The thing is, while some villians would be cool on the side of good, I would rather not see Joker, Lex Luthor, Magneto or Dr. Doom become heroes, in the sense of save kittens from trees and foil bank robberies. It would betray the entire character and even if that did happen, it would end up being a farce to defeat the hero. It would be too sudden and unexplainable, because after the horrors these monsters have wrought, it would be cheap to have Doctor Doom decide to help FF fight Mole-Man, or having Lex Luthor fight alongside Superman without some kind of common enemy.
But in the heart of the question, I'd have to say Black Adam. Just because he is such a gray area. And he floats. Floating rocks.
2006-10-05 07:29:14
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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DC: Joker, Poison Ivy, Harley Quinn
Marvel: Magneto, Mystique, Apocalypse, Sabretooth, Lady Deathstrike, Juggernaut
Good question.
2006-10-05 06:58:31
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answer #2
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answered by Special nobody 5
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Superman's Lex Luthor-Batman's Riddler (DC)
Fantastic Four's Dr. Doom-Spiderman's Lizard-Xmen's-magneto(marvel)
2006-10-05 01:26:38
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answer #3
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answered by ? 7
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Marvel Comics: Apocalypse.
2006-10-05 00:38:07
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answer #4
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answered by Divo Saint 2
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Marvel - Dr. Doom is the most charismatic but doesn't have a heroic cell in his body. The ones that do, already made the switch at least for awhile (Magneto, White Queen, Juggernaut)
DC- it would have to be Black Adam.. Wait, did that already happen? :)
Deathstroke would be cool too, but I just can't see that working.
2006-10-05 04:28:07
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answer #5
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answered by C-Man 7
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The Green Goblin (the Harry Osborne one, not his father Norman who's too far gone).
If he got the "hero" bug, he'd put Spider-Man and Daredevil out of business, with his enhanced physical abilites and superior technology.
Heck, he could be one of those 'driven' heroes who have so much to prove; redemption is a hot property for a character. With a similar level of drive as Batman, he'd be righting wrongs and living on the edge of lawlessness as a misunderstood hero.
You'd have to do a costume change, though, to reflect his new lifestyle.
2006-10-05 03:39:43
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answer #6
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answered by QuackJak 4
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Catwoman. She is not a hero nor a supervillain. She is in between. That's why Batman fell in love with her because she really didn't kill anyone. She just like to steal stuffs.
2006-10-06 13:03:06
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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They did it. Dr doom was a hero in the alternate future of 2099 and he was great because he was what the world needed at that time. So they didnt really turn him into a hero, so to speak, but changed the world enough so that, in context, he was a hero. It was great
2006-10-06 01:38:51
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answer #8
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answered by mark r 3
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DC: Catwoman (Selina Kyle or Patience Phillips)
Marvel: Black Cat (Felicia Hardy)
2006-10-05 02:02:28
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answer #9
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answered by Louise Smith 7
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Too many to list. Here's the top three.
Magneto. He really does want to do good, problem is his stay in the Nazi concentration camp as a kid has warped him in their image.
Dr. Doom. Honorable and forthright. A modern day Vlad Tepis.
Dr. Octopus. His ending showed exactly what kind of man he really was.
2006-10-05 04:37:13
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answer #10
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answered by DogbertCarroll 3
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