Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
"No! Metal handcuffs - my only weakness!"
"Spike, I don't know what upsets me more; that you deliberately tried to set up Owlowiscious, or that you actually thought this pathetic attempt would work!"

A potential villain who is consistently a failure or never gets the respect that he thinks he deserves, and may even be angry that the heroes don't take him seriously.

He may not necessarily be inept or have a laughably mild idea of what counts as villainy. Villain Decay is usually too simple an explanation. This is sometimes a relative situation, and the hero's Rogues Gallery just happens to include people more showy, better financed, or just plain scarier than him.

This does not mean that he doesn't bear animosity; that's a Punch Clock Villain. He's probably jumping at the opportunity to outdo his rivals and the hero. But there is something about his perseverance or attitude about the whole thing that is just short of sympathetic.

May also be a Determinator out of necessity or overlap with Draco in Leather Pants. If they get even more pathetic in regard to the hero, Unknown Rivalry looms. Just watch out, they may suddenly turn out to be Not So Harmless.

Video Game versions of this trope frequently overlap with the Goldfish Poop Gang if they are just as pathetic in actual battle as they're treated by the story. They may maintain threat status if Conservation of Competence allows them to keep competent supporters.

Examples of Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain include:

Anime and Manga

  • Mousse from Ranma ½ is a loser whose plots against Ranma go only so far before backfiring spectacularly. He's usually played as an unrepentant jerk, although maybe once a season, he'd get a moment of quiet reflection for the audience to sympathize with him—right before going back to his old ways, naturally.
    • Both the ineffectual and sympathetic aspects are ironic, because Mousse is the most ruthlessly homicidal of Ranma's regular rivals. Kuno simply wants to humiliate Ranma and get both Akane and "the pig-tailed girl"; his weapon is just a bokken. Ryoga initially enters the series with an apparent intent to kill, but settles down for pretty much just wanting to steal Akane away and be able to claim that he's better than Ranma after the early Martial Arts Figure Skating story. By contrast, Mousse spends most of the series willing to do just about anything to kill Ranma, routinely using bladed and impaling weapons and attacking with ambushes. He even comments once on being willing to slip poisonous mushrooms into Ranma's food.
      • Perfect example: in "The Ryoga-Mousse Alliance", Mousse tries to kill Ranma by shackling him to a giant bomb. Even though they almost win as a result of teaming up, Ryoga swears to never stoop so low again. At the end, you can almost feel sorry for him when Shampoo comes upon the battered Mousse, misunderstands, and tells him "You know you no can win Ranma all by own self. Why you always be such stupid duck?" She pedals away while he quacks frantically, unable to explain.
  • Principal Uchimiyada on Great Teacher Onizuka often plots to get rid of Onizuka, and yet is portrayed as less of a threat than the troubled students in Onizuka's class, like Miyabi, Urumi, and (towards the end of the manga) Sho.
  • Jessie and James of Team Rocket, especially in the Fourth Wall-breaking 4Kids version of Pokémon. They are so pathetic, you can't help but feel sorry for them. They even occasionally team up with the heroes when the fate of the world is at stake, showing that they're not really evil—just misguided and incompetent. Ironically, they usually stop being ineffectual whenever they stop being villains.
    • Meowth as well.
    • However, the three all got their happy ending in Best Wishes. And by "happy ending", they...
  • Martina, the anime-exclusive Guest Star Party Member and fallen princess from the second season of the Slayers anime, who only knows how to perform minor curses and can't defend herself at all. She spends the first half of the season trying to get revenge on Lina and her friends for destroying her home, and fails every time; after that, she decides to tag along with them. She does decide to help Lina out morally during the final battle, though.
  • Dorodoran in Futari wa Pretty Cure Splash Star. Unlike most Pretty Cure villains, he's trying as hard as he can from the start, and is increasingly frustrated and upset by his repeated failures. When he finally comes close to victory, it all evaporates due to sabotage by Michiru and Kaoru. It's hard not to feel sorry for him.
  • Zeta Gundam had Jerid Mesa, who ended up becoming the Designated Rival for the show's protagonist, got into a vicious cycle of each killing the other's friends and/or lovers in battle, and eventually was killed when the hero threw his mobile suit into an exploding battleship.
  • Jeremiah Gottwald from Code Geass, who began the show as the military equivalent of a Jerk Jock, but made the mistake of crossing Lelouch, which left him disgraced, hated, and saddled with the ignoble nickname "Orange". His enormous popularity spared him from a planned quick death, resulting in his returning later as an Ax Crazy cyborg. Just to crank up the sympathy another few notches, the side materials revealed that Jeremiah was a palace guard on the day Empress Marianne was killed, and based his entire career on an attempt to atone for failing not only Marianne, but her children, who disappeared in Japan, leading him to think that they were killed by the Japanese, which prompted his racism against Elevens, which resulted in Lelouch (Marianne's supposedly-dead son) publicly humiliating him. Whoops...In the second season, Jeremiah was sent by the Geass Order to assassinate Lelouch, revealed that he was still loyal to Marianne, and when Lelouch admitted that avenging his mother was one of his main reasons for becoming Zero, "Orange-Boy" immediately dropped his thirst for vengeance and became Lelouch's retainer.
  • Mobile Suit Gundam 00 had Patrick Coulasour, an ace in 'simulated' combat, who quickly develops a one-sided rivalry with the Gundams after being publicly humiliated by them in the first episode, only to be dispatched in a similar fashion when he returns later. As with Jeremiah, fans latched onto him, giving him the nickname "Team Patrick". He eventually latches onto his commanding officer, Kati Mannequin, and goes on to be shot down another 5 or 6 times, even after switching sides.
  • Excel in Excel Saga at times. She really wants to help her Lord Il Palazzo's plans to take over the world, but she fails so badly at every mission given to her. Often subverted though by following a sympathetic moment with doing or saying something disturbing.
  • Viral from Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, who does not have Spiral Power like the protagonists and thus can only watch as they reach ever increasing heights of power. By the time the heroes reach the Spiral King himself, Viral, even given immortality and a four-armed upgrade to his Humongous Mecha, is swatted aside by Simon as if he is a humorous interlude.
  • Harry Champ from Zoids New Century, though he's more of a rival than a villain per se. Major Polta is certainly ineffectual, but does very little to garner sympathy aside from kidnapping Leena.
    • There's also the Zabre Fangs; though they do prove to be worthy opponents a few times in the series, they're mostly comic relief, and, in fact, lose their final battle against the Blitz Team when their Zoids do a Face Fault and malfunction from the fall.
  • Doctor West from Demonbane is basically just an anime Jack Spicer.
  • Kinkotsuman and Iwao from Kinnikuman are complete losers, plain and simple, who can't seem to do anything right. Of course, they're also kind of a subversion, because Kinnikuman is just as big a loser. Also, sometimes, when they aim high, they miss high. Like when Kinkotsuman accidentally shot Terryman in the leg when he was aiming for Kinnikuman, and Terryman ended up having to have his leg amputated (this is only in the manga, since in the TV series, Terryman eventually gets better, but the toned-down anime scene still is sad for poor Terryman).
  • Emperor Pilaf and his assistants from Dragon Ball.
    • Only once does Pilaf (almost) get what he wants...he manages to successfully get a wish from Shen Long in the first episode of Dragonball GT. However, instead of wishing for what he wanted, he shouts in frustration at Goku (who showed up just as the dragon was summoned) "I wish you were a kid again!" - not as an actual intended wish, but because Goku was so much easier to defeat as a child.
  • Japoli, Katejin, and Enge, the Punch Clock Villains of Overman King Gainer who are completely incompetent in their jobs, and are only a threat if they have Overman. They are the main source of comic relief with the Siberian Railroad.
  • Feliciano/Italy in Axis Powers Hetalia, an odd example of an ineffectual sympathetic villain title character semi-protagonist. He really only gets the title of villain because the manga is set predominantly in the WWII era. If further explanation of that is needed...
  • Lilynette, Stark's Token Loli fraccion from Bleach. She's currently fighting Ukitake, who is one of the 5 most powerful shinigami in existence. The fight so far has consisted of Ukitake telling her that he doesn't want to fight a little girl and simply deflecting or dodging every attack she threw at him. Currently, he's playing keep-away with her Zanpaktou as she cries at him to give it back and threatens over and over again to kill him.
    • And then she merges with Stark and they descend into full out loner Woobie territory -- turns out, Lilynette is Stark's Imaginary Friend turned real due to sheer loneliness.
    • Or Stark is her Imaginary Friend. He states for both of them that they've been together so long that he can't even remember who is the real one anymore.
    • Ukitake even lectures the girl on how her determination is admirable, but she simply lacks the ability to 'fight' him properly (i.e take the sword back). She fires a cero, he deflects it with his hand. No wonder she was pissed off.
  • One Piece has had some of the best villains in anime during its long run, but for every great villain like Sir Crocodile and Donquixote Doflamingo, there are sure to be a few lame fools:
    • Hannyabal Initially presented as The Starscream, but eventually shows that he has it where it counts when the going gets tough.
    • The Laughably Evil Gonk, Foxy the Silver Fox, particularly in the anime where he gets more screen time. He's relatively Weak but Skilled and has only built up such a large crew because he won them in games stacked in his favor, but they seem to genuinely enjoy serving under him because of the fun carnival atmosphere of the Davy Back Fights.
    • Another Laughably Evil villain was Wapol, the Big Bad (the term should be applied loosely) from the Drum Island Arc. While this guy had a cool Devil Fruit power with the potential to make him a threat, he was never even a small threat to the heroes, he was just... there, and the arc would have gone smoother had he not been there. His one redeeming trait is that he is very funny, and became a rather complex and interesting recurring character after he quit being a villain and went into toymaking.
    • Hody Jones, the Big Bad (again, the term should be used loosely) from the Fishman Island saga. He looked kinda threatening, being a huge, bulky shark-man, but that was it, he was Curb Stomped twice, the first time by Zoro (in an underwater fight no less, where a fish-man should have clear advantage over pretty much anyone), the second time by Luffy. The only thing truly interesting about him was his motivation (blatant racism against humans) but any chance for a plot with serious social commentary was ruined because it degenerated quickly into blind hatred. Worst thing is, even if his scheme had succeeded, he and his crew would have been done in by the steroidal drugs they were using, making his victory pitifully short. In the end, he was little more than an Arlong wanna-be.
    • The Fake Straw Hats from the Return to Sabaody Arc. This small group of pirates led by a guy named "Three-Tongued" Demaro Black (the only member deemed dangerous enough to have a bounty) had an idea that seemed good on paper, they’d pretend to be the Straw Hat crew, hoping that group’s reputation would help them recruit a decent crew.[2] On one hand, this worked at first, and they managed to recruit several hundred competent pirates, including the Caribou Pirates. But they ran into trouble very quickly for several reasons. One, they didn’t look like the Straw Hats at all. To put it this way, this is Black and this is Luffy; the other fakes were no better. Possibly justified, as they barely knew what the real Straw Hats looked like, failing to recognize members of the real crew at least twice; they even made fools of themselves trying to intimidate the real Nami and Usopp by claiming to be the Straw Hats. Worse, they advertised by placing fliers in public places, making them targets of several dangerous enemies of the Straw Hats, including the hulking Marine enforcer Sentamaru, a group of Pacifistas, several rank and file Marines and bounty hunters, and for that matter, the Caribou Pirates, once they figured out it had been a ruse. Most ironically, the two impersonating Robin and Chopper helped the real ones a great deal; after the fake ones were caught by a group of Marines, the real ones were able to throw off pursuit for a while. Not to mention, they weren’t very good fighters either. While there was one "hero confronts his imposter" moment in the story, it was lackluster, with Luffy belting Black and his gang into unconsciousness a single Haki, never realizing they were anything more than common muggers.
    • Uh, Spandam. Seriously, while this guy isn't the only reason the viewers will start to wonder if C9 is worthy of their reputation (and what exactly the Marines' guidelines are for recruits), he is a big reason. He's clumsy (a Running Gag involved him spilling coffee on himself during moments of excitement), cowardly, short tempered, and all too often, just plain dumb. Overlapping with Nice Job Fixing It, Villain he could be blamed ultimately for deaths of countless Marines; his cruel abuse of Robin during the Water 7 Saga (breaking a promise to the Straw Hats in the process) made her so enraged that he was the first victim of her dreaded "Clutch" attack (where she uses her Devil Fruit powers to cause her arms to sprout on the victim's body and break his spine.) Ironically, he survived, but this first time made it far more easier for Robin afterwards, and since then, whole armies have perished from her Clutch.
    • Blueno is another of those reasons. To his credit, he's not stupid, nor is he a bad fighter, but he has an odd eccentricity (for lack of a better term) which prevents him from believing anything that he cannot confirm with his own senses, never trusting any sort of third-party information. Thus, during the Enies Lobby Arc, he had been duly warned of Luffy's skills and the gumption the Straw Hat Captain had in intending to declare war on the World Government itself, and nonetheless confronted Luffy alone. Luffy at that point had mastered his Gear Third technique, but barely needed it, as he mopped the floor with Blueno using "only" Gear Two.
    • Charlotte Daifuku, one of Big Mom’s sons and a high-ranking (for some odd reason) officer in her army, and thus an antagonist during the Whole Cake Island Arc. A man who values physical strength among all else, he has an uncontrollable temper, a trait that made his attack on the Thousand Sunny almost laughable. In his attempt to bring Carrot down after she assumed her Sunlong form, he used his Devil Fruit power to create a giant, sword-wielding genie - who, in its efforts to hit Carrot with its weapon, inadvertently sunk about half of Daifuku’s fleet, never hitting Carrot even once.
    • Cidre and his guild from the Cidre Guild Arc. If not for the fact that they enslaved a group of workers at a beverage factory and treated them like garbage, these idiots would be laughable. No Devil Fruit or Haki powers, Cidre stupidly believed he had an edge against Luffy and Boa with his carbonated weaponry (high pressure water guns that use soda as ammunition) . While large amounts of water are indeed effective against Devil Fruit users, such reliance on massive blunt force in a frontal assault proved ineffective against Luffy. The Straw Hat captain was far more annoyed and angered by his treatment of the enslaved laborers than actually worried, and soundly trounced him. But wait, there’s more. Cidre actually intended to lead an assault on the Pirate Festival (where many past and current members of the Seven Supernovas and Seven Warlords of the Sea would be attending) where he claimed he would take down and apprehend every pirate in attendance, including his arch-enemy Douglas Bullet (one of Gol D. Roger’s original crew). It seems likely Buena Festa (his former business associate) only invited him to the Festival as a patsy, hoping he’d initiate a fight; Festa himself claims Cidre is all talk.
    • And for that matter, Buena Festa himself, the Dragon-in-Chief of One Piece: Stampede, the 14th movie. Driven by jealousy against Roger himself, he planned to end the Age of Piracy by making Douglas Bullet the King of the Pirates and ruling the world as the power behind the throne. A rather grandiose (if absurd) goal, seeing as the World Government has been trying to quash the trend since Roger’s death. Festa planned to do this by turning the the Pirate Festival into a free-for-all where Bullet would be the last man standing, and shifted into Stupid Evil territory by broadcasting it to the Emperors of the Underworld, boasting that he planed to have them executed once he assumed control - and is then humiliated when Luffy takes Bullet down. To drive the point home, Luffy’s brother Sabo shows up to give Festa "The Reason You Suck" Speech, telling him he’d have done much better had Luffy been his partner in such an endeavor, although he seriously doubts Luffy would have agreed to it.
      • Bullet qualifies too, it seems, as he stupidly thought he could stand up to dozens of the most renowned pirates in the world (including all the Straw Hats, many of the former and current Warlords, several "Worst Generation" Supernovas, many high-ranking Marines - including Smoker and Garp - and many previous Arc Villains) by himself, after he lost an arm, no less. Granted, the only person who had ever bested him before was Roger himself, but quite a few of the pirates in the army he was up against could also make that claim, and he seems to have forgotten his arrogance is what led him and Roger to part ways and cause him to end up incarcerated at Impel Down. Long story short, it didn't end well for Bullet.
    • Gecko Moria, the captain of the Thriller Bark pirates and Arc Villain of the arc of the same name. Now, some characters in One Piece start out with seeming utterly ridiculous, but then after a few episodes, you see them in action and they become truly awesome; Gecko was not this, he started out seeming utterly ridiculous (an Ambiguously Human vampire-like creature whose crew had sort of a cheesy Comedy-Horror theme) and remained utterly ridiculous. One of the Seven Warlords, owner of the largest ship in the world with a bounty of 320 million berries, he once slaughtered Kaido’s entire crew (badly wounding Kaido himself) and had a potent Devil Fruit power that let him steal and control shadows, granting him remarkable powers of Necromancy - but unfortunately, it seemed the success had gone to his head, making him overconfident, sluggish, and lazy. Most of his appearances in the arc has him doing nothing but sitting on his fat behind sending out his undead minions and three lieutenants ( Hogback, Absalom, and Perona, all of whom were more competent with better developed character than their boss) do all the work. To his credit, when he finally does decide to get his ass off his throne and fight the heroes, it’s a pretty epic Final Boss scene, but it only leads to his very epic defeat that wrecks what’s left of his reputation, causing the World Government to revoke his Warlord status and decide to eliminate him. He manages to escape, so he might eventually become a legitimate threat, but until then, he remains this Trope.
  • Buaku from Dominion Tank Police and his sidekicks, the Puma sisters. They've always been wannabe Magnificent Bastards, but they were slightly more competent in the manga. Granted, their failures are rarely their own fault, discounting their lack of foresight.
  • Heavy Metal L-Gaim's Gavlet Gabre is a particularly jarring example. He's introduced as the primary rival, but never once defeats the protagonist, Daba Myroad. During the final battle at Sveto, he fails to defeat the unimportant and generic villain Rockley Ron, which makes the later the sole villain who makes it out of the show without being captured or killed.
  • In Baccano!, this spot is owned by Dallas Genoard, who isn't all that sympathetic, but is more than ineffectual enough to make up for it.
  • Many a member from a Quirky Miniboss Squad in the Sailor Moon anime falls into this trope. The noteworthy examples are Jadeite from the Shittenou, Ail and En from the Maikaju filler arc, Eudial and Mimette from the Witches 5, the Amazon Trio, and both Sailor Iron Mouse and Sailor Aluminum Siren from the Sailor Animamates.
  • Kurumi, Kurumi, Kurumi. As of the end of the anime's first season, she still hasn't caught a break despite confessing to Kazehaya and tearing down what was left of her fake persona—or if she has, it was offscreen.
  • Keroro from Keroro Gunsou probably counts. His schemes to conquer Earth always seem to end in disasters of some kind, when he's not being sidetracked saving the world from other alien invaders or something.
  • The eponymous Squid Girl is a superhuman being with Combat Tentacles and a strong desire to conquer the human race. She has a bit of trouble getting to the conquering part.
  • King Dedede in Kirby: Right Back at Ya! is the kind of guy who wants respect from the Cappies, and just wants to beat up Kirby for the sake of it, which is why he buys Demon Beasts/monsters online from Holy Nightmare/Nightmare Enterprises. Of course, Kirby always wins the day, so Dedede never gets the respect he wants. To be fair, Dedede isn't really all that bad, he's just mean, misunderstood, and a completely incompetent half-wit.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh; Gee, where to start...
    • In the original Manga, Mokuba (who was far nastier than the one American fans know) tried to get even with Yugi with a rigged Capsule Monster game. (The rules Mokuba set down were that they would take turns using a vending machine before they started to get game pieces so neither would have an advantage; Mokuba had the machine fixed, so that he got powerful pieces and Yugi only got Com Mons.) Unfortunately, Mokuba was a Bad Liar and a bad bluffer, and Yugi easily saw through this charade and defeated him with what he had. To make this worse, Mokuba forced him into another Capsule Monsters game during the Death-T arc with much bigger stakes, using the exact same trick. A combination of overconfidence and foolish pride led to him playing sloppy - as opposed to Yugi, who had to do so carefully - and Yugi prevailed again.
    • Insector Haga and "Dinosaur" Ryuzaki were probably the most well known examples. You kind of felt sorry for them after awhile. Their worst humiliation came during the KC Grand Prix when they dueled Zigfried two against one, and he beat them both... On his first turn. (Granted, Zigfried is a guy who gave even Kaiba one of the most epic duels of his career, but still...)
    • Not that there weren't others. There was Jean-Claude Magnum (a Hopeless Suitor to Mai, and a Miles Gloriosus) the unnamed Rare Hunter called "Seeker" by fans (half of Yugi's dialogue during the duel consisted of a "The Reason You Suck" Speech) and Gurimo from the DOMA arc. (To those who have only seen the dub, that would be the first duelist seen using the Seal of Orichalcos; the dub didn't think he was worth a dub name.) Seriously, Gurimo not only used one Artifact of Doom (The Seal of Orichalcos, naturally) he was dumb enough to combine it with a second one (Obelisk the Tormentor). The only thing that was truly surprising about his loss to Yugi is why all the other characters found it so surprising!
  • Then came Yu-Gi-Oh! GX with more lame villains:
    • In the first season, almost every Obelisk student shown as an antagonist except for Manjyome, Asuka, Fubuki, and Kaiser qualifies. (Clearly, most of the students there did not get to the best dorm based on merit.) Others villains like this included Seven Stars member Abidos III who was a participant of the original Shadow Duels of Egypt and undefeated - but only because his servants let him win and the Duel Spirit Don Zaloog (not a bad duelist, really, but not a good villain, he and his gang tried to steal the Shadow Gate Keys, which was pointless, because they wouldn't function unless you won them from the owners).
    • There was also Manjyome's two brothers. One was Corrupt Corporate Executive, the other a Corrupt Politician, and both suffered from a Small Name, Big Ego.
    • The second season had its share; the Alien of Light whom Judai met in Neo Space had one of the worst deck strategies ever, focusing on a monster whose Attack Score was equal to 1,000 times the cards in the user's hand. That would seem fine if not for the fact that he needed to discard two cards to summon it... And it couldn't attack the turn he did... And he couldn't draw any more cards after doing so. Even then, Judai defeated a duelist using a 3,000 ATK monster in the pilot episode, so this was nothing he couldn't handle. Maybe justified in that he was supposed to be a Warmup Boss for Judai after gaining the powers of Neo Space, but it was still pathetic. You know you're a lame duelist when an Idiot Hero like Judai points out your card's flaws.
    • Starting Season 3, the show took a Darker and Edgier theme and this sort of villain was rare, but there were still a couple. In Season 4, there was Sorano, another Obelisk snob who saw Judai and didn't see past the red blazer. (Some people just don't learn.) Not only that, his Horus deck seemed like it was copied from a magazine, aside from one part of the strategy that needed an anime-only card. He only became a true threat after he was possessed by Trueman.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh 5 Ds: continued the trend, but not as much. As early as the second episode there was Uryu, a hoodlum who was sent to Satellite for causing trouble, who lost a duel to Yusei because he didn't know how his own card worked. Aki had two opponents that qualified in the Fortune Cup alone, Jill deLauncebeaux, and Kodo Kinomiya (the second one a guy who bordered on Stupid Evil, seeing as he knew he was dueling a powerful Reality Warper and spent the whole duel flinging insults at her.) In the second season there was the D-Wheel thief Cid (who rigged his Death Trap so that he wouldn't fall victim to it, only to almost be done in because he rigged it badly) and the Loan Shark Garome. (Jack Atlas is a guy who grew up on Satellite and would later face the nightmarish metal stress of facing the Earthbound Gods, survived it all with a grin. It's not like common crooks like them are going to intimidate or panic him.)
  • In Yu-Gi-Oh!: SEVENS, it’s much easier to list the members of the Goha Corp who do not deserve this designation than the ones who do, literally: Yugo, Otes, Nail, and Mimi are the only competent members, the rest are, at most, Laughably Evil. This is especially true during the Team Battle Royale arc where they are unable to discover Otes' identity or location despite him being an employee and the fact that they own the online server than controls the Solid Vision system. (To put this in perspective, in the original anime, KaibaCorp owned the server and Kaiba or one of his employees could locate a duelist within a minute.) Their goal is to abolish the Rush Duel system, which Playful Hacker protagonist Yuga Ohdo programmed into their computer system, and despite dozens of engineers and programmers working around the clock, they cannot even find the implanted rootkit, much less deactivate it. Yuga didn’t even create the backdoor system that accepted his program, and their plans to steal the information or trick Yuga out of the codes fail in the most absurd ways. (One seriously has to wonder why a more malevolent hacker has yet to rob them blind with such bad security.) Even worse, most members that try have to use the Rush Duel system themselves, and many start to seriously have a lot of fun doing so.

Comic Books

  • Batman has a rogue's gallery with some of the best villains in comic history. Sadly, he also has some of the lamest:
    • The Riddler is often treated as slightly less of a threat than most of Batman's gallery because his particular lunacy isn't inherently violent, and he has a compulsion to tell Batman and the police what his plans are (he's tried not to, but he just can't). It's tough to write a Riddler plot that can believably challenge Batman...so many writers don't, essentially writing him as a joke. The difficulty of writing good Riddler stories may also be a factor in the character's recent Heel Face Turn, wherein he decided to use his genius for puzzles to solve crimes as a (well paid) private detective...at least for now...
      • One issue of Batman Adventures takes this and runs with it for all it's worth. The Riddler decides to try one last time to beat Batman, vowing that if Batman solves the riddle and defeats him, he'll give up crime forever. The riddle he comes up with really is good, but Batman's busy with multiple other villains and essentially decides to not spend time on the Riddler, and catch him after the fact if necessary. He catches him anyway, completely by chance, and admits as much to the Riddler when asked how he solved the puzzle. Satisfied that he outwitted Batman, even though he got caught, Riddler sings all the way back to Arkham.
    • Similarly, the fact that the Penguin is perfectly sane may have contributed to his mutation into a gray market white-collar criminal who Batman is grudgingly willing to tolerate as a source of information on the criminal underworld.
    • The Baffler is a second-rate version of Cluemaster, which makes him a third-rate Riddler.
    • The Arkham Asylum: Living Hell miniseries introduced several such villains, mixed with Arkham regulars, such as the Junkyard Dog who goes through garbage. Seriously, that's his gimmick. Others included Doodlebug, who paints (although he's a definite example of Not So Harmless), and Magpie, who really, really likes shiny things.
    • Humpty-Dumpty, who is so delightfully inoffensive that even calling him a villain is a big stretch. Even when one learns that there's a good reason that he's in Arkham, one kinda feels sorry for him; he has an obsession with fixing things by taking them apart and putting them back together again, because his whole life has been a string of disasters, one after another. Unfortunately, his attempts to fix things only make them run worse. His attempts to fix stuff like a subway train, an elevator, and a clock tower have lead to people getting hurt or even killed. And, of course, he murdered his abusive grandmother when he tried to take her apart and put her together again.
    • Condiment King, an absurd parody of gimmick villains, is this trope with a lampshade. Originally introduced as an original character for Batman: The Animated Series where he wasn't a villain, but a brainwashed pawn of the Joker, he eventually emigrated to mainstream comics as a real one. Just dangerous enough to be worthy of Batman and Robin's attention, he has at least the potential to be a real threat (think "mustard gas", for just one example). However, in practice, he repeatedly gets defeated in a single page. Because he's an Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain, he keeps getting parole.
    • Jenna Duffy, aka The Carpenter (see trope image), was a member of Tweedledee and Tweedledum's "Wonderland Gang", but had the sense to get out of supervillainy and to work exclusively as...an actual carpenter. Her specialty (who do you think builds all those deathtraps in Gotham?) can still get her into trouble, however.
      • Amazingly enough, however, Jenna manages to become a Not So Harmless Villain and a three-dimensional character in Batman: Streets of Gotham. When she is double crossed by her employer (a crime boss called the Director) and realizes he never intended to pay her and that his scheme to kill Batman requires her death as well, she turns against him and his gang, taking them all down in what could best be described as an R-rated version of Home Alone. (And yes, she kills one thug with a nail gun.) Batman later advises her to leave Gotham, and she does - for a while.
      • Of course, the Director fits this Trope too and Duffy knows it from the start. The reason he hires her to begin with is to build a Death Trap complex with the intent to use it on Batman and film it, intending to market the footage as a Snuff Film. And he doesn't plan to stop there either, having "scripted" similar films with Superman and Wonder Woman as victims. He even advertises these movies -- one movie poster shows Diana's dead body hanging from a gallows. Duffy's own opinion of this is, Batman is going to curb-stomp him, and she hopes to be paid and be miles away before that happens. Of course, as previously mentioned, Batman does not curb stop him, she does.
    • Signalman got his start as a crook who figured he needed some gimmick to be successful, so taking inspiration from the Bat-Signal, he embarked on crimes where, like the Riddler, he left clues for the hero. But signals just don't grab a fan's attention as much as riddles do, and his costume looked like some kid scribbled all over it.
    • Calendar Man started out as a lame villain. Julian Gregory Day (his name is three puns in one) committed crimes on holidays with an appropriate theme. (For instance, dressing as Uncle Sam on Independence Day and robbing historic museums.) And he made really bad puns doing it. In recent years, however, he's become more serious and is seen in darker stories, becoming a little better and less of a joke.
    • Charlie Brown, the notorious Kite Man. (Not making this up, he was a lame Shout Out to Peanuts who even crashed into a tree in one story and yelled "Rats!") Obsessed with kites, he committed crimes with a rocket-powered hang glider, until he was killed off and never mentioned in that continuity again. Still, the Harley Quinn cartoon has made him, while lame, a good deal more entertaining.
    • Most characters designed by comic legends Bob Kane and Bill Finger would be A-list, but the Penny Plunderer was anything but. Joe Coyne (another pun there) was a newspaper seller who was fired for stealing pennies, and turned to crime over an obsession for them. But it gets worse. He was the original owner of the giant penny proudly displayed in the Batcave. DC was so embarrassed by this story, they gave it a Retcon that attributed the giant penny to one of Two-Face's schemes, banishing the Penny Plunderer from canon.
    • Poka-Dot Man, a guy in a bodysuit covered with multicolored poka-dots. Truthfully, this guy had a lot of pretty cool gadgets, but his ridiculous costume and name made it very hard for anyone to take him seriously.
  • Wonder Woman had a few, most from The Golden Age of Comic Books:
    • The Blue Snowman. This was a scientist who invented a suit of Powered Armor that made her (yes, her) look like a snowman, and it had a freeze ray that produced blue snow. A new version of the character in the more modern era tried to be Darker and Edgier, but only looked sillier, adding a corncob pipe.
    • The Duke of Deception and the Earl of Greed were two of Ares' flunkies whose job was to keep the Earth in a perpetual state of war. Since this was during World War II, it's not clear why Ares even needed these buffoons, who always messed up. DC may have been going for the Halfhearted Henchman angle here, but these guys were bigger failures than Pain and Panic. DC seems to have given up on the Earl, but the Duke managed to eventually Take a Level in Badass, pulling a successful coup on Ares and still appears from time to time.
    • Angelo Bend, aka Angle Man, a villain with a... geometry theme. Obsessed with committing crimes with "unbeatable angles" this guy had a silly-looking costume covered with mathematics symbols and a sillier-looking weapon that looked like a Penrose triangle ("the Angler", he called it) but always got his ass handed to him by the heroine. Eventually he modified the weapon so it could warp time and space in a variety of ways, ditched his silly costume (for a getup that made him look like a middle-aged accountant) and was killed in the Crisis.
    • Egg Fu may have been in a class of himself among Diana's enemies:
      • The first was likely one of the worst cases of Unfortunate Implications in comic book history. He was a huge egg with a face that was an insulting caricature of a Chinese man. With no limbs. And he couldn't move. At all. He was killed the first issue he appeared (after a somewhat clever scheme to turn the heroine and Steve Trevor into living bombs), but he left an heir, it seemed...
      • Unfortunately, DC felt a need to revamp him, bringing in Egg Foo the Fifth. (Where were the other three? Nobody knew, nobody cares.) This one was worse than the first, managing to capture the heroine by binding her with her lasso (common practice for misogynist villains she tended to fight) but was done in when she got too close by offering to dance for him.
      • Eventually a robot version of Egg Foo called Dr. Yes (a Shout Out to Dr. No, of course) was introduced as an enemy of the Metal Men. A slightly better bad guy, still an American-hating villain from China. This one survived and escaped, but didn't return.
      • DC would come up with another version post-Crisis, one that gave him a robotic body and a scheme that involved summoning the Four Horsemen using technology. Sadly, it was still hard to take a giant, living egg seriously., and he was still a blatant Chinese stereotype, so he didn't last, until...
      • Finally, the most recent version was named Edgar Fullerton Yeung (get it?) who became a regular in Harley Quinn's own title. The nature of the title made him more acceptable when the Chinese background was removed, but he was still a truly incompetent villain who was much happier when Harley hired him as a handyman.
  • Most bad guys on this list are lame because they have lame powers. However, that was not the case with the Composite Superman. Originally an out-of-work stuntman named Joseph Meach, he tried to get back into the spotlight by setting up a tank of water on a street in Metropolis, then diving into it from the roof of a building; unfortunately, the defective tank was leaking, and he’d have been killed had Superman not shown up and saved him. Superman also got him an honest job as a janitor at the Superman Museum, but being around superhero memorabilia just made him bitter and resentful. Until, that is, one stormy night where he was sweeping the room displaying wax statues of the Legion of Super-Heroes. Lightning crashed through the window and struck the display, and somehow, Meach gained the powers of every member of the Legion (that’s right, all 22 of them; keep in mind, this includes Superboy, Supergirl, and two heroes just as strong as they are, Mon-El and Ultra-Boy); it also caused him to snap and become obsessed with defeating Superman and Batman. Now, with powers like this, Meach could have become one of the most dangerous villains in existence, but sadly, he couldn’t use them very well. Being something of an Attention Whore , his first scheme involved creating a series of disasters for Superman and Batman to attend to, but he deliberately sabotaged them in order to humiliate the heroes, and then fixing them himself. He wasted so much time doing so, he didn't realize that his powers were temporary, and eventually wore off. Indeed, the only good thing the Composite Superman did was in his second appearance, where a Heel Realization led to him defending his two foes from another villain called Xan, dying in the attempt. Ironically, this last act granted led to Meach being honored with his own statue in the Museum, the inscription stating he "lived a villain, but died a hero."
  • The Marvel Universe's Toad is a classic example of this. He has second-rate powers, a stupid nickname, and an even stupider real name (Mortimer Toynbee). Understandably, he hated himself. However, the first X-Men live action film, with the character played by Ray Park, changed him into a wry villain with more self-respect and redefined powers that are actually scary in their deadliness—managing to become his own Canon Immigrant (in particular, his Ultimate Marvel incarnation is much more badass than his first one).
  • The Shocker from Spider-Man:
    • He almost revels in his second-rate status, remarking on one occasion that at least it keeps him off the radar of guys like The Punisher.
    • Not that this makes him particularly successful:

Captain America (comics): What the hell do these kids [the Young Avengers] think they're doing?
Spider-Man: Making the Shocker look like an idiot. Which--granted--isn't tough, but is always entertaining.

    • In one story, a group of heroes are moving through a superhuman prison, vigorously expositing about the potential damage that the villain they're after could cause. In the process, they run by The Shocker's cell.

Wolverine, smirking: "Yeah, we wouldn't want the Shocker to get out - then we'd really be in trouble."
The Shocker, arms crossed petulantly: "Shut up!"

    • He's fallen to the point that he no longer appears on the local news' supervillain alerts even though Stilt-Man did. Desperate, he teams up with a similarly washed-up Hydro-Man to knock over ONE bank and retire. You feel pretty bad for him when Spider-Man not only stops them, but the Shocker accidentally evaporates Hydro-Man and injures himself to the point that his ribs are sticking out of his chest. "You always said I looked like a pincushion..."
    • But contrary to his reputation, the Shocker actually has a fairly high success rate against Spidey. He once proved himself to be Not So Harmless when he captured Spidey and, in a fit of rage, delivered a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown that nearly killed him. Even The Hood mentioned that he had great respect for the guy.
    • Another time he teamed up with fellow loser the Trapster (see below), had Spidey at their mercy and only didn't kill him due to suddenly getting a call from their boss informing them that their pay would be doubled if Spidey lived. Ever the pragmatist, Shocker accepted though he remarked that if he killed him, he would "save a fortune on therapy bills".
    • While the "regular" Shocker has his moments of competence and Not So Harmless, his Ultimate Marvel counterpart consistently fits this trope.
  • Daredevil's big problem is that he has a few good villains (like Bullseye, the Kingpin, the Owl, and Elektra) but most of the others are lame:
    • Case in point, Stilt-Man. A man whose suit of Powered Armor offers some minimal amount of protection while making him very tall. One of the more baffling villains of his era, writers gave up on revamping him into a serious threat a long time ago. Since then, whenever you needed a really pathetic villain to beat up, Stilt-Man was your guy. Eventually, The Punisher killed him. For all that, his wife, Princess Python, was pretty hot, so perhaps Stilt-Man was effective in other areas.
    • While Stilt-Man may be dead, his legacy lives on in...Lady Stilt-Man! Her first appearance consisted of being mocked by Spider-Man (who thanked her for improving the miserable day he was having), and being defeated by stepping into an open manhole. Even Spider-Man felt sorry for her when she started crying. This changed in her next appearance in "Villains for Hire", where she upgraded her armor and Took a Level in Badass.
    • The Matador was a former bullfighter who was kicked out of the sport for cruelty to animals. Just think about that for a minute. Now you know how a regular matador uses his cloak to goad the bull into charging? This lame villain tried to use that technique on armored cars, so he could rob them. He tried to use it on Daredevil too, who is blind in case you forgot.
    • The LeapFrog. Vincent Patilio was a burglar and small-time inventor who made a frog suit with spring boots. The costume wasn't even very intimidating, and he got his clock cleaned by Daredevil. Still, one might say he had more smarts than most villains on this page, because once he did time, he decided to quit being a villain. Unfortunately his teenage son Eugene decided to use the suit and try to be a hero (though not a very good one), renaming himself the Fabulous Frog-Man. While his career as a hero has lasted longer than his dad's stint as a crook, and he occasionally manages to save the day, it's usually completely by accident.
  • Rhino sometimes gets this treatment. Recently, he underwent a Heel Face Turn, but this is doomed to fail
    • There was a two issue story about him in a Spider-Man spinoff focusing on the various other characters in Spidey's life, with his idiocy being what makes him so pathetic. However, he ends up becoming super-intelligent via super science and ends up getting the girl and becoming the strongest crime boss in New York, along with figuring out Spider-Man's true identity. He goes back to being dumb, however, when he ends up being miserable by not being able to connect with people anymore.
  • Slyde. A villain who claims that his parents were gunned down by the Incredible Hulk and Captain America, and whose primary mode of attack is the "Slyde Punch", which is just a jab to the ribs. He gets taken down and hauled off to jail with incredible speed. As it happens, he's just a guy going through a midlife crisis who decided to go toe-to-toe with Spider-Man instead of just buying a Corvette or something.
  • Though the rat creatures in the comic Bone are quite fearsome in force, the nameless two most commonly seen around the valley where the protagonists live are pretty pathetic on their own. They want to eat the story's protagonist, but they do themselves more harm than anyone else with their bumbling. Their constant bickering over whether to bake the Bones into a quiche is also quite endearing.
    • A trilogy of junior novel sequels even have them as two of the chosen heroes. Well, more like Token Evil Teammates, really.
  • Marvel's Porcupine was a rare example of a Heel Face Turn from this type, although it went wrong. The villain initially created his battlesuit to sell to the military, but for some reason, they weren't interested (perhaps it was because it looked goofy). He became a particularly pathetic supervillain, to the point that when he tried to sell the battlesuit to other villains, they also turned him down. He then turned to the Avengers for assistance, only to be killed by his own costume when he decided to do the right thing and double-cross the Serpent Squad.
  • The DCU villain Dr. Light started out as a formidable foe capable of taking on the Justice League single-handed, but was a victim of severe Villain Decay in the Bronze Age and Post-Crisis eras, mostly notable for being repeatedly defeated by kids. And while defeat at the hands of the Teen Titans isn't all that shameful, he was also humiliated by Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys, a team of non-powered pre-teens! That all changed with his rape-the-wife moment in Identity Crisis.
  • The entire Injustice League, which consisted of Major Disaster, Cluemaster, Clock King, Big Sir, Multi-Man, and Mighty Bruce. Individually, they were talented in some area, if lacking in others. As a group...they're still a bunch of losers. Here's how bad their luck is—while staying in Europe, they happened to attend the same French as a Second Language class as the Justice League. And this was following a bank robbery that was thwarted by the fact that none of them could effectively communicate the idea of "This is a stickup" in French.
    • The Clock King deserves special mention, as he overlaps this Trope with Tragic Monster (and no, this is not the villain in Batman: The Animated Series, he has nothing to do with this one). At first William Tockman seems utterly ridiculous, an armed robber and burglar with no super-powers at all, just a silly costume covered with clocks who steals expensive clocks. But then you hear his history. Tockman spent years caring for his invalid sister, and when a doctor tells him that he is also terminally ill with six months to live, he is terrified of what might become of his sister when he dies. He commits crimes hoping the profit will pay for her treatment once he is gone, the clock motif used to remind him his time is limited. Unfortunately, he botches a robbery, and is caught by Green Arrow. While in jail, his poor sister dies alone, and in horrible irony, his own diagnosis had been wrong, the incompetent doctor having switched his papers with that of another patient. He busts out of jail seeking revenge on Green Arrow and the doctor, later joining the Injustice League and then conscripted into the Suicide Squad, failing in their first mission and not seen since.
  • Bolphunga the Unrelenting, from Green Lantern. A Large Ham villain, notable for using an axe against power-ring wielding space cops, and for attempting to take on Mogo.
  • Turk, the pettiest of the petty hoods in Harlem, in the Daredevil comics.
  • A good unseen character example is Captain Carnage from Watchmen, killed by falling down an empty elevator shaft.
    • Not quite, Captain Carnage was Rorshach'd down an elevator shaft. Which could happen to anyone really.
  • The All-New Orb from Ghost Rider is a man with a giant eyeball for a head and a repulsor ray gun. Captain America describes the problem as "nobody takes him seriously enough to put him in an actual cell." He's not quite Not So Harmless since he's yet to prove a proper threat to any superhero thus far, but he's more dangerous than he looks.
  • Marvel Comics' Paste-Pot Pete had one of the more unfortunate villainous monikers in supervillainy, and his Villainous Harlequin costume didn't help, although that was the first thing he changed. Even after changing his name to "The Trapster" and becoming more effective in his use of specialized glues and pastes, he still gets ragged on mercilessly about his old name by the likes of Spider-Man and the Human Torch.
  • Astro City has Glue-Gun, an obvious Expy of Paste-Pot Pete. His only major appearance to date showed him invading a superheroes' dinner club, only to be taken out by the busboy he was holding hostage.
  • The pirates and Romans in the Asterix books.
  • Iznogoud the Infamous, the ever-scheming but hapless Grand Vizier to the Caliph, who merely wants "to become Caliph instead of the Caliph."
  • Not all of Captain America's foes had the notoriety of The Red Skull:
    • Batroc the Leaper is one of the most skilled fighters in the Marvel Universe, yet he almost always loses and never gets any respect. Thankfully, the good captain actually seems to like him.
      • Taken to another level in an issue of Marvel Adventures Avengers, in which Captain America's old enemy tries to reform and ends up inadvertently roping the Avengers into a somewhat amoral scheme to promote an internet dating business.
      • Batroc is an interesting case, as he's only 'ineffective' when he's fighting Steve one-on-one. When working for someone like Zemo, or fighting other heroes, he can be scarily effective. See his effortless beat down of the super-strong mercenary Paladin and his clashes with Bucky Barnes.
      • It was also noted in a comic about one of Marvel's superprisons that since Batroc's abilities all come from a lifetime of training, people like him are the most dangerous in supervillain prisons, as most of the villains either have their powers sealed or their tech taken away. Another name dropped in that vein is the Kangaroo, of all people.
      • Even Batman himself commends Batroc on his speed and skills after defeating him (off-panel) in Volume 4 of JLA-Avengers.
    • He's bigger than the Kingpin! He's the crime lord of Miami! He's the Slug! So says the cover blurb for Web of Spider-Man Annual, but unfortunately for Ulysses X Lugman (who in fact first appeared in the Nomad limited series where Cap was a guest star), that's it. He's a 1,200 pound drug Lord with all the fighting skills of a bean bag chair. He can't even move on his own without a giant mechanical wheelchair. Maybe this could be seen as an analogy for America fighting obesity, but most of the time he's just a big joke.
  • Carface, who Huntress made quick work of.
  • Rainbow Raider in The Flash became this, once going so far as to attend a villainy motivational seminar in a futile effort to stop losing all the time. Neron once sent him an invitation to his upgrades-for-souls meeting just so the Trickster could steal it from him.
  • Asbestos Lady is a villain who fits this Trope in hindsight. This gal was a thief who thought it was a good idea to fight the Human Torch (not Johnny Storm, the original one) with an asbestos costume. This made perfect sense back in The Golden Age of Comic Books before anyone knew that asbestos was a dangerous carcinogen. Later in the modern era, it was confirmed she had died of cancer, done in by her own costume, and that she had been secretly funded by the U.S. government to combat the perceived threat superhumans posed, sort of a precursor to the Superhuman Registration Act during the Civil War. In effect, poor Asbestos Lady had become Aesop Collateral Damage in a precautionary tale of how a corrupt government could ruin the lives of its own employees for selfish personal agendas.
    • There was also Asbestos Man, another foe of the Torch. When he appeared a second time - quite a bit later, in The Fantastic Four Vol. 5 #1 - he also suffers from cancer and has to carry an oxygen tank around with him even as he commits crimes. This ironically makes him more successful, as everyone he tries to rob is terrified at the thought of getting the disease. Despite this, he is miserable, as he now has no purpose (he came out of retirement seeking revenge on the Torch, only to find out he was dead) and thinking that if anyone remembers him at all, it will be as a lame fool who was defeated by his own poor judgment. Fortunately, the Great Lakes Avengers (the heroes who oppose him in this story) are no strangers to being regarded as lame, and promise they will remember him and spread the word about how notorious a villain he is, if he simply turns himself in. He agrees, and passes away soon after.
  • Codpiece, from Doom Patrol. This crook started his criminal career when he was rejected by a girl in high school who said he wasn’t “big enough”. She meant height but he thought she meant something else, and it inspired him to build… eh, this. Even worse was the way he was defeated - rookie heroine Coagula was trying to make a name for herself after the Justice League rejected her application, and figured fighting this villain would help, but because she didn’t have a costume yet, she bought a cheap frog mask from a convenience store and took him down in a… rather humiliating manner. It did indeed gain Coagula a spot on the Doom Patrol, but Codpiece wasn’t so lucky. He hasn’t been seen since.
  • Foes of The Fantastic Four include such iconic villains as Doctor Doom and Galactus, but even they have some of these:
    • The Hate Monger. With his pointed Hood that made him look like a klansman, this villain could cause a Hate Plague in his victims. Unfortunately, this villain’s gimmick was the secret identity behind his mask, kind of like a darker version of a crook from Scooby-Doo. When the heroic foursome took him down and removed his mask (revealing him to be a clone of Adolf Hitler himself) he lost that edge and there was nothing left. Even the Red Skull (an actual Nazi) called him lame.
    • Stan Lee once claimed in an interview that the one character he may have regretted creating was Diablo. Yep, this was a Card-Carrying Villain who was purposely designed as a Card-Carrying Villain, hence his name. He was pretty much Marvel's poster boy for the Alchemy Is Magic trope, but never really accomplished much. In fact, initially it seemed he was Only In It For The Money, selling his alchemical concoctions to make profit, but failed at that because most of his potions wore off in a few weeks at most.

Eastern Animation

  • The South Korean mice in the propaganda-tastic North Korean series A Squirrel and a Hedgehog. The pair, consisting of domineering Jerkass Mulmangcho and his meeker, one-eared companion Yelipalip, migrate from faction to faction amongst the villains, and are consistently mistreated and abused. All of their efforts to prove their worth, do something evil, and make it higher up in the ranks of whichever group they're currently attached to inevitably fail, miserably and pitifully, usually thanks to the heroes. More than once, the two are actually arrested and imprisoned by their own bosses and almost executed because they got the blame for what the undercover good guys, Geumsagi and Juldarami, did. So far, they have always managed to somehow get out of such situations alive. Although they clearly want to be evil and respected (Mulmangcho more so than Yelipalip), they fail so often and so pitifully it's difficult not to feel bad for them.
    • It should also be noted that this was originally an evil trio of Ineffectual Sympathetic Villains, but the third guy, Mulsajo, whose distinguishing characteristic was that he wore a pink shirt, was even more ineffectual than his comrades and was blown up with a grenade midway through one of the earlier story arcs, leaving just his two buddies to carry the mantle of constantly failing.

Film

  • Disney examples:
    • Kaa, from Disney's The Jungle Book. His interest in Mowgli occasionally bordered on the paedophilic, though. Unlike in the book, where he's a benevolent Badass Old Master.
    • Captain Hook. After a while, you just start to hate Peter for being so darn mean to the Captain.
    • Edgar, from The Aristocrats. Given his age, clumsiness, bad driving, and no real skills other than that of any other butler, his "scheme" is almost laughable. Granted, he managed to get rid of the Dutchess and her kittens (for a short while at least), but lets be honest, it doesn't exactly take a genius to fool three cats, and ultimately, he is beaten up and humiliated by a bunch of alley cats in a Curb Stomp Battle - how pathetic can you get? One has to question just why he was so dead set on getting rid of them - not like they'd have been able to do much to stop him from spending most of the money on himself by doing the bare minumum of what had been required of taking care of them.
  • Peter Lorre in M. And again in Casablanca. And in The Maltese Falcon. And Arsenic and Old Lace. In fact, Peter Lorre in general.
    • Peter Lorre in Mad Love; all of the sympathy, three times the creepiness. Fairly efficient, given how nuts he was.
    • Exception: he was pretty unsympathetic and effective in Casino Royale 1954. And as Mister Moto, he's a two-fisted detective hero.
    • Further exception: he's the hero in the film of The Mask of Dimitrios (aka A Coffin for Dimitrios), and Sydney Greenstreet, who was usually the more competent villain to Lorre's ISV, is the ISV of this film.
  • On the other hand, Elisha Cook, Jr. made Peter Lorre look lucky. At least Lorre survived most of the above examples (and in Arsenic and Old Lace, he even pulled off a Karma Houdini). The same can't be said for poor Elisha in Phantom Lady, The Big Sleep, Born To Kill (where, shortly before his character's death, he tries to menace a little old lady, only to have the little old lady kick his ass!), or The Killing. In Shane, he's practically a good guy version of this trope. But the best example of how much worse off Cook is compared to Lorre is in The Maltese Falcon, where they're both ISVs. Sam Spade disarms and humiliates Cook's Wilmer far more often than he does Lorre's Joel Cairo, despite the fact that Wilmer's a multiple murderer and Cairo isn't. And at the end, their mutual boss (and possibly more) Casper Guttman sells out Wilmer to the authorities while happily walking off arm in arm with Cairo (although they all end up in jail). Joel Cairo may be more pathetic than you, but Wilmer is even more pathetic than Cairo.
    • Cook's character in House on Haunted Hill, though hardly villainous, is quite ineffectual and sympathetic. He just had the right face for the part.
    • One critic said of Cook that 'his very appearance seems like an invitation to destroy him'.
  • Inspector Clouseau, originally intended as an incompetent version of Inspector Javert in the original The Pink Panther, managed to be so much more sympathetic than protagonist Charles "The Phantom" Lytton that he was retooled into the hero of the film's sequels.
    • In the following film, A Shot in the Dark, Clouseau transmitted this ISV condition to his boss, Chief Inspector Dreyfus (soon to become the former Chief Inspector Dreyfus). Dreyfus is actually a good detective who, it's implied, would never have gone Ax Crazy if it hadn't been for Clouseau. After his Face Heel Turn, poor Dreyfus has to look on helplessly as Clouseau survives all of Dreyfus' numerous murder attempts solely due to the dumbest of dumb luck.
      • And then, in Son of the Pink Panther, Dreyfus gets a reboot into sympathetic, if not protagonist, at least The Woobie status, as his complete descent into Axe Crazy has apparently been retconned out of existence and him back into existence. He even gets the girl with the down side of now being the stepfather to his late nemesis Clouseau's long-lost son. Still the Butt Monkey, if not the ISV.
  • Vincent Price as Shelby Carpenter in Laura. This is how his own girlfriend sums him up:

"He's no good, but he's what I want. I'm not a nice person, Laura, and neither is he. He knows I know he's just what he is. He also knows that I don't care. We belong together because we're both weak and can't seem to help it. That's why I know he's capable of murder.[3] He's like me."

  • "Bowler Hat Guy" in Meet the Robinsons. He becomes dramatically more sympathetic further into the movie.
  • Muerte ("name for death!") in Undercover Blues. Muerte's reputation on the streets is hinted at as being formidable, but his utterly humiliating defeat at the hands of Jeff Blue quickly turned him into one of these. Every lost tooth just makes him that much more lovable.
  • Sol and Vince, the loser duo of pawnshop crooks who try their hand at the big(ger) leagues, in Snatch. It does not go well for them.
  • Prince Charming (or more appropriately, the franchise's resident Prince Charmless) from the second and third Shrek movies. Initially The Dragon to his mother in the second film, he's a spoiled rotten, vain egotist with all the trappings of a deceitful usurper and tyrant, but the problem is, he's not very good at it. Not intimidating in the least, his grandiose threats make him sound more foolish than threatening, and he's only truly a problem with his mother's support, something he doesn't have in the third movie where he makes an honest attempt to be the Big Bad, only for his revenge plan and attempted coup to fall on top of him, literally.
  • Gargamel, mostly, comes off as this in The Smurfs. Until he gets his hands on Smurf Essence, that is.
  • Prince Edward in Braveheart. He tries so hard to meet his father Longshanks' expectations, but he never does.
  • Pretty much the whole plot of Spaced Invaders. The aliens want to conquer Earth, but aren't all-too good at it.
  • The ED-209 from Robocop can't be held accountable for its incompetence because it was a mindless machine, but it was clearly a poorly designed one. Its logic circuits could not process information as quickly as a human brain (making it dumber than even a PC bought from a Radio Shack in the 80s) and could not even maneuver itself down a flight of stairs, which is exactly how the protagonist defeated it.
  • RoboGadget, the evil android imposter of the protagonist of Inspector Gadget. When inevitably confronted by the real Gadget, he actually makes the iconic Idiot Hero seem competent in comparison.
  • The eponymous monsters in Attack of the Killer Donuts. They manage to kill a few humans (mostly folks that had it coming, and one of the heroes who makes a Heroic Sacrifice to stop them) but most of the intended victims are able to swat them aside with relative ease. In the end, living, evil donuts aren't very dangerous.
  • The Purgers in The Purge. While This Troper is no expert on the subject, one would assume that gangs intending to invade a home and murder the occupants on the day of the year it is most likely to happen would expect some level of resistance. Nobody wants to be dragged out of bed and murdered in the middle of the night by people wearing horrendous-looking masks, right? Yet, the Purgers in this movie aren’t exactly up for the task. Despite this movie occurring in America, they carry surprisingly little in the way of firearms. Plus two of them they literally act like children (sociopathic murderous children, that is) giggling wickedly and giving each other piggyback rides, actions that make them seem like evil lunatics, right up to the part where the much savvier homeowner James blows their brains out with a shotgun. The rest fare little better, easily ambushed and killed by the Sanders’ neighbors, seemingly forgetting that when you go out on Purge Night, you are not the only ones purging.
  • No One Lives combines this with Eviler Than Thou. The film’s Villain Protagonists are a gang of hardened, violent killers who make the mistake of going up against a monstrous Serial Killer who is far better at killing than they are. Contrary to the film's name, a couple of characters do survive, but it isn't them.
  • You’re Next. The masked intruders are sadistic, brutal killers, hired to murder a family as part of an inheritance scam orchestrated by two of them, Felix and Zee. Obviously, however, these two didn’t know enough about their own siblings to know that one of them, Erin, is an Action Girl survivalist trained in a mercenary compound to kill without fear or pity, and her evil brothers and their hired killers are completely unprepared to deal with what is essentially a Distaff Counterpart to Rambo out to exact bloody retribution on them.
  • When it comes to Hunting the Most Dangerous Game, few excel at it better than the Predator - it is their “hat” as a species. But the Predator in the aptly named movie Prey seems to have no plan on what to do should the prey try to beat it at its own game. Sure, it slaughters the French voyageurs who are after Naru and Naru's unfortunate brother, but it seems this is because they make the mistake everyone else does when up against a Predator, trying to fight it directly. As a skilled hunter herself, Naru quickly learns that the only way to survive against a monster like this is to use its own strategy against it, and despite the Predator possessing superior technology (the movie takes place in 1719) and hunting skills common of its people, Naru proves the better hunter, outwitting and outsmarting it until she leads it into her own deadly trap.
  • Biff Tannen in Back to the Future; for all his his sadism and macho posturing, Biff was nothing but a wimp with a glass jaw, his rotten temper often causing him to make mistakes he could have avoided - a lot of fans pointed out that he was lucky George humiliated him, he might have been doing hard time in prison for rape otherwise. And that is just the first movie, in the second, his older self's attempt to change the timeline gets himself Ret-Gone, while the third shows that his great-grandfather was just as dumb, making his incompetence hereditary.
  • Jerry, the Villain Protagonist of Fargo. The main humor of this Black Comedy movie is how his ludicrous plot to become rich - kidnapping his own wife and making a ransom demand to her rich father - backfires due to his own ineptitude. The thugs he hires to do the job are violent sociopaths who seriously botch the plan by murdering a state trooper and two witnesses, starting a series of Disaster Dominoes that results in his wife and her father murdered, and Jerry left with nothing and in prison, the true victim being his ten-year-old son who has lost both his parents as a result. While Jerry does come off as borderline sympathetic, one must remember he caused this tragedy via his own stupidity and has nobody to blame for it all but himself.

Literature

  • Prince (later King) Korin, The Dragon (although the Big Bad dies first) of Lynn Flewelling's Tamír Trilogy...although, especially towards the end, he ends up less sympathetic than merely pitiful. In real-world history, kings like him tended to end up with the sobriquet of "The Unready".
  • While Sloan in the Inheritance Cycle has certainly done some terrible things—killing a man, selling out his village to man-eating mooks, and bullying the protagonist in his younger years—it's revealed that he did everything out of love for his daughter, and so lies on a fuzzy line between this trope and Well-Intentioned Extremist.
  • Antorell the wizard in Patricia C. Wrede's Enchanted Forest Chronicles. His father, Zemenar, is the series' closest thing to a Big Bad (in the first three books, anyway), and Antorell wants to be favored by him, but he—and pretty much everyone else—sees him as largely inept, to the point that the heroes will often talk about him as if he wasn't in the room. He's never really presented as a sympathetic character, and he spends much of his time trying to kill the series' main female protagonist (or maybe not...it's sometimes hard to tell if he hates her, likes her, or both), but he's so bad about it that he's hardly ever presented as a threat, he never catches a break, and is all in all just so pathetic that it's hard not to feel a little bad for the guy.
  • Toward the end of the sixth Harry Potter novel and through all of the seventh, Draco Malfoy has this role. He's pretty much forced into more overtly villainous acts (apart from being a male Alpha Bitch and jerk) by the threat of Voldemort killing him and his parents. Also noticeable is that while in the past, Harry and friends hated Draco, they instead see him as pathetic, and keep saving him even as he keeps trying to do successful evil against them.
  • Some of the more incompetent Mooks in the Redwall series fall into this category.
  • 'Evil Harry Dread' from The Last Hero.
    • Not so ineffectual, actually. Even with horrible help (which he intentionally looks for, too), he still manages to be a somewhat legitimate threat...Or he would, except the Code keeps him from being more then a Card-Carrying Villain. Remember though, like the Barbarian heroes he travels with for much of the story, he's lived to be very, very old in a profession that regularly has him facing some of the most dangerous individuals in the world (including the heroes he's travelling with).
  • Vaurien Scapegrace from Skulduggery Pleasant. His major goal in life is to be "Killer Supreme". Not only does he not manage to kill anyone until two whole books after his initial appearance, but he ends up being killed himself and turned into a zombie before even that.
  • Chichikov in Dead Souls becomes this effectively.
  • Chaunzaggaroth is this for the first couple of The Dresden Files books.
  • Jabba the Hutt may have been a dreaded and feared gangster in Star Wars continuity, but his father Zorba, who appeared in a few Expanded Universe stories, was a big joke. Several years after his son's death, he sought revenge against Leia and Han, but he never even got to Han; his attempts on Leia's life were all Epic Fails. He came closest the first time, attempting to deal her a Karmic Death by throwing her to the sarlacc, but that only ended with him humiliated; not only was he fed to the beast, but it got sick as a result and vomited him out. After barely avoiding starving to death in the Tatooine desert before someone found him, he made other attempts against Leia but they were even worse. He eventually became a recluse, and it's believed he eventually died in isolation.
  • Goosebumps.
    • Slappy the Ventriloquist Dummy. Certainly, one of the most iconic and entertaining villains in the series and very evil, but while he has the desire, he lacks the ability, never able to actually succeed in his evil schemes. Maybe if he spent less time telling jokes he'd do better, but then, he'd be much less iconic and entertianing if he didn't.
    • The Mud Monster from "You Can't Scare Me!" The title kind of gives it away, not only is he not scary, he's too slow to catch anything capable of moving faster than a brisk walk. It says a lot for a monster's reputation when a child is capable of Talking the Monster to Death and getting him to back off.

Live-Action TV

  • The Stillman Sisters from an episode of Charmed, entitled "The Power of Three Blondes". They are trying to steal the Halliwell sisters' powers and prove that they're more than just dumb blondes, and they come oh-so-close to succeeding at both.
  • Dr. Clayton Forrester of Mystery Science Theater 3000 springs to mind. As his character brief in the show's official Episode Guide puts it, "His passion for depravity far exceeds his aptitude."
  • Harmony from Buffy the Vampire Slayer, after she became a vampire. She's evil, but other than that, she's still that teenage girl who wants to have friends and be loved. She is willing to kill her friends and allies, but at the very same time, she sincerely likes them and does not want them to be angry at her.
    • That said, the fact that she murders people to drink their blood (she is a vampire, after all) makes her somewhat less sympathetic.
    • This finally starts working for her in Angel, where she ends up being promoted out of the typing pool to Angel's secretary because she's a friendly face, admittedly one last seen trying to feed them to a group of vampires. Even when she betrays them again, Angel doesn't hold it against her, and actually prepared a reference for her so she can get a new job.
    • The Trio also start out this way. They quickly become less sympathetic—though not less ineffectual, however, as even Warren murdering Tara was an accident. He meant to kill Buffy.
      • Oh, no - Jonathan remains sympathetic, and actually becomes less evil as the other two get worse - he even helps Buffy defeat Warren. Andrew is less so than Jonathan since he enjoys committing crimes, but he's still so pathetic that even after he kills Jonathan (while manipulated by the First), he's such a failure at serving it that he's caught easily and held prisoner in Buffy's own house. Once he finally realises that real life is not a game, however, he shows enormous guilt over his actions, crying for the friend he killed and finishing his 'for posterity' recording by stating that not only does he expect to die, but feels he deserves to. He pulls a Heel Face Turn and survives the final battle.
    • Spike is a mixture of this and Draco in Leather Pants. It's why he had a sizable fan following even when he was pathetic and laughably useless.
  • Halfway through his Villain Decay and before his (grudging) Heel Face Turn, Crais of Farscape became this, having always been a little ridiculous and also rather sad. He remains an egomaniac throughout, though.
  • Peter Campbell of Mad Men. Sure, he's an obsequious little jerk who is looking for any opportunity to take advantage of any tiny opening. He's a total jerk to any and all women and he's so passive aggressive that it's sickening. And yet he's almost sympathetic because he's a constant failure with puppy dog eyes.
    • That was Season 1. Then Character Development kicks in. I'm not going to spoil the details, but by Season 4, he's possibly the single most sympathetic (in the sense that "you actually like him because he's a good guy") character on the show.
    • Peter becomes sympathetic when one realizes that he is trapped in the system just as much as the other main characters. His delusions are crushed at the end of season 1 and he realizes that being a jerk will not get him anywhere in the firm. He is much more humble after this and stops being a villain.
  • Wiseguy. Mark Volchek runs the town of Lynchboro, Seattle as a personal fiefdom. The OCB is sent in to investigate him, only to find that his big plan is merely to build a cryogenic storage hospital for the entire town in order to sate his own personal phobia of death.
  • Crossing the border to Real Life here. Smoking Gun: World's Dumbest Criminals features quite a few of these. From the guy who broke in a convenience store through the roof, but couldn't get back out, to the group of guys who broke into a department store and stole all the display models (which have no working components).
  • The Ferengi were introduced on Star Trek: The Next Generation as the new Big Bad. They really weren't, and so the writers made them more comical villains in stories like "Menage a Troi" and "Rascals". Eventually, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine gave us Quark, an entirely sympathetic Lovable Rogue.
  • Col. Klink in Hogan's Heroes.
  • Governor Croque in Jack of All Trades has a role similar to Klink's in Hogan's Heroes. He's not all that bad a guy, but more to the point, any likely replacement would either be more intelligent (and thus more likely to figure out what Jack and Emilia are up to), more tyrannical (and thus more likely to inflict suffering on the innocent people of Pulau Pulau), or both.
  • Crowley in Supernatural doesn't always fit this trope, but he's had his moments. He seems to flip-flop between wanting to be a badass demon overlord and sincerely trying to be a lesser evil, and his success either way is somewhat mixed.
    • After his first (unsuccessful) effort at double-crossing Lucifer in Season 5, the next time he meets the Winchesters he's on the lam, protesting to the boys "They killed my cat! They ATE MY TAILOR!" Of course at this point he's also on their bad side, as his bad information got Jo and Ellen killed.
    • After he succeeded in becoming King of Hell in Season 6, when summoned by Bobby to address the matter of the latter's soul, he popped a couple of Alka-Selzer in lieu of his usual glass of Scotch, complaining about the difficulties of trying to better the lot of his hopelessly corrupt demon brethren.
    • And of course in Season 7 he winds up living in hiding in a rundown house trailer after being ironically double-crossed by Castiel, who takes on the monster souls they had been jointly trying to acquire and briefly assumes the role of God.
  • Much like the Ferengi, the Centauri of Babylon 5 in general (and Londo in particular) seem at first to be too backstabby to be much of a threat. Of course, then, Londo gets in bed with Morden, and the Centauri start the Second Shadow War; but then, when Londo goes back to Centauri Prime, it proves that the Centauri have been sad little pawns the whole time.
  • The Power Rangers franchise pretty much perfected the Monster of the Week formula, with hordes of entertaining examples. But it also had quite a few lame ones:
    • Mighty Morphin Power Rangers:
      • See Monster from "Changing of the Zords", the third season. With eyes all over his body, with Eye Beams that had explosive impact or could cause migraines in his foes, and a knack for puns (all using the word “eye”) he seemed like… A lame knock off of the much more iconic Eye-Guy from season one. But he was lame for another reason - he wore an overcoat over all his eyes and opened it to use them offensively, which made it look like he was doing something really offensive. Fortunately, when he returned briefly as part of Professor Longnose’s army, he decided to switch to an old-fashioned sword.
      • Pursehead, from "Two for One". What was Lord Zedd thinking here? Okay, he was thinking to Divide and Conquer the heroes with two monsters, one made from Kimberly’s purse and another with a lipstick taken from the purse, but he really could have gone better. Pursehead could take items from the purse that was his head (like a compact mirror and dental floss) and turn them into weapons, but Tommy flattened him with one kick once he got close enough. His partner Lipsyncher was only slightly better, using a proper weapon (a sword) and a sonic attack, but the Rangers didn’t even need the entire Megazord for this one, taking her down with only the Red Dragon Zord.
    • Power Rangers Zeo
      • Leaky Faucet. Originally one of several monsters created from movie costumes in “Invasion of the Ranger Snatchers”, he became an Ascended Extra as the main antagonist of “Oily to Bed, Oily to Rise” The Fail O'Suckyname aside, this guy did have potential as a WMD, able to turn water into toxic Cog oil, and he had some powerful water-based attacks. Unfortunately, it was very hard to be scared of a robot donkey dressed in a hardhat and plumber’s outfit who talked like some country bumpkin and had an annoying laugh. He didn’t last long.
      • Googleheimer the Toy Robot, from "Bulk Fiction". Designed as a plaything for Prince Sprocket, this guy was surprisingly durable. Unfortunately he lacked much in the way of offensive power, seeing as his most powerful weapon was, uhm… silly string.
      • Somnibot from de "Rock-A-Bye Power Rangers" (who by the way, was voiced by Barbera Goodson, who also did Rita Repulsa’s voice) was a robot who could put people to sleep by singing a lullaby. A pretty decent power, but would help if she wasn’t half-asleep herself and went into battle wearing a nightcap. Kind of hard to be afraid of that. Plus she was a Glass Cannon who was floored by ONE blast from the Gold Ranger’s staff.
    • Power Rangers Turbo had a lot of lame monsters, but some were lame among the lame:
      • From "Weight and See", Numbor was his name, recalculating weights and measures was his game! If you think that sounded silly, you should have heard him say it. A combination of a Villainous Harlequin and Mad Mathematician, he wore a mortarboard, had a calculator for a torso, and could make things heavier or lighter. He also used bombs shaped like numerals. And goaded the heroes using really bad puns. Oh, and Divatox told him to attack Katherine after another student called her fat. Obviously, this was his only appearance.
      • Mr. Goorific from "Cassie's Best Friend". This guy had a decent weapon, an oversized toothpaste tube that could Baleful Polymorph a target; actually hitting the target, however, was a different story, he had terrible aim. He was actually brought down by Cassie’s dog. Seriously. Even his entry on RangerWiki calls him "one of the weakest monsters in the franchise".
      • Mad Mike the Pizza Chef from "Trouble By the Slice". Okay, most fans are under a non-verbal agreement never to speak of this one again, but a brief exception must be made here. Porto was “inspired” to create this monster from the mascot of a pizza parlor, but even in a show known for being campy and cheesy, someone who used thrown pizzas as weapons who tried to bake the heroes into a pizza went a little overboard. Plus his costume was a dumb recreation of the flag of Italy and he spoke with a horrid parody of an Italian accent; thankfully he was never seen again.
    • Radster from Power Rangers Lost Galaxy. In all fairness, this was the first Monster of the Week in Lost Galaxy, making him sort of a Warmup Boss, but he was still sort of lame. He was part scorpion, part lobster, and part Elvis (no, really) and had a bad case of Small Name, Big Ego. The only reason he gave the Rangers a hard time was because they didn’t have Zords yet, but the Red Galactabeast blew him to fragments with one blast of its fiery breath. Still, Radster may have been a failure as a warrior, but he sure made the fans laugh.
    • Power Rangers Wild Force:
      • Barbed Wire Org from "Darkness Awakening", again, the Warmup Boss for the Wild Force team, As his name suggested, he was an org made of barbed wire, and looked pretty dangerous. Looks were deceptive. The most hilarious part of the Megazord battle was how he ended up in a Punch-Punch-Punch Uh-Oh situation right before the Megazord decked him.
      • Wedding Dress Org from the episode “Three’s a Crowd” was a cowardly and arrogant Org who created a body out of a wedding dress. Her only goal was to disrupt weddings by kidnapping the brides and turning them into mannequins, simply because, well, because she was evil. However, against anyone who could fight back (as in, the Rangers) she was about as formidable as the dress it was made from.
        • Arguably, its Super Sentai counterpart in Gaoranger was even worse. In this version he (yes, he) was a fugitive the Rangers had been after for a while, and had a more feasible goal - draining female victims in order to make a crooked wedding planner named Saori Shimada eternally young. He loused that up, turning Saori into an infant. He wasn’t very intelligent either, the Goarangers luring him out using a faux wedding with Sotaro posing as the bride.
    • From Power Rangers Dino Thunder came Donkeyvac. Hybrid Monsters are common in this franchise, but this one was created by combining the DNA of a donkey, a pomegranate, and a vacuum cleaner. He did have the ability to steal the youth from victims, so if he had a design that made logical sense (and didn’t shoot exploding fruit from his nose) he might have been an efficient and memorable threat, but he did not, and was not.
    • Stingerella from Power Rangers Jungle Fury. This scorpion-girl monster came off as terrifying at first from her appearance alone, and to her credit, she appeared in more episodes than most of the monsters listed here (three as the antagonist, plus one cameo). But then she actually launches her assault and shows herself to be a master of… Dance Battle. To drive that point home, she trained a battalion of Rinshi in the same “style”. Someone really should have told her that this is something the typical Teenagers With Attitude can learn like a duck to water. Worse, during the Megazord Battle she breaks out a much more useful power - a whole swarm of scorpions used as projectiles, which makes you wonder why she didn’t use that in the first place.
    • Nojoke from Power Rangers Mega Force ("Last Laugh") was a tengu-like monster who had absolutely No Sense Of Humor and hated the sound of laughter, his goal being to eradicate humor entirely. While that sounds like an… odd motive, he was very much a Combat Pragmatist. His primary weapon was a Laughter Gourd, a device that could absorb anyone who laughed (a victim trapped this way would eventually be liquified and consumed later); should anyone have enough willpower to keep themselves from laughing, he could also control winds in a way to tickle potential prey, and should that fail, he had a… sound-based gaseous attack that could compel people to laugh. While this all seems oxymoronic, he was a pretty effective warrior, but fits this Trope due to his weakness… He was not immune to his own powers! When Robo Knight (an android who was physically unable to laugh) and Noah (who also had no sense of humor) manage to find a way to make him laugh, he is snared by his own Gourd, causing it to break and free every victim. Naturally, his final words before being slain by the Megazord are, "This isn't funny!"
    • Power Rangers Dino Charge completes the cycle with a triad of examples:
      • Smokescreen from "Sync or Swim". If you can imagine a Samurai warrior with armor that had a Kabuki design, you might be able to picture this one. What made him dangerous (the term should be used loosely) was the pipe-vent-mechanism on his back that could spew a foul-smelling vapor with a rude smell. To top it off, he was very proud of his ability to use his Fart Fog so efficiently. Gross.
      • Loafer and Leisure from "Catching Some Rays". This was a brother-sister team of really nutty looking monsters with a summer vacation theme. Their main gimmick is, they use some sort of euphoria gas that makes victims think they’re on a permanent vacation. It truly seemed the writers were trying a little too hard to make this odd theme work.
      • Cavity from "The Tooth Hurts" was both an Evil Chef and a Depraved Dentist, a pastry chef whose wares caused agonizing toothaches to whoever ate them, something he could also cause using his energy projection powers. The Monster of the Aesop plot has been used a lot in this franchise, so this might have had potential if there was an Aesop in the plot, which there wasn’t - nothing about the benefits of dental hygiene or how you should avoid too many sweets. In fact, Cavity’s powers could decay things other than teeth; it would work on objects as big as trees, making him a case of wasted potential.
      • Plus there was Game Face from the Sequel Series, Power Rangers Dino Super Charge, the episode "Freaky Frightday". Give a storyboard designer ten minutes to design a monster with the personality of a tough gym teacher and an I Know Madden Kombat theme, the result would be… Much better than this one. He looked like someone took all the equipment a high school PhysEd department was going to throw away and glued it all together in a vaguely humanoid monstrosity. He had a large set of Combo-Platter Powers set due to an arsenal of equipment, but with no synergy whatsoever, and while he did have hilarious dialogue, he was about as much of a threat as the pile of junk he resembled.

Professional Wrestling

  • An unintentional case was Retribution, a group who were pivotal to a storyline that may have looked good on paper. In 2020, this group of masked hooligans "invaded" WWE and wrecked everything in their path on a mission to bring the organization down. Or rather, that was the intent. Made up of NXT stars that had been given ridiculous names and silly costumes, they were far more annoying than they were evil, and were quickly condemned by both fans and critics. Reportedly, most mainstream WWE stars at the time felt sorry for them. WWE tried to salvage the storyline by "revealing" Mustafa Ali as the group's leader, but to no avail. After seven months, the group disbanded to little fanfair.

Theatre

  • Dr. Einstein of Arsenic and Old Lace. At the very least, he's helped Jonathan escape from jail and evade the police. He probably has something to do with the latter's ability to be a contender in the play's Body Count Competition as well. However, he's clearly motivated by fear and spends a lot of time drunk. This may be the reason for his escape at the end.

Video Games

Vyers: I see. So you saw my potential and decided to strike first against moi... Such wonderful intuition... Well played, son of Krichevskoy.
Laharl: I've never even heard of you. It's only a coincidence that we're here. You're just a tiny stepping stone on my path to the throne.
Vyers: * gasp* How dare you! I'm the Dark Adonis Vy...
Laharl: Who gives a damn about you? Your new name is "Mid-Boss".
Mid-Boss: M-m-mid-Boss!?

  • Solt and Peppor, the bumbling duo from Chrono Cross, fail continually to succeed at anything, even acting as combat tutorials for the main character, because of how ineffective their combat planning is.
    • Do know, though, that the final time you face them, they are properly tough bosses and will probably kick your ass by spamming Earthquake.
  • Rose, from Zack and Wiki, gets this in her second appearance. She gets frozen in ice and used as a statue!
  • Winston Payne from the Ace Attorney series, while not a villain, is a prosecutor, and therefore an antagonist. He was once the famous "Rookie Killer" who claims to have never lost a case in his first seven years as a lawyer, but lost one case along with his hair and, from then on, basically became a joke.
  • Dist from Tales of the Abyss certainly comes off as one, introducing himself as 'Dist the Rose' but ending up being called 'Dist the Runny'. In every fight, he sweeps in with an over-dramatic entrance and then gets made fun of immediately, usually by Jade, before his humiliating and undignified loss.
  • Pete from Kingdom Hearts II, and loads of it. Seems more like he just picked the wrong side.
    • Demyx arguably fits in the same category, especially in Days. All he wants to do is chill with his sitar, and Saix and Xemnas make him act evilly. Averted later when he puts up one hell of a fight.
  • Steambot Chronicles has Dudley, an obnoxious, tough-talking, muscle-brained trotmobile rider who the player runs into on about 4 occasions (3 during the main story and another in an optional encounter). While not necessarily a villain per se, the oaf constantly boasts about his strength and generally acts like a prick (he picks fights with anyone he can, destroys a farm just because "flowers are stupid", and think that a massive zeppelin is hoarding treasure). In the hero ending of the game, he can even be seen during the credits making what appears to be threatening gestures towards Vanilla (who is leaving on a ship for his homeland).
  • Halo has the Unggoy/Grunts, the main cannon fodder for the Covenant. Small (by Covenant standards), requiring gas masks to breathe in non-methane atmosphere, mistreated by the other races, they're slaves who come across as cowards. In large part because, fearing an uprising, the Covenant doesn't want to give them any actual combat training. Half the fandom feels sorry for them. The other half loves to slaughter them. Averted in Halo3 and Halo3: ODST: there, they take so many levels in badassery.
  • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim has some of the best villains in fantasy. It also has quite a few idiots:
    • Arvel the Swift, the first bad guy most players come across. The quest involving him requires you to find him and get the Golden Claw he stole. When you find the infamous thief, he’s been caught by a Giant Spider, and you have to rescue him. However, once you cut him down he calls you a fool and makes a run for it; unfortunately for him, he’s actually not very swift, and barring a hideous streak of bad luck, he’s easy to catch. In fact, if you DO have a hideous streak of bad luck, the guy doesn’t realize he’s about to charge into a crypt full of hungry Draugr, and even if he gets past them (which he won’t) he’d run into a hallway full of deadly traps and… Long story short, he’s a stupid bandit.
    • Ulfr the Blind, the bandit who "watches" the entrance to White River Watch. Already, this is clearly a bunch of Stupid Bandits, putting their hideout so close to Whiterun, but they have a ‘’blind’’ man guarding the entrance. Even worse, it’s pretty easy for you to convince him you’re another bandit, unless you actually attack him, and if you DO that, he suddenly seems perfectly able to see. So either he’s not blind, and is simply lazy, or he’s the skilled at blind-fighting, but a terrible guard.
    • The dumbass Bandit by the log bridge south of Hillborne's Tomb. This jerk insults and challenges everyone he comes across, including you and the Ancestor Trolls that are nearby. The bridge isn't exactly the safest place to fight on, and the only threat he poses comes if you act like a bigger jerk and follow him onto it, but otherwise, he won't last long.
    • Captain Valmir, an undercover Thalmor agent disguised as a Stormcloak captain or an Imperial Legion soldier (whichever side you are on) who tells you to fetch the Dragon Priest Mask from Forelhost. Why? Well, according to his orders (which he carries) he's supposed to get it, but is too lazy and/or cowardly to do it, so he dresses as a member of your faction and tells you to. If you agree (which is worth it, as the Mask is a pretty decent magic item) you have to fight a bunch of ghosts, cultists, and Rahgot himself (a far more competent villain) and take the Mask, and when you come out, Valamir, who clearly wasn't too convinced of your success, if trying to pull this con on another adventurer. Which is very bad for him, because now he's got two adventurers angry at him. He won't last long after that.
  • In The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. the evil Yiga Clan are a group of assassins devoted to killing Link and serving Ganon. While most members are competent fighters, Master Konga - their leader - is a complete joke. He's an overweight and hyperactive Man Child, and the Boss Battle with him is arguably even less of a threat than the rank and file Yiga clan mooks you fought to get to him. Even worse, he takes himself out using a Dangerous Forbidden Technique that he cannot control.
  • The Panther King from Conker's Bad Fur Day is stupid to the point of absurd, not to mention gullible. His sole motivation for opposing Conker stems from his obsession with fixing the table next to his throne and Professor von Kripplespac's claim that red squirrels make good table legs. Despite this suggestion making no sense whatsoever, he's willing to commit acts like kidnapping and murder to obtain a red squirrel, which Conker actually isn't. Little wonder that Kripplespac succeeded in his plan to assassinate him.
  • Resident Evil may have one of the best villains in video games with Albert Wesker, but also has one of the worst with Ramon Salazar from the fourth game. He claims to be a twenty-year-old man who has been prematurely aged by the Plagas, but acts like a whiny 8 year old. The one edge he has is Plot Armor, as the storyline seems to go out of its way to make up reasons why time after time, Leon is unable shoot the little brat and end the threat once and for all.
  • Majestic, from Destroy All Humans!. What does it say in a game with a name like that when the genocidal alien looks more competent and more ethical than his human foes? Majestic is a large international organization dedicated to defeating the Furons, while secretly plotting their own goals of world domination. Thing is, the Furon invasionary force consists of… one guy, the protagonist, Crypto. For all their highly-trained agents and cutting edge technology, Majestic - A Non-Indicative Name if there ever was one - can’t capture or defeat this one alien. Seriously.
  • The Batman: Arkham Asylum series has many, often a result of the character being an Adaptational Weakling:
    • First, we have the elephant in the room, the Big Bad of the first game himself, the Joker. He was actually doing okay up until the Final Battle where he purposely injects himself with Titan and turns himself into a huge, hulking, super-strong, utterly-ridiculous looking buffoon. You would be hard pressed to find a review of this game (no matter how positive) to say that this is the very last thing the Clown Prince of Crime would do, that it just isn't him, and almost all of them agree that this was the one thing keeping an otherwise great Batman game from being flawless.
    • Of course, there’s Lester Buchinsky, the Electocutioner, a would-be assassin and Large Ham who turns out to be not even as tough as any of the mooks, almost a Harmless Villain there. But then, the “fight” against him was intended to be played for laughs.
    • Deathstroke was a decent villain in Origins, but the idiot in his costume pretending to be him in Arkham Knights was an insulting joke. He is supposed to be a world-class assassin, weapons expert, and combatant that is near equal to the Dark Knight himself, but for his Boss Battle, Batman fights him via Vehicular Combat. An okay idea yes, but not how the legendary Slade Wilson does things at all. Worst of all, when he does decide to fight Batman mano-a-mano, the hero floors him with one punch.
    • Bane in the first game. This is not the Man Who Broke the Bat, he’s a Dumb Muscle thug. In fact, the only real difference here between him and the first Titan that Batman encounters is that Bane has a few mooks backing him up. Nothing more.
    • Killer Croc was a good idea that was done wrong. A trek through the sewers being hunted by the remorseless killer… It’s something that has worked so many times before. But it gets boring very quickly, and Croc can never succeed in surprising the player, his attempts at ambush far too easy to predict.
    • Zsasz is a villain who appears in every game in the series, and he's lame in all of them. He has no motivation whatsoever (other than kill anyone he comes across) and is almost laughably easy to defeat. If his "plan" involves hiding from Batman, there will be about a hundred ways the player can spot him, and if it involves combat, he'll be floored in one punch. Even compared to most Jobber opponents in video games, he's pathetic.
  • Rick the Door Technician from Star Wars Jedi: Survivor. When you enter the Imperial Base on Koboh, you will come across a figure that appears to be a boss, with a boss's health bar. But he's just a Scout Trooper with Scout Trooper attributes, and the game identifies him as "Rick the Door Technician". He'll charge madly at you and attack, but will do barely any damage. And you can drop him with a single swipe of your lightsaber. Rick has become so beloved that fans have made jokes, memes, videos and even posters celebrating him.

Web Animation

  • Burnt Face ManTemplate:"s entire Rogues Gallery, whose nefarious schemes include harassing him over MSN and stealing his submarine (he doesn't have one, the plot was randomized). Taps Man splashes his opponents with water. "Hot, and cold. Hot, and cold, and a combination of them, which I call 'HOLD'."
    • Despite that, Taps Man managed to kill Burnt Face Man's rival, Slightly Bruised Man, with a spray of scalding water, followed with tepid water with lead piping and a faulty boiler.
  • Strong Bad, most of the time. On the rare occasion the mischief he gets up to is more serious than Poodle Poking, he's likely to fail pretty miserably at it. It's just as well, though, as the local approach to law enforcement is just as pathetic.
  • While O'Malley from Red vs. Blue occasionally has moments of true villainy, far more often, he is completely, thoroughly, and utterly ineffectual throughout the Blood Gulch Chronicles. How much of this is him and how much is actually due to him being in the head of Doc, the pacifist medic is up for debate, but the fact still remains that his evilness generally consists of wacky plots to destroy the universe and illegally downloading music, and his robot army fails miserably because...well, let's just say that when he requested a robot army to take over a base in a day, he didn't expect that it would literally have to take exactly 24 hours for the robots to do it!
  • Verosika Mayday, Blitzo's ex-girlfriend and now rival from Helluva Boss. Breakout Character, maybe, but as a Horny Devil, not very competent. A leader of a group of other succubi and incubi, Verisika figures a group of hormone-crazed college students on spring break are easy prey. She's right, and easily tempts them into an orgy of bestial lust, but makes the mistake of doing it on a public beach. The end of the episode sees Blitzo's crew - who were very careful to leave no witnesses to their evil deeds - fleeing back to Hell while the police surround Verosika and her group, likely leaving a lot for her to explain to whatever Overlord she's working for.

Web Comics

[Y]our penchant for mass murder notwithstanding, people tend to regard you as a BIT OF A TOOL.

  • Eridan really doesn't count as an example; it's later revealed that he really doesn't care about killing people, he's just doing it to stay close to his crush.
  • Eridan becomes a full-on subversion when he loses both the "sympathetic" and "ineffectual" parts in Act 5 Act 2. The crush mentioned in the above line? He killed her as he leapt across the Moral Event Horizon.
  • Though he switches right back to ineffectual when Kanaya comes back from the grave as a vampire and effortlessly fells him. Like a tree.
  • Jack Noir starts as this. Later into the story...he's significantly less ineffectual or sympathetic.
  • Dr. Kinesis in Evil Plan. His technology gets stolen, the other villains laugh at him, and on his minions' first mission, they bump into a brand new superhero.
  • In El Goonish Shive, technically, Magus was behind the v-five Elliot incident, and tried to manipulate Ellen within some plot that sounds quite dubious. And is not very good at this. But he's in desperate straits, which isn't even his own fault (unlike Abraham's case). And he's still reluctant to kill a guy who stands in his way even when pushed hard to do it.
    • He knows it, too.
    • He's mostly out of his depth and as he tries to grasp any straw, "bloody list of things to atone for keeps getting bigger".

Web Original

  • Dr. Horrible of Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, portrayed as a decent fellow with evil ambitions and a crush on a girl from his laundromat, while also being bullied around by Jerk Jock superhero Captain Hammer.
    • He even qualifies as a Well-Intentioned Extremist; he thinks Utopia Justifies the Means and a benevolent dictatorship would do that. Kind of like the Brain.
    • Interestingly, at the very beginning, he gets a letter from a would-be superhero calling himself Johnny Snow. Horrible immediately makes it seem as if Snow is an Ineffectual Sympathetic Hero. Then we read the prequel comics and see how Johnny Snow single-handedly stopped the entire Evil League of Evil while Captain Hammer was out of town. It turns out that he's also a Gadgeteer Genius. That "ice beam" which is so "Johnny Snow" that Horrible mentions in his song was actually used by Snow.
      • "Stops" is kind of the wrong word here. The League was planning to pour poison in the watermain For the Evulz, and Johnny Snow stopped them by freezing the water, leaving millions without water. The ELE approved and went on to do more evil, with Johnny crying that he's a good guy.
    • Dr. Horrible's main problem with Johnny Snow is that Snow wants to set himself up as a nemesis, when the doctor has much more personal reasons for reserving this for Captain Hammer.
  • Lee Phillips from Kate Modern, during his brief time as a villain. He is perfectly serious in his plot to revenge himself on Gavin and Tariq, but is overshadowed by the arrival of far more threatening antagonists such as Kate's Watcher and Terrence.
  • Voldemort in Potter Puppet Pals. Taken to ridiculous extremes when Harry has Hagrid beating up every character that bothers him. Voldemort tries to kill Harry, and Harry just leaves without even bothering to have him knocked out.

Voldemort: Ah! Harry! Avada Keda-
Harry: No time to chat, Voldemort! (runs off)
Voldemort: Every time I try to kill him...

  • Dr. Insano...sometimes.
  • On a less mass-homicidal note, The Nostalgia Critic. He's pretty just a damaged little boy with a gun and temper tantrums at his disposal.
  • While she worms her way out of trouble much more successfully than the Critic and could dominate the world if she got her mind fixed, The Nostalgia Chick is still just a shut-in alcoholic who'll never make anything of her life.
  • Kami Steele of Survival of the Fittest Spin-Off The Program seems to fit on and off, depending on the thread. Her first appearance had her pointing a gun Gangsta Style at a girl with the intent to kill her, but ran away over being yelled at by said girl, who had started to poke holes in her plans. She has since started a body count, but still has her moments of incompetence. One could also make a case for Version 4's Jimmy Brennan, up until he beat Philip Ward to death with a branch. Prior to that, though, he definitely qualified due to his attitude.
  • SCP-1370 of the SCP Foundation. An Omnicidal Maniac in personality, in ability it's completely harmless.

Western Animation

  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic:
    • "Owl's Well That Ends Well" involves the usually-good dragon cub Spike temporarily becoming a villain, but definitely of the "ineffectual sympathetic" variety, with the emphasis on "sympathetic". For context, when an owl named Owlowicious shows up to do some of the work Spike had been typically doing for the girls, Spike ends up getting less attention from them than before, and in turn, resents the owl a fair bit. After being scolded by Twilight for lying about a book not being there, he thinks the owl set him up, and in turn, tries to do the same to the owl, by planting a fake dead mouse with ketchup blood in Twilight Sparkle's room; he gets caught in the act. After running away, ending up encountering a dragon while gone, and then being saved from the dragon by Twilight and the owl, he apologized for the way he was behaving and is back to being one of the good guys.
    • Except in the episode "Secrets of My Excess", however this time, Spike is transformed into a gargantuan rampaging beast that almost completely demolishes Ponyville. Even then he may lean into this since it's all for the sake of hoarding "gifts".
    • Most of the Rogues Gallery for the show act as this or mere petty bullies. The foes used in the two part specials are the only notable exceptions, and even then their detrmimental arrogance and the often humiliating manner they are taken out almost makes you pity them.
  • Batman the Animated Series:
    • Harley Quinn tended to fall into this trope, especially when she caught on as a popular character: She was often treated as genuinely misguided, so the audience sometimes forgave her for her more violent behavior depending on how softening a particular episode was.
      • In the comic-turned-episode "Mad Love", Harley did manage to succeed in trapping Batman. Batman's only hope was to have her inform The Joker, who he knew would free Batman because it wasn't HIM that defeated Batman! Batman even admitted that Harley came closer to killing him than the Joker ever did. Harley also suggested just shooting Batman, instead of elaborate death traps. Ironically, at the end of the episode, Harley almost succeeded in killing Bats with an elaborate death trap, while the Joker, who previously slapped Harley for even suggesting such a thing, tried simply shooting him...and failed.
    • Baby Doll is probably one of the most sympathetic characters in Batman's Rogues Gallery. She kidnaps her former TV co-stars, but just to yell at them for abandoning her and forcibly reenact the show. She Took a Level in Badass as time went on.
  • The Superfriends incarnation of Scarecrow qualifies for this Trope. To quote the Legion of Doom's leader, when naming the villains' "dangerous super powers" in a Cartoon Network bump:
  • The Amoeba Boys in The Powerpuff Girls. While the Powerpuff Girls are out beating up real criminals, the poor Amoeba Boys can't get the girls' attention, despite committing heinous acts such as littering, jaywalking, and disobeying a "Keep off the grass" sign.
    • In one of the early World Premiere Toon shorts, the Girls actually commit a bank robbery solely to show the Boys how it's done. When the Girls are brought in for the crime, the boys turn themselves in, in an attempt to appear "big time".
    • In another, during the actual series, the Boys stumble upon Mojo Jojo's Death Trap plans, and they, along with the Girls, mistake it for a "scavenger hunt"—so they find all the things it calls for and put it together, and once it's assembled, the Girls think it's a theme-park ride, so they willingly submit to the plan intended to destroy them.
    • In another episode, the Boys catch a cold while loitering on the grass in yet another attempt at crime. Even though they end up unwittingly mutating the cold into a deadly strain of virus and even more unwittingly starting an epidemic in Townsville, the viewers still can't help but feel sorry for them.
    • And in another episode, they manage to actually succeed at stealing an orange, for once, and when it splits apart, are reminded that, as amoebae, they are capable of multiplying. There is quickly an army of them, and the only thing they can think to do is to steal all the oranges in Townsville (although this does cause the citizens to contract scurvy).
  • The Toilenator from Codename: Kids Next Door badly wants to be a villain, but is far too wimpy and incompetent to pull it off. He's a minor inconvenience to the KND, and most of the bad guys try not to be seen with him because of his clingy Bumbling Sidekick personality.
    • He's Not So Harmless though, as he's able of using his "toilet powers" to "flush" the entire Grand Canyon with milk.
  • Odlaw in the animated series Where's Waldo? (Where's Wally?). As so many bad things keep happening to him in the name of comedy, and all he ever wants is to commit a single act of theft, you have to feel for the guy. Also, his determination is admirable!
  • In Xiaolin Showdown, Jack Spicer, despite being the main villain in some cases, is usually an Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain, especially in the later episodes.
    • This is reinforced by Jack being probably the only fictional character, let alone villain, to have a breakdown failing to interrogate a parrot that simply repeated everything he said.
  • With one exception (The Phantom Limb) and, in later episodes, The Monarch, all the villains on The Venture Brothers are of this nature.
    • Most of them are of the Not So Harmless type. It's shown that the reason OSI and such tolerate the supervillains' stupid games is that it keeps them from committing real crimes or blowing up cities. (Those who don't play the game have to deal with SPHINX.) The Monarch, in particular, is a special case. When he was taken off of Dr. Venture, he was unhappy with the normal game and proceeded to kill 5 heroes in a short time.
    • Doctor Mrs. The Monarch is the most competent villain and, quite possibly, the most competent character on the entire show. Even the Sovereign of the Guild respects her.
    • Doctor Killinger's entire reason to exist seems to be to snap out villains from this trope and into Not So Harmless instead.
  • Many Looney Tunes villains:
    • Wile E. Coyote. In fact, one of the laws of the Road Runner cartoons is "The audience's sympathy must remain with the Coyote."
    • It's very difficult to hate the likes of Marvin the Martian and Elmer Fudd.
    • Yosemite Sam was actually a deliberate subversion of the trope, because audiences were starting to favor Elmer too much. The idea was to feel sorry for the guy, but it was getting to the point where Bugs was starting to look like a relentless bully instead of a wiseacre outwitting the buffoon who was trying to victimize him. Sam was both smarter and more belligerent than Elmer, meaning that Bugs was free to lead him on all he wanted. But even Yosemite Sam, while pretty dark for a Looney Tunes villain, was still fairly ineffectual compared to the average non-Looney-Tunes villain.
    • Daffy Duck, initially just a Screwy Squirrel or Anti-Hero, eventually evolved into one for Bugs Bunny and Speedy Gonzales.
    • Nasty Canasta and Rocky the gangster, initially more fearsome subversions of this trope, eventually devolved into hopeless foils for Bugs as well.
    • The Big Bad Wolf tends to be this in any short that parodies The Three Little Pigs or Little Red Riding Hood. For that matter, this is also usually the case when he appears in Disney cartoons or Tex Avery shorts.
  • Sideshow Bob also frequently veers into this territory. The poor guy can't even win against a rake.
  • Waspinator from Transformers: Beast Wars is one of these, being a Chew Toy on the side of the bad guys.
    • Ditto for Sky-Byte and his Team Rocket in Transformers: Robots in Disguise. Except that Sky-Byte would actually be leadership material if only a few things were different. It's just that he lacked the only two qualities that really mattered for a leader: aptitude and intelligence.
  • Prince Zuko in the first season of Avatar: The Last Airbender. The second season puts him in Anti-Villain status, with him and his Uncle spending more time being fugitives from the Fire Nation than trying to capture Aang, along with having Character Development and Enemy Mine "moments" as sprinkles. And then, about halfway in the final season, said "moments" are what causes Zuko to become Aang's ally. Then, in the series' ending, he becomes the new Fire Lord, with things getting better and better for him, effectively inverting this trope at that point.
  • Frisky Dingo's Killface is a pseudo-cultured, incompetent supervillain whose plans are often derailed by trivial matters and lacks knowledge of common subjects (it's a revelation to him that P.C. stands for "personal computer"). He's still more likable than "hero" Xander Crews, though.
    • Killface is so sympathetic, especially when compared to Jerkass Designated Hero Xander Crews, that it's easy to forget that he brutally killed two people in the pilot and has added to his body count throughout the series. It helps that some of the other members of the cast have committed similar misdeeds and/or are Asshole Victims.
  • Invader Zim qualifies for this trope most of the time; more often than not, his schemes are thwarted by the Ditz portion of his Genius Ditz personality, rather than by his arch-nemesis or his Cloudcuckoolander robot. Of particular note is the episode where he survives a Training from Hell in order to receive some Humongous Mechas from his leaders, only to be shot into a sun for his troubles.
  • Yin Yang Yo!: Karl anyone. The commercials for the next episode suggest he'll join the heroes so he can keep up with everyone else.
  • South Park: Professor Chaos/Butters is so inept that it's cute.
  • Dr. Drakken from Kim Possible never gets the respect he thinks he should have; he always fails his capers, sometimes even without the help of Team Possible. Maybe he had the potential to be a great villain, but he never acted on it. He often gets mistaken for the more respected Dementor and, at the end of the series, he is outright told how much of a failure of a villain he has been (despite having come closer to taking over the world than any of his peers, and ending up with much of the credit for saving the world from the Alien Invasion). If it wasn't for his Dragon, Shego, he wouldn't be a villain at all.
    • Arguably, every villain in Kim Possible is like this, aside from Shego, who's the only one with any amount of competence or fighting ability.
      • Keeping Shego on his payroll should be considered extremely competent, especially when there are villains like Senor Senior Senior, who has Scrooge McDuck levels of moolah.
  • G.I. Joe: Cobra Commander, who was constantly mocked, ignored, or pushed aside not only by other would-be world conquerors, but by his own minions.
    • Of course, he was never anything but effective and unsympathetic in the comics, where, among other things, he killed his own son. Oh, and he used to be a used car salesman, the fiend!
      • He does get the ineffectual part still - sometimes as part of a Plan, sometimes because it's an imposter performing poorly. And sometimes, Destro just plain doesn't like him, and is willing to take the loss just to make him look bad, mostly because of his 'thing' for the Baroness.
    • The miniseries G.I. Joe: Resolute is also a subversion. Cobra Commander actually has a speech where he claims his previous incompetence was just an attempt to force his minions to think outside the box. He wipes Moscow from the face of the Earth just to prove that he could, and by the end of the series, he's so unhinged that he's hacking his own men apart with a sabre. His plan still failed, of course, but holy shit was he badass.
  • While he started off as a Badass and a walking Crowning Moment of Awesome, by the end of Kung Fu Panda, Tai Lung had become this due to a combination of Freudian Excuse, Sympathy for the Devil, revealing his Start of Darkness and "Well Done, Son" Guy status, and an Et Tu, Brute? from his past. This may have something to do with the Humiliation Conga and Kick Them While They Are Down which some viewers see in the final battle—it certainly can't be denied that what had once been a chillingly effective villain seemed rather pathetic and easily defeated, Po's understanding of the Dragon Scroll notwithstanding.
    • Of course, after his Arrogant Kung Fu Guy resume is firmly established and he has shamelessly brutalized the entire rest of the cast, others see this as simple Kharmic retribution. Pride goeth before the fall, after all, and a Humiliation Conga was really no less than Tai Lung deserved at that point.
  • The battle droids in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, an entire army of Ineffectual Sympathetic Villains.
    • Until they start gunning down unarmed pacifist, cracking open escape pods so the helpless people on board will die in space, and Zerg Rushing that is.
  • Plankton from SpongeBob SquarePants. After a while, you just start to feel sorry for the guy. It's more prominent in the post-movie episodes, where he could easily be one of the Trix Rabbit's drinking buddies. Granted, he gets a Not So Harmless moment in the movie, but still...
    • Most of the time, it seems that he just wants some manner of success. In the cruel Yank the Dog's Chain episode "Plankton's Regular", after getting just one regular customer, he immediately stops trying to steal the Krabby Patty secret formula.

Plankton: Alright Krabs! Now hand over the secret formula!
Krabs: Or...What?
Plankton: I don't know. I never thought I'd get this far.

  • Grizzle of Care Bears: Adventures in Care-a-Lot.
    • Of the primary villains of the earlier series, No-Heart and his niece Shreeky don't count. No-Heart was a legitimately powerful and evil sorcerer who had a habit of blasting Beastly with lightning bolts whenever he screwed up; and while Shreeky never actually did anything evil, she was a Spoiled Brat with a voice so loud that she made No-Heart wince. Mr. Beastly, No-Heart's primary lacky, definately fits somewhere between here and Butt Monkey. In the one episode that Beastly had, with him in the spotlight, him infuriates No-Heart by breaking No-Heart's crystal amulet (which is the source of his shapechanging spells), then breaks No-Heart's throne (something he knows No-Heart will be livid about), get turned into a horrific mishmash of animals while using No-Heart's broken amulet to catch some of the Care Bears, then be blackmailed into letting the Care Bears go after they tape-record him chanting a litany of "I care" to break the broken spell and be turned back to normal, and then, when No-Heart arrives, having calmed down due to finding an even more powerful crystal, he sits on his crudely repaired throne...and it breaks to pieces. Meaning more electroshocking for Beastly.
  • The Box Ghost of Danny Phantom draws the line between this and Harmless Villain. He has the potential to be a great baddie (if one episode and his badass future self is any indications), but he just never makes it. Out of all the ghosts Danny has fought, Box Ghost is strictly in the "Who Cares" category, but he tries, he oh so tries.
  • Wacky Races‍'‍ |Dick Dastardly:
  • Voltar and the League of Super Evil. Guy is just so very motivated and happy about every plan or scheme he thinks up, no matter how trivial, that you just have to root for him. I mean, how many villains are ecstatic about throwing an 'EVIL' barbeque and not inviting their uncaring neighbors?
    • One of the episodes involves a highly convoluted plot by the League...to make the pizza delivery boy late so that their food will be free!
  • Snively from Sonic Sat AM. He is a reedy and sneering little man who is always consumed by his Uncle Robotnik's quite massive shadow. Also, he's a baldy. However, he turns out to be Not So Harmless when he manages to slip out before his uncle is killed, and return as a The End - or Is It? cliffhanger for a season that we will never receive.
    • Nope, he was still going to retain this role. In one interview with screen-writer Ben Hurst regarding the third season that never arrived, it was revealed that Snively was going to take a shot at becoming the new Big Bad, only to be shortly upstaged by Ixis Naugus, and would later make a Heel Face Turn and join the Freedom Fighters.
  • Dr. Ivo Robotnik and his henchmen from Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog. While Robotnik often tries to do something rrrroten, he ALWAYS fails horribly, and Sonic torments the doctor so sadistically, that it becomes hard to sympathize with the heroes.
    • Even more so are his minions, Scratch and Grounder. While Robotnik could at least genuinely cook up a malicious plan every now and then, his duncebot's Wile E Coyote-esque traps hardly ever worked on anyone but themselves.
  • Jack W. Tweeg and his sidekick L.B. from The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin.
  • The Zigerians from Rick and Morty are "the most ambitious, least successful con artists in the galaxy" according to Rick, and it's easy to see why. Their typical MO is to abduct a would-be victim and place him in a simulator, but said simulator is always flawed. For instance, their Earth simulation has a vendor selling a bun held by two hot dogs, a lady walking a cat on a leash, and a walking Pop Tart with a hat living inside a toaster the size of a house and driving a car shaped like a smaller toaster. One way they attempt to fool Rick is with an ambulance that they claim has the President of the United States inside. The entire species also has irrational gymnophobia (fear of nudity) making them easy to outwit.
  • Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz could count as one of these. Sure, his plans are really not well thought out at all (which inexplicably cause their failure), but he had a terrible childhood, never wins any of his fights, is deprived of any chance at happiness he may receive, and, on top of all that, he can't even win a fight against a potted plant...You've got to feel sorry for the guy. Though perhaps he wouldn't be considered ineffectual, as he does serve to be a threat, if not for being thwarted at the hands of his platypus nemesis every time. Still, that episode where he is no longer considered a threat and Agent P is relocated to a different nemesis might show that he is, indeed, one of these.
  • Sandman in The Spectacular Spider-Man can never quite get his big score. Before his superpowers, Spider-man jokes about how many times he's been caught. After, he can actually fight Spidey, but then proceeds to forget or be unable to keep his take when he escapes down the drain. He also gets a couple of Pet the Dog moments when it's revealed that while he cares a lot about the Big Score, he doesn't really want to hurt anybody (other than Spider-man, of course).
  • The Lobe, archnemesis of the titular character in Freakazoid!. Despite being fiendishly brainy (quite literally - pretty much his entire head is made up of brain), he's extremely sensitive and insecure, and Freakazoid was once able to defeat him with nothing more than some harsh verbal criticism of his scheme.
  • Dr. Reginald Bushroot of Darkwing Duck. He mutated himself in an attempt to impress a girl. When that went about as well as expected, most of schemes throughout the series involved trying to grow a companion or feed his plants. He certainly seemed like a nice enough guy most of the time, only turning violent when Darkwing tried to stop his plans.
  • Hack and Slash, the bumbling minions of Megabyte, in ReBoot. In fact, they are justified in being bad guys by the fact that the heroes always stop them before they could do anything really awful. When the heroes fail to arrive to stop them from killing a traitor to Megabyte, they let him go off on their own and undergo a Heel Face Turn.
  • Skeletor in He-Man and the Masters of the Universe was so ineffective that the writers felt sorry for him. One stated in an interview that part of the reason they wrote a few Enemy Mine episodes was that it was the only way they were allowed to have Skeletor come out ahead for once.
    • His 2002 incarnation, on the other hand, was every bit as powerful, terrifying, and evil as he claimed to be.
  • Control Freak from Teen Titans. Despite being able to animate the inanimate to do his bidding and inadvertantly altering television frequencies to literally rot people's brains, he STILL didn't get on the Titans' list of main villains.

Control Freak: The Puppet King?! They fought him ONCE!!

    • In later seasons, Dr. Light is similarly ineffectual. Though he does get one major Not So Harmless moment.
  • Word Girl's Chuck the Evil Sandwich Making Guy.
  • Lucius Heinous VII on Jimmy Two-Shoes. Despite literally ruling Miseryville, the main characters either don't fear him or don't respect him. He despretely tries to be the Big Bad, but fails horribly.
  • Tom, from Tom and Jerry, was so ineffectual and sympathetic that, in many cartoons, one failed to see how Jerry was even a victim. Particularly Egregious examples, in fact, would cite that he wanted nothing more than to leave Jerry in peace, and Jerry could not stop antagonizing him and trying to ruin his life. Often, the shows started with Jerry trying to steal Tom's milk, break into a safe/refrigerator/ship that Tom was guarding or just being a dick in general. Granted, sometimes Tom's methods can get a bit extreme, he's just trying to protect his property or doing his job.
  • X-Men: Evolution: Toad and the rest of the Brotherhood, at least by Season two. At first, they were at least even with the X-Men, and were able to over power them in one episode, except for Toad. But slowly, each one got more and more Pathetic. Pietro became more cowardly, Blob became more dumb, and Avalanche went through massive character Derailment. In season 3, they were bested by only Two X-Men, one being the weakest member. It was why the Acolytes were introduced, who were definately not this.
    • Usual, given that this is the reason why they're so popular, with people playing up the ineffectual sympathetic part, and ignoring the vilain part.
  • Adventure Time‍'‍s Ice King plays this as a Deconstruction / Zig-Zagging Trope: he wants to force a Everything's Better with Princesses into marrying him, but he comes across as sincerely lonely and desperate for love. At some points, however, he'll wind up saying or doing something really messed up, cluing the viewer in that he's really just a sociopath.
  • Zordrak's minions, the Urpneys (and sometimes even his former self) of The Dreamstone, are a mix of this alongside the Minion with an F In Evil category. The fact that their overall goal usually amounted to little more than giving people scary dreams didn't help much. Granted since Rufus and Amberley are often Ineffectual Sympathetic Heroes they do at least briefly get the upper hand every now and then.
  • General Specific from Sheep in The Big City. To put it bluntly, how hard could it be to catch one sheep in a city where nobody likes sheep? Well, this guy spends the whole series trying and failing to do so.
  • Downplayed with Boogey from The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy. He has indeed done quite a few evil things that had long-lasting repercussions for members of the cast, mostly due to his petty grudge against Grim. However, when you take his true goal - wanting to be the scariest of all monsters - into consideration, he’s a failure, because well, he’s just not scary. Grim claims butterflies are scarier than he is, Mandy claims marshmallows are scarier, and even his henchman Mr. Creeper isn’t afraid to tell him he can't think of a monster that is less scary than Boogey is. In fact, in the movie (where the Horror’s Hand puts the cast through an I Know What You Fear scenario) it is revealed that Boogey’s greatest fear is realizing he isn’t scary.
  • The Ape Man from the original Scooby-Doo Where Are You?. One of the biggest strengths of this cartoon was the creativity of the bad guys, but this was… just a gorilla. Naturally, it was in fact a crook dressed like a gorilla, but he did the dumbest thing any villain did in this show, remove his mask when he thought nobody was looking! This let Shaggy take his picture, leading to the others easily identifying him, made even easier by the fact that he was the only bald guy in the episode. Plus there was his incredibly pathetic motive, revenge against a movie director for not giving him the lead role in a movie. It was a low budget horror B-movie! How petty can you get?
  • Prince Charming from Shrek the Third. He was an okay - if a little flat - character when he was his mother’s crony in the second movie, but as the main antagonist in the third, he went from flat to lame. First of all, everyone in the film sees him as the butt of a bad joke - when even Pinocchio is trolling you, it kind of underscores the idea that you could ever be a threat to anyone. And he isn’t. His Evil Plan isn’t exactly well thought out - putting on a play where he heroically slays Shrek at the end, an action he assumes will forever cement him as the hero and Shrek as the villain. Sure, he gains points for creativity, but the flaw in this plan is obvious from the start - by this point in the franchise, Shrek has established himself as a beloved hero, while everyone despises Charming. More than likely, Prince Charming is a lesson for any villain’s goofy sidekick with thoughts of becoming a Dragon Ascendant - sometimes it’s better to stick to what you’re good at.
  • Jacob Hopkins, the museum curator from The Owl House is this and a Hate Sink. Much like Emperor Belos, Jacob is a bigot of the Fantastic Racism type, a Narcissist, Well-Intentioned Extremist, Attention Whore, and unmistakable proof that Humans Are the Real Monsters in this series. Belos, however, while utterly despicable, is a captivating and interesting villain with an intriguing backstory and deep storyline. Jacob is just... an idiot, being a Conspiracy Theorist of the most absurd sort. While most villains who fit that Trope have at least some leg to stand on and often bring up some good points, Jacob seems to have based his beliefs - including the idea that demons and witches come from Mars in order to collect human teeth in order to build a time machine - from internet blogs with RPG content. In fact his sole motivation for wanting to dissect poor Vee is because his YouTube account has been banned for being obnoxious, and he believes obtaining proof of his ideas will get it unbanned. Very Catharsis for the viewer to see Ms. Noceda beat him to a pulp, jail him in his own demon-holding cage, and then learn that he was fired later.
  • In Star Trek: Lower Decks, the Packleds as a whole are this, being woefully stupid and Laughably Evil, almost as if "incompetent villains" is their “hat” as a species. But special mention goes to Rumdar from the episode "The Spy Humongous". Sent to infiltrate the Cerritos as a Trojan Prisoner, he all but confesses to Ransom his intent to steal information regarding their technology, which is already a common Packled MO. (“We're not exactly dealing with a Tal Shiar here,” says Ransom to another officer.) Eventually, Rumdar mistakes an airlock for a restroom, blows himself out of it, and has to be rescued by Ransom - Dr. T'Ana is puzzled as to how he can still be alive.

Real Life

  • While they are often portrayed this way in fiction, Italian Fascists were neither ineffectual nor sympathetic. Just ask any of the people who tried to oppose Mussolini and his politics before World War II. Dissidents were often beaten within an inch of their lives, force-fed castor oil, and sent into exile on deserted islands. It's just that that's kid stuff compared to the other forces of evil we were fighting against — or alongside of — during that same war.
    • They just barely managed to conquer a tribal African country that had 19th-century military technology. And that was the height of their military achievements.
      • That doesn't change the fact that they were a danger to Italian opponents of their regime. Regardless of how (un)successful they were at fighting other countries, being an inspiration to Hitler and siding with him during the second World War hardly makes Italian Fascists sympathetic (at least, up until the point at which the Allies invaded Italy, and the Italian soldiers stood at the sidelines, watching their country being torn apart by fights that they no longer participated in; but before that, they were just ineffectual, not sympathetic).
      • "Good soldiers, bad officers" is how Rommel described the Italians, and as for how ineffectual they were, one of his other quotes was "The German soldier has impressed the world, however the Italian Bersagliere soldier has impressed the German soldier".
        • Of course, seeing that an army's capacity to organize, plan, and cause its various elements to cooperate efficiently is more important than individual competance, it's still not the makings of a very good military, as Italy's entire post Roman military history shows.
  • Any crooks profiled on America's Dumbest Criminals is sure to fit.
  • The bank robber who was caught when he got trapped in the bank he was robbing... when he didn't try to pull the door open, and only pushed it. He was in there for about five minutes before the cops showed up.
  • Warren Taylor seems to have found a way to combine this trope with Terrorists Without a Cause. He stormed into a small-town post office, placed what appeared to be a bomb on the counter, and took three people hostage. At that point, he didn't seem to know quite what to do. Over the following eight hours, he issued two demands: a pizza to share with his hostages, and a pack of cigarettes for a hostage who smoked. In the end, he made his way outside and surrendered peacefully, eventually apologizing during his arraignment for getting everybody out on Christmas.
  • Muhammad Saeed al-Sahaf, better known as Baghdad Bob and Comical Ali (the latter being a reference to "Chemical Ali", the nickname of the much more effectively evil former Iraqi Defence Minister Ali Hassan al-Majid) gained fame and memetic status during the second Iraq War on account of his hilarious Blatant Lies about American forces, which were generally contradicted by things visible directly behind him.
    • So notorious was he that when a comic showed an American soldier walking into the frame behind him and making bunny ears, this troper's entire US Navy shop had to see if he'd actually been taken off the air by the same soldiers that he claimed were not in the city.
  • Kim Jong Il in this video.
  • This robber. Prepare to laugh.
  • How about this one?
  • Or this one.
  1. (Though really, Spike was just temporarily a villain during the episode that originated the quote.)
  2. There are indeed stories about Real Life novice pirates taking the names of well-known ones in order to gain notoriety, as before the invention of photography, few could tell two groups of pirates apart.
  3. Keep in mind that she says he's capable of murder. He doesn't actually do it.