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What originally started as parodying the best-known superhero of all became so clichรฉ that creating heroic pastiches of Superman has looped back around to being subversive. Most of these evil Superman clones are, to be frank, downright boring. An unstoppable warrior is infinitely less entertaining when you remove the emotional tension, but thatโs not to say that all evil Supermen are bad. There are plenty that are very entertaining. The cream of the crop offers a brand new window into the human condition and exploration of what it means to be a superhero. Today, weโre taking a look at ten of the best evil Supermen, and discussing what actually separates them from the chull. Without further ado, letโs inspect some Supermen.
10) Red Son

Calling the Superman of the Red Son Elseworld feels like a misnomer, as he is much more nuanced than the average evil โhero.โ In this world, Supermanโs rocket landed in the Soviet Union. He was raised to be a state-sponsored champion of โStalin, socialism, and the international expansion of the Warsaw Pact.โ However, this character was very much still Superman. At his core, the Man of Tomorrow was still a good person trying to help the world, but one who was raised in a culture that emphasized control instead of humility, as the Kents did.
Red Son is less an evil Superman subjugating the world, and more an exploration of the line between nature and nurture. Superman forcibly takes over the world in the name of peace, murdering his enemies without hesitation, but he does it all to help everyone. The road to hell is paved with Supermanโs best intentions. In the end, he realizes his mistakes and repents. This story is all about grey areas and uncomfortable situations, which it excels at. Heโs not really a villain, but heโs far from a hero, and does so many villainous things.
9) Homelander

Homelander is one of the most popular evil Supermen out there, and heโs a truly one-of-a-kind case, because heโs the ultimate example of this idea pushed to one of its furthest extremes. Homelander is a whiny, petulant man-baby narcissist, and thereโs something so entertaining about watching him swing between terrifying and pathetic. Heโs over-the-top and obscene to the point of the cringe looping back around to funny, although he definitely spends a lot of time in cringe territory. He makes the list not because he says anything interesting about Superman or even the human condition, but because if you are looking for a version of Superman that is just downright evil, and thatโs it, Homelander is your guy.
8) Kid Miracleman

Kid Miracleman is technically a Superman pastiche removed about three times. Heโs an evil counterpart to Miracleman, who was Marvelโs version of Shazam, who was Fawcettโs own Superman pastiche. Technically, that would make him more of a Black Adam character, but thatโs weeds we donโt need to get into. Kid Miracleman is entertaining because he truly is a child given unlimited power, a boatload of trauma, and the ability to become a version of himself without restraint or regrets. Itโs the story of an abused child who was already predisposed to bad tendencies, amplified a thousandfold by his experiences. The tension created by the terrified Johnny Bates and the monstrous Kid Miracleman earns him a spot on this list on its own.
7) Injustice Superman

The Injustice franchise is what I credit with the boom of evil Superman in the 2010s and popularizing the idea in broader media. This series imagines our normal Superman pushed past his breaking point, becoming a despotic tyrant who lords over the Earth. While the inciting incident is dramatic and traumatic to the extreme, the seriesโs true focus was always on making evil Justice Leaguers for the true heroes to fight, which it excelled at. The actual characterization in Injustice is spotty at best for our heroes-turned-tyrants. Still, the best thing about this version of Superman is how he interacts with the heroes who know the real one. Heโs a dark mirror that they openly reject on every level, and seeing him get his butt beat is endlessly enjoyable.
6) Hyperion

Hyperion was Marvelโs original take on an evil Superman, being introduced in Avengers (1963) #69 as part of an evil Justice League parody, the Squadron Sinister. He started as a one-note villain, but has since developed into something much more interesting. There are countless versions of Hyperion now. There are the two-bit evil variants, the good-intentioned but flawed dictator variants, the purely heroic variants, and the all-powerful cosmic ruler variants, and all have been used to explore different aspects of being superhuman. Hyperion was meant to be a one-off Superman-like for the Avengers to beat up, but he became a vehicle to explore the effects of unlimited power on the human psyche.













