite a few instances where Regal comes off as pretty narmtastic.
** Then let me introduce Dr. Weil, the [[Big Bad]] of ''[[
*** Strangely, despite realising he's evil (he actually says [[A God Am I|"I am]] [[Inverted Trope|the Devil!"]]), he [[It's All About Me|doesn't think he deserves his rightful punishment]]. It makes him [[Complete Monster|even more demented]].
* ''[[Mega Man Star Force]]''. In the third game, this is used literally; the villains belong to an organization known as Dealer, and they carry Noise Cards with them to make Wizards go out of control.
Line 356 ⟶ 353:
** Their counterpart in the sequels, Team Skull (Team Poison Rose in the Japanese versions), are the same. Their only motivation is greed and harassing the players' team to make them look bad. Compared to the real [[Big Bad]] of the game and his Dragon, they're almost literally the Team Rocket trio in Pokémon form.
* The Genma of the ''[[Onimusha]]'' series revel in being referred to as "evil", most notably in the second game (evident by the final boss being the Golden Evil Statue, and also by the content of some in-game documents).
* In ''[[Cuphead]]'', the Devil himself is one. He makes no effort whatsoever to conceal that he is the owner of the Devil's Casino, not bothering to disguise his hellish appearance in the slightest while offering wagers to gullible customers. His right-hand man Mr. King Dice is even more blatant, boasting in his [[Villain Song]], "I never play nice, I'm the Devil's right hand man."
* Gnarl of ''[[Overlord]]'', in a [[Large Ham|most over-the-top manner]]. He takes such great delight in evil for the sake of evil.
* [[Up to Eleven|ALL]] of the antagonists in [[
* Bio-Haz, in the obscure Game Boy RPG ''Great Greed'', is a textbook [[Evil Overlord]] trying to conquer Greene Kingdom, and he's generating as much pollution as possible because it makes him and his army stronger. {{spoiler|It's not until the end of the game that you learn he has another motive besides his [[Title Drop|great greed]]; he wants to save the ''human'' world from pollution by using Greene Kingdom as its garbage dump.}}
* Ridley, and most of the Space Pirates for that matter, in ''[[Metroid]]'' seems to have no other motivation for trying to (ostensibly) take over the galaxy, other than that it's an evil thing to do. They commit horrors and atrocities just for the pure fun of it (although some games suggest most of the Pirates are just a mindless drone race following the orders of dominant intelligent figures like Ridley). Sometimes, a motivation will be supplied from the villain of the week, but usually, they're there, they're bad, kill'em all and reap your rewards.
* Dr. Nefarious of ''[[Ratchet and Clank]]'', a [[Mad Scientist]] [[Large Ham]] robot [[Crush! Kill! Destroy!|bent on destroying the "Squishies"]].
* The Ilwrath of [[Star Control]] II go on at length about how evil they are, as a matter of [[Religion of Evil|religion]]. They certainly do enjoy torture, genocide, murder, etc. However, you can induce a [[Logic Bomb]] by pointing out that, although they are certainly evil by external measures, by following the tenents and customs of their society, they are, in fact, good.
* The super-villain Rictus in ''[[
** I shall kill you...with '''death'''!
* Irenicus from ''[[Baldur's Gate
** "No, you merit no villain's exposition."
* The Soviets in ''[[Command
* E-123 Omega from ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog]]'', despite being a friend of [[Anti-Hero|Anti Heroes]] Shadow and Rouge.
* House Steiner in the ''[[Mechwarrior]]'' game franchise: on the couple of occasions you aren't fighting them, they're setting you up for a murderous betrayal. The original ''[[
** Somewhat justified in ''[[Mech Commander]] 2'' and ''[[Mechwarrior]] 4: Vengeance/Mercenaries'', as they are being lead by [[Complete Monster|Katherine Steiner-Davion.]]
* Malefor, the [[Big Bad]] of ''[[The Legend of Spyro]]'' trilogy, has absolutely no problems with his title as The Dark Master and, in fact, took the name himself. He's also a third sphere version intending to destroy the world. Unlike most examples of this trope, he's played ''dead serious'' and is pure [[Nightmare Fuel]].
** Didn't seem so accidental to me. Although he's also a villain with a side of [[Large Ham|ham]], so maybe it is after all.
* Oni of ''Super [[
* King Squid from ''[[
* In ''[[Metal Wolf Chaos]]'', [[Evil Chancellor|Vice-President Richard Hawk]] is never given any motive for his coup d'état and subsequent oppression. He just seems to really hate freedom.
* [[Big Bad|Nene]] from ''[[Blue Dragon]]'' definitely fits. Wanting to "share [his] pain and fear" with others is all the explaination he bothers to give for spending the entire game (and many years prior) [[Kick the Dog|spreading chaos, death, and fear throughout the known world.]]
* Most of the evil races in ''[[Galactic Civilizations]]'' take so much ''joy'' in their skull collections. If you're playing an evil race and are on good terms with other evil races, they may occasionally warn you that the good guys want to stop both you and them from torturing people.
* Your character in ''[[
* Most of the Path of Dark class promotions in ''[[Might and Magic]] VII'' have a name that is either more associated with not-quite-a-good-guy than their Light counterpart (Warlock vs Arch Druid, Bounty Hunter vs Ranger Lord, etc) or invoke darkness (Priest of Dark, Black Knight). The Paladin promotion is called ''Villain'', and yes, the guy that promotes you to it uses it himself.
* Nearly ''every'' non-redeemed villain in the ''[[Advance Wars]]'' series is a ''huge'' one of these. For ''starters'', the "evil" army in the original ''Advance Wars'' trilogy was known as ''Black Hole''.
* ''[[Warframe]]'' gives us its Grineer army:
** Wants to [[Take Over the World|conquer the universe]]? Check.
** Is [[Gonk|grotesquely ugly]] due to [[Clone Degeneration]]? Check.
** [[Large Ham|Loves to constantly yell and boast about its evil plans?]] Check.
** Is pollution incarnate? Check.
** Is loaded with [[Cyborg|cyborgs?]] Check.
== Web Comics ==
* Xykon from ''[[
** As do ''most'' OOTS villains, both for the same reasons as [[Dungeons
** The Linear Guild literally carries (business) cards.
** As do {{spoiler|their masters}}, the Inter-Fiend Cooperation Commission, though, considering they're fiends (and therefore literal incarnations of evil), this trope rather goes with the territory.
** Redcloak is an interesting example: he admits he and his god are evil by Dungeons and Dragons alignments, but he still [[Well-Intentioned Extremist|thinks his actions are justified]]. He seems to think of alignments as being more like team names than actual moral judgments.
** Elan's long-lost father turned up and explained why he chose to become an evil tyrant: every story calls for one, so he will be the villain and "live like a god for three decades" until some heroes come along to vanquish him. He'll still be immortalized in bardic lore ''and'' he'll get to be emperor for a while, so, in his opinion, eventual [[Karmic Death]] is worth the payoff.
* Helen, Mell, and, later, Dave in ''[[
* ''[[
* Khrima from ''[[Adventurers
* In ''[[Yet Another Fantasy Gamer Comic]]'', all of the monsters of the mountain identify themselves as evil, though only the Drow (and King Louie the Liche) act like it. The only real difference between the rest of the monsters and the "good" humans and elves are a tendency to eat other sentient beings and a casual approach to mortal violence.
* ''[[Concerned]]'' has Wallace Breen of ''[[Half-Life]]'' become something like this.
* Richard of ''[[Looking for Group]]'' would be a
* ''GU Comics'' [http://www.gucomics.com/comic/?cdate=20050524 demonstrates.]
* Black Mage Evilwizardington in ''[[8-Bit Theater
** Hell, he even tried joining the bad guys after gleefully wasting all his fire spells on [[Goddamned Bats|BATS]] and leaving the Light Warriors to die inside a block of solid ice:
{{quote|
'''Black Mage:''' I'd say I was joining the winning side, but that would imply that there was some point where I wasn't part of team evil. }}
* ''[[Bob the Angry Flower]]'' once had a violent confrontation with a man who only gave his name as the Evil Business Guy Made of Butter. Well, allegedly had a violent confrontation with an alleged Evil Business Guy made of pure creamy butter.
* {{spoiler|Captain Obvious}} from ''[[The Way of the Metagamer]]'' - he even has a [[Good Hair, Evil Hair|goatee]]!
* ''[[Precocious (Webcomic)|Precocious]]''? Well, the main kids [http://www.precociouscomic.com/archive/comic/2009/06/30 play as the Super Villain Union]. And when it's time to pick the Class President? Dionne quickly turns the campaign negative [http://www.precociouscomic.com/archive/comic/2010/03/12 as her selling point.]
* In ''[[
== Web Original ==
* ''[[
* In ''[[Unforgotten Realms]]'', the [[Evil Overlord]] Timmy the Evil spends his evil time discussing his evil plans for the destruction of the not-so-evil heroes with the evil Professor Walrus. All of his evil plans so far include using evil crystals with a variety of evil powers. Evil.
* {{spoiler|Sarah Genatiempo}} is revealed to have been this [[The Mole|all along]] in the ''[[
* [[Doctor Steel]] is apparently a member of the [[Weird Trade Union|Mad Scientists Union (Local 42)]] and also seems to be on an Evil Genius Committee.
* The Villain Evil from the Flash cartoon "[[Bonus Stage (
* The [[Large Ham|hammy]] [[
* Ganondorf, from the Machinima series ''[[
* [[The Spoony Experiment
* [[Secret Circle of Secrets|The Circle of Cold Flames]], from the ''[[Global Guardians PBEM Universe]]'', is an order of mystics and sorcerers dedicated to overthrowing Heaven and instituting a reign of evil over the earth (and putting themselves in control over it all in the end). They even describe themselves and their plans as evil when talking to one another.
* In ''[[Trinton Chronicles]]'', the group known as Trinty plays this role well.
Line 420 ⟶ 423:
* [[Making Fiends|Vendetta]]. In the web cartoon, Vendetta's main reason to destroy [[The Pollyanna|Charlotte]] seems to be because she thinks Vendetta and the fiends are nice and her friends, although in the TV series, this boils down to [[Motive Decay|"Charlotte is annoying"]]. Same with [[Misplaced Kindergarten Teacher|Mrs. Minty]], who is unaware(?) of Vendetta's evilness and treats her like another misbehaving student, which doesn't end well.
* Evil Blah in ''[[The Demented Cartoon Movie]]''.
* Marik in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series
{{quote|
'''Marik''': No! The card game is essential to the plot! [[Evil Is Hammy|The EVIL plot!]] }}
* Vegeta in season 1 of [[Dragonball Z Abridged]]:
{{quote|
'''Goku:''' That's not very nice.
'''Vegeta:''' OF COURSE NOT, I'M [[Precision F-Strike|F**KING]] EVIL! }}
** Also Freiza, he even demands God to strike him down [[Did You Just Flip Off Cthulu|and laughs when he survives unscathed]]
== Western Animation ==
* ''[[Kim Possible]]''{{'}}s [[Rogues Gallery]] not only self-identify as evil without exception (there are no [[Well-Intentioned Extremist|Well Intentioned Extremists]] in this world), but most try very hard to prove it. Shego, in particular, is a good example. She's clearly in it as Drakken's [[The Dragon|Dragon]] for the money, but also tries to beef up her evil credibility on her own time; maybe because she [[Face Heel Turn|used to be]] a [[Superhero]]. One time, she was even manipulated into helping Kim Possible herself, when the heroine threatened to tell the world that Shego [[Old Shame|used to be a good guy]].
** Evil is a whole lifestyle in ''[[Kim Possible]]'', with its own magazines (Shego reads ''Villainess'' while not listening to Drakken's [[Evil Plan
*** It even has an own TV show: Evil Eye for the Bad Guy.
** The villain culture has a whole set of traditions, to which the bad guys generally adhere, even when they clearly give the heroes a chance to [[Bond Villain Stupidity|escape]] or [[Just Between You and Me|turn the tables]].
* Several in ''[[Teen Titans (
** Slade's not as much of one as some - he never self-identifies as evil, and his plans are clearly building towards ''something'' (though [[Hidden Agenda Villain|neither the audience nor the heroes ever get clued in as to what that is]]). Better examples are Brother Blood, who teaches a supervillain school that includes courses on doomsday threats and "Theory of Mayhem", and the Brain, who actually puts the word "evil" in his ''organization's name''!
* Same thing goes for the villains in ''[[El Tigre]]: The Adventures of Manny Rivera''. They even have a villain quarterly magazine.
* Let us not forget ''[[Captain Planet]]''. While, contrary to popular belief, the show's villains generally ''did'' have some kind of discernible motive (usually raw profit at the cost of the environment), causing damage to the planet for its own sake sometimes seemed to [[Flanderization|take a life of its own and supersede anything else]]. In particular, villains such as Verminous Skumm, Dr. Blight on a bad day, and the evil spirit Zarm tended toward the "Corruption/Destruction for its own sake" end of the scale.
* Azula from [[
* Roughly 90% of [[Disney]] villains are this. Seriously, some are laughable, some are complex, some have interesting backstories, and most [[Evil Is Cool| are pretty cool]], but it's rare to find a villain in Disney with any sympathetic qualities at all. The [[Black and White Morality]] of these movies almost always makes the bad guy rotten to the core.
* In ''[[
* Megatron in most of the earlier ''[[Transformers]]'' incarnations had a rather grating tendency to laugh and say how evil he was, or how evil his plan was, just so that the kids knew who to root for.
** [[Expository Theme Song|"Autobots wage their battle to destroy the evil forces of the Decepticons"]]
** In Dreamwave's comic book series, Starscream responds to a question as to their appointed task with "Who cares? With Megatron, you know it's going to be evil...and evil is always fun!"
* ''[[
{{quote|
'''Blackarachnia:''' Get a clue, you canine cretin! I'm a Predacon! I'm evil! I'll shoot you--
'''Silverbolt:''' No. My heart tell me that you will not.
'''Blackarachnia:''' Oh yeah? * shoots him in the leg*
'''Silverbolt:''' * shocked* You...SHOT me!
'''Blackarachnia:''' No duh, Dog-Boy! I'm evil!! Now do you believe me?
'''Silverbolt:''' And yet...you ensured the wound would not be mortal. Your inner Maximal goodness?
'''Blackarachnia:''' SHUT UP, SHUT UP, SHUT UUUUUUUUPPP!!! }}
** You can't say evil in that show without mentioning Tarantulas, whose outright villainy and treacherous attitude was something Megatron considered to be a ''viable asset''.
** In ''[[
{{quote|
'''Thrust:''' But savage? That we can do! }}
* Aku, the [[Big Bad]] of ''[[Samurai Jack]]'', identifies himself as "Master of Masters, The Deliverer of Darkness, and the Shogun of Sorrow." His ''name'' even means evil in Japanese.
* Krombopulos Micheal on ''[[Rick and Morty]]'', an odd case of a villain like this who is also [[Affably Evil]]. Guy's a cheery, friendly, talkative guy who loves his job, even if he is a [[Professional Killer]] and an ugly, bug-like alien. He even admits to having no code of ethics at all, that he'll gladly target children and the elderly, even pointing it out [[My Card|on his business card]] and Facebook page!
* ''[[The Venture Brothers]]'': Every SINGLE villain in the entire series is LITERALLY a card-carrying villain belonging to the aptly-named Guild of Calamitous Intent.
** Which, ironically, is depicted as having an important [[Even Evil Has Standards|honor code]] and being an accepted facet of society.
*** The protagonist, however, is a [[Heroic Sociopath|complete and total asshole.]]
* ''[[
** Jack refers to himself several times as an "Evil Boy Genius". He also has club jackets with his face and "evil" on it and, of course, he has an [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZF8ucW90MI evil trademark laugh].
*** He didn't just trademark his laugh, he stated he was adding evil and other such words to his devices to "create a brand".
* ''[[The Powerpuff Girls]]'' is full of these guys. Mojo Jojo is the most notable.
* ''[[
* And, of course, ''[[G.I. Joe]]'', with the vastly over-the-top COBRA Commander.
** [[Expository Theme Tune|"...COBRA, a ruthless terrorist organization determined to rule the world"]]
** Even he wasn't as blatant about it as Blackthorne Shore from ''[[
* Doctor Ivo Robotnik in ''[[Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog]]''.
** The ''[[Sonic
{{quote|
'''Lazar's guardian''': You intend harm to my master.
'''Robotnik''': Oh, you wound me dear guardian! I merely want to wake the grand wizard and honour his evilness! We have much in common.
'''Lazar's guardian''': ...yes. I can see that. }}
* King Koopa, Bowser's animated counterpart in all three of the animated ''[[Super Mario Brothers Super Show]]'' series, plus his seven Koopalings in the latter two series.
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** Krang also has been known to say this more than once and being even more evil or cruel than Shredder, OR towards Shredder when Shredder's plans sometimes backfire on him big time.
* Negaduck's goal on ''[[Darkwing Duck]]'' is to be Public Enemy #1. He was already the [[Evil Overlord]] dictator of the [[Mirror Universe]], but [[Pride|"like death is never satisfied."]]
* ''[[
** Jade also references this trope when referring to the Dark Hand as "Card Carrying Members of the Forces of Darkness."
* You can tell that [[The Spectacular Spider
* The ''[[League of Super Evil]]'' is based around a group of Card Carrying Villains. If they didn't tell you so themselves, [[Poke the Poodle|you'd find it hard to believe]] [[Harmless Villain|they're really villains]].
** Other villains in the series tend to also be quite open with the fact that they're evil, there's even a company making devices just for super villains and a special driving test for them. Heck, they even have their own evil version of [[Bad Santa|Santa Claus]] who rewards them for being evil!
* ''[[Justice League]]'' [[
{{quote|
'''Sergeant:''' I don't know, sir. Wear a gaudy costume and threaten a bunch of people?
'''General:''' Thank you Sergeant, you've been quite a help. }}
** Lampshaded yet again in Unlimited by Flash, during his [[Freaky Friday]] switch with Lex Luthor:
{{quote|
'''Polaris:''' You gonna wash your hands?
'''"Luthor":''' No...[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v{{=}}KyYOuuRmQp0 cause I'm EVIL]. }}
* Emperor Zurg in ''[[Toy Story (franchise)|Toy Story]]'' and ''[[Buzz Lightyear of Star Command]]'' is a true [[Large Ham]] of a Disney villain and proud of it.
* A bit of a ''plot point'' in the ''[[Legion of Super
** In the series finale, despite never having self-identified as evil before (quite the opposite, in fact), the still-alive villain says to...no one in particular, "Evil does not die. It evolves," in an ill-fated [[Sequel Hook]].
* In ''[[Yin Yang Yo
* Most, if not all the villains on ''[[The Fairly
* After [[He-Man and
* Lucius on ''[[Jimmy Two-Shoes]]''
* In ''[[
{{quote|
Hail, Pottsylvania, sneaky and fiendish through and through!
Down with the good guys, up with the boss,
Under the sign of the Triple-Cross!
Hail Pottsylvania, Hail, Hail, Hail!" }}
** In the movie, when Natasha starts musing about what a wonderful life they could have together if they could only stop moose and squirrel, she mentions about how they could have children that they raise to be "little monsters". This is mentioned in the same breath as them living a peaceful life in a house by the sea.
* Dr. Jumba Jookiba from ''[[Lilo
** You doubt he wanted to be evil at first? When he was turned into a baby for one episode (don't ask), he spent his entire time breaking things to the (adorably) malevolent chant of "Evil! Evil!"
** Also from ''[[Lilo
* In ''[[Angry Beavers]]'', Norbert's costume [[Super Villain]] persona: Baron Von Bad Beaver, {{spoiler|later extended to Baron Von Once Bad Then Good Then Bad Again Beaver}}.
* [[Corrupt Corporate Executive|Mr. Burns]] from ''[[The Simpsons (
** Moe the bartender had literal villain business cards printed up.
* Pofessor Ratigan and his cronies from Disney's ''[[The Great Mouse Detective]]''. Just...[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jw0HlB54CIw&feature=related listen to them].
* Gru from ''[[Despicable Me]]'' and his archnemesis, Vector.
* In ''[[Codename
** On a character basis, Father calls himself the second most evil adult, then refering to his father as the 'World's Most [[Ultimate Evil]]' before reawakening him. Grandfather goes on to refer to himself as pure evil.
* ''[[
* The Brain-Eating Meteor from ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy]]'' claims it's "just your average evil meteor from outta the sky".
* Dick Dastardly is a true, if ineffective, card-carrying villain, and probably the most popular bad guy in the Hanna-Barbera stable. The narrator of ''[[Dastardly and Muttley
* [[The Rival|Captain Zero]] from ''[[TUGS]]'' - he's not so much outright evil as sort of [[Honest John's Dealership|a shyster]], but it's touched on in the first episode.
{{quote|
'''[[Minion
'''Captain Zero:''' What's devious is what's necessary to make an honest living in these days of corruption and bad business ethics!
'''Zip:''' ...Oh. }}
* In ''[[Thundercats 2011
* A number of ''[[
▲== Religion ==
▲* [[Satan]] is often depicted in this manner.
== Real Life ==
* Some of the criminals [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ah51vPzcVEM#t=2m46s interrogator Jim Smyth] has confronted arguably qualify.
{{quote|
* Several [[Serial Killer
** ''Aileen Wuornos:'' To me, this world is nothing but evil, and my own evil just happened to come out cause of the circumstances of what I was doing.
** ''Alberto De Salvo:'' It wasn't as dark and scary as it sounds. I had a lot of fun...killing somebody's a funny experience.
** ''Carl Panzram:'' In my lifetime I have broken every law that was ever made by both man and God. If either had made any more, I should very cheerfully have broken them also.
** ''David Berkowitz (Son of Sam):'' I am a monster. I am the Son of Sam. I love to hunt.
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** ''Ted Bundy:'' I'm the most cold-blooded sonofabitch you'll ever meet. Sometimes I feel like a vampire.
** ''Richard Kuklinski:'' (Smiles) Assassin....Sounds so exotic....(Sneers) I'm just a murderer.
** ''Richard Ramirez (The Night Stalker):'' [[Humans Are
* Stalin ''did'' play this trope at least once, though sarcastically:
{{quote|
* Adolf Eichmann went back and forth on this; sometimes he would claim that he was [[Just Following Orders]], and that he was unnerved at what he did because "My sensitive nature revolted at the sight of corpses and blood.". On the ''other'' hand, he ''also'' gave us these lines:
**
{{quote|
**
{{quote|
**
{{quote|
**
{{quote|
**
{{quote|
* Any human who believes [[Humans Are the Real Monsters|Humans Are Bastards]]. (Unless they [[Holier Than Thou|carve out exceptions for themselves]], or [[My Species Doth Protest Too Much|regard the bastardliness as something to be fought and not embraced]].)
* The corporation-targeting criminal organization known as The Monster with 21 Faces left this note when a police investigator committed suicide by setting himself on fire after failing to catch them: "We are bad guys. That means we've got more to do other than bullying companies. [[Evil Feels Good|It's fun to lead a bad man's life.]]"
* Anton Lavey, founder of the Church of Satan. [http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e5/Anton_LaVey_photo.jpg Just look at him, for bad's sake.]
▲=== Sports ===
▲* Thoroughly embraced by Floyd Mayweather Jr., who actively and gleefully seizes the black hat in the build-up to any of his big fights. Initially, the boxing ur-example would have been Muhammad Ali, but he eventually became the most beloved figure in boxing, even today.
▲* During the 80s, the Miami Hurricanes
{{reflist}}
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[[Category:Villain Ball]]
[[Category:Evil Tropes]]
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[[Category:Villains]]
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