X Tutup
TVTropes Now available in the app store!
Open

Follow TV Tropes

The Psycho Rangers

Go To

The Psycho Rangers (trope)
One team is the Trope Namer. The other is the original. Guess which is which.
"You've heard of the Dream Team? Well, we're the Mean Team, wussy man!"
Pound, Space Jam

A regular Legion of Doom has members which oppose the heroes and are often their archrivals, but their powers are scattered all over the place, and they're not necessarily Evil Counterparts even if they have the same number of members.

The Psycho Rangers are the collective Evil Twin of The Team. Each one's nature/powers mirror a specific hero and they work together as a group. The same way The Hero can get his True Companions together to fight the Monster of the Week, sometimes the Big Bad, The Rival, Evil Twin, Monster of the Week or Evil Counterpart can get himself a team made up entirely of Evil Counterparts to the main cast.

If they know all the moves of their heroic counterparts, the Psycho Rangers may be too strong for their duplicates one-on-one. The heroes can sometimes turn the tables by switching opponents and fighting each others' evil doubles. Without knowledge of the heroes' fighting techniques, the Psycho Rangers become much easier to defeat. (Unless they promptly switch back again.)

If they are less straight up evil and more along the lines of merely "opposing the heroes", and there is a gender flip Evil Counterpart, then there might be some sexual tension between the two.

The most extreme, but not the most common, type of Psycho Rangers are literally evil clones or Mirror Universe counterparts of the heroes.

Named for the Psycho Rangers from Power Rangers in Space, whom were adapted from the Jaden Sentai Neziranger in Denji Sentai Megaranger. Similar to, but Not to Be Confused with, Evil Counterpart Organization, which differs from this trope in that it applies to a larger evil organization in general instead of a specific evil team and each of its members. Also contrast Mirroring Factions. May to various extents also be a Similar Squad. Can be part of a Geodesic Cast. Usually turns out to be an Evil Knockoff team. May lead to Counterpart Combat Coordination. The heroes and the Psycho Rangers are often shown in a Mirrored Confrontation Shot. Opposing Sports Team is a sports-specific version. For a good-guy team with such manners, it's Anti-Hero Team.


Example subpages:

Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Audio Drama 
  • The Bloomsbury Bunch in Big Finish Doctor Who's Paternoster Gang series likewise comprises a male Sontaran, a female Silurian and a gay human in a relationship with their leader. One difference: the Sontaran, Stonn, is the leader and the human, Tom, is male, with Vella the Silurian telling Madame Vastra "Unlike you, I don't kiss apes."

    Card Games 
  • Yu-Gi-Oh!: Zig-zagged with the Evil HEROes to the Elemental HEROes. The majority of their monsters are a direct Evil Counterpart to an Elemental HERO, but the fusions actually require the original Normal Elemental HEROes to summon, while using Dark Fusion instead of Polymerization. In the anime, they are an evil replacement for Jaden's original deck when he becomes the Supreme King.

    Fan Works 
  • All Things Probable Series: Team Probable is a group similar to Team Possible, except that they assist villains for pay rather than stopping them for free. Its members (except the Team Pet) are the opposite gender from their respective counterparts.
  • The Bridge gives a loose but present example. The main four heroic kaiju (Godzilla Jr., Mothra Lea, Anguirus, and Rodan) agree to work with the Equestrians to find a way home. Knowing this, the Big Bad recruits a group of villainous kaiju. The most prominent are Monster X, Hyper Gyaos/Irys, Megalon, and Gigan. The quartet also serves as the Villain Protagonist leads of the Specials. The two teams mirror one another with poorly socialized leader who has trouble controlling his powers (Godzilla to Monster X), a chronologically youngest member with mystic based powers (Mothra to Irys), and two sibling artificial creations from the same "production line" (Anguirus and Rodan to Gigan and Megalon).
  • Code Geass: Paladins of Voltron: The Knights of the Round become this when given Galra enhanced Knightmare Frames to better combat the Lions. Each of the knights serve as a counter to each of the Paladins: Bismark to Lelouch/Zero, as the leader of their respective teams, Dorothea to Kallen, who are the most hotheaded members with Fantastic Racismnote , Gino to Rivals, both of whom are nice guys who try to woo the ladies, Luciano to Milly, whose quirks annoy their teammates, Anya to Rai, who are the most logical membersnote , Monica to Shirley, who are the most ‘normal’ members of their teamsnote , and due to Nonette’s defection, Shin Hyūga Shaing, is brought in to replace her as the Knights’ seventh member to act as a counter to Suzaku, as both of them are Japanese pilots who both have limited views on their own lives.
  • The Coven of Reformed Supernaturals series opens by featuring the titular team coming together; Angel, Spike, Illyria, Leo Wyatt, Cole Turner, Blade, Hellboy, John Constantine and the vampire Batman. The second fic in the series sees Spawn replace Batman as the team face the Gathering of Supernatural Psychopaths, who were explicitly created to be a gathering of supernatural killers for no greater purpose than to kill a lot of people (really to keep the Coven occupied while the Devil prepares the Apocalypse). The Gathering was led by Spawn's foe the Clown and included Chucky, Drusilla, Jason Voorhees, Freddy Krueger, Pinhead, the Headless Horseman, the Creeper, and It.
  • Dragon Ball Fantastic Tales: In this universe, the Red Ribbon Army are the ones to form the Frightful Four to counteract the Fantastic Four. Their membership includes Mercenary Tao, the Wizard, Red Ghost, and Yamcha who the Red Ribbon Army captured and turned into the android version of the Human Torch.
  • Fate: Hero and Sword has this going on between The Holy City Camelot and The Great Tomb of Nazarick. Their membership includes:
    • A Token Human leader in the form of Shirou and Ainz, though unlike Ainz Shirou has a lot of experience with life outside of YGGDRASIL and is consequently better at treading the members of Camelot than Ainz is at reading the NPCs of Nazaric.
    • Albedo and Arturia, who are female love interests of the leaders of their factions and the nominal seconds-in-command, though while Arturia embodies Beauty Equals Goodness and is one of the most heroic characters in the story, Albedo embodies Beauty Is Bad and is one of the most outright villainous members of Nazaric.
    • Agravain and Demiurge are The Chessmaster of their forces, but Agravain realizes that Shirou and his companions aren't always aware of what his plans entail due to Shirou and Arturia being too selfless to consider some of his more immoral strategies, while Demourge believes Ainz already knows and anticipates his plans.
    • Nero and Shalltear are female characters who jostle with Albedo/Arturia over various topics, but while Albedo and Shalltear have a legitimate rivalry over who will be Ainz's Top Wife, Nero doesn't have romantic interest in Shirou and mostly annoys Arturia due to her personality and being far curvier than Arturia and not being afraid to flaunt it.
    • Merlin and Narberal Gamma are casters who look human even though they aren't and have dismal views of mankind. Unlike Narberal, Merlin does not see this as a reason to treat humans like dirt.
  • Inner Glory has the reflections of the Lost World. They are Lustrous Revolt, (Twilight Sparkle's reflection) Spectral Slash, (Rainbow Dash's reflection) Shuddercry, (Fluttershy's reflection) Pinkamina Diane, (Pinkie Pie's reflection) and Temperament (Rarity's reflection)Jackie, (Applejack's reflection) and Thorn. (Spike's reflection) But none of them are really evil, and they all make Heel Face Turns in the end.
  • Miraculous City: The Disaster Team, a group of criminal Miraculous users that counteract Team Miraculous. The group has at least one Evil Counterpart to the heroes.
    • Lila/Cerise/Lady Harlequin is this to Marinette/Ladybug. Both are charismatic leaders, but Marinette fights to protect her loved ones while Harlequin fights for her own interest.
    • Tulip/Swinearchy to Rose/Pigella. Both are cheerful and optimistic Genki Girls with powers of the Pig Miraculous, but while Rose is a kind and gentle person who uses her powers to help others, Tulip is an insane Cloudcuckoolander who doesn’t care who she hurts in her pursuit of having fun.
    • XY/ViperX to Luka/Viperion. Both are musicians with Snake Miraculous power, but while Luka is a genuinely talented musician and a compassionate heart, XY has no real talent and steals the work of others. Word of God even lampshades that XY is already an evil Luka in canon.
    • Socqueline Wang/Lady Beetle is revealed to have one through Camille/Chrysalis. Both of them were Big Sister Mentors to Marinette and Cerise respectively, guiding the younger girl to be who they are in the present. Socqueline becomes a full-on Good Counterpart when she gets the Butterfly Miraculous and becomes Painted Lady.
  • My Little Avengers: Loki eventually assembles a team of Dark Avengers to combat Thor's Avenger team, selecting ponies whose powers make them Evil Counterparts to the heroes, with Loki himself serving as Thor's counterpart. The only standout is Loki's apprentice Trixie, who has no counterpart among the main characters — though this admittedly becomes a moot point by the Final Battle, as by then, Trixie's failed an attempt to double-cross Loki and has fled for her life, and in any case, all the Avengers (except for Thor, who still takes on Loki) swap opponents in order to get an advantage.
  • Played with in Pretty Cure Perfume Preppy: The Akutare brothers, managers of the Sunday Scent Shop, oppose the girls in episodes 16 and 17... but the girls are five, while the brothers are three, so neither Ayameko nor Hanae have counterparts.
  • Pony POV Series: This posp up near the end of Dark World: Nightmare Paradox has fused with five other Nightmares from previous cycles, the six of them forming one of these to the heroes. However, only two of them are the actual Superpowered Evil Side of their counterpart, due to the Elements having changed hooves: (Nightmare Mirror to Rarity, Nightmare Granfalloon to Apple Pie, Nightmare Whisper to Applejack, Nightmare Banneret to Spike, Nightmare Manacle to Derpy, and of course, Nightmare Paradox herself to Twilight).
  • Shining Pretty Cure has the Shade Quartet, a group of teenage minions that act as a counterpart to the titular girl group.
  • Pretty Cure Full Color has Belldandy, an Evil Counterpart who in a twist, ends up becoming the Sixth Ranger.
  • A Song of Silk and Saplings: Hornet's captors are a trio of recurring antagonists who are direct counterparts to Team Snakemouth:
    • Brier is a boxelder bug with powerful lightning magic and a former scholar of Hallownest's Soul Sanctum, diametrically opposite to Leif in several key aspects. While Leif was viewed as a "failed experiment" by the roaches of Upper Snakemouth, Brier was seen as the greatest success of Hallownest's Soul Sanctum, as they were the only Sanctum scholar to infuse themselves with Soul Magic with no side effects. Whereas Leif cares very little for his possible biological immortality and seems to have become an Anti-Nihilist in his personal journey, Brier is an obsessive Immortality Seeker who rejects any notion that a mortal life can be meaningful. And while Leif was an unwilling test subject of the roaches of Upper Snakemouth, Brier eagerly dedicates their entire life to the exact same kinds of hideously unethical experiments. Finally, while Leif is a cordyceps fungus who accidentally absorbed the memories and identity of its deceased host, Brier willingly sets up a cordyceps to take host in their body in the event of their demise, so that they can come Back from the Dead.
    • Carnus, an American carrion beetle of exceptional physical strength, is a foil to Kabbu. He suffers a great deal of angst over his species' diet of rotting corpses forcing him to scavenge grave sites, and, while he's seemingly quite gentle in personality, his immense guilt complex leads him to side with Light Within out of the belief that their promised "Second Reckoning" will absolve him of his "sins". More gruesomely, he's also scavenged the graves of Kabbu's master and friend and eaten their decaying bodies.
    • Rosha is an Africanized honey bee (better known by the common name "killer bee") with a fiercely independent spirit and a strong desire to prove herself, making her directly parallel Vi. Unlike Vi, she's actually a queen bee who purposefully refused to start a new hive and birth a new generation. Also unlike Vi, she is a nasty Social Darwinist who regularly murders other bugs for sport, out of the belief that strength is the only thing that truly matters.
  • Super Sentai vs. Super Sentai features one in the "Another" story, the Kyokingers, consisting of Tube Red, Alien Blue, Dora Pink, Yokai Black, NeziYellow, Rin Green and Evol White. Long later tries to give them another member in Jakan Blue.
  • Vengeance of Dawn has Breaking Dawn (a disgruntled, jealous former student of Celestia who isn't so different from Twilight) and her friends. They are Laurel, (generous like Rarity, but unlike her is homely and poor) Razor Wind, (fast and loyal like Rainbow Dash) Cherry Blossom, (kind and shy like Fluttershy) Hard Candy, (zany and silly like Pinkie Pie, also a Minty Expy) and Hardy Bloom (honest and straightforward like Applejack).
  • Vow of Nudity: The trio of demons sabotaging the Olympics are symbolically characterized as warped manifestations of the three core athletes. The incubus is roguish, lecherous and rude towards his teammates, in contrast to Lunov's strict moral code and cooperative leadership style. The succubus is crafty, quick-thinking and specializes in shapeshifting to manipulate her marks, like a malicious version of the changeling Spectra. Lastly, the gender-neutral concubus is sexless and driven only by bloodlust and sadism, filling the same 'outside the male/female dichotomy' side of the triangle as Kyblin the asexual hyper-logical bird person.

    Films — Animation 

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 
  • In Animorphs, David's ultimate plan for the blue box was to use it to create a gang of morphing criminals to counter the Animorphs. The Animorphs were able to defeat him before he could put this plan into action.
  • The Beginning After the End: Not only are the Scythes the Evil Counterparts of the Lances, but each Scythe parallels one of the Lances in one respect or another.
    • Cadell -> Bairon. Both are physically imposing individuals renowned for being The Ace. Fittingly, at the climax of Volume 7, Bairon (with help from Arthur) goes up against Cadell when he attempts to assassinate Virion, only for Cadell to effortlessly defeat both of them.
      • Both also have an enmity with Arthur. Bairon loathes Arthur for killing his younger brother Lucas even though the latter participated in the attack on Xyrus Academy, whereas Cadell killed Arthur's Parental Substitute Sylvia. Arthur ends up resolving these enmities in contrasting fashions. He slays Cadell at the Victoriad, followed by him reconciling with Bairon upon returning to Dicathen.
      • Both also are known for taking on an asura in spite of the power disparity. As already stated, Cadell is the one who killed Sylvia, albeit she was an old asura who was severely weakened at the time. Bairon on the other hand attempts to hold off Taci, who in spite of being a young asura manages to defeat not just him but the rest of the remaining Lances, with only the arrival of Arthur being what puts an end to his rampage.
    • Seris -> Olfred. Both end up betraying their respective groups, but while Olfred does so out of his loyalty to the traitorous Rahdeas, Seris turns out to be Good All Along as she never loyal to Agrona and the Vritra in the first place for she recognized for them for the tyrants that they are and throws in her lot with Arthur due to his potential to end the Divine Conflict.
    • Melzri -> Varay. Both are very talented mages who have white hair, but radically contrast each other in terms of personality, fighting style, and elemental powers. Melzri is a Sadistic Blood Knight who is a master of fire magic and fights by Dual Wielding swords, while Varay is an impassive Ice Queen who is a master of ice magic and wields a Royal Rapier. However, Varay also parallels Cadell in that both are The Ace and The Leader for their respective groups.
    • Viessa -> Aya. While Viessa's personality is more similar to Varay's, the main similarity she has with Aya is that both are masters of illusory magic.
    • Dragoth -> Mica. The Big Guys for their respective teams, Mica is a Cute Bruiser and Pint-Sized Powerhouse, whereas Dragoth is a brutish individual who resembles a fantasy barbarian. Both are also Blood Knights who live for a good fight and Carry a Big Stick for their weapon of choice.
    • Nico -> Arthur. The Sixth Ranger to their respective groups, both are reincarnates who in spite of being physically young are among the most talented mages in the setting, and in both their past lives and their current ones they used to be best friends before turning into bitter enemies. In addition, Nico is the weakest among the Scythes due to not having Vritra blood, whereas Arthur ends up being the strongest among the Lances both before and after his Re-Power.
  • The City of Heroes Expanded Universe novel The Freedom Phalanx has the Tyranny Legion, Psycho Rangers for the not-yet-formed Phalanx. The armored hero Positron has his old boss, Doctor Null, who's stuck inside his armor; Synapse, who got his powers from one of Null's experiments, has Revenant, his ex-friend who was turned into a zombie through a similar experiment; Sister Psyche, the mutant psychic, has the Shadow Queen, whose psychic powers come from a possessed mask; Manticore, a Batman-esque vigilante, has Protean, the shapeshifter who killed his parents; and, of course, Statesman has Lord Recluse, whose rivalry the entire game revolves around.
  • In the Haruhi Suzumiya novels, the whole SOS Brigade is diametrically opposed by the Anti-SOS brigade, a team consisting of a time traveler, an alien humanoid-interface, an esper, and a depowered version of whatever Haruhi is. Ironically, Mikuru's opposite more closely resembles an Evil Counterpart to Itsuki (something Kyon even comments on), while Itsuki's opposite would be more suited as an Evil Counterpart to Mikuru. Pointedly, the only thing missing is a Kyon-counterpart. The Anti-SOS make several attempts to recruit Kyon, instead, believing him critical to their plans and fueling a great deal of Wild Mass Guessing. However, this trope is ultimately subverted, in that the Anti-SOS Brigade are not in any sense a coherent group, and its members do not actually care about each other at all, as shown by the fact that there are four of them but are split into at least three factions. In fact, Sasaki disagrees completely with what the other three want, so much so that she tries to help Kyon oppose the others.
  • Lensman: By Children of the Lens the Eddorians have attempted to create their own "Black Lensmen", but the results are... disappointing.
  • The ghostwritten "Tom Clancy" Op-Center series has the titular crisis command headquarters and its Russian counterpart, Mirror Image. Sometimes they cooperate, sometimes not.
  • In A Practical Guide to Evil, Five Man Bands are explicitly a thing in-character, and villainous examples are rare but very real. Special mention goes to the Calamities, the Praesi villains who masterminded the Conquest of Callow.
    • The Big Bad: Amadeus, the Black Knight*. Has the vision, lays the plans, guides the stories. Also a master swordfighter who cheats with both hands and several extra ones made of shadow.
    • The Dragon: Hye Su, the Ranger. One of the most feared physical fighters alive, famous for her Pre-Asskicking One-Liner of "I hunt those worth hunting. Rejoice, you qualify."
    • The Evil Genius: Wekesa, the Warlock. A brilliant mage and analyst, planning to gain the knowledge of the Gods by dissecting the universe they built. In battle, he tends to be secreted out of sight while the others call in his magic like a sort of swiss-army artillery support.
    • The Brute: Sabah, the Captain. A giant of a woman who moves like lightning and whose hammer hits like a trebuchet stone, and that's when she chooses not to outright turn into a monster.
    • The Dark Chick: The Assassin. The knife in the dark, who roams behind the scenes murdering nascent heroes, rebel leaders and other obstacles in hilariously ironic ways.
    • The Sixth Ranger: Eudokia, the Scribe. A one-woman bureaucracy and spymaster, who keeps Black up-to-date on the latest intel and administers his conquests.
  • Wax and Wayne: After getting sick of the main duo ruining their plans, the Set decides to make their own in The Lost Metal. Dumad and Getruda are a specially designed unit to defeat the main heroic duo by imitating and outdoing them at their own game, sucessfully doing so until they get taken down via an Opponent Switch. They even attempt to directly copy the duo's mannerisms. Though these two have never met their counterparts before it was time to fight, and as a result don't truly know their opponents beyond the surface level, and are bad at figuring out their Hidden Depths, to their detriment. On the whole, they come across as less menacing and more...just plain surreal, with Wax and Wayne being mostly baffled by what motivates these two into committing their whole lives to mimicking another.

    Live-Action TV 
  • During the Angel Season 4 finale, each member of Angel Investigations is given a tour of the rebuilt Wolfram & Hart by an employee who is somewhat a dark mirror of that member:
    • Lorne's guide is Preston, a slick, fast-talking talent agent.
    • Gunn gets Lacey Shepherd, a mysterious Afro-American woman who just-as-mysteriously vanishes.
    • Fred's tour guide is Knox, a morally ambiguous geeky scientist and the only one to become a recurring character in Season 5. He worships an Eldritch Abomination and will eventually cause her death.
    • Wesley's guide is Rutherford Sirk (who appears in one Season 5 episode), a former Watcher.
    • Angel gets undead Lilah.
  • An episode of The A-Team had a group of bad guys put together their own squad to beat the heroes. Humorously, Murdock is unhappy to learn that they don't have an 'evil Murdock' for him to fight since he wasn't arrested like the other members and hardly anyone knows of his relation to them.
  • B-Fighter Kabuto features the B-Crushers, a team of four Evil Counterparts to the B-Fighters created from four of the eight insect medals (with the other four being claimed and used by the B-Fighters' allies, the auxiliary "New" B-Fighters).
  • Beetleborgs, adapted from B-Fighter, features the Mantrons, which are not Psycho Rangers to the Beetleborgs but rather to the Beetleborgs' allies, the Astralborgs.
  • The season six finale of Charmed featured an alternate universe where the role of good and evil were switched with the humans/witches as evil and the demons good. The sisters met their evil counterparts as well as counterparts for Chris and Leo. They tried fighting them but of course came to a draw. A subversion then happened where they decided to work together for their respective greater good/evil.
    • They had to fight two more sets of Psycho Rangers before that. First in a season one episode it was a trio of warlock brothers, though one was saved by becoming a priest. Then also in the sixth season, it was a trio of three evil witch sisters - the Stillmans. They stole the sisters' powers and rewrote reality to steal their identities too. Oh and they were blonde.
    • Ironically, one of the Stillmans was played by Melody Perkins, who also played Astronema, the villain responsible for creating the Trope Namers.
  • In Arrowverse crossover Crisis on Earth-X, the villain group's leaders are the Evil Counterparts of the Trinity of the Arrowverse: Overgirl is a Nazi Supergirl, Dark Arrow is the Nazi version of Green Arrow, and the Dark Flash is The Flash's arch-enemy speedster. They also have their superweapon Der Wellenreiter, counterpart to the Legends of Tomorrow's Cool Ship the Waverider.
  • CSI does the evil-counterpart thing rather frequently.
    • The murderer and the murdered in the "Butterflied" episode are Grissom and Sara's evil counterparts. The Miniature Killer and Ernie Dell are also clearly intended to be evil mirror-images of Grissom and Sara.
    • There was an episode where Grissom was interviewing a suspect, and the actor had been carefully styled and lit so that from certain angles he looked like a mirror-image of Grissom. The suspect was a shrink who turned out to have been administering some BDSM therapy to one of his patients, who then turned up as the corpse-of-the-week.
  • Kamen Rider has the Shocker Riders of the original series, a group of evil copies of Kamen Rider 1. Subsequent Showa era series use evil copies of main Riders fairly often - if the Scarf of Asskicking is yellow instead of its usual color, that's not your beloved hero and you should probably start running. Heisei-era shows instead make use of "Dark Riders", often black repaints of the main character.
    • Kamen Rider 555 has the Riotroopers, a Mook force of Kamen Rider-like soldiers.
    • Kamen Rider Spirits redesigned the Combatroids from Kamen Rider ZX into ZX-styled Shocker Riders; additionally, the Big Bad Judo could also qualify, since he has the ability to transform into any of the Kamen Riders preceding ZX and use their powers.
    • Kamen Rider Decade once visited the Negative World, which was populated entirely by Dark Riders. While each on their own was just an Evil Counterpart or Evil Twin of their respective main Rider, collectively they formed this sort of team, with Dark Kiva, the evil twin of the most recent Rider before Decade, as the group's leader. Unusually, there was no evil doppelganger of Decade himself, except in the video game Climax Heroes, which swapped the rest of the Dark Riders for the non-canon Dark Decade. Decade himself is a one-man Psycho team to all other Kamen Riders whenever he's on the heel side of his revolving door, since his primary power is to shapeshift into any other Rider.
    • Kamen Rider Gaim plays this trope the straightest: so straight, in fact, that the three core Riders fight a group of Psycho counterparts of themselves twice. The parallels are most directly drawn between Gaim, Zangetsu, and Roshuo, each of whom has a samurai motif, are the only unequivocally good members of their respective teams, and struggle with making moral choices in the face of an apocalypse, or in Roshuo's case having already made those choices and now struggling over the fact that in hindsight, it wasn't worth it. Micchy is unusual in that he has three Psycho counterparts with two of them being in the same group as each other: Ryouma is the brilliant Manipulative Bastard that Micchy thinks he also is, while Sid is the backstabbing slimeball whose ambitions make him an easy mark for other cons that Micchy really is.
    • Kamen Rider Ghost has the 15 Gammaizers as the Psycho versions of the 15 Heroic Spirits, down to providing their host with the exact same arsenal of weapons that the Spirits allow Ghost's singular Morph Weapon to become. In this case it's the reverse, though: the Spirits were called back from the beyond specifically in an attempt to counter the power of the Gammaizers.
    • The Monsters of the Week of Kamen Rider Zi-O are collectively Psycho versions of the entire Heisei era of the franchise, as they're Evil Knockoffs of previous Riders called "Another Riders". Up to and including Another Zi-O.
  • The Big Bad in The Legend of Dick and Dom creates Evil Twin versions of all the heroes, to do evil deeds that the heroes will be arrested for. They are fairly easy to spot, however, as they all have a highly unconvincing black goatee, including the woman in the group.
  • In the Leverage episode, "The Two Live Crew Job", the team squares off against a group of thieves who are just as skilled as they are in their specialties. Bonus points for the crew being played by people who have the same skills as their characters.
  • Quantum Leap introduced us to the Evil Leaper project in the fifth season. The few members that we saw seem to be evil parallels to the main characters.
    • Alia, the leaper, is Sam Beckett's evil counterpart, who travels back in time to Make Wrong What Once Went Right. However, she's an unwilling test subject (unlike Sam) and makes a Heel–Face Turn.
    • Zoey, the holographic observer, is Al's evil counterpart: a snarky horndog who wears loud clothing. Unlike Al, however, Zoey is without morals or a sense of honor. She later becomes a leaper after Alia defects.
    • Lothos, the evil computer, is Ziggy's evil counterpart.
    • Thames is roughly analogous to Gushie, in that they're both project members working behind the scenes, and can serve as a backup observer.
  • In The Real Husbands of Hollywood, Kevin Hart recruits a team of rival basketball players to oppose his friends after he leaves the group. The new team consists of counterparts for Boris ("Morris), Nick ("Dick"), Nelly ("Kelley"), and Duane ("Juwayne").
  • In Robin of Sherwood, the Sheriff of Nottingham once hired a group of lookalikes to pose as the Robin Hood gang and commit violence against the peasantry. In addition to evil Robin, there was an evil Tuck, an evil Will, an evil Little John, and an evil Nasir.
  • The Metalferds, the second Monster of the Week set in Seven Star Fighting God Guyferd, are created via a similar process to the way Guyferd himself was created involing cybernetics and Fallah injections.
  • Stella featured an episode where Michael Showalter and Michael Ian Black leave the group, leaving David Wain to find his own new comedy-triad. He changes his name and ditches the Stella-trademark business suit and moves in with two completely normal roommates, who are so mundane as to be eerie in comparison to the creepy and latently-homoerotic Stella group. At the end of the show, the new roommates flee to Italy in a sequence similar to the Sicily sequences in The Godfather.
  • By the end of the second season of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Weaver, John Henry, Ellison and Savannah were the morally ambiguous, if not dark, mirrors of Sarah, John, Derek and Cameron.

    Professional Wrestling 
  • CHIKARA had a stable called GEKIDO consisting of 17, The Shard, and The Swarm (combatANT, assailANT and deviANT). They were evil counterparts of Chikara's mainstay faces Mike Quackenbush, Jigsaw, and The Colony (Fire Ant, Soldier Ant and Green Ant).
  • The Japanese promotion Fighting Opera HUSTLE had a stable named Monster Kamen Rangers, which were evil clones of the face team HUSTLE Kamen Rangers. They were able to defeat them repeatedly, as they knew their fighting style, and even kidnapped Yellow Ranger, The Big Guy of HUSTLE Kamen Rangers, in order to turn him evil and destroy them. Finally the HUSTLE Rangers won when Yellow turned good again thanks to The Power of Friendship.

    Theatre 
  • Sera Myu: Petite Étrangère features a group of Senshi clones known as Droids.

    Toys 
  • BIONICLE:
    • The Shadow Toa, illusory copies of the Toa that could only be defeated when the heroes acknowledged that the darkness was a part of themselves. Their colors and voices were often described in corrupted elemental ways; Shadow Gali for instance, is stated to the color of an oil slick, Shadow Lewa mottled black with a layer of green the same color as a diseased leaf, and Shadow Kopaka with a voice describe as "sharp as an icicle".
    • The Bohrok-Kal and Piraka Gang are separate groups with elemental powers. The Bohrok-Kal are interesting, in that they just had a completely-different kind of elemental powers from one another, as a contrast to the regular Bohrok who, with the exception of the Lehvak, had the same Elemental Powers as their Toa counterparts. The Piraka Gang almost managed to pass themselves off as the real deal (It helps that the townsfolk being fooled had never seen a Toa before). The Piraka's personalities were also made to be opposite of what was typical for their elements, and therefore, that of the Toa.
    • The Rahkshi were an interesting example, as rather than their powers being in opposition to those of the Toa Nuva, they instead opposed Matoran principles of the same color. Turahk's Fear, Kurahk's Anger, Vorahk's Hunger, Guurahk's Disintegration, Lerahk's Poison, and Panrahk's Fragmentation respectively are in direct opposition of Ta-Matoran Courage, Ko-Matoran Peace, Onu-Matoran Prosperity, Ga-Matoran Creation, Le-Matoran Purity, and Po-Matoran Faith.
    • The Makuta of the Karda Nui saga were the closest in toy form. They even came with their own "evil" matoran, who could latch on and connect to them in the same way as the Toa from the set and were the first villains to feature Kanohi Masks. Originally there was to be a genuine Shadow Toa set, but it was cancelled in the prototype stage.
  • The Grossery Gang has The Clean Team, a team of cleaning products. Contrasting against the griminess and moldiness of the Grosseries, the Clean Team are polished and shiny, with the goal of cleaning up Cheap Town at the expense of the Grosseries.

    Webcomics 
  • Inverted in in 8-Bit Theater with the Real Light Warriors who are the strong, brave, wise and merciful warriors destined to save the world, contrasting with the team of jerks we follow. Except they don't. A team of four white mages saves the world.
    • There are two other examples that follow the trope a bit more closely, as well. First there's the Dark Warriors, with the technically-a-villain-but-actually-really-nice Garland (as opposed to the technically-a-hero-but-actually-evil Black Mage), the haughty dark elf Drizz'l (as opposed to haughty regular elf Thief), incalculably stupid pirate Bikke (as opposed to incalculably stupid Fighter), and LARP fan Vilbert (as opposed to pen and paper roleplaying enthusiast Red Mage).
    • Finally, there are the Other Warriors, made up of the shady and unethical Rogue (Thief), the rule-bending Ranger (Red Mage), the normally friendly but incredibly vicious Berserker (Fighter), and Cleric (Black Mage). Cleric doesn't fit quite as well as the others until you notice that he deliberately plays the Gods themselves against each other to increase his own power.
  • Sven's Gang in Cwen's Quest appear to be this, having a counter part to each of Cwen's friends and allies. Overlaps with Evil Counterpart a bit, although Cwen's isn't exactly a hero.
  • The T-Girls of Jet Dream face off against another all-girl flying team, Raven Red and her Dynamic Dare-Dolls. Each of the Dare-Dolls fits a national stereotype that isn't "covered" by one of the T-Girls.
  • The Linear Guild in The Order of the Stick were deliberately chosen by their leader to be this. This gets to the point that he's unwilling to face the Order of the Stick without a full team of evil counterparts, because he's invested so much time and effort into cultivating that identity for them as a team. At one point, he even gets a Token Good Teammate to counter Belkar.
  • In Shortpacked!, a minor character who was fired instead of a major character forms a team of other minor characters into a league of minor evil.
  • The Yeongdeungpo Union from Weak Hero end up coming to blows with the Cheongang gang from across the river, whose members' personalities all mirror those of the Union; Donald and Changui as the imposing leaders, Jake and Juwon as their calm second-in-command, Wolf and Giju as the resident psychos, and Jimmy and Doyun as the hot-tempered brutes.

    Web Original 


Alternative Title(s): Psycho Rangers, Doppleganger Squad

Top

The Evil Big Tops

During their softball adventure, the gang goes up against evil versions of themselves.

How well does it match the trope?

4.95 (38 votes)

Example of:

Main / EvilCounterpart

Media sources:

Report

X Tutup