FalloutJack said:
Dude, if you have more, keep it up! I literally want to show my friend that villains aren't all overwhelming power and money.
Here's the question though (which has already been mentioned earlier), is the notion that the villain created their power or money prior to the hero coming in an acceptable candidate? If so, your list just exploded even further...
Let's take Lex Luthor for example. He's got wits, wits enough to make himself a VAST fortune with a massive multi-billion dollar industry that is world wide. He employes probably hundreds of thousands of people in virtually every city in the US and the major cities of the world. He aids exploratory research, defense contracts, medical research, housing, construction, etc. What's his primary motivations up to this point? Probably money. He doesn't really strike me as the man who wants to rule the world because then he'd have to deal with a lot more stupid in his life.
Then along comes superman. What does SM do? Starts breaking everything to do with Luthor corp. He damages biuldings, destroys months of research in a few seconds all in the name of... what? The good of the people?
So now Luthor has to start from scratch and decides two things; he needs to start cutting corners to keep his company in the black, which is usually interpreted into being a criminal. Second, he needs to get rid of an Alien invader who for all intents and purposes has decided he needs to act as the worlds moral compass and smashes things that disagree with him. So he funds even more money into ways to get rid of SM, who at his point as been a major menace.
What does SM do about it? Calls him a criminal, mocks him in his face and goes out of his way to make sure that Luthor is contanstly under survaillance and if anything isn't the way SM wants it to be; he destroys it. Then blames Luthor further for endangering the human race and causing all the damages...
...ok, I must have gone off on a tangent here... the point is that Luthor HAS to be crafty in order to even hope to compete with his fellow villa... I mean *hero*, the rediculously overpowered Superman.
A lot of villains worked in creating their vast villainous empires. All to have some holier-than-thou upstart come wreck their shit. As Austin Powers taught us, these guys had families man! And they were dispatched in the name of a pun??!!
If we can take a lesson from here, is to not do anything grand or helpful toward the betterment of your world and to fly under the radar. That way some jackoff doesn't show up and start breaking all your stuff.