Last reviewed on 2026-05-02
Homelander
The Seven Leader / Superman ParodyThe most powerful superhero in the world — and the most psychologically damaged. Homelander's laser eyes, flight, and invulnerability are matched only by his desperate, infantile need for love and approval, weaponized by a childhood of laboratory isolation. Anthony Starr's performance — charming American icon in public, whimpering breakdown in private — is television's most terrifying portrayal of weaponized narcissism. His slow escalation toward open fascism is The Boys' central horror, because it's mapped onto recognizable real-world political patterns.
Billy Butcher
The Boys LeaderThe foul-mouthed, violently anti-Supe Cockney whose hatred of superhumans is rooted in personal trauma (Homelander's assault on his wife) and has metastasized into something that threatens to make him as monstrous as his enemies. Karl Urban's performance walks the line between charismatic and reprehensible with perfect calibration. Butcher's eventual arc — discovering his wife's son is Homelander's and wrestling with whether he can love Ryan — is The Boys' most human storyline beneath all the exploding bodies.
Starlight / Annie January
The Seven Member / Moral CenterThe genuinely heroic, light-powered Supe who joins The Seven as an idealist and spends four seasons learning that idealism costs everything. Starlight's arc — from wide-eyed believer to active insurgent against Vought — mirrors the show's thesis that good people in corrupt institutions must eventually choose. Her relationship with Hughie, her friendship with Maeve, and her willingness to sacrifice her career and safety for truth make her The Boys' clearest moral center in a show designed to have none.
Hughie Campbell
The Boys Member / EverymanThe audience surrogate — a regular guy who joins Butcher's operation after his girlfriend is accidentally killed by A-Train. Hughie's function is to be the character who still has a conscience when everyone else's has been worn down by proximity to violence. His relationship with Starlight, his moral line (he doesn't want to become what he's fighting), and his eventual willingness to cross that line give him the show's most complete character arc. Jack Quaid makes "ordinary guy in extraordinary circumstances" compelling.
Queen Maeve
The Seven Member / WarriorThe Wonder Woman analogue whose superhero career has ground her idealism to dust — she drinks, hides her sexuality from Vought's PR machine, and has long since stopped believing she can actually help anyone. Maeve's arc is quiet heroism: a character who gave up hope finding a reason to act anyway. Her relationship with Elena, her eventual sacrifice to stop Soldier Boy, and the reveal she survived make her the show's most redemptive arc. Dominique McElligott plays exhaustion as its own form of dignity.
A-Train
The Seven / Fastest Man AliveThe self-promoting, corporate-brand-obsessed speedster who kills Hughie's girlfriend running through her at full speed — and whose subsequent arc of accountability, drug addiction, and racial awakening is The Boys' most surprisingly nuanced. A-Train's realization that Vought uses him as a Black face while perpetuating the systems that harm Black communities is the show's sharpest social commentary. His eventual turn against Homelander is earned through years of gradually accumulating conscience.
The Deep
The Seven / Aquaman ParodyThe Aquaman parody whose sexual misconduct, subsequent public humiliation, and desperate attempts at rehabilitation via a Scientology-adjacent cult make him The Boys' most consistently comedic character. The Deep's genuine communication with sea creatures (played sometimes for laughs, sometimes with surprising pathos), his inability to read any room, and his horrible judgment make him impossible to fully hate. His arc — pathetic man, never quite learning, never quite irredeemable — is the show's most consistent dark comedy.
Mother's Milk (M.M.)
The Boys Member / StrategistThe methodical, principled Boys member whose hatred of Supes — rooted in Soldier Boy's destruction of his family — is balanced by his need to be present for his daughter. M.M.'s arc of managing PTSD, maintaining his values when Butcher abandons his, and protecting Ryan from Homelander's influence gives him the team's most grounded emotional storyline. His obsessive neatness, his love for his ex-wife and daughter, and his fury at being repeatedly dragged back into the fight make him The Boys' most relatable character.
Soldier Boy
Original Supe / Captain America ParodyThe original superhero — a 1940s Captain America parody who is exactly what you'd expect a 1940s military superhero to actually be: a racist, sexist, casually violent man whose nostalgia for power is itself the satire. Jensen Ackles plays him with complete commitment to the character's unironic self-image, and his season 3 arc (reluctant alliance with Butcher, discovery that Homelander is his son) gives him unexpected dimension. His relationship with his "children" and his inability to understand love are The Boys' darkest mirror of Homelander.
Frenchie
The Boys Member / ChemistThe multilingual, trauma-haunted chemist whose relationship with Kimiko is The Boys' most tender and consistently affecting storyline. Frenchie's past (cartel involvement, people he failed to protect) haunts him visibly, and his devotion to Kimiko — learning her sign language, protecting her, loving her without making demands — represents everything the show's Supes are incapable of. Tomer Capone brings enormous warmth to a character defined by guilt and genuine human connection in a show that frequently drowns in cynicism.
About The Boys
The Boys is based on the comic series by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson, adapted for Amazon Prime Video by showrunner Eric Kripke. The series premiered on July 26, 2019 and ran for four seasons, concluding in 2024. It consistently ranks as one of Amazon's most-watched original series.
The show is celebrated for its savage satire of superhero media, corporate power, and American exceptionalism — using the superhero genre to critique the real-world systems that produce and protect power. A prequel series, Gen V (2023), focuses on a college for young Supes. A fifth and final season has been announced.
The Boys is one of the cleanest TV examples of a corrupt-system villain — covered in types of villains in fiction. Several of its leads sit in anti-hero territory; the typology is in anti-heroes explained.
Gen V is a spin-off whose trade-offs are explored in sequels and spin-offs explained.