you figured wrong as usual
villains are usually very into impressing others and other humans seeing them as "powerful" it's extremely important to them, thus they value being human and other human opinions andd that isnt anti humanity
you figured wrong as usual
villains are usually very into impressing others and other humans seeing them as "powerful" it's extremely important to them, thus they value being human and other human opinions andd that isnt anti humanity
you figured wrong as usual
villains are usually very into impressing others and other humans seeing them as "powerful" it's extremely important to them, thus they value being human and other human opinions andd that isnt anti humanity
Not Captain Planet's villains, they were in it purely to destroy everything.
you figured wrong as usual
villains are usually very into impressing others and other humans seeing them as "powerful" it's extremely important to them, thus they value being human and other human opinions andd that isnt anti humanity
Not Captain Planet's villains, they were in it purely to destroy everything.
fictional villians arent real, doesn't count
but if they were in human form than yes they would be considered anti humanity, if money wasn't a stronger value than destroying everything. money is always used mainly to impress other humans but i suppose if the money were used to destroy more, and they weren't after the infamy than yeah
you figured wrong as usual
villains are usually very into impressing others and other humans seeing them as "powerful" it's extremely important to them, thus they value being human and other human opinions andd that isnt anti humanity
Not Captain Planet's villains, they were in it purely to destroy everything.
fictional villians arent real, doesn't count
but if they were in human form than yes they would be considered anti humanity, if money wasn't a stronger value. money is always used mainly to impress other humans
They just relish in breaking things. At their height, they made a super villain group with evil clones of the Planeteer rings, and all they accomplished was destroying the planet in various ways.
but if they were in human form than yes they would be considered anti humanity, if money wasn't a stronger value. money is always used mainly to impress other humans
They just relish in breaking things. At their height, they made a super villain group with evil clones of the Planeteer rings, and all they accomplished was destroying the planet in various ways.
oh so it wasn't even humanity they wanted to destroy, it was the planet? or were you using that as an anology
but if they were in human form than yes they would be considered anti humanity, if money wasn't a stronger value. money is always used mainly to impress other humans
They just relish in breaking things. At their height, they made a super villain group with evil clones of the Planeteer rings, and all they accomplished was destroying the planet in various ways.
oh so it wasn't even humanity they wanted to destroy, it was the planet? or were you using that as an anology
It's written so archetypally that I'd loosely argue it's both.
They want to destroy the planet through pushing humanity to destroy it, so either they are a means to an end or they are the ones they're breaking the planet over.
Here, a list of characters. Scroll down to the "Eco-Villains".
Looks like some of them were in it for greed, but they're so ham handed and nutty about it that it might as well be the same as those who do it "because they can".
Greedly's in it for example for the wealth, but it's over his nature to consume uncaringly as opposed to a humanity-focused narcissism. He clumsily and wealthily thinks he's above their struggles as opposed to doing it to impress anyone other than himself, and otherwise just wants to live in a way that lets him not have to think about not being brutishly comfortable.