Marvel Female Villains

Marvel Female Villains




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Top 10 Cruelest Villains | Marvel Top 10
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Just like anyone can be a Super Hero, anyone can be a Super Villain—from a regular woman in Harlem to a goddess in Asgard. And across nearly 80 years of Marvel history, there have been innumerable dangerous women dealing out death and destruction across the multiverse.
As we previously highlighted our list of the Greatest Female Marvel Super Heroes, we'd also like to highlight some of the baddest women in the Marvel Universe. So, if you prefer to root for the villain, you’ve come to right place.
These are just some of the greatest female Super Villains in Marvel history.
Goddess of death, Queen of Asgard’s underworld. These titles alone prove Hela is not to be taken lightly.
Daughter of Angrboda, a giantess, and Loki, the God of Mischief, Hela rules over two of the nine realms: Hel and Niffleheim. In addition to the standard Asgardian abilities, Hela can claim souls, resurrect the dead, has a withering touch that can age, wither, or kill her enemies, cast illusions, astral project, and much more. Most of her powers come from the magic cloak she wears, but should it be removed, she becomes powerless. The cloak also hides her true appearance: a decayed face due to being born half-dead.
Lose yourself in Hela's long history with her explore page: Hela 
Raven Darkholme, also known as Mystique, spends most of her time as a thorn in the side of the X-Men.
She uses her shape-shifting abilities to deceive and to get what she wants, such as becoming the Deputy Director of DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Planning Agency) to gain access to weapons and military secrets for her personal plans. In addition to shape-shifting, she also possesses a healing factor, enhanced strength, and immunity to aging.
Raven is also the mother to notable mutant characters: Graydon Creed (whom she abandoned and later assassinated), Nightcrawler (another son she abandoned), and Rogue (whom she adopted and has a not-so-great relationship with). While Mystique has teamed up with the X-Men a couple of times, the partnerships are often short-lived, and she inevitably returns to terrorizing humanity. 
Get Mystique's full story on her explore page: Mystique (Raven Darkholme)
Mariah Dillard might appear as a defenseless lady, but she’s anything but.
Taking her namesake from a police van, Black Mariah is cunning and intimidating—traits that are needed in her line of work. The leader of the Rat Pack, a gang that used fake ambulances and police vans to steal valuables from the recently deceased, Mariah spent a stint in jail before starting a new and more lucrative empire: drug dealing.
Although she doesn’t have super powers, she makes up for it with strength. Black Mariah’s punch can send a man flying across the room. But the most unique weapon in her arsenal are poisoned needles she also uses for knitting. She has also been a member of the New Pride, which was restarted by former member of the Runaways, Alex Wilder.
Read up on Mariah's entire story with her character page: Black Mariah (Mariah Dillard)
Introduced as Mary Alice Walker before being revealed as Typhoid Mary, Mary is timid and has no memory of any of her personas’ wrongdoing. But her Typhoid persona arises from Mary’s childhood abuse, which developed into dissociative identity disorder. When Mary is Typhoid, she has a high fever, is more athletic, and is out of control. She kills, works for the Kingpin, and uses her pyrokinesis to set Daredevil and Wolverine on fire on separate occasions.
Typhoid, however, is not even the worst of Mary’s personas. After being institutionalized, a third persona arose within Mary. Bloody Mary is violent, sadistic, unstable, and kills only men who abuse women. In addition to these names, she's developed more personas through the years since.
Get Typhoid Mary's full comic book story with her explore page: Typhoid Mary (Mary Alice Walker)
Devastated by the “loss” of Cyclops after a psychic duel with Mastermind, the Phoenix, believing itself to be the real Jean Grey, became corrupted and transformed into the Dark Phoenix. Whereas the Phoenix represents life and light, the Dark Phoenix represents power and destruction, and thirsts for these things. It is uncontrollable and destructive. The Dark Phoenix is so powerful that it once literally devoured a star, which caused a supernova and killed billions.
With Jean Grey as its basis, an already powerful mutant, the villain has a higher level of telepathy and telekinesis can fly at supersonic speeds, and can molecularly rearrange the structure of matter. In other words, you really don’t want to get into a fight with the Dark Phoenix.
Read up on Jean's decades-long story with her character page: Phoenix (Jean Grey)
Lady Deathstrike first appeared with one goal in mind: kill Wolverine.
In belief that Wolverine stole her father’s research on fusing adamantium to the human skeleton, she hunted him down relentlessly to restore her family’s honor. Each time they met, Deathstrike lost, so she decided to fight fire with fire by having Spiral transform her into a cyborg.
In addition to her bevy of weaponry, sword skills, and her training as an assassin, Spiral’s upgrade gave her superhuman strength, agility, durability, stamina, and speed. And crucially, she has adamantium claws that can slice through nearly anything. The woman also known as Yuriko Oyama can also interface with computers and download her consciousness, which can be helpful when her original body has been destroyed. 
Though Lady D has recently teamed up with the Weapon X crew, she'll always have her dark and dangerous past to lead her way.
Dive into Lady Deathstrike's full history with her explore page: Lady Deathstrike (Yuriko Oyama)
Tilda Johnson, better known as Nightshade, started her criminal career as a teen, when she caught the interest of the Yellow Claw, who funded her werewolf formula research. Self-taught in biochemistry, physics, genetics, and cybernetics, Nightshade has a diverse arsenal of scientific talents. She has acidic gloves that can burn through Black Panther’s suit, creates a hypnosis chemical to control men, and builds cybernauts to fight her super powered foes.
At one point, Nightshade turned from her life of crime, becoming a hospital receptionist, but was fired from her job after she embarrassed a doctor who gave a bad diagnosis and found out about her criminal past. Low on money, she joined M.O.D.O.K.’s Eleven, a squad consisting of criminals and mercenaries.
Discover Tilda's full story with her character explore page: Nightshade (Tilda Johnson)
With the ability to manipulate Asgardian energy and her knowledge of enchantments and spells, Amora, also known as the Enchantress, is one of the most powerful sorceresses in Asgard.
Having studied under Karnilla before being banished due to her lack of discipline, Amora learned magic under other mages, seducing them to learn their secrets. Her spells include paralysis, elemental conversion, and time control. She can also alter her appearance, control peoples' minds, and charm unsuspecting foes into doing her bidding.
Fun fact: Amora has lost to Dazzler in a singing contests at disco clubs on Earth and Asgard.
Read up on Amora's history with her explore page: Enchantress (Amora)
Mary MacPherran, a scrawny high school outcast, was transformed into the super powered Titania in exchange for joining of Doctor Doom’s army on Battleworld.
No longer shy and meek, but brash and confident, she held her own against various members of the X-Men during her time on Battleword. After the events of Secret Wars, she mainly became an antagonist to She-Hulk. Titania became so obsessed with beating She-Hulk that she stole the Power Gem to defeat her. (It didn't work.)
In addition to her super strength, she has superhuman endurance and stamina, highly resistant to physical injury, and unbothered by extreme temperatures. Titania has also been a member of the Masters of Evil, the Frightful Four, and the Femizons. 
Look through Titania's entire history with her character page: Titania (Mary MacPherran)
The woman who is as frigid as her last name, Emma Frost. And although she has sometimes shifted into being a hero, she has quite the evil past.
The White Queen of the Hellfire Club once tried to get a 13 year-old Kitty Pryde to enroll in the Massachusetts Academy for her own nefarious reasons. Emma was amoral and ruthless, which was shown when she shot her older sister, Adrienne, and projected a Cyclops illusion which was “killed” by Black Bolt, in order to declare war against the Inhumans. And more than once, she has been a host for the Phoenix Force, but could not handle its immense power, unlike a certain other character on this list
 
Emma is an Omega-Level mutant. She can read minds, erase memories, switch minds, and broadcast thoughts. But that’s not all she can do. Frost has a second mutation, which allows her to turn her body into a diamond form. Although she can’t use her telepathic abilities in this form, she has immunity from other telepaths, high durability, and no need for water, food, or air.
Uncover Emma's full story with her explore page: Emma Frost
Read up on these characters and more on the Explore the Universe page and with Marvel Unlimited now!
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With most of Marvel's villains being male, we dug up best female villains of all time in the MCU.
By Leanne Louie Published Feb 15, 2019
Watching Hollywood movies as a woman can sometimes be demoralizing. Too frequently, female characters are one-dimensional, lacking in agency and completely unrepresentative of what we ladies are actually like. Much has been said about the many times our positive qualities have been overlooked by screenwriters, but less attention goes to the negative traits that often go underrepresented in female characters. Put simply, where are all our female villains?
If women are to be seen as equal to men, we must be portrayed as equals on the screen — both as heroes and as villains. When it comes to temperament, female characters tend to be boxed in on either end of the spectrum, with writers afraid of creating characters showing too much heroism (lest they break the stereotype of female docility). However, they're equally wary of writing too much villainy into their characters (women are supposed to be warm, not wicked). But women are just as capable as men, both of the good things and the bad. We can be as intelligent as Tony Stark and as heroic as Captain America— but we can also be as evil as Thanos. 
Marvel’s villains have largely been male—just like most bad guys in the movie industry—but there have been some pretty noteworthy female antagonists over the years. Hopefully, as time goes by, more and more wicked women will join Marvel’s ranks, but until then, here are eight of Marvel’s best cinematic female villains.
As the victim of a quantum accident (comic book lingo for “something that gives you superpowers”), Ghost was granted the ability to flicker in and out of existence at a young age. But some superpowers aren’t so super. Although Ghost’s come in hand during fistfights, they made her reliant on quantum energy. Her search for a cure for her condition brings her into conflict with Ant-Man and the Wasp.
Orphaned as a child, deceived by S.H.I.E.L.D. and in constant pain due to her condition, Ava Starr is bitter for a good reason. Being on the verge of death doesn’t exactly bring out the best in people, but when Ant-Man and the Wasp show her kindness, she forgoes villainy and becomes best buds with our heroes. That is until they all fade into dust. Marvel just won’t let us leave a theatre happy this year, will they?
For a long time, beautiful female aliens were usually only included in stories as love interests. But in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, the gorgeous, golden Ayesha is anything but a romantic side role. When the Guardians of the Galaxy steal her batteries (no one steals a woman’s batteries), she will not let the slight slide, embarking on a galaxy-spanning quest to wreak vengeance upon them.
From her unapologetic arrogance to her psychopathic tendencies, Ayesha embodies many qualities that society at large might deem “unladylike” (can we just throw that term away already?). Her presence as a villain in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 shows the world that beautiful lady aliens can be just as intent on your destruction as giant purple Titans with colorful rock collections. 
When she was a child, Thanos decimated Proxima Midnight’s home planet and adopted her into his fold, raising her to be a faithful follower and merciless assassin. Throughout the Infinity War, she exhibits superhuman strength, mastery of combat, and rampant psychopathy as she faces off against the Avengers on Earth.
Like the rest of us, Proxima Midnight is a product of her upbringing. But where our culture teaches us that Starbucks and selfies are a normal part of life, her childhood taught her that murder is just another day at the office. So, although we wouldn't go so far as to say we feel for her, we certainly see how spending a lifetime with the like of Thanos might turn a person sour. 
In X-Men: First Class, Emma Frost is one of the main villains, allying herself with Sebastian Shaw and helping him in his quest to squash the human race. She is gifted with telepathy and the ability to turn her flesh into a diamond-hard armor, but even impenetrable skin isn’t enough to deflect the blatant sexism she experiences in the film. Especially when Shaw calls her the most beautiful woman in the world, then promptly implying she should fetch some ice for his drink.
Emma Frost soldiers through the double standards of the 1960s, though, holding her own as one of the most powerful mutants in the film although the odds are stacked against her. She is intelligent and calculating, putting up with the ploys of the boys around her only so long as it suits her. Although her superpowers are impressive, it's her ability to navigate the sexism of the 1960s that impresses us most. 
Although she is an Avenger now, Scarlet Witch entered the Marvel Cinematic Universe as a villain. Almost killed by a Stark Industries missile as a child, Wanda Maximoff and her brother wanted vengeance against Tony Stark and allowed themselves to be experimented upon with Loki’s Sceptre in an attempt to gain superpowers. 
After they come into their powers, the twins align themselves with Ultron, who shares their distaste for Tony Stark. However, once they realize that he’s
. well, an evil megalomaniac intent on destroying the entire world, they have a change of heart and fight alongside the Avengers.
Driven by rage and a desire for revenge, she indulged her darker inclinations in her youth, but the fact that she was able to come to terms with her anger and not just reconcile with Tony Stark, but fight alongside him, shows the depth of her character. 
Although Mystique starts out aligned with the X-Men, the constant pressure to hide her true form and conform to human beauty standards eventually drives her to Magneto’s side. Although most of us don’t have blue skin and yellow eyes, Mystique’s struggle to fit in and feel beautiful is relatable for anyone who’s ever felt like they looked different. 
According to the standards of modern society, beauty is unattainable unless you’re tall, thin, and willing to devote hours every morning to coiffing your hair so that it looks stylish, but not as if any time was actually put into it (hair is ever so exhausting). Mystique eventually eschews society’s beauty standards and embraces who she really is — a mutant, and proud. Except for the whole becoming-a-villain thing, Mystiques journey is something to aspire to. 
Throughout Guardians of the Galaxy, Nebula is one of the central villains, but in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, we see a different side of her. In the midst of trying to kill Gamora, Nebula starts opening up to her about her past (nothing resolves family issues like attempted murder). She admits that, when Thanos pitted Gamora against her as a child, all she wanted was to feel close to her, yelling, “You were the one who wanted to win, and I just wanted a sister!”
After this revelation, Nebula forgoes some of her darker ambitions (like killing her sister) but is still unwilling to fully embrace the heroism of the Guardians of the Galaxy. Representing the perfect grey character, Nebula is somewhere between a villain and a hero, constantly reckoning with her dark past while trying to wreak vengeance upon Thanos. 
But after Odin turns into golden dust and floats away on the Norwegian wind, Hela is released from her imprisonment and returns to lay claim to the throne. Although her character is a bit one-dimensional—she’s an egotistical psychopath seeking power, just like most supe
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