Batman’s 45 biggest villains from all time

Regarding DC super-villains, it is not better than Batman mean. Representing the best diabolical of the saims, granular and disturbing of the city of Gotham de Batman, these offenders are perfectly opposed to Crusade Caped in the fight against crime.
What distinguishes them is that they are only a few shades of gray far from the black knight itself. That, and they like to dance with the devil in the pale moonlight. Batman has faced tons of horrible villains over the years that pushed him at the absolute limit, and it was the best 45 villains whose Batman and the fans will still remember.
45
DEADSHOT (alias Floyd Lawton)
First appearance: Batman # 59 (1950), created by David Vern Reed, Lew Schwartz, Bob Kane
While Deadshot over the years has become the best known for its members at suicide squad, he started as a Batman villain. He has also become a main villain from Batman over the years, although both have shared respect for each other. While Deadshot is a killer, and Batman will never accept it, he also lives by a code of honor.
Deadshot is always a dangerous villain, because he is the man who never lacks. Although he does not beat Batman as much as before, he made his debut as Batman villain and the two often ended up impregnating in their battles.
44
Punchline (alias Alexis Kaye)
First appearance: Batman # 899 (2020), created by James Tynion IV, Jorge Jiménez
With Harley Quinn and the joker officially, it was just a matter of time before the Clown Prince of Crime finds a new girl on Friday. Alexis developed a fixation on the Joker after a meeting with the villain in high school, leading her to see him as an entity of the change.
Punchline is more than a good fighter and a straight woman. It is also very practical with poisons and has even developed its own joker venom brand. While Punchline was extremely useful for his obsession in Joker’s war, Alexis decided to project himself as a more independent villain.
Not only did she replace the Joker on the Legion of Doom, but she also took control of the Royal Flush Gang, giving him a meteoric ascent among the bad guys of Gotham.
43
Carmine Falcone (alias the novel)
First appearance: Batman # 405 (1987), created by Frank Miller, David Mazzucchelli
Carmine Falcone receives a lot of attention thanks to Batman film, but it is a villain who is a dangerous villain for Batman since the 1980s. The new film is based on Batman at the same age that he appeared in First yearAnd this is where Carmine Falcone made his debut in DC Comics.
There have been a lot of bad guys in Batman Comics with regard to Gotham City underfect, but Carmine is held above most of the others. Its origin in the film helps him to go beyond them all thanks to Batman Perhaps making him responsible for the death of Bruce Wayne’s parents.
42
Kite Man (alias Charles Brown)
First appearance: Batman # 133 (August 1960), created by Bill Finger, Dick Sprang
Almost all aspects of the original character of Kite Man aimed to make him a walker. Or rather a flight. With an original story mocking the classic formula for comic super-vilains, the young “Charlie Brown” was obsessed and in love with kite. Obviously, grow up to use this love as a complete alter ego and a criminal identity.
Fortunately, Tom King led the accusation to resuscitate and redefine Kite Man as part of the Renaissance of DC. From his tragic background losing a son against the bad guys from Gotham, his motto signed “Hell Yeah”, Kite Man has become one of the most recognizable and same characters in the DC universe. Even if he is still technically a Batman villain.
41
Calendar man (alias Julius Day)
Detective comics # 259 by Bill Finger, Sheldon Moldoff and Charles Paris.
Each Batman villain needs a gadget. Whether in two facets with his coin or his joker and his fatal practical gags. It was the rule for Batman’s bad guys, and it resulted in really ridiculous characters, Julian Day being one of them. Julian Day, also known as the calendar man, is obsessed with dates and provides for his crimes around them.
He has rarely been considered a serious villain, but after his reinvention Batman: The Long HalloweenHe began to obtain more respect, even appearing in the Arkham Video games in a support role. Despite an awkward air at first, Julian became a dangerous serial killer.
40
Mr. ZSASZ (alias Victor Zsasz)
Batman: Shadow of the bat # 1 by Alan Grant, Norm Breyfogle, Adrienne Roy and Todd Klein
While most of Batman’s bad guys have a redemptive or understandable element in their background frame, Zsasz is completely irrevulsible. Zsasz has grown incredibly rich and, by 25, led his own business and raised a fortune. In a deep depression after losing his parents in an accident, he turned to the game and quickly lost his whole fortune.
It made Zsasz believe that life does not make sense and that by killing people, he releases them with their life devoid of meaning. While Zsasz is rarely the center of a story, he showed a plot And is a terrifying serial killer.
39
The ventriloquist (alias Arnold Wesker)
Detective comics # 583 by John Wagner, Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle
Everyone in Gotham City needs a gadget, and Arnold Wesker has certainly found hers. Wesker is a qualified ventriloque that would put performance with its fictitious scarface. Scarface has the typical gangster personality. Oddly, Wesker seems to believe that Scarface is really alive and is able to make choices by himself.
Wesker is often represented as a helpless victim of Scarface who is forced to follow the plans of the model for fear of his own life. This illusion is so strong that it made Wesker out of mind control, because Scarface already controls it.
38
Karma (alias Fleet Delmar)
Detective comics # 983 by Bryan Edward Hill, Miguel Mendonca, Diana Egea, Adriano Lucas and Sal Cipriano
Karma was a man by the name of Fleet Felmar who caused terror and destruction through the lands of Markovia. Karma was delusional and claimed to be a fighter of freedom and a savior of the country while provoking massive destruction and death. Finally, he drew the attention of Batman, who easily defeated him.
Disgusted with his actions, Batman was unusually brutal, spraying the gas karma for fear and siccing a swarm of bats on him. These bats would even end up tearing the Fleet’s eyes and leaving it badly marked. Fleet would come back later as Karma, using high -tech headset to take revenge on Batman.
37
Killer Croc (alias Waylon Jones)
First appearance: Detective comics # 523 (1983), created by Gerry Conway, Don Newton, Gene Colan
When written properly, Killer Croc is as good as Batman’s bad guys. Recently, the character has been reduced to a large transferred reptile with little ambition beyond eating Batman.
However, during his beginnings, Killer Croc began as a much more interesting villain, so much so that some people believe that his background was the real inspiration for Tim Burton’s penguin Batman returns. When Waylon Jones was born with a rare and scaly skin disease and tirelessly, it was natural that he became a murderous cannibal.
After a quick discovery in observation with a traveling circus, he ended up in Gotham City. By letting his state dictate his life, Croc turned into a really scary thug.
36
Solomon Grundy (AKA Cyrus Gold)
American comics # 61 by Alfred Bester and Paul Reinman
Perhaps one of the most powerful bad guys in the Rogues gallery in Batman. Salomon Grundy was a rich merchant known as Cyrus Gold before being murdered and thrown into a marshy at Massacre. Due to the strange properties of the slaughter swamp, Cyrus would retire again.
Unable to remember his original life, Cyrus took the name of Solomon Grundy of a nurse rhyme, the only thing he remembered. Since then, Salomon Grundy has traveled the outskirts of Gotham City or lived in the sewers that connect to Slaughter Swamp, joyfully killing anyone who disturbs him.




