English
Noun
- A device given to infants to help soothe inflamed gums during
teething, often filled
with a fluid or gel that can be frozen or refrigerated.
This page contains a list of the minor characters
made specifically for the
American
animated television series Teen
Titans.
Chu-Hui is known as "the True Master", a
legendary martial-arts master of world renown despite her
appearance as a small, elderly lady. She lives on a temple located
on a mountain-top in China near a remote, agricultural village, and
has three animal guardians in the form of a bear, a snake, and a
monkey, who are stationed in various places on the mountain and
have human knowledge and speech. Each guardian excels in a
different aspect of combat, and is put on the mountain to test
anyone who wants to become the True Master’s student. If a person
can climb up the mountain to her temple and defeat all three of her
guardians without any weapons or technology before the sunset of
the day they arrived, she will train them in battle. If not, they
are immediately banished after some scolding from Chu-Hui.
She appears in the episode “The Quest”, when
Robin is defeated by a martial artist who claims to have trained
under the True Master. Throughout the episode, she is only known as
“The True Master," but her real name was used in the end
credits.
Chu-Hui is named after Teen Titans background
painter Chu-Hui Song.
Cron and Kai are Centauri police that went to
Earth to capture
Blackfire. Their
probes mistook
Starfire
for her sister (since they are almost identical). After
Robin
pointed out that there was another Tamaranean on Earth, Cron and
Kai took Blackfire into custody and cleared Starfire of any
wrongdoing. They have not appeared in the series since.they are
techno-organic humanoid crab aliens with a special weapon that
extends a capture tentacle that constricts and neutralizes any
special super-power of the person who is captured by it.
Fixit is a cyborg hermit who can control machines
with his mind. When
Cyborg's
power cell fails during a battle with
Mumbo, Fixit finds
Cyborg and takes him to be repaired in his home beneath the city.
However, Fixit's "repairs" are actually aimed to remove the human
parts of Cyborg, which he believes are inefficient. He then
attempts to download Cyborg's memories, but is overwhelmed by the
emotion and life. The Titans find Cyborg in time for him to explain
to Fixit what it really means to be human. Fixit understands this
and Cyborg offers to help him return to a life living a more human
existence, an offer he accepts.
Galfore
- Voice Actor: Alan Shearman
Galfore is the Tamaranean k'norfka (the
equivalent of a legal guardian) of Starfire. When she arrives on
Tamaran for her marriage ceremony, he refers to her as her real
name, Koriand'r, and acts very loving and affectionate toward her.
He raised her since her birth and has "always expected great
things" from her. When Starfire defeats Blackfire in battle and
exiles her, she receives the crown and becomes Grand Ruler of
Tamaran, but she decides instead to return to Earth and abdicates,
giving her crown to Galfore.
Larry is the counterpart of Robin from another
dimension. Cyborg proves that they share DNA and his real name is
Nosyarg Kcid (
Dick Grayson
spelled backwards). He has the power (housed in his right index
finger) to bend reality to his whim, which he uses to watch Robin
from his dimension. He comes to the Titans' dimension to help fix
Robin's broken arm, which he injured in an encounter with
Johnny
Rancid. Larry breaks his finger during an argument involving
Larry trying to fix the broken arm, and accidentally "breaks"
reality. Examples of the consequences are Beast Boy losing his
mouth and speaking in pig Latin, Raven's hair turning into strange
shapes, the T-Tower blowing a raspberry, and Starfire's head
growing wings and separating from her body. As Larry's finger is
broken, he can't reverse it, and the Titans are forced to go to the
tower to fix it. After reality is fixed, Larry returns to his own
dimension, but not before Robin offers him the chance to fix his
broken arm one last time. He succeeds, but ends up accidentally
trapping Robin in another reality as well (which he inexplicably
escapes by the next episode).
On the episode in which he appeared, the theme
song was sung in Japanese by
Puffy
AmiYumi producer Toshiro Kai.
Melvin, Timmy, Teether, and Bobby
A small team of siblings (and Bobby, an
"imaginary" teddy bear) who each have a special power.
The girl Melvin was thought to have telekinesis
by Raven. It is revealed that she actually has an invisible, giant
animated teddy bear named Bobby. Timmy, the second oldest, throws
earthquake and sonic boom-inducing temper tantrums, for which he
was given the nickname "Timmy Tantrum" by Melvin. Teether, the
baby, can eat any form of matter. He can also spit chewed-up
objects, firing them like bullets.
Bobby is Melvin's "imaginary friend" resembling a
large ragged teddy bear. In the episode "Hide and Seek," his powers
include super-strength, invisibility, and the ability to leap great
lengths. Melvin says he uses his invisibility to hide from people
he doesn't trust (i.e. Raven, Mallah). This also leads Raven to
believe that, since she couldn't see Bobby lifting or pushing
things, Melvin had telekinesis, but could not control it, so she
created Bobby to take the blame. In "Titans Together", he appears
with Raven and his teammates. When Timmy, Teether, and Melvin go
into battle, Bobby follows them and lets them ride atop his massive
head while he fights the Brotherhood.
All three were in danger from the Brotherhood of
Evil so Robin sends Raven to take them to safety. Raven at first
disliked the children, but grew to care about them all and became a
mother figure, even going so far and saying, "Nobody messes with my
kids!" when they were captured. She tries to save them against
Monsieur
Mallah but each of the children themselves manages to take him
down. Raven then made them all Honorary
Titans.
Sarasim is a warrior princess of long ago. Her
tribe, which is under siege from a horde of monsters, is saved when
Cyborg appears to defeat them. Impressed, Sarasim orders the
vanquished warrior
Krall to hand over
his sword. When Cyborg calls her people primitive and says they
wouldn't know how to power his battery, she has them harness the
power of a nearby stream to do the job. Together, she and Cyborg
fight Krall and a band of green glowing frog-like energy creatures
sent by an evil witch. The two develop a relationship, kissing
twice. This is interrupted when Cyborg is whisked back to the
present by Raven.
Raven shows Cyborg, who is concerned about
Sarasim's fate, a book from her private library. The book tells of
how Sarasim and her tribe beat the warrior named Krall, with the
help of an armorless warrior (Cyborg without his tech).
Sarasim's name is derived from the DC Comics
character
Sarah Simms,
a romantic interest of Cyborg's introduced in the Wolfman/Perez
era.
Silkie, or Larva M319, was at first one of the
many mutant larvae created by
Killer Moth
who planned to take over the city with them once they had matured
into their adult moth states. When the Teen Titans put an end to
Killer Moth's schemes, Beast Boy bonded with one of the mutant
larvae. Unknown to his friends, Beast Boy kept it as a pet at
Titans Tower, naming it Silkie.
Beast Boy hid this secret for a very long time
until one day after battling Johnny Rancid when the Titans returned
home to find most of their furniture eaten. He didn't tell anyone
except for Starfire, who fed him some alien food from Tamaran
(Zorka Berries), but Silkie reacted strangely to the substance and
had a monstrous growth spurt. Robin forced Starfire to get rid of
Silkie before he ate the entire tower. Heartbroken, Starfire left
Silkie on a remote island off the shore, inscribing the message
"Please be kind to monster" into a rock for any future
visitors.
Killer Moth found him and transformed him into a
monstrous moth. The lepidopterized Silkie battled the Titans, but
became deeply confused about where his loyalties lay, recalling the
pains and kindnesses each "parent" had brought him. Suddenly, and
without warning, Silkie molted. He reunited with Star and it was
discovered that the pink residue was actually an edible compound
which tasted just like Starfire's alien food.
Silkie cameos in other Teen Titans episodes, but
does not play any role, rather acting as background flavor and
incidental humor. When Starfire left with the other Titans
traveling to save other Titans, they asked Titans East to watch
over the tower, so
Más y
Menos took over for Starfire in caring for Silkie ("For Real").
Starfire and Silkie's relationship was such that in "Calling all
Titans", Starfire desired to get the mission done quickly by
splitting up (when Beast Boy mentioned to stay together) so she
could see Silkie again.
Aqualad's
fish mechanic and friend, Tramm helps the Titans fix their T-Sub in
"Deep Six". He also takes over
Beast Boy's
spot in the T-Sub when battling
Trident.
He speaks in gibberish (which Aqualad seems to understand), and has
the appearance of a child with webbed hands and feet, scales, and a
fish-like head. In "Calling All Titans", he increases in strength
and size when challenged to fight. Although he defeats XL
Terrestrial and meets up with Aqualad, they are both overpowered by
Plasmus and
Trident.
When he is freed by Más y Menos, he fights alongside Aqualad to
defeat the
Brotherhood
of Evil.
Tramm is named after Cartoon Network's executive
in charge of production Tramm Wigzell.
Val-Yor appeared in the episode "TROQ", helped to
defeat The Locrix, and subsequently fell out of favour with the
Titans due to his prejudice against Tamaraneans,
Starfire's
race.
The episode title, TROQ, is a Tamaranean word
which means "nothing", and which is used as a slur. Val-Yor at
first uses this term to refer to Starfire, but later, after she
saves his life and helps him complete his mission, he says that
she's "the good kind," which still was found offensive. This racist
attitude eventually sunders his relationship with the Titans and he
returns to his own planet. It should be noted that he bears a
striking resemblence to
Captain
Atom.
Enemies
Many of these foes appeared in "Homecoming: Part 2"
in a cameo role.
Adonis is a lanky young man in a mechanical suit
which gives him powers similar to those of Cyborg. In "The Beast
Within", he fights Beast Boy, but loses the fight when both
combatants get covered in a strange liquid substance that causes
each person to become a hulking primitive beast when under extreme
pressure. The other Titans believed that Beast Boy attacked Raven,
landing her in the Titans Tower infirmary. However, the real
culprit is revealed to be Adonis when Robin and Cyborg witness a
battle between Beast Boy and Adonis, which Beast wins. The
chemicals are subsequently removed from Beast Boy's body, though he
still claims he can feel "the beast".
Adonis appeared again in the finale arc of season
5, where he and
Atlas attempted to
defeat
Pantha under orders
from the
Brotherhood
of Evil. He fails, but returns to the Brotherhood base, where
he and three others see
Cinderblock
(really under the control of titan
Jericho).
Jericho switches from Cinderblock to
Private
H.I.V.E. and Adonis's armor is sucked into another dimension by
Herald. In his weakened state, he is easily trashed by a kick from
Herald. He is not present in the final battle. He ended up being
frozen at the Brotherhood of Evil's base.
Angel is a
H.I.V.E. student
who first made a cameo appearance in Deception. She later helps out
the Brotherhood of Evil and appears alongside
Punk
Rocket to (unsuccessfully) take out
Bumblebee.
Her known powers are flight and enlarging her wings to attack her
opponents. She is only seen attacking Raven in the final battle
before being frozen by Más y Menos.
Atlas is a large red-and-yellow robot that enjoys
video games and is obsessed with winning. He possesses great
strength and multiple weapons. He refers to himself in the third
person and believes robots are superior to humans and other
organisms.
When Cyborg defeated Atlas in a video game, Atlas
ordered a rematch and Cyborg accepted. However, it turned into an
actual fight that started when Atlas melted a hole in the wall
directly behind the television. He later captured the rest of the
Teen Titans and Cyborg went after him. Cyborg was forced to push
himself beyond his supposed 100% cybernetic strength limit, and
prevailed in the final battle.
Atlas had a servant, Spike, whom he treated
poorly. However, he was dependent upon Spike to equip his weapons
and tools and to maintain him. Spike left Atlas when Cyborg
defeated him, having realized the threat his master posed to the
world of humanity.
In "Calling All Titans", Atlas was sent to take
down the mighty Pantha. He received much-needed backup from Adonis,
but the honorary Titan still managed to defeat them. In the final
battle in "Titans Together", his right leg was sliced off by the
sword master
Bushido.
His still-functioning parts were flash-frozen by Más y Menos.
Billy Numerous is a minor villain and student at
the H.I.V.E. Academy. He is the primary villain in the episode
"Overdrive", where he challenges Cyborg. His power is
self-duplication and he is known to brag about his many crimes
around Jump City to his clones (his only friends). The Titans
defeat him by using holograms to counter his natural
self-duplication powers, causing him to push his power past its
limit. He later becomes a member of the H.I.V.E. F.I.V.E. Billy and
Gizmo are
sent to capture
Kole and
Gnarrk on the orders
of the Brotherhood of Evil. When Beast Boy's group of Titans
attacks the Brotherhood at their secret hideout, Billy is easily
defeated by Pantha. He attempts to get away with the remaining
members of the H.I.V.E. F.I.V.E., but is stopped by Kid Flash and a
reformed
Jinx.
He is later frozen by Más y Menos.
The character later cameos in the comic book
Catwoman
#78.
Brushogun is a supervillain from Tokyo, who was
once a manga artist who fell in love with a woman he drew. He used
Japanese dark magic to bring her to life, but she cursed him with
the ability to create living ink drawings. Brushogun was believed
responsible for various criminal outbreaks in Tokyo, which prompted
the Titans to go to Tokyo to track him down. After battling several
of his "ink criminals", the Titans trace him to a manga factory,
where they find that he is a frail elderly man hooked up to a giant
printing press. Innocent of any wrongdoing, he was being held
captive by Police Commander Uehara Daizo, who forced Brushogun to
create criminals for Daizo to capture and thus appear to be a hero.
When Daizo jumps into Brushogun's vat of magical ink, he emerges as
an ink monster, which absorbs Brushogun. Robin defeats the monster
by pulling Brushogun out of it, causing the ink creature to revert
back to Daizo. After thanking the Titans, Brushogun vanishes. His
name is a
portmanteau of "brush" and
"shogun".
Cash and his pal Sammy are two teenage boys who
love getting into trouble. In "Car Trouble", the pair stole
Cyborg's newly-built T-Car and raced it in Crash Alley, but they
lost the vehicle to Gizmo. After Cyborg defeated Overload, Cash and
Sammy were arrested along with Gizmo
Cinderblock is a humanoid monster made of
concrete. In the first episode, "Divide and Conquer", he is used to
break
Plasmus out of
prison. In "Apprentice" (Part 1), Slade used him to separate Robin
from the other Titans. He was easily defeated by a furious Robin
who finds a tracking device on Cinderblock's hand which leads Robin
to Slade. In "Aftershock" (Part 1), Terra breaks him out of jail
and is sent to distract Robin and Starfire. He is later fused with
Plasmus and Overload to become Ternion as a detriment to the
Titans. The Brotherhood of Evil used him and Johnny Rancid to
defeat Más y Menos, but in the confusion of the battle only managed
to capture Menos, as Más escaped. Cinderblock was instrumental in
Beast Boy's plan to infiltrate the Brotherhood of Evil's secret
base by having Jericho take over his body. He was later frozen with
the other villains at the Brotherhood of Evil's base.
Cironielian Chrysalis Eater
There are rare occasions where a Tamaranean
during their transformation (puberty), become a Chrysalis. Some
don't survive due to creatures called Chrysalis Eaters who eat
Tamaraneans in this stage. One stalked Starfire in space when she
was going through her transformation, and disguised herself as a
humanoid woman before revealing her spider-like true identity to
Starfire. The other Titans appear as Starfire is freed from the
cocoon by Robin to find her emerging normal with a new power:
shooting beams out of her eyes. She uses this power to send the
Chrysalis Eater through the wall and to its death of being
eaten.
The Cironielian Chyrsalis Eater is named after
Teen Titans director
Ciro
Nieli.
Fang is the original boyfriend of
Kitten,
the daughter of
Killer Moth.
He is a mutant with a giant four-legged spider for a head. In
"Revved Up" he was seen in a race with his girlfriend Kitten, but
taken out when
Red X cuts their
limo in half. He also joined the
Brotherhood
of Evil and, with
Private
H.I.V.E., unsuccessfully tried to defeat Jericho. Later, he
temporarily stopped the Herald's horn from working with a web
blast, allowing the Titan to be captured. During the final battle,
he is captured by
Speedy
and frozen by Más y Menos. His powers are the ability to move at
surprising speeds over any surface, to jump vast distances, and to
fire paralysis-inflicting venom beams.
Fire Monster (Inpachi)
Only appearing in the episode
"Forces of Nature", little can be understood about Fire. An
enormous humanoid being of flames, it was summoned by a magic
ritual set up by
Slade and
completed by
Thunder and Lightning. It was only stopped after Thunder and
Lightning used their powers to make rain.
Seen in "Final Exam", she sent Gizmo, Jinx, and
Mammoth
to destroy the Teen Titans in order to gain
Slade's
business, but they failed and were punished. Later,
Brother
Blood is seen commanding the school from "Deception" and
onwards, where the Hive Mistress appears on a milk carton stating
"MISSING". She is frozen by Más y Menos in "Titans Together".
The I.N.S.T.I.G.A.T.O.R. is a villain who has a
giant
M.O.D.O.K.-like head,
and the body of a H.I.V.E. drone robot. He has only been seen as a
H.I.V.E. student, and in battle in "Calling all Titans" when the
Brotherhood of Evil ordered it to take down
Thunder. He is frozen by Más y Menos during the final
battle.
According to character designer Derrick Wyatt,
I.N.S.T.I.G.A.T.O.R. stands for Integrated Neural System
Techno-Intelligence Gyroscopic Atomic Tactical Organic Robot.
Johnny Rancids personality and appearance is a
mix of a punk rocker and biker. He refers to Robin as "Bird Boy".
When Larry breaks his magic finger, Johnny takes control of Larry's
unleashed power and becomes a muscular brute able to wield red
energy. When Larry uses his powers to revert everything back to
normal, Johnny loses his powers and crashes into the earth. He
later returns with his robotic pet "dog" named Wrex, which is taken
down by the Titans. Later in the episode, he returns again with
Wrexzilla (a gigantic version of Wrex), but is devoured by Silkie
under control of Killer Moth. When Silkie finished molting, Johnny
is arrested by Jump City police. In Season Five, Rancid's
motorcycle was destroyed by Red X in "Revved Up," but it is fixed
and he teams up with Cinderblock to capture Más y Menos, but
succeeds only in capturing him. He was later frozen by Menos in the
final battle with the Brotherhood of Evil.
Kardiak resembles a giant mechanical heart. Its
abilities include floating, a vast suction power from its valves,
and the ability to change the shape of its valves into other
mechanical objects. He has an affinity for capturing and devouring
small children. At first, Raven used a spell to break it, causing
the Titans to think it was destroyed. However, it was able to
regenerate and later attacked and kidnapped a girl from her bed.
Raven used dark magic she learned from
Malchior on it to
defeat it. In "Calling All Titans", the Brotherhood of Evil ordered
Kardiak to go after Beast Boy, but he was overpowered. Kardiak
returned to the Brotherhood base and fought in the final battle,
and is frozen by Más y Menos.
Katarou is a martial artist who is the rival of
Robin. He defeated Robin in combat, at which point Robin goes to
seek the "True Master", supposedly the most skilled martial artist
in the world. Katarou claimed to have trained with the True Master,
but it was revealed that he failed in his attempt to reach the True
Master. He is apprehended by the guardians of the mountain where
the True Master (who is actually a woman named Chu-Hui) lives. He
defeated Bushido for the Brotherhood of Evil, but was then defeated
himself by Bushido in the final battle. He was frozen by Más y
Menos.
Krall is a warrior from circa
3000
B.C., in the tribe of
Sarasim. He makes
a deal with a witch to bring help from the future to make him the
greatest warrior in the land, so he can overthrow Sarasim and
become the tribe's leader. The witch actually brings Cyborg from
the future, who uncovers Krall's plot and defeats him. The witch
then makes Krall powerful by physically fusing him with evil
creatures and monsters she has been unleashing upon the tribe, at
which point he attacks the tribe himself. Cyborg helps defend the
tribe, but is brought back to the future before he can defeat
Krall. Raven reveals one of her ancient books to Cyborg that shows
a depiction of the tribe defeating Krall. Having been killed by
Sarasim, Krall did not return in Season Five.
Kyd Wykkyd is a villain who was once a student at
the H.I.V.E. Academy. After Cyborg and the Titans destroyed the
H.I.V.E. and the various students became renegade villains, Wykkyd
joined the H.I.V.E. F.I.V.E. with
Billy
Numerous, but the group was defeated by Kid Flash. Kyd can use
his cape to teleport or create small other-dimensional portals. He
fights a losing battle with Raven alongside
Psimon in "Calling
All Titans." He attempts to escape with the remaining members of
the H.I.V.E Five and is frozen by Más y Menos, but not before
witnessing Jinx's betrayal to the side of good.
Locrix
The Locrix are a techno-organic race and also
Val-Yor's enemies. They are not given much character, as the
central aspect of this episode is Val-Yor's racism toward Starfire.
Most of the Locrix were "unplugged" when Starfire destroyed the
mechanical core that powers them. One was held prisoner by
Gordanians in "Go!". No representative of them joined the
Brotherhood of Evil.
Malchior was a mighty dragon who fought the
powerful wizard Rorek. His power was so vast, that his power
rivaled those of Machior's. Rorek's last curse seemingly defeated
Malchior. However, Malchior rose up and captured Rorek. As Malchior
was about to obliterate Rorek, Rorek used an ancient curse that
finally defeated Malchior. Unfortunately, the spell also defeated
himself. He then was trapped inside a book found by Raven, with
Malchior. Malchior manipulated Raven by teaching her magic as a
paper man and passing himself off as the heroic wizard. After his
intentions were revealed upon a spell that released him, Malchior
attacked the other Titans. He was defeated when Raven uses a spell
to send him back in the book. Malchior later popped up as a member
of the Brotherhood of Evil. In the final fight, his paper form
assumed his dragon form which ended up sent into another dimension
by Herald.
The Master of Games is a character who takes the
male Titans, along with Gizmo,
Hot
Spot,
Wildebeest,
Aqualad,
and Speedy to his own world in order to have a Tournament of
Heroes. However, the heroes discover his real motive is to take
their powers using his magic amulet. They defeat him and return to
their own world. Raven, Starfire,
Terra, and
five other unannounced super-heroines are then transported to his
world for the Tournament of Heroines.
He later returns as a member of the Brotherhood
of Evil, and turns up during the final battle, in which he was
frozen by Más y Menos.
Mother Mae-Eye is a villainous mystical being
with three eyes and a crooked nose. In her human form, she appears
as a pudgy, kindly woman, but is actually an "evil witch" and
energy vampire that feeds on the love and affection of her victims,
whom she refers to as her "children", "sweeties" and "little ones"
regardless of their physical age or body structure.
Mother Mae-Eye first appears sealed in a pie,
which Cyborg mistakenly brings to Titans Tower after buying it from
a gypsy in a dark alley at night, when she is subsequently
released. She puts the Titans under a spell by constantly
force-feeding them enchanted pie, after which they in turn have
hallucinations that she is their mother, while she uses their
situation to feed on their love. When several pies are consumed by
the Titans, they regress back to childlike behavior. She has a
mass-produced army of gingerbread cookie soldiers, and also
redecorates the Tower to accommodate a "cutesy" and "gingerbread"
image. She also speaks baby talk to the Titans throughout most of
the episode, and gives them childish nicknames like "Borgy-Bear"
for Cyborg, and "Twinkle Star" for Starfire.
She is occasionally overbearing, but mostly
motherly and sweet to the Titans, as she dresses them up in
childish attire for their "safety" during a mission, which she
assumes is the kids wanting to play outside. For example, Raven's
cloak turns into a
Shirley
Temple dress and her hair is restyled into braided pigtails,
while Beast Boy gets a bunny suit that restricts his transformation
abilities. When the HIVE Five attack, they find themselves helpless
in their new outfits (or in Robin's case, his weapons being
replaced with either childish or infantile items like a teddy bear
and baby bottle) until Mother Mae-Eye helps them, by whacking the
"nasty children" with her purse. Because Starfire receives a "bump
on the cranium" from a mall light, she sees the truth behind Mother
Mae-Eye and releases the other Titans from her spell the same way -
by whacking them over their heads with Mother's rolling pin,
therefore restoring them to normal. The freed Titans finally figure
out her love-extracting plan and come up with their own plan to
banish Mother back into the pie. After sealing Mother back into the
pie she came in, they decide to deliver it to the hideout of the
HIVE Five, where she calls them her children now.
Mother Mae-Eye returned and joined the
Brotherhood of Evil, but she was defeated along with the other
villains, disappearing when she hits the floor near the end of the
fight.
Mumbo is a turquoise-skinned magician with a
twisted sense of humor that was created specifically for the
animated series. His powers are limited to small-time spells based
on stage magic. He also is human, and can turn into his magician
form by saying "Mumbo-Jumbo."
He first appeared in the season-one episode "The
Sum of His Parts", in which he battled the Titans in a junkyard
after being confronted following a jewel theft. After he flees the
scene and Cyborg goes missing, the Titans mistakenly believe Mumbo
has something to do with his disappearance, and pursue him. After a
chase throughout the city, they catch him and break his wand,
turning him into an ordinary human. Upon learning that he wasn't
involved in Cyborg's absence, the Titans head back to the
junkyard.
In the Season Three episode, "Bunny
Raven...or...How to Make a Titananimal Disappear," he sucked the
Titans into a pocket dimension inside his hat, where his powers
were much stronger. He was able to turn the Titans into animal
forms, rendering their powers useless. After a humiliating show
with such stunts as pulling Raven out of his hat and turning Cyborg
into a dancing bear in front of an audience of Mumbo lookalikes,
Raven defeats him by having Robin and Beast Boy (as a paintbrush)
paint them to blend in with the stage during the intermission.
Before Mumbo could perform his Grand Finale - making them literally
disappear - Raven hits him with a hard kick, sending them all back
into the real world, where Mumbo was arrested. Mumbo also appeared
as one of the racers in "Revved Up." He was frozen by Más y Menos
during the final battle.
During the episode "Mother Mae-Eye", when Mother
turns Starfire's room into an oven, Starfire's Mumbo clock melts in
the heat. This clock also appeared in the episode "How Long is
Forever".
Nufu is a species controlled by "The Source" who
uses 'Nufu Soldiers or Bob' to capture cows which power their
ships. It is also used to create synthetic meat products being sold
at the Mega Meaty Meat restaurant, which serves as a cover for the
spaceship. Nufu's only known weakness is water, or someone
consuming it. The latter was defeated in this way, as Cyborg ate
him at the end of the episode "Employee of the Month."
Bob is a servant of the Nufu Source. He and his
clones were defeated when Beast Boy exposed them to water.
Both Bob and "The Source" popped up amongst the
villain assortment in the Brotherhood of Evil, but didn't appear in
the final battle.
Overload is a villain electric monster controlled
by a small circuit board. Its powers are firing bursts of
electricity and the ability to control machinery. It is extremely
vulnerable to water, which reduces him to his circuit board
form.
Slade later used Overload in his plans by sending
it to battle Raven. By that episode, it had changed in appearance
and size, going from looking like a simple white monster to having
metal in its body and turning slightly blue. During the episode
"Aftershock Part II", it was fused into the monster Ternion (along
with Plasmus and Cinderblock), which was defeated. During the final
battle,
Killowat absorbs
Overload, leaving the circuit board behind, which is later frozen
by Más y Menos.
Overload was not based on anyone from the Teen
Titans comic book. It was created specifically for the show.
Although he has appeared in later shows, Overload only speaks in
his debut episode "Car Trouble".
Private H.I.V.E. is the eponymous villain from
the
H.I.V.E. Academy.
In "Mother Mae-Eye", he forms the H.I.V.E. F.I.V.E. with four other
H.I.V.E. students: Jinx, Gizmo, Mammoth, and See-More. They were
defeated and later joined up with the Brotherhood of Evil, but
Private H.I.V.E. was not seen with his other teammates when they
took on
Kid Flash. He
appears later on to help Fang unsuccessfully take down Jericho.
Then, inside the Brotherhood of Evil's base, he discovers that
Cinderblock is really Jericho in disguise, but Jericho
astral-projects out of Cinderblock and into Private H.I.V.E.'s body
before he can stop him. Private H.I.V.E. fights in the final
battle, both under, and later free of, Jericho's control, but is
defeated by the might of so many Titans assembled. He is frozen by
Más y Menos.
Professor Chang is a villainous mad scientist
created specifically for the animated series. He runs an
underground operation providing supplies for higher-tier villains.
Robin once forced him to hand over xenothium, the fictional power
source for his
Red X armor which
first appeared in the Season One episode "Masks". Later, in the
Season Three episode "X", Robin went to him expecting the thief who
had taken the Red X suit to hit there in search of more xenothium.
He had none left, and sent him to a heavily guarded storage
facility where xenothium was held. It turned out to be a trap to
get the xenothium for himself to power his new laser canon in his
plans to step into the spotlight himself. He remarked, "I'm sick of
selling to bad boys, I'm ready to be one." Red X teamed up with
Robin to destroy his cannon, and Professor Chang was
imprisoned.
Later, he escaped prison, and
Brother
Blood employed him to assist him augment himself with
Cyborg's
technology. Blood intended to convert all his students (which at
the time included the mind-controlled Titans East) into half-human
half-machines, like Cyborg, before the Teen Titans stopped
him.
Professor Chang later appears in a cameo in the
Season Five episode "Snowblind". He is frequently seen (both with
and without his equipment) in
Red
Star's flashback scene of how he received his deadly powers. He
joined the Brotherhood of Evil and helps them flash-freeze the
captured heroes. However, Más frees Menos, and the reunited duo
freezes Chang and his scientists/bodyguards.
Professor Chang is named after Teen Titans
director Michael Chang.
Puppet King
The Puppet King is based on the comic book character
Puppeteer
who is a
Green
Lantern villain. The Puppet King is an evil marionette (the
exact circumstances of this state are unrevealed). In "Switched",
he sucks all of the Teen Titans' souls into puppets, except for
Starfire and
Raven,
whose minds got switched instead. Puppet King intends to enact a
'ceremony' that will turn the Titans' bodies over to him
permanently. Eventually, however, Raven and Starfire put aside
their differences and work together to stop him. The Puppet King's
spells are broken and each Titan's mind returns to its proper body.
At the same time, the Puppet King's soul leaves him and he is
revealed to be only a lifeless marionette, which the Titans stowed
in their storage room. He is reanimated, and, with Control Freak,
took down Killowat for the Brotherhood of Evil. In the fight just
before the final battle, Más beats up Puppet King. He is not seen
for the rest of the battle.
See-More is a minor villain from the former
H.I.V.E Academy. He made a cameo appearance in the episode
"Deception" and fully appeared in "Mother Mae-Eye" where he formed
the H.I.V.E. F.I.V.E. His powers stem from a variety of colored
"eyes" on his helmet, and he is a master of hypnosis. He later aids
Warp in
(unsuccessfully) taking down
Herald. In the
final battle, he gets beaten up by
Pantha and is frozen
by Más y Menos. Throughout the series, See-More seems to have a
crush on (or be in a relationship with)
Jinx.
Soto is a neutral and super-strong alien who
comes to Earth looking for his green-colored pet dog. He
accidentally kidnaps
Beast Boy in
dog form, but decides he would rather keep his "new pet" instead
because it can become any animal it wants. Soto is characterized by
his lack of intelligence and childishness (his outfit resembles
footie pajamas, and the controls of his spacecraft toddler's
toys).
Soto was forced into a fight with the Teen
Titans, where he was prone to crying when he was on the verge of
losing. After
Raven and
Starfire
combined their powers to beat him, Soto found himself face-to-face
with his real dog. The dog told his former master that he was tired
of being the pet, and a panicked Soto eagerly agreed to let the dog
be his master. After "Every Dog Has His Day", Soto is seen in
cameos in many episodes, though not in "Homecoming Part 2."
Soto is named after Teen Titans director Alex
Soto.
An unidentified Space Monster tore apart a space
station, which the Titans are sent to investigate. He nearly
defeated them with his sonic powers and near-invulnerability, but
fell into a reactor. He turned up again when the Titans were
fleeing the station. He landed on their ship, but was soon thrown
off and crashed on the planet that the Titans also landed on. In
his fight with Robin and Starfire, he eventually falls down a chasm
and is presumed dead as he is never seen again. Another one
appeared in "Go!" as the Gordanians' prisoner, but he was not
recruited by the Brotherhood of Evil.
Steamroller is a gigantic, mechanic monstrosity
used by
Brother
Blood. It is comparable to Cinderblock as used by Slade. Like
Cinderblock, Steamroller is incredibly big and strong, and almost
managed to defeat the Titans East until Cyborg brought them
together as a team. It was later revealed that the battle was a
ruse, and that Steamroller had downloaded the access codes to the
Titans East's tower. Steamroller was later used by the Brotherhood
of Evil in "Calling all Titans" to help the I.N.S.T.I.G.A.T.O.R.
take down Thunder. Later, he subdues Pantha inside the Brotherhood
base. He was later frozen by Más y Menos.
"Thing"
- Voice Actor: The "Thing" has no lines
A white monster capable of absorbing itself into
materials such as concrete, oil, brick, stone, water, and fire,
this creature was pursued by Robin, Cyborg, Starfire, and Raven,
while Beast Boy tried to find and reconcile with the girl that was
apparently Terra. The Titans cornered the beast in a recycling
plant, but it was too powerful to defeat.
Trogaar is a
Gordanian, and
the ruler of the prison ship on which
Starfire, the
Space Monster, a Locrix, and others were being kept. He was the
Titans' first take-down as an official team. After Cyborg shot him
with his sonic cannon, he is presumed dead as he did not appear
with the Brotherhood of Evil at the end of the season.
Krall's magical assistant, she is referred to
only as Witch. He freed her from eternal limbo and she thus became
his slave. Condemned to obey
Krall, she twisted
his command for her to make him a hero. She sent her minions (which
Krall couldn't defeat) to attack Sarasim's town, and brought Cyborg
from the future.
Witch's Minions
The Witch's Minions are green, insectoid
creatures. The Witch sends them to attack Sarasim's village so
Krall can become famous by defeating them. However, they are too
much for him. Later, at Krall's wish to become more powerful, some
of them merged with him, turning him into a monster and their
supreme commander. Most of them were decimated in the final battle
with Krall.
Wrex/Wrexzilla
Wrex is a giant mechanical dog built by
Johnny Rancid. Although being mechanical, Wrex has the habits and
mannerisms of a regular dog. He was distracted by a game of fetch
during his battle with the Titans, and quickly blown up. However,
he was rebuilt into the monstrosity Wrexzilla, which was eaten by
Silkie.
Xenothium Creature
This Xenothium Creature spawned out of
Red
Star's bled-off energy. It resembles a large amorphic blob that
still has a vaguely humanoid shape. It was mistaken by the people
of Red Star's village to be him, but was eventually destroyed by
Red Star before it could destroy the town.
XL Terrestrial is a H.I.V.E. student who looks
like an alien and first made a cameo appearance in "Deception". He
later helps out the Brotherhood of Evil to take out
Tramm. His powers
grow in size by pushing the arrow on his chest (XL stands for
"extra-large"). He is seen enlarging himself during the final
battle, and is attacked by Raven and Starfire, and eventually
frozen by Más y Menos. Yet when the Brain is frozen, he is seen in
the crowd of Titans groaning about Beast Boy's joke, even though he
was a villain.
teether in Polish: Lista bohaterów serialu
animowanego Młodzi Tytani