Just Wanted To Say That Your Supe Power Analyses For The Boys Characters Are Genius. Truly Just Well
Just wanted to say that your supe power analyses for The Boys characters are genius. Truly just well thought out and put together. I love analyzing things like this but am hardly able to put it into words and you did that so well. Great posts. Hope you have a good day! đđâ¤ď¸
Thank you so much! I appreciate that you donât think Iâm overthinking! This specific trope of characters getting abilities indicative of their personalities is one of my all time favorite things to read into, so Iâm glad to hear someone else enjoys it!
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Analyzing The Abilities of Characters From The Boys
-Le Finale-

đşđ¸Homelanderđşđ¸
Thank you to everyone who sat by and waited for this grand finale, it truly means a lot to me! Youâre the heroes, truly! I added Superman by Ivory Layne because I associate it with Americaâs #1 Supe, plus I wanted to plug one of my all time favorite 2010s throwbacks.
I think Homelanderâs âEvil Supermanâ pitch is definitely the main draw of the franchise, but I wish he wasnât always shackled to that identity. He acts as an introspective analysis of the true evil of corruption on a radical/political level. I mean, the man was birthed in a lab and raised on straight looping American nationalist propaganda. He was essentially being hypnotized by Vought to be an All-American boy, and yet he turned out exactly like America itself; overpowered, inescapable, and caked in far too much makeup.
Homelander/Johnâs wide range of abilities stems directly from the versatile torture methods Vought used on him in infancy in order to rig the results of the V and produce the most amount of abilities. For example, my assumption is they would drop him, along with other flying Supes, from high places, and if they managed to float for survival they would grow up to be able to fly at dazzling speeds. This is based on the number of trials he endured, such as the oven he would be placed in for hours on end. Heâs now invulnerable, but he had to quite literally be forged through flame to be so.
In addition to his range of abilities, the episode of Diabolical that depicts Black Noir feeding him his lesson on optics makes his inability to swiftly dispose of those who show no fear all the more reasonable. When heâs viewed as the monster heâs always been seen as (the whole âyou ripped out of your mother and beamed through the bodies of the doctors in the room while flying like a scene from the exorcistâ thing) heâs incentivized to be what they expect of him, almost like how he was taught to be what the masses wanted from him. The careful crafting and hardwiring of a monster stays, even though heâs subverting Voughtâs benevolent persona.
When a character shows indifference or truly just a lack of terror, he spares them, deeply yearning for genuine human connection with an individual who doesnât recoil from his advance. Whether it was Madeline, Stormfront, or Maeve, they all proved themselves to be fierce women who he had difficulty letting go of. Madeline in particular managed to survive up until the exact moment she admitted her fear of him, to which he incinerated through her skull with his laser vision.
Even when analyzing how he spares Hughie, Butcher, Annie, or the rest of The Boys, Homelander has ample opportunities to fly over and murder them all. He could kill them all in broad daylight and get away with it, but whether heâs consciously aware of it or not, he fully needs humans on this planet who know the truth about him and refuse to be afraid. The alternative would be too boring, and as I could imagine, horrifying. He doesnât want to be a king, we see into his psyche too frequently to know he hates himself. He truly hates what he sees in the mirror, and masks it with a veneer of egotism until he eventually breaks down again. He wants people unafraid to challenge him, otherwise he would have used one of his several powers to slaughter The Boys ages ago. You may call it plot armor, but I think John needs someone to go blow for blow with. Butcherlander
John never had the chance to be human. He was directed how to be a god, and given the power to match. While every part of me sees him as the monster he is, rape and murder included, I almost feel like killing him wouldnât be the karmic serve fans think it would be. I agree with the sentiment that he should be stripped of his power and condemned to live an average human life without access to Compound V (I like to imagine theyâll just blow up Vought tower in the finale, but weâll see). His scenes with Ryan almost make me believe that he wants to be human, but he can never do that as the supervillain he is today. Maybe if he could try out being a human, he wouldnât have to try and escape his humanity.
Analyzing The Abilities of Characters From The Boys Pt. VIII

đŹđ§S3 Billy ButcherđŹđ§
Englandâs debatably worst man alive, Billy Butcher experienced the loss of his wife after Homelander rapes her and Vought spirits her away to a hidden home for her to raise the bastard son of The Homelander. All the while, Butcher assumed she had taken her own life after the assault, and swore vengeance on Homelander ever since.
After shooting up with Temporary Compound V in S3, Butcher receives abilities reminiscent of Homelanderâs, namely his iconic optic beams. Butcher inheriting the abilities of the man he hates most on this earth could very well stem from the fact that, at the time of injection, he believed that had he been The Homelander, had he shared a fraction of that strength, he could have protected his wife from him all those years ago.
Additionally, after being reunited with Becca in S2, sheâs killed by Ryanâs optic beams in a freak accident involving an immortal nazi. Butcher is an envious, spiteful, miserable person, so him essentially duplicating the skill sets of the people who took Becca from him makes complete and utter sense, especially when him mimicking these abilities would ultimately make him even more self loathing, now that he shares something with the thing that killed the love of his life.

đŚ S4 Billy ButcherđŚ
After injecting himself with Compound V following his terminal illness diagnosis and being given a few months to live, Butcher develops the ability to seemingly project tendrils of cancerous material out from his body and use them as tentacles.
I believe this is indicative of him perceiving all the evil heâs done as spreading like his cancer. Heâs infected and kept Hughie, MM, and Frenchie doing his dirty work despite their attempts to move on an live their lives, sure, but something the show fails to analyze is how Homelander seemingly raped Becca as a power move. Before meeting Butcher, Becca had worked with Homelander for years without any issues when she was an employee at Vought. Then a few days after he meets Butcher, he rapes her in a backroom to âassert his dominanceâ. Butcher may have understood this after obsessing over the tapes since 2011, and always assumed that his presence in her life ultimately led to its tragic end.
While S3 had Butcher trying to match Homelanderâs might, S4 shows him embracing his own wickedness, all while viewing himself as being defined by his spreading evil he can now emanate out and âspreadâ to others.
Analyzing The Abilities of Characters From The Boys Pt. XVI

đď¸Supersonicđď¸
Alex/Supersonic was a painfully irrelevant character who was introduced and briefly killed off all in S3. While his time on the show was short, his had his license to drive his way into all of our heartsâŚ
Alexâs abilities are actually never shown in the show whatsoever. It is mentioned that he has the ability to generate a sonic boom by clapping his hands, but we unfortunately never get to see this before his life is cut short by Homelander.
I find Alexâs role significant, not because of his weird faux love triangle with Annie, but because of the nature of âsoundâ throughout the series. Alex proves himself to be an ally, and to align himself with Annie on her journey to take down Vought. He gives us valuable insight into how not every supe is brainwashed and radicalized, and yet, we watch as his advocacy goes unnoticed and still punished.
He was a child star, a musician, and a true hero, but his power wasnât in the limelight like Annieâs. Despite the obvious fame he had, he was supposed to be an encouraging voice in Annieâs head telling her that sheâs not alone, and he served that purpose exactly.
Like literally every character we see get killed in this show, I just pretend theyâre not actually dead and weâre going to get a Dawn of The Seven style âAvengers Assembleâ moment for the finale, but yeah no, this flopâs dead.
Analyzing The Abilities of Characters From The Boys Pt. VI

đZoe Neumanđ
Zoe, growing up in both a multiethnic and affluent home, is both marginalized and privileged in a myriad of ways. Her ethnicity, along with her motherâs, is never acknowledged outright on the show. For all we know, the directors could have cast white actresses for the both of them and the core of my analysis would be null and void, but I believe the fact they arenât white provides a certain layer of tragedy to Zoeâs character in particular.
Going off of personal experience in uppity East Coast spaces, Zoeâs presumably one of few ethnic children in her social circle. While sheâs debatably white passing, this would undoubtedly have led to numerous instances of her facing prejudice and most likely teasing of various kinds.
This is where her unique ability of generating snake-like tentacles from her mouth presents itself. Her being injected as a preteen means her body analyzed her current surroundings and decided what she needed most at this stage in her life was some form of aggressive defense that could come from her mouth. This most likely resulted from her being mocked, teased, harassed, or discriminated against, and wishing there was a way her âsharp tongueâ could actually cut them. Now with these serpents that expel themselves from her mouth, sheâs capable of holding her own against anyone who wishes to insult or berate her.
Her being subjected to Red River felt like karmic irony, Victoria injecting her in adolescence* because she decided having any ability at all would be better than being powerless. Iâve mulled over this decision from Vicky, but ultimately settled on it being near sighted and power hungry on her end. She knew full well that Compound V resulted in the death of her own parents, and could very well have given Zoe a disastrous mutation, if not killing her in a long, drawn out body horror scenario. Even Stan Edgar was repulsed and horrified at the idea that Victoria would stoop so low as to inject Zoe with V, which put the gravity of the situation into perspective.
Vicky additionally knew that, while she was getting herself tangled up in Vought and Homelander, that her life was on the chopping block, and if she died, Samir wouldnât be able to fend off Firecracker, let alone all of Voughtâs forces. This would, assuming Homelander didnât execute her daughter, land Zoe in the same place Vicky ended up after the death of her parents, which is exactly what happened.
While this seemed unfair at first, I saw it more so as a cautionary tale of what corruption does to a person. Vicky wasnât satisfied with what she had, and strived for absolute power at the expense of her daughterâs well being. The shift from a loving mother willing to give her child the world to a power hungry tyrant injecting her daughter with a potentially lethal drug to turn her into a #girlboss didnât happen randomly. I can imagine every thought that went through Vickyâs head as she decided to this to Zoe, especially explaining away the consequences as trivial costs to her daughterâs safety.
My response to that, aside from it not panning out how Victoria intended, is to look no farther than Kris Jenner with Kim Kardashian. In both mother-daughter duos a power/money hungry mother mutates/exposes her child all in the name of giving her a âbetter lifeâ at the cost of robbing her of her agency and ultimately her humanity. Society blames Kim for perpetuating beauty standards, all of which were thrust upon her by a mother who just wanted a bigger mansion.
*The horror of Vickyâs decision stems mostly from the fact that the older you are, the worse the mortality rates/negative mutations are with V injections. Stan and Vicky already knew this, and itâs why people were contemplating whether Ashley would die at the end of S4 or not. Babies appear to be more malleable, and while some gain adverse mutations, theyâre hardly ever lethal, and may even be tailored to Voughtâs liking (so it seems).*

Aphrodite energy â¨ď¸