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Which Teen Titans Villain Are You?

Are you ready to discover which Teen Titans villain you are? If you've ever wondered what it would be like to be a notorious antagonist in the world of the Teen Titans, now is your chance to find out! With our fun and engaging quiz, you'll answer a series of questions designed to reveal which villain you're most like. From Slade to Brother Blood to Blackfire and beyond, each character has their own unique strengths and weaknesses that make them stand out. So what are you waiting for? Click the Start button below and let's get started!

Welcome to Quiz: Which Teen Titans Villain Are You

About “Teen Titans” in a few words:

Teen Titans is a popular American animated television series that first aired in 2003. The show follows a group of young superheroes, the Teen Titans, as they fight against various villains and save the world from danger. The team is composed of Robin, Beast Boy, Raven, Cyborg, and Starfire, each with their own special abilities and personalities. The series is known for its action-packed sequences, clever humor, and exploration of deeper themes such as friendship, loyalty, and personal growth. Teen Titans has been praised for its animation style, voice acting, and memorable characters, making it a beloved classic for fans of all ages.

Meet the villains from Teen Titans

Cheshire

Cheshire is the kind of assassin who looks like she stepped out of a silk painting and then immediately poisoned it, so graceful and deadly you almost admire her (and then she stabs you). She’s cold, precise, loves toxins and silent footsteps — the whole “shadow that smells like jasmine” vibe — but also has this weird soft spot for old movies, which feels wrong and I love it. She betrays people like it’s a hobby, yet sometimes she rescues the strangest stray animal and acts like she meant to all along. Honestly, she’s mysterious on purpose and unreliable even to herself, which makes her deliciously dangerous.

Mammoth

Mammoth is literally the muscle, a brick wall with fists and a surprisingly bad sense of direction (he gets lost in rooms, I swear). He’s big, loud, and loves smashing things, but there’s this toddler-ish innocence under all that — like he might also apologize to a broken lamppost. He’s the stereotype of the gentle giant who ends up in the wrong fight, and somehow you can picture him holding a teacup collection in private (don’t ask why). Also, dramatic roar, occasional vulnerability, and probably a soft spot for kids’ cartoons.

Brother Blood

Brother Blood is the charismatic freaky-cult leader who reads scripture like it’s a heavy metal album and makes you clap along before you realize what you signed up for. He’s manipulative, theatrical, and disturbingly sincere at the podium, always convincing people that what he’s doing is salvation (or… at least profitable?). He wears power like perfume — lots of robes and booming speeches — but underneath is insecurity and this desperate need to be worshipped (ugh, cringe but effective). He’s spooky and magnetic at the same time, like a sermon and a snake in one package.

Psimon

Psimon is the brainiac turned nightmare: telepathic, telekinetic, and with a bowl haircut of doom (okay the helmet is more iconic, but imagine the haircut). He sits in his own head too much, which makes him brilliant but also unhinged — like someone who aced every test and then decided reality needed more questions. He loves playing chess with people’s minds, but also randomly quotes poetry when he’s bored, which is both creepy and oddly poetic. Oh, and he’s always scheming three moves ahead; don’t make eye contact unless you enjoy having your secrets stolen.

Doctor Light

Doctor Light is flashy, narcissistic, and convinced the world exists to be dazzled by him — literally, because lasers and blinding light are his signature move. He can be petty (like, laughably petty) and also terrifyingly competent, shifting from “annoying show-off” to “actual deadly threat” in one sunbeam. There’s a performative glamour to him — disco lights, cape maybe, definitely dramatic poses — but he also has a weirdly scientific side that makes him more than just a villain with good lighting. He’s the kind of person who would stage an entrance and then critique the acoustics.

Terra

Terra is the tragic wild card — earth-bender with teenage fury, complicated loyalties, and a history that makes people shout her name in two different tones depending on the episode. She’s fiercely independent, more comfortable with rocks than small talk, and has this wrecking-ball vibe mixed with fragile honesty; like she’ll literally crumble a wall and then apologize about it. Betrayal is her headline act (yes, the Titans thing), but she’s also painfully human, trying to find where she belongs and failing spectacularly and honestly. Also, she digs solitude and sometimes collects tiny smooth stones like trophies, which is oddly sweet.

Deathstroke

Deathstroke is the ultimate professional killer with a dress code (eye patch, tactical gear, and a very specific way of walking into a battle). He’s cold, efficient, brilliant tactician — the kind who plans ten steps ahead and has contingency plans for his contingency plans — yet he operates by a code that makes him scary because he actually keeps his promises. There’s a weird tragic dad-energy to him (complicated family life, as always) and he occasionally hums lullabies while sharpening a sword, which is delightfully creepy. He’s terrifying, competent, and strangely magnetic in that “you know he’s dangerous but you can’t look away” way.

Blackfire

Blackfire is Starfire’s darker, sassier sibling — same powers, more bite, and an ego that could eclipse a star (pun not unwelcome). She’s regal, petty, and unapologetically manipulative; she schemes like it’s an art form and enjoys the drama almost more than the victory. There’s venomous humor in everything she does, but also a streak of vulnerability you catch when she’s alone and not plotting, which makes her not just a foil but oddly sympathetic sometimes. Also, she rocks a look that says “I’ll overthrow you and then have drinks,” which is basically her brand.

Harvest

Harvest is the creepy eco-tech weirdo who feels like a cross between a mad farmer and a failed android engineer, harvesting stuff (life energy? crops? both?) with disturbingly calm efficiency. He has this eerie, almost clinical way of collecting life and technology like trophies, and his plans always smell faintly of rot and inventor’s oil. He’s unsettling in a very specific “soft-spoken but absolutely monstrous” way, and he keeps weird little mementos from his victims like a stamp collector — usefully unnerving. Honestly, you never know if he’s a methodical scientist, an old-world mystic, or just someone who really loves pruning things.

Trigon

Trigon is cosmic-level demon daddy, the ultimate end-of-the-world energy with a laugh that will haunt your nightmares and your weekend plans. He’s power incarnate — reality-warping, soul-eating, dramatic monarch of doom — but he’s also theatrical in a way that makes him oddly entertaining, like he’s always onstage even when annihilating universes. He’s abusive, loving in the worst ways, and obsessed with control (Raven’s family issues are not a small subplot). Also, there’s this weird elegance to his evil, like a tuxedo on a volcano — classy and catastrophic.