List of The Fairly Odd Parents Characters - Other Characters - Other Villains

Other Villains

  • Dr. Vulkan is a villain in episode "Emotion Commotion", he is described by one of agents as most scary, diabolical spy of all-time.
  • The Titanium Toenail is a villain in the Crimson Chin comic. He can shoot sharp blades to destroy things.
  • Spatula Woman is a female villain in the Crimson Chin comic. She uses a giant spatula to fight.
  • Short Fuse is a tiny villain in the Crimson Chin comic. He is one of the main villains to appear in "Big Superhero Wish", where it is revealed he blows up when people call him "small","short"and "tiny".
  • H2Olga is a water-based villain in the Crimson Chin comic. In "The Crime Wave", it is revealed she becomes more powerful when she absorbs more water. She speaks in a Russian accent.
  • The Bronze Kneecap is a nemesis of the Crimson Chin. He employs a number of weapons from the kneecaps of his bronze suit. He is featured in some of the episodes in which Timmy Turner reads or wishes himself into the Crimson Chin comic books. His real name is Ron Hambone.
  • Nega Chin is the opposite of the Crimson Chin from a nega universe version of the Crimson Chin's world.
  • The Iron Lung is a metal-based villain in the Crimson Chin comic. It can suck anything, but was beaten by Chin and Cleft. In the webtoons, the Lung tried to ruin the Cincinnati 200th anniversary, not just by blowing out the candle on the giant birthday cake commemorating the event, but blowing it towards the Statue of Cincinnati. Cleft of course stopped the Lung by producing a 1937 Hewlett-Packard and used its smog-producing engine's exhaust to choke the Lung and then corked the Lung's mouth shut.
  • The Copper Cranium is an enemy of the Crimson Chin, that made his first, and so far only, appearance in the Crimson Chin webtoons. He tried to use his giant spring-loaded extra skull to break into the First National Bank.
  • Gilded Arches is an enemy of the Crimson Chin who has long legs and feet, a side effect. He was once a former child star (his feet and legs grew when he hit puberty), but turned bad and tried to destroy any and all theatres that no longer showed his movies (that included the "Someguy" Asian-American movie house, as they never let Arches put his feet in their cement). He hasn't appeared in the show yet, but did appear in the Crimson Chin Webcomic and Breakin' Da Rules.
  • Brass Knuckles, a.k.a. Coslo Puncholowski, is a hand-to-hand combat villain who has attempted to defeat the Crimson Chin in battle. He doesn't hit girls. He was also responsible for a three-state burglary spree of nail salons, glove factories and the bank (because somebody had to pay for all those manicures and gloves). He had easily outpowered the Chin in a boxing match between the two, until Cleft cleverly produced a giant magnet to turn Knuckles' knuckle dusters against him (smartly playing a quick game of "Why are you hitting yourself?").
  • Super Bike is a talking bike, mad because Timmy left him behind due to his obsessive and jealous nature. He is seen in "Super Bike" and helps Gary in "Escape from Unwished Island".
  • Super Toilet is a large toilet of which Cosmo is afraid. It was first appeared in "Super Bike". What makes this villain useful is that it can flush anything. It helped Gary in "Escape from Unwished Island". Whenever Super Toilet appears or being referred in the series, Cosmo would have a trauma while thumbsucking, and would say "So Much Clogging!", causing Cosmo to have a fear of toilets or being flushed by a toilet.
  • Tom Sawyer is a book character who wreaks havoc in various books in "A Shelf Life".

Read more about this topic:  List Of The Fairly Odd Parents Characters, Other Characters

Famous quotes containing the word villains:

    Why do villains have so much influence? Because the honest people are terribly dense.
    Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872)

    I don’t believe in villains or heroes, only in right or wrong ways that individuals are taken, not by choice, but by necessity or by certain still uncomprehended influences in themselves, their circumstances and their antecedents.
    Tennessee Williams (1914–1983)