Homelander [ongoing] - Version: 0.02b ⭐
A delusional belief in his own superiority and right to rule.
Unlike Clark Kent, who was grounded by the unconditional love of the Kents, Homelander (born "John") was raised in a sterile laboratory under constant observation. Deprived of physical affection and raised through transactional behavioral conditioning, he never developed fundamental human empathy. This upbringing left him with a fragile ego that requires constant public adulation to survive; to Homelander, love and attention are the only metrics of self-worth. Homelander [Ongoing] - Version: 0.02b
Homelander suffers from a profound identity crisis, often viewing himself as a god among "mud people" while simultaneously harboring deep-seated insecurities. His behavior exhibits classic signs of , characterized by: A delusional belief in his own superiority and right to rule
Homelander , the central antagonist of The Boys , represents a chilling subversion of the "Superman" archetype, embodying what happens when absolute power is wielded by a man with the emotional maturity of a child. While the public sees a god-fearing patriot, the reality is a lab-grown product of Vought International, engineered to be a corporate asset rather than a hero. A Product of Isolation This upbringing left him with a fragile ego
A disturbing search for mother figures, manifesting in his bizarre, transactional relationships with Madelyn Stillwell and later Firecracker.