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One of the most fruitful types of villains for the company are those enemies who are dark mirrors of the heroes they battle. Just look at someone like Magneto (who won’t be on this list because he’s been a hero for close to 20 years now); he was so special because he was the dark opposite of Xavier. Marvel does these kinds of villains with a special gusto, and these seven are the perfect opposites to the best heroes in comics.
7) Loki

So, Magneto isn’t the only archenemy to become more of a hero than a villain; Loki has followed the mutant master of magnetism in a lot of ways. The God of Stories has acted like a hero often in recent years, but they’re still something of a villain, so I’m counting them. We’ve seen many Loki variants over the decades, but the villain has always been Thor’s perfect opposite. They were smart where Thor was strong, they were crafty where Thor was honorable, they were into magic while the God of Thunder was always about physical power. The two characters play so well off each other, whether they’re in battle or on the same side, because of just how different they truly are.
6) The Leader

The Hulk faces some powerful villains, and most of them have one thing in common: they’re all really strong. The Jade Giant is the strongest one there is and most of his enemies try to punch him out. However, there’s one villain who is his complete opposite in every way that counts: the Leader. The Hulk is the supreme physical power, but the Leader is the supreme mental one. Gamma gave him the most powerful mind on the planet, making him smarter than nearly anyone and giving him limited mental abilities. Where the Hulk is often monosyllabic and controlled by his feelings, the Leader speaks eloquently and makes all of his decisions based on a brutal calculus. Their differences make them such amazing foes.
5) Mister Sinister

Most X-Men fans wouldn’t really think that Mister Sinister is much of an evil opposite to the X-Men, but it actually works really well when you think about it. Both of them want to allow mutants to become more powerful, but where Xavier and the X-Men want to spread freedom to everyone, Sinister wants to be the one in control of everything down to everyone’s genes. He wants mutants to be powerful, but he wants them to be powerful under him. He wants to create chains and not freedom. His playful nature also speaks to this opposition, as he seemingly takes nothing seriously anymore and is all about plans within plans, where the X-Men are serious to a fault and never have any plan. He’s become one of the greatest X-Men villains ever, serving a dark mirror for what the dream of mutant freedom can be.












