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List of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles characters
List of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles characters
from Wikipedia

The following is a list of characters in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise.

Overview

[edit]
List indicators

This table shows the recurring characters and the actors who have appeared in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles throughout the franchise.

  • A dark grey cell indicates the character was not in the series or film, or that the character's presence in the series or film has not yet been announced.
  • A Y indicates an appearance as a younger version of a pre-existing character.
  • A C indicates a performance in costume.
  • A S indicates a singing role.
  • A D indicates an appearance in deleted scenes only.
  • A M indicates a motion-capture role.
  • A MU indicates a character is mute.
  • A U indicates an uncredited role.
Character Television series Direct to video and television films
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Mutant Turtles: Superman Legend Turtles Forever Half-Shell Heroes: Blast to the Past Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie
1987–96 1997–98 2003–09 2012–17 2018–20 2024 1996 2009 2015 2019 2022
Leonardo ("Leo") Cam Clarke Michael Dobson
Gabe KhouthC
Shishir InocallaC
Michael Sinterniklaas Jason Biggs
Dominic Catrambone
Seth Green
Cam Clarke
(1987)
Ben Schwartz Nicolas Cantu Daiki Nakamura Michael Sinterniklaas
(2003)
Dan Green
(1987)
Jason Griffith
(Prime)
Seth Green Eric Bauza Ben Schwartz
Donatello ("Donnie") Barry Gordon
Greg Berg
Jason Gray-Stanford
Jarred BlancardC
Larry LamC
Sam Riegel Rob Paulsen
Barry Gordon
(1987)
Josh Brener Micah Abbey Hidenari Ugaki Sam Riegel
(2003)
Tony Salerno
(1987)
Clay Adams
(Prime)
Rob Paulsen Baron Vaughn Josh Brener
Raphael ("Raph") Rob Paulsen
Thom Pinto
Hal Rayle
Michael Gough
Matt Hill
Mitchell A. Lee YuenC
Dean ChoeC
Greg Abbey Sean Astin
Rob Paulsen
(1987)
Omar Benson Miller Brady Noon Hiroyuki Shibamoto Greg Abbey
(2003)
Sebastian Arcelus
(1987)
Sean Schemmel
(Prime)
Sean Astin Darren Criss Omar Benson Miller
Michelangelo ("Mikey") Townsend Coleman Kirby Morrow
Richard YeeC
David SooC
Wayne Grayson Greg Cipes
Townsend Coleman
(1987)
Brandon Mychal Smith Shamon Brown Jr. Toshiharu Sakurai Wayne Grayson
(2003)
Johnny Castro
(1987)
Bradford Cameron
(Prime)
Greg Cipes Kyle Mooney Brandon Mychal Smith
Splinter Peter Renaday
Townsend Coleman
Stephen Mendel
Fiona ScottC
Darren Dunstan Hoon Lee Eric Bauza
Sander ArgabriteY
Fred Tatasciore
Brady Noon
Hideyuki Umezu Darren Dunstan
(2003)
David Wills
(1987)
Appeared Eric Bauza
Hamato Yoshi Eric Stuart
April O'Neil Renae Jacobs Veronica Taylor Mae Whitman Kat Graham Ayo Edebiri Emi Shinohara Veronica Taylor
(2003)
Rebecca Soler
(1987)
Kat Graham
Casey Jones Pat Fraley Marc Thompson Josh Peck Zelda Williams
(Cassandra Jones/Foot Recruit)
Marc Thompson
(2003)
Haley Joel Osment
(Casey Jones Jr.)
Leatherhead Jim Cummings
Peter Renaday
Frederick B. Owens
Gary K. Lewis
Peter Lurie Rose Byrne
Slash Pat Fraley Corey Feldman
Irma Langenstein Jennifer Darling Kate Micucci Appeared
Mona Lisa Pat Musick Zelda Williams
Miyamoto Usagi Townsend Coleman Jason Griffith Yuki Matsuzaki
Metalhead Appeared MU Appeared MU Max Mittelman
Wingnut Rob Paulsen Daran Norris Natasia Demetriou
Venus de Milo
Mei Pieh Chi
Lalainia Lindbjerg
Nicole ParkerC
Leslie SponbergC
Cameo
Fugitoid Oliver Wyman David Tennant
Renet Tilley Liza Jacqueline Ashley Johnson
Angel Tara Jayne
Carrie Keranen
Jamila Velazquez
Pigeon Pete A. J. Buckley Christopher Mintz-Plasse
Ice Cream Kitty Kevin Eastman Cameo Kevin Eastman
Baron Draxum John Cena
Roger Craig Smith
Appeared D
Antagonists
Shredder James Avery
Dorian Harewood
Jim Cummings
Townsend Coleman
William E. Martin
Pat FraleyY
Doug Parker
Patrick PonC
Scott Rayow Kevin Michael Richardson
(2012/1987)
Hoon Lee Kiyoyuki Yanada Scott Rayow
(2003)
Load Williams
(1987)
David Wills
(Prime)
Andrew Kishino
Krang Pat Fraley Wayne Grayson Nolan North
(Kraang)
Roseanne Barr
(Kraang Prime)
Rachel Butera
(Kraang Prime)
Pat Fraley
(1987)
Appeared Hideyuki Umezu Bradford Scobie Jim Pirri
(Krang One)
Toks Olagundoye
(Krang Two)
Karai Karen Neil Kelly Hu Gwendoline Yeo Karen Neil
Baxter Stockman Pat Fraley Scott Williams Phil LaMarr Ramone Hamilton Keith Ferguson AppearedD
Bishop David Zen Mansley Nolan North Alanna Ubach Cameo
Rat King Townsend Coleman Jeffrey Combs
Lord Dregg Tony Jay Peter Stormare
Hun Greg Carey
David Zen Mansley
Eric Bauza Carlin James Greg Carey
Bebop Barry Gordon
Greg Berg
J. B. Smoove
Barry Gordon
(1987)
Cameo Kyousei Tsukui Bradford Scobie J. B. Smoove
Rocksteady Cam Clarke Fred Tatasciore
Cam Clarke
(80s)
Hidetoshi Nakamura Johnny Castro Fred Tatasciore
Tokka Rob Paulsen Appeared MU Appeared MU
Rahzar Townsend Coleman Clancy Brown
Chris Bradford Peter Stormare
(Kristoff Van Bradford)
Tiger Claw Eric Bauza Eric Bauza
Hypno-Potamus Rhys Darby Rhys Darby
Warren Stone John Michael Higgins John Michael Higgins
Big Mama Lena Heady Cameo

Main characters

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In most versions, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are created when four baby turtles are exposed to radioactive ooze, transforming them into humanoids.[1]

Leonardo

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Leonardo, nicknamed Leo, is the leader of the ninja turtles, as well as the most disciplined and skilled. Naturally stoic and mature beyond his years, his main priority is to help his brothers to be the best ninjas they can. Because of his leadership, he is often challenged with the constant rebelliousness of Raphael. An expert swordsman, he wields two katanas and wears an ocean blue mask.[2]

Donatello

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Donatello, nicknamed Donnie, is the smartest and gentlest of the Turtles. An intellectual, he often attempts to reach his goals through science and technology rather than through violence and so frequently invents gadgets and vehicles. He is typically the passive turtle and Leonardo's second-in-command, always one step ahead of his brothers and coming up with solutions to complex problems when they cannot.[1] Studying the art of Bojutsu, he wears a purple mask and wields an oak .[2]

Raphael

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Raphael, nicknamed Raph, is the most aggressive and temperamental of the turtles. Rebellious, cynical, and quick witted, he is often driven by his strong emotions and is more prone to temper loss than his brothers. He possesses a strong desire for independence, often going rogue whenever opportunity calls for it and displaying disapproval of authority. His quick temper tends to get the better of him, but he openly loves his family, and is fiercely loyal to his allies.[1] He wears a red mask and wields a pair of sai.[2]

Michelangelo

[edit]

Michelangelo, nicknamed Mikey, is the least disciplined and most fun-loving turtle. He is usually portrayed as the most agile and naturally gifted, contrasting his free spirit and inability to take training seriously.[1] The most stereotypical teenager of the team, he is an avid fan of pop-culture and often speaks with a surfer dialect. He yearns to live life to the fullest, resulting in a tendency to fool around whenever possible. He wears an orange mask and fights using nunchucks.[2]

Splinter

[edit]

Splinter is the mutant rat sensei and adoptive father of the Ninja Turtles. Generally depicted as wise and powerful, he raised the four turtles and trained them in the art of Ninjutsu. He is very cautious and protective of them, constantly warning them of the dangers on the surface. In stark contrast to his coarse gnarly appearance, Splinter always speaks in a quiet gentle dignified voice.

April O'Neil

[edit]

April O'Neil is a confident, courageous, benevolent, intelligent, and outgoing human companion of the Ninja Turtles. She met the Turtles when they saved her from a squadron of MOUSERS chasing her down the sewers. She embarked on many of the Turtles' adventures and aids them by doing the work in public while the Turtles cannot.

Casey Jones

[edit]

Casey Jones is a hockey-masked vigilante, armed with an assortment of sporting goods that he carries in a golf bag. He is a close ally of the Ninja Turtles, whom he met after having a martial-arts skirmish with the temperish Raphael regarding Casey's own inflamed behavior when battling the bad guys.

Recurring characters

[edit]

Hamato Yoshi

[edit]

Hamato Yoshi is a ninjutsu master whose history is always intertwined with Splinter's. In most versions, Splinter is either his pet rat or a mutated form of Yoshi himself.

Mighty Mutanimals

[edit]

Dreadmon

[edit]

Jagwar

[edit]

Leatherhead

[edit]

Leatherhead is a mutant American alligator and hot-headed ally of the Ninja Turtles.

Mondo Gecko

[edit]

Ray Fillet

[edit]

Wingnut and Screwloose

[edit]

Slash

[edit]

Slash is a humanoid turtle who is either an enemy or ally of the Ninja Turtles depending on the version.

In the Archie comics continuity, he is a turtle-like alien from a tropical planet in Dimension X. Slash's home world was eventually destroyed by alien invaders, leaving him the only homeless survivor of his kind. He was later found by Krang, who made a deal with him to find his way back to Earth, and in return, Slash came under the former's leadership and kept the Ninja Turtles busy while Krang sought to possess Shredder's body, but to no avail. Slash's rampage caught the attention of the Mighty Mutanimals, who captured him and brought him to their island. With Leatherhead's help, Slash was able to control his violent spree and informed that he would be allowed to stay in a grove of lush palm trees he so loved. Grateful, he went on to become a member of the Mutanimals, ultimately sacrificing himself later to save the Turtles.

In the 1987 animated series, Slash (voiced by Pat Fraley) was Bebop's pet turtle, mutated by Rocksteady to carry out an assignment that Shredder wanted them to do. However, when the plastic palm tree he loved in his tank was accidentally dropped down an air duct by Bebop, Slash went berserk and stole Shredder's shaolin, chasing them around the Technodrome before going to Earth on Bebop's part. There, he ran into a corrupt businessman building condos in the sewers until the Ninja Turtles foiled it. As payback, the businessman sent Slash to smash the Freedom Bell, which would tarnish the Turtle's reputation and give them a bad name. The Turtles eventually stopped them and sent Slash into space aboard a trash rocket, which unknowingly contained a plastic palm tree that he was so content with. After having a run-in with a race of super-intelligent aliens who hooked him up to a machine to grant him their intelligence, Slash returned to Earth with fancy weaponry and equipment of his design and planned to turn everyone into turtles to become the number 1 supreme turtle. This was foiled when Donatello tricked him into thinking that he turned the Turtles into humans to lure Slash into a rooftop fight. Thus, Slash was reverted to his low-level intelligence and launched into space once again.

In the IDW comics, Slash was introduced as Specimen 6, a snapping turtle experiment at StockGen mutated with Old Hob's DNA assigned to hunt down the Ninja Turtles and Splinter. However, his mind became unstable and gave him a savage nature, so Specimen 6 was contained in a special tank guarded by the Rock Soldiers. He was later freed due to April O'Neil's diversion to retrieve the Turtle Tracker for the Ninja Turtles. After punching one of the Rock Soldiers, he escaped from the lab into the night. From then, Slash began lurking around the city as a mindless monster injuring people and damaging their property, such as attacking Michelangelo's pizza-delivering friend Woody and leaving scratch marks on April's van. After ripping off the shirt of a thug the Turtles just apprehended, he followed them to an abandoned church and attacked them in the church basement. Though proven more powerful than the Turtles, Slash was accidentally impaled by Leonardo and left to fall into the sewers. He eventually survived the wound and was washed ashore to be woken up by Old Hob, who told him that they should work together to hunt down anyone with a connection to StockGen. Slash was shown the error of his ways when Michelangelo gave him a candy bar that he instantly fell in love with. He agreed to help the Turtles escape from one of Shredder's traps. He was an integral part of a mission to reclaim Leonardo from the Foot Clan, and developed a strong antipathy towards Hun, whom he knew as the "Dragon Man". At the mission's conclusion, he was given a new black mask by Leonardo, as well as a bladed gauntlet. Slash's life changed forever when Hob began producing new mutants, but discovered that Lindsey Baker's psychotropic compound was crucial to the process. He took a syringe of Splinter's compound-infused blood, declaring that he wanted to be a "hero" like Michelangelo. Mikey tried to reassure Slash that he himself was not even a hero and that the two of them were both still just children, but Slash injected himself anyway. After a few minutes of agonizing pain, he suddenly began to think more clearly and speak more eloquently than before. With his new intelligence, he became the co-founder of Hob's new mutant army, the Mutanimals, and was involved in Hob and Splinter's attack on the Foot Clan.

In the 2012 animated series, Slash (voiced by Corey Feldman) was introduced as Spike, a young box turtle who was flushed into the sewers from his original owner's home and saved from drowning by Raphael, who took him in as his pet. He used to listen to his owner's angry ranting about his troubles with his family and learned ninjutsu by watching Raphael practice it in his room. Although no one knew at the time, Spike even developed a hatred for the Ninja Turtles, thanks to hearing Raphael's angry chants all his life. One night, he drank from a canister of mutagen that spilled in Raphael's room, mutating himself into a mutant box turtle with a spiked shell, long fingernails for makeshift weapons, heightened smell and superhuman agility. Obtaining a mace, Slash joined the other Turtles on patrol but revealed his true intentions by beating Donatello and Michelangelo, to Raphael's horror. The following murderous spree nearly took Leonardo's life. After engaging his former owner, he survived the fall off the roof top and fled into the night. However, the incident left Raphael with a lasting regret. Slash was captured a few times by the Krang during several run-ins with them. In the last of these run-ins, he was freed by Newtralizer and allied with him to start a violent but effective crusade against the krang. Despite having a dislike for the Turtles, he still shares the same beliefs they were taught regarding protection of the innocent. So, when the amoral Newtralizer to destroy all humans and krang, Slash realized the position he put Raphael in and sided with the Turtles and Casey Jones to stop him. He then made amends with them and declines the offer to rejoin their team before departing, saying that he was better operating solo. As soon as the Krang's invasion started, Raphael began hoping that Slash survived. He eventually did, however, and was later recruited as leader of the Mighty Mutanimals as they worked with the Turtles to take back the city from the Krang.

Slash appears as a boss in the video games Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III: The Manhattan Project, the Super NES version of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge.

Mutagen Man

[edit]

Mutagen Man is a character in the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" franchise that suffers a bizarre encounter with mutagen that exposes his internal organs and resides in a special robotic suit.

In the 1987 animated series, Mutagen Man (voiced by Rob Paulsen) was introduced as Seymour Gutz, a nerdy mailman who became dismembered after falling into a special vat of mutagen.

In the IDW comics, Mutagen Man is a failed attempt at combining several different animal breeds into one mutant. When The Mutanimals found him strapped to a bed, they tried to free him. Although he is told that he's being saved, Mutagen Man has a different idea of the term by forcing Old Hob's gun to his dome and urging him to fire. Hob refuses and they all escape the facility together. Later, Mutagen Man was given the name "Seymour Guts" by Mondo Gecko.

In the 2012 animated series, Mutagen Man (voiced by Roger Craig Smith) was introduced as Timothy, a young ineffective ice cream vendor who, after witnessing the Turtles' first battle with Baxter Stockman from his apartment window, dedicated himself into fighting crime as a wannabe superhero in a turtle costume called The Pulverizer. When he was exposed to mutagen, he dissolved into a 6-foot (1.8 m). mutant blob of mutagen with floating organs and a disintegrating touch. He kept in a special mutagen container by Donatello, who keeps him in his room in the lair and promises to help him find a way to turn back to normal.

Ninjara

[edit]

Ninjara's real name is Umeko, but for reasons that were never fully revealed she goes by the name "Ninjara". While Splinter first thought she was an "atomic child", she was actually once part of an ancient race of humanoid foxes living on a hidden island off the coast of Japan. She ended up becoming a thief and assassin for the villainous dog-man Chien Kahn, but then had a change of heart when she met the Turtles, and fell in love with Raphael. She helped out on many missions, from the Far and the Middle East to Dimension X. Her family life was explored more in detail when her younger brother managed to track her down and convince her to come back home. The Turtles discovered the island was hidden by fog banks, but despite this, it had been discovered by an opportunistic, greedy hunter. She was a powerful member of the team from issue #29 until issue #70 from the TMNT Adventures from Archie comics.

Fugitoid

[edit]

Professor Zayton Honeycutt, also known as Dr. Zayton Honeycut, is a semi-retired scientist from the planet D'Hoonib whose mind was transferred into his working robot as both were struck by lightning. As he refused to build a transmat device (a means of teleportation) for General Blanque of the Federation military in their war against the Triceraton Republic, he was categorized as a "Fugitoid" (short for "fugitive android"). The character was introduced in a series of strips in the Gobbledygook comics that was later finished in a one-off self-titled comic book and then guest starred in the original TMNT issues 5 to 7, later became a recurring character in the main TMNT comic.

In the IDW comics, Professor Honeycutt was a Neutrino scientist who used to work for Krang. Honeycutt's wife Marra worried about the influence of evil that was oppressing the Neutrino people, including their family. She convinced him that they should join the Neutrino resistance, and so they did. Three months later, Krang's armies had found where the resistance compound was and targeted it for attack. A fire broke out, and the living quarters were locked down due to safety protocols. Rather than let Marra, their son Ely, and the rest of the families burn to death, Honeycutt used SAL to breach the flames and override the safety protocols. By doing so, he sacrificed his own body where he became trapped within SAL in the process. Honeycutt saved the families, but his victory was short-lived. Sergeant Granitor ordered an attack on the fleeing families killing them all. Honeycutt could do nothing but watch them die on the security monitor. Not long after, Honeycutt had made it back to the lab, and Granitor and some Rock Soldiers found him. Honeycutt restrained himself from tearing apart the man who gave orders to kill his family and instead escaped through the portal he had been working on. Now in New York City on Earth, Honeycutt masqueraded as a blonde male to hide from the Rock Soldiers. Honeycutt took a job with Baxter Stockman at StockGen calling himself Chet Allen. Stockman worked with Krang, so Honeycutt was hidden within plain sight. Krang referred to the professor's new form as a "fugitive android". Rather than involve more innocents in the fight, Honeycutt allied himself with the Foot Clan. Although Honeycutt knew the Foot Clan were evil, they were enemies of Krang and his forces as well.

The Fugitoid appeared in the 2003 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series voiced by Oliver Wyman. Here his mind was transferred into the robotic body of his helper robot SAL after the pair were struck by lightning while Honeycutt was wearing a psychic amplifier device. Both the Triceratons and the Federation pursued him seeking to obtain his Teleportal device to gain the upper hand in their ongoing conflict, but Honeycutt found surprising allies in the Turtles. They wound up back on Earth courtesy of the Utroms' transmat, which later transported Honeycutt and the Utroms to their homeworld. However, upon learning that the Triceratons had pursued him to Earth, Honeycutt returned there after erasing the Teleportal blueprints from his mind. He was eventually captured by the Federation, but managed to infect their fleet with a computer virus that shut them down, with his body being fried in the process. Honeycutt's sacrifice touched both sides, and a peace soon resulted between the two. Honeycutt later returned, having uploaded a copy of his mind into Earth's satellite network prior to his demise. Leatherhead later built him a new body using Earth technology, and he would continue to provide aid to the Turtles, eventually officiating at April and Casey's wedding.

The Fugitoid appears in the 2012 animated series, voiced by David Tennant.[3] He first appears at the conclusion of season 3 aboard his vessel, the Ulixes, just in time to save the Turtles, April O'Neil, and Casey Jones from a black hole created by the Triceratons. After they escape, he introduces himself and promises them that they are about to embark upon a great adventure. He revealed that he was a normal scientist until his body was destroyed by the Triceratons for turning down their offer to make weapons for them. His brain survived and was placed in the body of his robotic assistant, and he set out to stop the Triceratons from causing any more harm. He also formed an alliance with the Utrom some time prior to becoming a cyborg, and later approached them with the Turtles in an effort to learn the whereabouts of the black hole generator fragments. The reason for Fugitoid's involvement was later revealed in "Earth's Last Stand": he had created the black hole generator and then sold it to the krang, only learning later the ghastly use to which it would be put. Despite the distrust this prompts in the Turtles, April, and Casey, Fugitoid manages to recover the generator and execute his plan: combining his power source and that of his ship to destroy the generator while wiping out the Triceraton fleet in the process. A past version of the Fugitoid then arrives and takes the now duplicate versions of April, Casey, and the Turtles on an adventure; meanwhile, in the wreckage of the Triceraton fleet, present-day Honeycutt's head is shown to be intact and apparently partially functional.

Fugitoid appears as a playable character in the Wii version of the 2009 fighting game Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Smash-Up, voiced by Oliver Wyman.[4] He also appears as an NPC in the videogames Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Battle Nexus (2004) and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3: Mutant Nightmare (2005), as well as a cameo in the Dimension Shellshock DLC of the 2022 game Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge.[5]

Supporting characters and allies

[edit]

Tang Shen

[edit]

Tang Shen appears in the Mirage comics as the lover of Splinter's owner Hamato Yoshi.

Then Shen appears in the IDW comics as Hamato Yoshi's wife.

In the 2003 animated series, Tang Shen debuted in flashbacks in the Season 4 episode "Tale of Master Yoshi", which was told by Leonardo to Splinter and the other Turtles. In this version, Tang Shen had been an orphan raised by the Ancient One, in Tokyo, Japan, who eventually took in the orphaned Hamato Yoshi and his friend Yukio Mashimi as his own sons. As the years passed, she fell in love with Hamato Yoshi, and took in a hungry, innocent rat as a pet. As her bond with Yoshi strengthened, an even greater rift occurred in Yoshi's longtime friendship with Mashimi. Blinded by jealously and hatred, Yukio had ruthlessly murdered Tang Shen in cold blood. Her premature demise is what prompted Hamato Yoshi to challenge his former best friend and adopted brother to a duel. It was Tang Shen's everlasting kindness, beauty and love that made him name the pet rat "Splinter". Her grave is located on a hill of flowers, where Hamato Yoshi was eventually laid to rest as well.

In the 2012 animated series, Tang Shen had been the loving wife of Hamato Yoshi (who eventually mutated into the mutant-rat Splinter), and had borne a daughter whom they named Miwa. Her decision in choosing Hamato Yoshi over his adopted brother, Oroku Saki, had caused intense hatred to fester between them. Further taken over by vengeance, jealously and rage, Oroku Saki had staged an attack on Yoshi, attempting to finish him once and for all. However, Tang Shen intervened to defend her husband; a fatal decision, as the final blow meant for Yoshi had struck her instead. Fifteen years after her tragic demise, Hamato Yoshi had moved to New York City (which had been her own desire), where he had purchased four baby turtles, encountered a krangdroid, and mutated into the rat-mutant Splinter via their mutagen. To keep her memory alive, several photographs of her remain with her husband in the Dojo, and a torn color picture (with her shoulder held by her husband Hamato Yoshi, who the Shredder had torn off to further make his fabrications more real) kept by her teenage daughter Miwa, who had been abducted by Oroku Saki as an infant and renamed Karai. She is even seen in memories of Splinter's. She makes her first and only live appearance in "Tale of the Yokai" when the Turtles travel back sixteen years previously via Renet's time specter. She had expressed her dislike at her husband wanting to save the last of the Hamato clan, as she believed ninjas had no place in the modern world, not wanting her only child to follow in the path of her father. She was later approached by Oroku Saki, now clad in Foot Clan attire, and said that she had made her choice. She was asked to take little Miwa and leave as the two adopted brothers faced off in a death-duel. In the prequel episode "Lone Rat and Cub" Tang Shen was seen in the black-and-white picture of her next to her husband, holding their baby daughter between them. She was last seen in a vision of Splinter's when he debated whether he had the discipline to be a proper father, for either Miwa (were she alive) or the baby mutant Turtles.

Mr. O'Neil

[edit]

There have been different versions of April's father in the TMNT franchise.

In the Mirage Comics, he is named Robert O'Neil. Not much is known of O'Neil, only that he is an antique dealer who owned his own shop, "Second Time Around", and a proficient businessman. One day his daughter Robyn was born, but his wife could no longer bear any children. In his examination of a few things that he purchased, but had not yet sorted, he had found a strange crystal, O'Neil attached the crystal to a pencil and was miraculously able to bring his drawings to life. O'Neil decided to satisfy his wife's desire to have children, but all of his attempts to create babies broke into nothing, as he had drawn them with a pencil. Sometime later O'Neil tried again with an ink pen, the result did not disappear this time and grew into a young woman: April.

Nearly thirty years later O'Neil died of a serious illness (probably cancer) and bequeathed his entire estate to his daughters, he gave April his old antique shop (but by then it was already destroyed by the Shredder and the Foot Clan when they had sought vengeance on April's new friends, the Turtles). All his life he had the secret of her origin concealed from April, until she had to learn through a chain of dramatic circumstances that she was not a naturally-born creature, and only some time later with Renet's Help was she finally able to discover the truth. This realization gave April a severe emotional crisis, and she left her old life behind for a while to find a new meaning to her existence.

In the 2012 animated series, he is named Kirby O'Neil, voiced by Keith Silverstein. In this show, Dr. Kirby is a psychologist, but was mutated into a mutant bat in the season 2 premiere "The Mutation Situation" and coined "Kirby Bat" until he was cured in season 3's "Battle for New York".

In the IDW Comics, April's father is named John O'Neil. John experienced a stroke that left him wheelchair-bound and reliant on his wife Elizabeth. Their daughter April considered abandoning her studies to help look after him, but her parents argued against it. Up until his stroke, John was employed as chief assistant at StockGen, the genetics laboratory of Baxter Stockman, which is responsible for the transformation of Splinter and the Turtles into mutants. He also knew of the Ooze, the base material for Stockman's experiments. It was through his initiative that April was able to secure her internship, through which she later became acquainted with the Turtles, but he and his wife already had a hunch that something in this laboratory was not right.

Some time later, the Turtles were traced by agents of the Foot Clan to the O'Neil Farm, while Elizabeth learned of the Turtles in a very dramatic way. After April and Splinter had declared her necessary, Elizabeth received from her daughter a vial of Ooze, which she used to heal her husband from the effects of his stroke. Then they returned to New York to be closer to their daughter, and opened their old antique shop again. They later invited Casey to live with and work for them there, which attracted the ire of Hun. Fortunately, their neighbors on the same street came out to assist the O'Neils, and peace was restored.

During the Triceraton invasion, John and Elizabeth remained in the Second Time Around store for some days, anxious about April's safety. Eventually April and Baxter Stockman brought them to the T.C.R.I. building, where John and Elizabeth were reunited with their daughter.

In the 2014 film, April's father was referred to as Dr. O'Neil and was portrayed by Paul Fitzgerald. He was a scientist working at Sacks Groups Ltd as one of the creators of the TCRI mutagen. Splinter was the one who informed April that her father was killed by Eric Sacks and the Shredder destroying their lab.

Mrs. O'Neil

[edit]

There have been different versions of Mrs. O'Neil in the TMNT franchise.

In the Mirage Comics, she was named Bridget O'Neil.

In the 2012 animated series, Mrs. O'Neil (voiced by Renae Jacobs) was the loving wife of the psychologist Kirby O'Neil, and the late mother of sixteen-year-old April O'Neil. Many decades ago, when she herself was a child, her grandfather had discovered the Krang residing deep underneath the O'Neil's family farmhouse. After unmistakably awakening the Krang, the brain-like extraterrestrial creatures paid him back by performing experiments on him and his entire bloodline; including Mrs. O'Neil. In her adult years she had fall in love with and married an Irish scientist by the name of Kirby O'Neil. She was eventually captured and experimented on by the Krang while she was pregnant with April. As a result, her daughter was born a human/Krang hybrid mutant; possessing an array of exceptionally powerful psychic abilities, as a result of her Krang DNA. When April was six years old, the Krang came for her. While her husband was able to escape to New York City, Mrs. O'Neil was recaptured and "put into stasis." One decade later (in Episode 55 "Buried Secrets"), she was discovered by the Turtles, Casey Jones, and her teenage daughter. She explained how her whole family's difficulties with the Krang raged on for many years, and seemed happy to be reunited with her daughter. She wondered of Kirby's whereabouts, to which the Turtles assured her that he was "on a safari in Puerto Rico." She attracted the suspicions of the sharp and intuitive Michelangelo, who planned to expose her true motives by any means. She was later revealed to be a clone of the real Mrs. O'Neil as an infiltration experiment infused with the human DNA of the real Mrs. O'Neil and Krang DNA; thus having only her memories. April expressed her sadness at losing her family all over again, even if it truly was not her mother, and wondered if she was indeed gone forever or was still alive somewhere. A family photograph of her, alongside her husband and infant daughter, was shown in "The Krang Conspiracy" which had been kept by Jack Kurtzman. She was first referenced by April in "Karai's Vendetta". April mentioning the tragic loss of her mother as a child, caused Karai to feel sympathy for April, as she, too had lost and never knew her own mother, Tang Shen.

In the IDW Comics, April's mother was named Elizabeth O'Neil, who was a journalist (similar to April's status as a reporter from various TMNT media adaptations). Elizabeth was first introduced when April, the Turtles, Casey, and Splinter were forced to flee New York to their home in Northampton. While April and Casey worked on keeping the Turtles and Splinter a secret, Elizabeth showed having some knowledge of the mutagen due to her past career as a reporter. When the Foot Clan tracked them down and attacked Elizabeth along with her husband John found out about the existence of the Turtles and Splinter. After the group fled, Elizabeth used a part of the mutagen April left behind to help heal John from his stroke due to its healing properties. Afterwards, the two moved to New York and took up residence in the Second Time Around store, where they maintain a good relationship with their daughter and her other friends, where they also allowed Casey to stay with them due to issues he has with his father.

Justice Force

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The Justice Force is a superhero team that was around during the Golden Age.

First appearing in the Mirage Comics issue "Dome Doom", the Turtles and Casey meet the older versions of the Justice Force in Northampton at the time when their former member Doctor Dome attacked them with his Domeoids. The fight ended when Battlin' Bernice's daughter named Ananda showed up to chastise Doctor Dome for ruining her mother's life. Stainless Steel Steve broke up the argument and offered Doctor Dome a redemption which he took. When Lilith swore vengeance on Shadow Jones for the death of Sloan, April and Casey asked Stainless Steel Steve and Metal Head to help Splinter watch over their stepdaughter.

In the 2003 TV series, the Justice Force first appears in the episode "Return of the Justice Force". The Turtles and Casey head to Northampton where they enter Steve's comic book store to look for a lost issue that would've helped Michelangelo know the fate of Battlin' Bernice. They meet the Justice Force when Doctor Dome started using his Domeoids to abduct them. It was soon discovered that Doctor Dome's secret daughter with Battlin' Bernice named Ananda was behind this where she wanted revenge on the Justice Force for letting her mother die. When Ananda was defeated, Doctor Dome reconciled with his daughter and also reconciled with Stainless Steve Steel. In later episodes, Ananda and Metal Head formed a second incarnation of the Justice Force that consisted of Silver Sentry, Chryalis, and Tsunami with Stainless Steel Steve in an advisor role and Zippy Lad training the new recruits. Their membership was later expanded with Nobody, Raptarr, and Nano in the episode "Membership Drive" while also gaining Michelangelo as the Turtle Titan. The Justice Force are among the allies of the Turtles who assist them in the fight against the Demon Shredder's forces. The episode "Super Power Struggle" revealed another former member called the Green Mantle who lost his powered cape in a battle and was found by Raphael during the fight with Dr. Malignus. When Dr. Malignus was defeated, the security guard at the convention turned out to be Green Mantle's true identity of Al Gordon who reclaims the special cape and rejoins the Justice Force. The Justice Force are among those who attended April and Casey's wedding and helped to fight the Cyber-Shredder.

Stainless Steel Steve

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Stainless Steel Steve is the leader of the Justice Force who gets his name from the round metallic saucer on his head which can smash through anything.

In Mirage Comics, Stainless Steel Steve and Doctor Dome competed for the love of Battlin' Bernice. In the present, Stainless Steel Steve runs a comic book store with Metal Head as the stock boy when Doctor Dome began to target his old teammates. When Ananda came into view and broke up the fight, Stainless Steel Steve offered Doctor Dome a chance at redemption.

Stainless Steel Steve appears in the 2003 animated series voiced by David Wills impersonating Adam West. During the Justice Force's fight with Doctor Dome, Michelangelo mentioned that Stainless Steel Steve once saved Doctor Dome from the Living Volcano and Doctor Dome once cured Stainless Steel Steve of the creeping alien rust. When Ananda was defeated and had reconciled with Doctor Dome, Stainless Steel Steve thanked the Turtles and Casey Jones for their help and even made Michelangelo an honorary member of the Justice Force. In "Super Power Struggle", Stainless Steel Steve appeared in an advisor role to the second incarnation of the Justice Force at the time when Raphael found the Green Mantle's powered cape. Following Dr. Malignus' defeat, Stainless Steel Steve picked up Al Gordon from the hospital and reunited with the Justice Force while reclaiming his cape.

Metal Head

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Metal Head is a synthetic and dwarfish member of the Justice Force who can harden his hair to be used for weapons and change the physiology of his form. When Stainless Steel Steve opened his comic book store, Metal Head worked as the stock boy.

Metal Head appears in the 2003 animated series voiced by Wayne Grayson. He is the first Justice Force member to be abducted by the Domeoids when the attack Steve's comic book store.

Joey Lastic

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Joey Lastic is an elastic member of the Justice Force.

Joey Lastic appears in the 2003 animated series voiced by Oliver Wyman. In his old age, he has been shown to have trouble retracting his limbs and neck.

Zippy Lad

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Zippy Lad is a member of the Justice Force with super-speed. In his old age, he can still move fast in his electronic wheelchair.

Zippy Lad appears in the 2003 animated series, voiced by Andrew Rannells in his first two appearances and by Sean Schemmel in his third appearance. In "Membership Drive", Zippy Lad was seen training the Justice Force's new recruits.

Doctor Dome

[edit]

Doctor Dome is a dome-headed member of the Justice Force with genius-level intellect who can control his robots called Domeoids.

In Mirage Comics, he and Stainless Steel Steve competed for the love of Battlin' Bernice. When the Justice Force disbanded, Doctor Dome had a falling out with them. Years later, Doctor Dome started targeting the Justice Foce members to draw out Battlin' Bernice which also brought him into conflict with the Turtles and Casey Jones. When Battlin' Bernice's daughter Ananda shows up to break up the fight, she chasitizes him. Stainless Steel Steve offered Doctor Dome a chance at redemption which he accepted.

Doctor Dome appears in the 2003 animated series, voiced by Stuart Zagnit. He was suspected of being behind the abductions of the Justice Force when they arrived in his lair. When Doctor Dome clashed with Stainless Steel Steve where he blamed him for what happened to Battlin' Bernice, Michelangelo tried to get them to remember the times when they worked together like when Stainless Steel Steve once saved Doctor Dome from the Living Volcano and Doctor Dome once cured Stainless Steel Steve from the creeping alien rust. It is then discovered that Doctor Dome's secret daughter Ananda was behind this where she wanted revenge on the Justice Force for letting her mother die. The Turtles threw off Ananda's concentration on the Domeoids to defeat her. Doctor Dome then reconciled with Ananda. Michelangelo recapped to Joey Lastic that the strategy to defeat Ananda was the same one the Justice Force used to defeat the Grim Repo in issue #57 when he gained control of Doctor Dome's brain.

Ananda

[edit]

Ananda is the daughter of Battlin' Bernice who inherited her mother's super-strength.

In Mirage Comics, Ananda shows up to interrupt the fight between Doctor Dome, the Justice Force, the Turtles, and Casey Jones where she chasitizes Doctor Dome.

Ananda appears in the 2003 animated series, voiced by Amy Birnbaum in most appearances and by Veronica Taylor in "The Journal". This version is the daughter of Battlin' Bernice and Doctor Dome, inheriting the latter's powers. When her mother died, Ananda blamed her father and the Justice Force enough to control the Domeoids into abducting the Justice Force and framing her father. The Turtles were able to throw off Ananda's concentration on the Domeoids to defeat her. In later episodes, Ananda and Metal Head formed a second incarnation of the Justice Force.

Pantheon

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Aka

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Aka is the oldest sibling of the Pantheon in the IDW comics.

Gothano

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Gothano is a member of the Pantheon and is more quite than his siblings and is the keeper of knowledge.

Toad Baron

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Toad Baron is a member of the Pantheon who wants to make parties for both mortals and immortals to enjoy.

Al'Falqa

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Al'Falqa is a mutant falcon from an unnamed city in Saudi Arabia who is exclusive to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures comics. Al'Falqa encounters the Turtles when they were traveling in Saudi Arabia. They helped Al'Falqa protect the mysterious Black Stone, which was about to be stolen by Shredder and Verminator-X.

Punk Frogs

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The Punk Frogs are a group of mutant frogs who are the counterparts of the Ninja Turtles.

In the 1987 series, the Punk Frogs are created by Shredder when mutagen landed in their part of the swamp. Shredder convinced them that he was a good guy and to be his warriors where he named them after would-be conquerors and dictators. Shredder trained them to fight the Turtles whom he had convinced the frogs into believing were bad guys. Each of the frogs were named after Shredder's own "heroes". After the Turtles saved them from being captured by Captain Hoffman, they realized that the Turtles were good guys and that the Shredder was a bad guy and broke ties with him. Afterward, the frogs became friends with the Turtles, with Attila emerging as the group's leader. They may even be described as having the character traits of the Ninja Turtles.

In Ninja Turtles: Superman Legend the Punk Frogs (except Napoleon Bonafrog) make a cameo.

In the 2012 series, the Punk Frogs were created by mutagen poured into their pond near the O'Neil family farmhouse by Mrs. O'Neil's Krang clone. Besides Attila, Genghis, Napoleon, and Rasputin, there are a substantial number of Frog Soldiers working for them. Evidently remembering the actions of humans in destroying their swamps to make room for cities, they swore revenge upon them, and briefly considered the Turtles brothers in need of liberation until learning that they were friends with April and Casey. Afterwards, the Punk Frogs

In the comic series published by IDW, the Punk Frogs are a faction in Mutant Town ever since Old Hob's mutagen bomb went off in a part of New York City. Besides Atilla, Genghis, Napoleon, and Rasputin, there are other members of the group consisting of Bloody Mary, Bonnie, Clyde, and Zetian. The Turtles came into conflict with them when the Punk Frogs thought that one of the Turtles kidnapped Bonnie. When the Turtles claimed that they didn't do it during the attack, they also claimed that it must've been some other mutant turtle that was the culprit. Clyde and the Turtles find that Dr. Jasper Barlow cobbled Bonnie together with a prosthetic shell that was implanted with a dragon scale and other turtle-like parts where he called her "Venus". After Dr. Barlow was thwarted, Clyde took Bonnie's original arms back to the Punk Frogs where he informed them that Bonnie is "dead" and that the Turtles weren't responsible.

The Punk Frogs appear as cameos in the 2022 beat-'em-up Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge.

Attila the Frog

[edit]

Atilla the Frog is a member of the Punk Frogs. He is named after Attila the Hun. He is armed with a spike ball and chain.

In Mutant Turtles: Superman Legend, Attila makes a cameo.

In the 2012 animated series, Attila the Frog (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) is the leader of the group. Much of his behavior was inspired after actor Marlon Brando, and inspired by his characters in The Godfather and Apocalypse Now.

In the IDW comics, Attila is the tall leader of the Punk Frogs, wields a morningstar, and is very protective of the group.

Genghis Frog

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Genghis Frog is a member of the Punk Frogs. He is named after Genghis Khan.

In the 1987 animated series, Genghis Frog (voiced by Jim Cummings) is a Punk Frog that is armed with an axe.

In Mutant Turtles: Superman Legend, Genghis makes a cameo.

In the 2012 animated series, Genghis Frog (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) served as the General of the Frog Soldiers.

In the IDW comics, Genghis Frog is a tall member of the Punk Frogs with a fierce personality and wields an axe.

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, Genghis Frog is voiced by Hannibal Buress. He is a member of Superfly's gang. Genghis Frog eventually joins the other gang members in switching to the Turtle's side and becoming part of their extended family.

Napoleon Bonafrog

[edit]

Napoleon Bonafrog is a member of the Punk Frogs. He is named after Napoleon Bonaparte.

In the 1987 animated series, Napoleon Bonafrog (voiced by Pat Fraley in most appearances, Townsend Coleman in "Napoleon Bonafrog: Colossus of the Swamps") is a Punk Frog that is armed with a whip. Though normally the Turtles ally, he was once transformed into a hulking slave of Krang and Shredder.

In the 2012 animated series, Napoleon Bonafrog (voiced by Jon Heder) is depicted as a clumsy frog disliked by his brethren, which leads to his befriending Michelangelo. Much of his behavior was a nod to Heder's character in Napoleon Dynamite.

In the IDW comics, Napoleon is a tall and well-built member of the Punk Frogs and wields a whip.

Rasputin the Mad Frog

[edit]

Rasputin the Mad Frog is a member of the Punk Frogs. He is named after Grigori Rasputin.

In the 1987 animated series, Rasputin (voiced by Nicholas Omana) is a Punk Frog who wields a bow and arrow.

In Mutant Turtles: Superman Legend, Rasputin makes a brief cameo.

In the 2012 animated series, Rasputin (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) is the adviser to Attila the Frog.

In the IDW comics, Rasputin is a bulky member of the Punk Frogs with a reasonable personality and wields a crossbow.

Renet Tilley

[edit]

Renet Tilley is a rather reluctant, spoiled, and impulsive teenager whose parents, also denizens of the 79th Level, hoped that apprenticing her to Lord Simultaneous would help her develop some kind of common sense. Curious and impatient as she was, she did not care very much for studying. Renet first met the Turtles fooling around, when one day out of boredom she snatched her master's Time Scepter and was caught by him. She replied immediately and time-traveled off with Lord Simultaneous' Sceptre of the Sands of Time to Earth – more specifically to 1986 New York City. Renet and the Turtles became friends, but Simultaneous appeared and sent Renet into a panic. Fleeing Simultaneous further, she and the Turtles went to 1406 A.D., straight into a castle siege. The castle belonged to the dark mage Savanti Romero, a former, but exiled student of Simultaneous, and the besiegers were the soldiers of Cerebus, who was after some scrolls, that Romero had stolen. Romero also managed to grab the Time Scepter, and the Turtles and Renet had to contend with Cerebus' help to attack the castle and get the Sceptre back from Savanti Romero. The force was no match for Romero's magic. Before it came to the worst, Simultaneous appeared. Romero attacked Lord Simultaneous who took the Time Scepter again and cast Savanti into prehistoric times. He handed the scrolls to Cerebus, sent the Turtles back again to their time, and sent Renet to wipe dust in his huge library. Later, she assists the Turtles in defeating Savanti Romero in prehistory when Romero plans to alter the Earths orbit and prevent the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs, meaning humanity, and mutant Turtles, will never exist. After defeating Romero, the group is stranded in prehistory for several months after the Scepter is lost in the ocean, but it is eventually recovered. Renet makes a third appearance saving the Turtles from Romero's demonic bride, Juliet Romero. This time she appears as a deity-like woman with full control over her time manipulating powers.

In the 2003 animated series, Renet (voiced by Liza Jacqueline) undergone some minor changes in her backstory, where she is shown to be quite a scatterbrained person who came to her friends with good intentions, but with little practical skill she caused some problems across space and time. This leads to her transporting herself and the Turtles back to the medieval age to which Savanti Romero was banished, which resulted in the loss of the Time Scepter to Ultimate Drako, the fused form of the Ultimate Ninja and Drako. It would later be recovered and entrusted to Renet again, leading to another encounter with Romero in the Cretaceous Period. She would later appear at April and Casey's wedding, watching from a distance.

In the IDW comics, Renet has her debut in a special story, where she "invites" the Turtles to the interdimensional Battle Nexus tournament. In this version she is also Lord Simultaneous' pupil in magic, dimension travel, and apparently his successor in the Dimensional Council. At the time in which she appears for the first time, the cruel Councilor Nieli hosted a series of merciless gladiator fights, which only he really liked. Renet was also against the games for personal motives, because one of the champions, the warrior Baltizar, had won her heart. For this reason, they brought the Turtles to the hub of the dimensions and helped the culmination of these events to instigate an uprising against Nieli which meant that Nieli was banished and the games were transformed into a far more peaceful affair.

In the 3D CG 2012 animated series, Renet (voiced by Ashley Johnson) is a young immature timestress from the future who, like Michelangelo, makes rash decisions that sometimes gets her and others into trouble. She is also becomes the object of Michelangelo's affections. After taking her master's time scepter to keep it out of the hands of mutant time master Savanti Romero, she traveled back in time to get help from the Ninja Turtles. She ended up banishing Savanti to the Middle Ages, but was forced to pursue him to preserve history. This eventually got Renet and the Turtles to lose the scepter to Savanti, but after a series of conflicts, they recovered it. However, while traveling them back to their present, she lost the Turtles to sixteen-years-prior Tokyo, Japan, due to the mystical time scepter taking matters into its own hands. After six months from her perspective, she was able to locate them and return them to the twenty-first century. In the fifth and final season of the show, "When Wolds Collide, Part One" a hologram of her is first seen in Michelangelo's room. She appears to still keep in touch with the Turtles, particularly Mikey, who still has a crush on her. In the Monstrous Tales saga (consisting of four episodes "The Curse of Savanti Romero", "The Crypt of Dracula", "The Frankenstein Experiment" and "Monsters Among Us!") Renet returns to 21st century New York City, once again needing the Ninja Turtles help in stopping her Savanti Romero from making an unbeatable army of the undead by traveling back to the ancient past, to the time when Dr. Frankenstein began his monstrous scientific experiments.

Tattoo

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Tattoo is a sumo wrestler whose tattoos can be used as weapons.

In the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles episode "Planet of the Turtleloids" Pt. 1, Tattoo (voiced by Rob Paulsen) was not a human being at all but a hamster mutated by the Shredder into human form. The Ninja Turtles encounter him vandalizing a pet shop. After a scuffle in which a confused angered Tattoo wraps himself up in electrical wire, he is electrocuted and reverted into hamster form. Leonardo deduces that Shredder kidnapped the hamster from that very same pet store and all he wanted was to return home.

In the Archie Comics he asked Splinter for a favor and requested that the TMNT rescue his chihuahua dog "Inky" from a group of Yakuza who wanted him to throw his next fight for gambling purposes. Tattoo states that he can't lose the match as it will ruin his career. The TMNT vow to help him get his pooch back without having to throw the match. While Tattoo is engaged in his Sumo match, the TMNT, Ninjara and the Warrior Dragon infiltrate the mob headquarters and rescue the feisty pup. Tattoo wins his match and the Turtles return Inky to his beloved master. The wrestler awards Leonardo a katana as thanks for saving his dog.

The Warrior Dragon

[edit]

The Warrior Dragon debuted in the Fall 1990 issue of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Magazine. He later returned in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures comics series published by Archie Comics in 1991 as a New York City fireman named Chu Hsi. He was created by Mirage Studios artist Ryan Brown.

In 1992 Playmates Toys released an action figure of the Warrior Dragon named Hothead and cast in red plastic. Using the Hothead name, the character appeared in the NES version of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Tournament Fighters

Angel

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Angel is supporting character in the 2003 animated series and later appearing in the IDW comics under the name Angel Bridge in the latter. Additionally in the IDW Comics, Angel served as the vigilante Nobody, using an exo-suit created by the Turtle's ally Harold Lillja. In the Mirage Comics volume 3 by Image comics there is a female ninja named Angel who is one of Pimiko's minions.

Utroms

[edit]

Utroms are a race of brain-like aliens in the franchise. They first appeared in the Mirage comics and later in the IDW comics. They also appear in the 2003 television series as allies for the Turtles to stop a rogue Utrom named Ch'rell, the modern Shredder led by one named Mortu (voiced by Dan Green)[clarification needed]. Appointed by the Utrom Council, Mortu was the captain of an Utrom ship that crashed on Earth a thousand years ago in Japan. After the crash, he remained the field-leader of the marooned Utroms, and worked as their liaison to the Humans. In the modern day, this makes him CEO of the front company TCRI. His name is "Utrom" backwards.

In the 2012 series, the Utroms hail from Dimension X and the notable members are Bishop, Pawn, Rook and Queen.

In the series Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, one rogue member was revealed to be the creator of the armor worn by the Shredder, which many believed to be an Oni.

Alopex

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Alopex is a mutant arctic fox who debuted in the IDW comics. Originally a normal arctic fox in Alaska, she was captured by scientists and taken away from her family to be experimented on with mutagen, granting her human-like intelligence and altering her body. She was rescued from the laboratory by Shredder and recruited into the Foot Clan, whom she loyally served for years. In her first appearance in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Micro-Series, she attempts to trick Raphael into bringing her to their lair, but he manages to catch onto her scheme.[6]

Shredder later tested her commitment to the Foot by burning down the forest she grew up in. While she continued serving him, she vowed to kill him one day. She ultimately defects to the Turtles' side when they fought the Shredder to reclaim a brainwashed Leonardo from him. While their relationship with her is tense at first after she follows them to April's parents' farm, she ultimately gains their trust thanks to Leonardo vouching for her and bonds with Raphael. After Splinter kills Shredder and takes over the Foot Clan, she helps train the new recruits and forms a close friendship with Angel aka Nobody.

However, she is brainwashed by Kitsune into an assassination attempt on Splinter. Though it's successfully prevented, she runs back to Alaska to fight of Kitsune's influence, and with help from Raphael and Angel, she's able to rid herself of it completely. She returns home and begins dating Raphael while helping the Turtles monitor Mutant Town as part of the Splinter Clan (even getting her own green mask in the process), but she later separates from them when they decide to work together with Shredder to prepare for the Rat King's Armageddon Game[7] and adopts Old Hob's mutated weasels to form the Claw Clan.

Alopex appears in the 2012 series voiced by Minae Noji. This version is a mutant red fox who possesses superhuman speed and the sister of recurring series villain Tiger Claw. When she and her brother were children in Japan, they wandered into a portal on a playground and ended up getting captured by the Kraang, who mutated and experimented on them for months. When they eventually escaped, they ran away from home knowing the rest of their village would see them as monsters, joining a circus and later becoming top-level assassins. Alopex developed a vendetta against her brother for forcing her into a life of crime and murdering their parents and rebelled against him, cutting off his tail in the process. In "Tale of Tiger Claw", she comes to New York to finish her brother off and steals the Cursed Blades of Vengeance to do so, accidentally cursing Casey Jones in the process. With the help of the Turtles, she is able to defeat her brother, but refrains from killing him after listening to Leonardo's warnings of how vengeance could impact her life. When Tiger Claw attempts to shoot her as she begins to walk away, she cuts off his arm in retaliation before disappearing.

Old Hob

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Old Hob, or just Hob, is a male mutant alley cat in the IDW comics. He was mutated right after the Turtles and Splinter, still animals at that time, had been stolen by Foot ninjas from the StockGen laboratories. He tried to abduct Raphael as his dinner, only to have his right eye clawed out by Splinter.[8] Transformed by mutagen residue sticking to the Turtles and Splinter, he at first worked as Stockman's henchman until the latter betrayed him. Embittered by his experiences with humans, he became a terrorist for mutantkind and formed his own version of the Mutanimals, later going so far as to transform a large portion of New Yorkers into mutants using a mutagen bomb.[9] At first antagonistic towards the Turtles, he gradually develops a mutual understanding with them and lends them his assistance when asked.

In the Saturday Morning Adventures spinoff series, Hob also appears as the leader of The Pantheon.

Lita

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Lita is a pre-adolescent female mutant albino turtle featured in the IDW comics. Originally a human albino child, she fell victim to Hob's mutagen bomb with which he turned a huge number of New York citizens into mutants, and was subsequently abandoned by her parents. She lived on the streets in the newly formed ghetto of Mutant Town until she was taken in by the Turtles.[10] She and her new family also encounter a future version of herself, named Big Lita, an apprentice to Time Mistress Renet.[11] In the course of events in which Donatello tries to avert the menace posed by the time-travelling devourer Armaggon, she is turned back into her human form by Bob, Leonardo's student-turned-villain from the future.[12]

Metalhead

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Metalhead is a robotic Turtle that usually has some link with Donatello, either having been designed by him, or reprogrammed by him.

Klunk

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Klunk is a stray ally cat Michaelango adopted. He has appeared in the Mirage comics, the 2003 animated series, and the IDW comics.

Cudley the Transdimensional Cowlick

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Cudly the Transdimensional Cowlick is a giant cowhead with the ability to teleport and is an ally of the turtles. Cudly appeared in the Archies comics and later the IDW comics.

Antagonists

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Foot Clan

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The Foot Clan is an evil ninja organization that is usually run by the Shredder.

The Shredder

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Shredder is the leader of the Foot Clan and arch-enemy of the Ninja Turtles.

Karai

[edit]

Karai is a high-ranking member of the Foot Clan employed as Shredder's second-in-command and both an ally and enemy of the Ninja Turtles.

Bebop and Rocksteady

[edit]

Bebop and Rocksteady are a mutant warthog and rhinoceros employed by Shredder and enemies of the Ninja Turtles.

Tatsu

[edit]

Tatsu is a Foot Clan Warrior and the Shredder's second-in-command in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze, and the 2012 animated series.

In the films, Tatsu (portrayed by Toshishiro Obata, voiced by Michael McConnohie) is a skilled martial artist who oversees the training of Shredder's army. He rarely speaks except to Shredder or to give orders to the Foot Ninja or those training to join the ranks. He leads the attack on April O'Neil's home in the first film, and later fights with Casey Jones at the Foot lair. Though initially overpowering the vigilante, he is defeated after Casey finds a golf club among the various stolen items stockpiled by the Foot and uses it to subdue Tatsu. In the second film, he is shown to have escaped police custody, and attempts to take leadership of the Foot until the Shredder is revealed to be still alive. He leads the Foot Ninja who steal the mutagen from TGRI, and helps oversee the rebuilding of the Foot army. However, he is easily defeated near the end of the film by the Turtles all slamming their back shells into him.

In the 2012 animated series, Hattori Tatsu (voiced by Michael Hagiwara) is a blind swordsman, but still Shredder's loyal underling. Here, he was in charge of the Foot Clan in Japan whenever the Shredder was absent, and also mentored Karai. After the death of the Super Shredder, Tatsu came to New York to seize control of the remainder of the Foot Clan from Tiger Claw only to face the Turtles and Karai and be opposed by Tiger Claw. His soul is drained from him by Kavaxas.

Despite being a minor character, Tatsu appears as a boss in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Hyperstone Heist.

Tokka and Rahzar

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Tokka and Rahzar are a mutant alligator snapping turtle and gray wolf employed by Shredder and enemies of the Ninja Turtles.

Tokka and Rahzar first appear in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze with Tokka face-performed by Rick Lyon, in-suit performed by Kurt Bryant, and voiced by Frank Welker while Rahzar is face-performed by Gord Robertson, in-suit performed by Mark Ginther, and also voiced by Frank Welker. As a snapping turtle and gray wolf abducted from the Bronx Zoo by the Foot Clan, Tokka and Rahzar were mutated into more intelligent humanoid forms by kidnapped TCRI professor Jordan Perry under Shredder's orders, but during the process, Perry secretly altered the mutagen with the DNA of human infants. This eventually gave the duo childish personalities, thus humiliating Shredder by thinking the word "master" meant "mama". However, Perry had sympathy for them and showed Shredder their full obedience, thus convincing to keep them around. The duo even proved to be more than a match for the Ninja Turtles. After failing to stop them from rescuing Perry, Shredder had them cause destruction to an old neighborhood. The next day, Shredder had the Foot encounter April and have her deliver the Turtles a message telling them to meet the Foot Clan at a construction site near the docks or else Tokka and Rahzar will be sent out again. This time, they will be sent into Central Park. The Turtles note that Tokka and Rahzar won't avoid any people there. Perry had prepared a retro-mutagen for the Turtles to use, which retro-mutated both Tokka and Rahzar after a brief battle during a Vanilla Ice concert. The fate that followed the duo's retro-mutation remained unknown, but it's most likely that they could've been carted back to the zoo.

In the 1987 animated series, Tokka (voiced by Rob Paulsen) and Rahzar (voiced by Townsend Coleman) were out-of-control alligator snapping turtle and gray wolf zoo exhibits mutated into their current mutant forms when Shredder infected their habitats. Following their first encounter with the Ninja Turtles at the Crystal Palace Mall, Tokka was captured by a mutant hunter and taken to Dirk Savage, leaving Rahzar to report back to Shredder. Rahzar made a big deal with Tokka's capture and went to fight Dirk alone, yet it was unclear of whether or not the duo was reunited following the rescue mission.

In the series finale of the 2003 animated series titled "Turtles Forever", two Cyber Foot members are mutated into the 2003 incarnations of the characters and play a brief role as members of the Mutant Foot Soldiers.

In the 2012 animated series, Tokka (vocal effects provided by different sound effects) and Rahzar (voiced by Clancy Brown) are given drastically different origins. As a result, they were never seen together in this series.

Rahzar is introduced first as Chris Bradford, a celebrity martial arts star who is a prized pupil of Shredder, owning chain of dojos across the country with their ninjutsu classes used for the purpose of recruiting Foot Ninjas. When Shredder learned of Splinter's presence in New York, he sent by Bradford to find and kill both him and the Ninja Turtles, first tricking Michelangelo into a faux friendship on a social media website. Bradford revealed his deception when he had Michelangelo captured, sparking a bitter hatred from him. However, after he failed to trick the Turtles into leading him and the Foot to Splinter and numerous repeated failures, Shredder became enraged at his incompetence. During a fight with the Turtles, Bradford and Xever were doused with mutagen, and as a result of being earlier bitten in the knuckles by Shredder's pet akita, Hatchiko, Bradford mutated into an 8 ft. humanoid mutant akita with a spiked back, a large left arm, heightened senses and superhuman strength simply dubbed Dogpound. However, he hated his larger, clumsier form. Dogpound was later mutated into a near-skeletal werewolf-like version of his previous form with more agility, which he found more acceptable. Being given the new name Rahzar by Michelangelo, he continued to serve the Shredder until his death at the hands of Leatherhead towards the end of the fourth season. Rahzar was resurrected by the demon Kavaxas in the fifth season, only to be revealed to be serving as Kavaxas's puppet. Rahzar fell into the Netherworld during Kavaxas's attack on the mortal realm, never to return.
Tokka, on the other hand, is introduced as Tokka Picasso, a monstrous female turtle-like alien assigned by the Utroms to guard the final piece of the Black Hole Generator. In her first appearance, she attempts to recover the Black Hole Generator piece from when Lord Dregg was able to steal it. However, the piece was seemingly destroyed by the explosion of a dwarf star triggered by the Triceratons, though Tokka's son Chompy survived and remained with the Turtles. Tokka subsequently was revealed to have survived the ordeal and ventured to Earth to collect her son but decided to allow him to stay with Raphael after realizing he was in good hands with him. Tokka departed Earth, though Raphael conceded that one-day Chompy would have to return to the stars with his mother.

In the comic series published by IDW, Tokka and Rahzar appear as two of Old Hob's mutant creations. He was to sell them as "recruits" to Karai and the Foot Clan.[13]

Chrome Dome

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Chrome Dome is a robotic member of the Foot Clan.

Chrome Dome first appeared in the 1987 animated series voiced by Peter Renaday. His first appearance in the show was in the two-part episode “ Planet of the Turtleoids,” in which he is built by Shredder to supervise the Foot Soldiers in the construction of the Technodrome Mark-II. He was destroyed by the Turtles by disabling a main chip on his back. He returned in another episode "Night of the Rogues" with several other villains as one of Shredder's Rogues. He was defeated when Casey Jones crushed him in hydraulic press.

A series of Chrome Dome robots appear in the 2012 series voiced by Nolan North. They are modeled after Chris Bradford's dark ninja outfit.

Foot Elites

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The Foot Elites are the elite squads of the Shredder in the Mirage and IDW comics. The Foot Elite also appears in the 2003 animated series.

Foot Mystics

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The Foot Mystics are Foot Ninjas that mastered the art of magic. They first appeared in the 2003 animated series and later in the Mirage series. In the 2012 animated series, Karai's friend Shinigami is a Foot Mystic.

Koya

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Koya is a mutant brown falcon who only appears in the IDW comics.

In the IDW comics, Koya was Shredder's pet, and used for reconnaissance. Following the "City Fall" storyline in the IDW Comics, Koya later mutated into a humanoid form. At first a fierce antagonist of the Turtles, she develops respect for them when, during a mission in New York, she and her team led by Karai are forced to crash-land in Mutant Town and are nursed back to health by the Turtles.

Bludgeon

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Bludgeon is a mutant hammerhead shark who appeared in the IDW comic "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" issue 37. He was created by the Shredder and used alongside Koya as his personal mutant strike team. After Bludgeon is permanently blinded by Donatello/Metalhead during the Vengeance storyline, he finds enlightenment and turns from assassin to self taught mystic, even to the point of training Venus.

Shredder Clones

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The Shredder Clones are the Clones of the Shredder. They consist of:

  • Claw Shredder – A clone of Shredder with crustacean-like claws.
  • Mini-Shredder – A small clone with a wrist blade on each arm.
  • Shiva Shredder – A hulking brute with four arms.

The Shredder Clones first appeared in the Mirage Comics. Shredder claims that they were created through a combination of ancient magic, modern science, and a Paramecia Coloniex (a species of colony worms created by the Foot Clan) where they turned the remains of someone into a replica of said person while claiming that the Paramecia Coloniex fed on Oroku Saki's charred remains

The Shredder Clones appear in the 2003 animated series. They were referred to as Mutant Shredder Clones where they were kept in liquid vats within the Foot Clan's headquarters. They resembled the Shredder more where the Claw Shredder was less crustacean-like. The Turtles and Splinter fought them where the Claw Shredder was emerging from the rubble and the Mini-Shredder and Shiva Shredder were last seen on top of a falling elevator. Their fates after that were unknown.

The Shredder Clones appear in the 2012 series, voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson. They were referred to as the Shredder Mutants where they were created by Baxter Stockman through a combination of Shredder's DNA and different crustaceans. They are first seen in "Return to New York" where they served as the guards to Stockman-Fly's laboratory. The Turtles fought them and Stockman-Fly during a mission to rescue Splinter. Once Splinter regained his mind, he defeated the Shredder Mutants by knocking them towards the fan beneath the mutation device. In "Attack of the Mega Shredder", Leonardo and Michelangelo sneak into Stockman-Fly's lab to obtain some Brain Worms and are caught by Rocksteady, Bebop, and the Shredder Mutants. When Rocksteady and Bebop planned to mutate the Turtles, Leonardo states that they should mutate more animals. This causes Rocksteady and Bebop to dump the Shredder Mutants into the mutagen vat which fused them into a gigantic blob-like super-mutant dubbed Mega-Shredder as it goes on a rampage in New York. When the Mega-Shredder's young Oroku Saki-like tongue was cut off by the Turtles due to it serving as the brain, the Mega-Shredder dies.

Krang

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Krang is an alien warlord that comes from Dimension X in several incarnations of the series. The 1987 animated series featured him as disembodied brain, others as a rogue Utrom, such as the TMNT comic strips and the IDW comics.

In the 2012 series, Krang is referred to as Kraang Prime, and is the leader of a rogue hive mind faction of Utroms known as "the Kraang".

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, a woman named Cynthia Utrom is in charge of TCRI. Her surname and connection with Shredder (which is implied in the post credits scene) suggest that she may be revealed to be Krang in the future sequel.

Rock Soldiers

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The Rock Soldiers (sometimes called Stone Warriors) are sentient humanoids that are made from rocks.

In the 1987 cartoon, the Rock Soldiers work for Krang and come from Dimension X. It was revealed in "Michelangelo's Birthday" that they were made when Mutagen fell on some rocks. Different voice actors voiced the generic Rock Soldiers: Rob Paulsen and Peter Renaday.

The Archie Comics version of the Rock Soldiers are the same. It also features the exclusive Rock Soldier Morg.

In the IDW comics, the Rock Soldiers were created by General Krang.

In the 2012 cartoon, the Rock Soldiers work for the Kraang.

General Traag

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General Traag is the leader of Krang's loyal Rock Soldiers from Dimension X.

In the 1987 cartoon, Traag (voiced by Peter Renaday) came following the Neutrinos through the dimensional portal. After a small skirmish with the turtles, the Neutrinos teamed up with them and Michelangelo and Donatello sent both Traag and Granitor back through the portal and to their own dimension. Traag would make further appearances in the series until the eight season finale "Turtle Trek". As "Turtle Trek" ended with the Technodrome stranded in Dimension X, it can be assumed Tragg is still in Dimension X somewhere.

He appeared in Archie Comics, the arcade game, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Back from the Sewers.

In the IDW comics, he is called "Captain Tragg" and helped Krang in trying to conquer the home planet of the Neutrinos and completely escaped after the battle in which the END rocket from Professor Honeycutt put all of the weapons of Krang's forces out of action.

In the 2012 cartoon, Traag is a 20 ft lava-spewing rock monster with regenerating abilities, who is in service to the Kraang. He first appeared in "TCRI," where he was brought by the Kraang through a portal that connected TCRI to Dimension X. He proved to be a challenge to the Turtles, so Leatherhead ended up dragging him through the portal back to Dimension X. In "Showdown", Traag was seen guarding the portal when the Kraang upgraded it with a force field. When the Turtles tried to destroy it, they drew the attention of him and the Kraang, so Leonardo used the laser to disintegrate Traag. In "Into Dimension X", Traag teamed up with Granitor to attack the Turtles near the Kraang's facility in Dimension X. However, they were both defeated by Michelangelo in his "savage" suit when he used his voice to break apart the part of the cliff both rock monsters were on. Traag and Granitor alongside smaller Rock Soldiers were later summoned by the '80s Shredder and the '80s Kraang to attack New York where they fought the Ninja Turtles and the Mighty Mutanimals. With help from the local Rocksteady and Bebop, the Ninja Turtles sent the Rock Soldiers back to Dimension X and defeated the '80s Shredder and the '80s Krang.

Sergeant Granitor

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Sergeant Granitor is General Traag's right-hand man and one of Krang's loyal Rock Soldiers from Dimension X.

In the 1987 cartoon, Granitor (voiced by Pat Fraley) came to Earth following the Neutrinos through the dimensional portal, originally appearing inside the Technodrome. After a small skirmish with the turtles, where the turtles destroyed the rock warrior's weather-making machine, the Neutrinos teamed up with them and Michelangelo and Donatello sent both Granitor and General Tragg back through the portal and to Dimension X.

He appeared in the arcade game as the 4th scene's (7th stage) boss, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Back from the Sewers.

In the IDW comics, he is called "Sergeant Granitor" and commanded an assault on a Neutrino resistance bunker, to capture the Fugitoid and bring him back to Krang. Due to Granitor's command, the Neutrino bunker was destroyed and many innocent Neutrinos killed along with Fugitoid's family. Later on he and several other Rock Soldiers was searching the demolished base for Fugitoid. Granitor realized that the Fugitoid was in fact Honeycutt and chased him through a portal to Earth. However, the Fugitoid used his morphing abilities to shapeshift himself into human form and get lost in the crowd.

In the 2012 cartoon, Granitor is a 20 ft blue fire-spewing rock monster with regenerating abilities, who resembles Traag (but is pale-pink in color) and is in service to the Kraang. He first appeared in "Into Dimension X", where he teamed up with Traag to attack the Turtles near the Kraang's facility in Dimension X. However, they were both defeated by Michelangelo in his "savage" suit when he used his voice to break apart the part of the cliff both rock monsters were on. Traag and Granitor alongside smaller Rock Soldiers were later summoned by the '80s Shredder and the '80s Kraang to attack New York where they fought the Ninja Turtles and the Mighty Mutanimals. With help from the local Rocksteady and Bebop, the Ninja Turtles sent the Rock Soldiers back to Dimension X and defeated the '80s Shredder and the '80s Krang.

Baxter Stockman

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Baxter Stockman is a mad scientist and human enemy of the Ninja Turtles, becoming employed by Shredder in most incarnations.

In the Mirage era, after creating the MOUSERS, with April O'Neil as his computer programmer, Stockman used them to commit strange bank robberies by allowing them to dig small tunnels leading into the vaults. April found out and tried to escape through the MOUSER factory elevator, but Stockman sent the elevator (with her still in it) down to the sewer level, where a squadron of MOUSERS were waiting to capture her. The Ninja Turtles saved her and successfully infiltrated the factory, stopping Stockman and leaving him in police custody. However, he escaped some time later and began using technology from DARPA to build a robot body for him to install his own brain into, making him a cyborg. Stockman tried getting revenge on the Turtles, but his new body was electrocuted and seemingly destroyed. Only his glasses remained.

In the 1987 animated series, Stockman (voiced by Pat Fraley) was a misguided Caucasian inventor who tried building his MOUSERS for the Ajax Pest Control company, but was told that it would only run them out of business and was kicked out of the building. Watching the whole scene through security cameras, Shredder approached him, offering an even better job, which Stockman accepted. Shredder had Stockman create a master control device for the MOUSERS so that the Foot Clan could use them to destroy the Ninja Turtles. However, the Turtles destroyed these MOUSERS and found Stockman's name on one of them, thus leading them to confront him and escape in his van (which later became the Turtle Van). Though he was defeated and committed to an asylum, Stockman was later freed by Shredder when Krang withdrew Bebop and Rocksteady to Dimension X. Following various incidents made by the Turtles during his service in the Foot that all ended with him getting abused by Shredder, Stockman was tasked to accompany Bebop and Rocksteady through an unstable portal to Dimension X to meet with Krang. Krang saw no use in his scientific expertise and decided to kill him by tossing him into a mutagen-powered disintegration chamber, which instead mutated Stockman into a mutant housefly due to letting a housefly land on his clothes and get tossed into the unit with him. Krang informed Shredder about what happened to Stockman. Blaming the Turtles and Shredder, Stockman fled Dimension X to take his revenge but was convinced by Shredder that the Turtles alone were responsible for his mutation and took him back to the clan, promising to have him retro-mutated once they have the Turtles pay.

In the 2003 animated series, Stockman runs a wealthy corporation on behalf of the Shredder, but when he begins failing his master due to the intervention of the Turtles, Stockman begins suffering brutal mutilation and torture at the hands of Hun as punishment. At the end of season 1, Stockman makes a play to kill Shredder and the Turtles, but is defeated when his enemies team up. Stockman is forced to rejoin the Shredder only to turn on him again early into Season 2. Stockman joins the New York mafia during the power vacuum after the Shredder's apparent death, but is conscripted once again and is tortured so severely that he is reduced to a brain and an eyeball attached to his spinal cord in a jar. During season 3, Stockman forms an uneasy alliance with Hun who has also been feeling the Shredder's wrath after too many failures, but decides to defect Agent Bishop's Earth Protection Force. In Season 4, Stockman attempts to create a clone body for himself, but the body deteriorates and he subsequently dies after an encounter with the Turtles. However, Bishop resurrects him from the dead, much to his dismay. Stockman remained with Bishop until decades after the end of Season 7, in which he was presumably killed in a lab accident. Stockman survived until the year 2105 when he tried to take revenge on Bishop, who was now the president of Earth. However, he was convinced by the reformed Bishop as well as the Turtles, who had been transported into the future, to stand down and make peace. Bishop promised to help Stockman finally regain a healthy human body.

In the IDW comics, Stockman is the head of the StockGen company that created the Turtles and Splinter, who was tasked by Krang to experiment on mutagen. He would later become the Mayor of New York City.

In the 2012 animated series, Stockman (voiced by Phil LaMarr) was a child prodigy who was constantly bullied growing up. After several encounters with the Turtles, Stockman finds himself forcibly conscripted into the Foot Clan. Despite managing to flee on his own for a time, he is brought back in by Dogpound and threatened with being mutated should he step out of line. Shredder later goes through with mutating him into a fly after deeming his work unsatisfactory, and the mutation destroys much of Stockman's sanity. Stockman has no choice but to swear loyalty to the Foot Clan. Stockman begins receiving more civil treatment from the Shredder as he begins serving full-time as his chief scientist, engineer, and medical officer. In his last appearance during the season 4 finale, the Turtles spare Stockman's life during their assault on the Shredder's compound. Michelangelo uses retro-mutagen on him, turning him back into a human. However, Stockman is furious upon regaining his humanity, insisting he was stronger as a mutant.

In the 2014 film, Baxter Stockman (portrayed by K. Todd Freeman) appears briefly in a scene as one of Eric Sacks' scientists at TCRI. The role was later recast to Tyler Perry in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows.[14] Although a prominent industrialist and a genius who graduated MIT at 15, he is soon revealed to be working with the Foot Clan, using salvaged alien technology to rescue Shredder from jail by teleporting him away during a prison transport. Upon Shredder testing the purple mutagen on Bebop and Rocksteady, he notes that it taps into dormant animal DNA in their system from a point before life on Earth began to evolve in different routes causing them to mutate into a humanoid common warthog and black rhinoceros. When Shredder learns that the component Stockman has is one of three parts to a teleporter that would allow the alien warlord Krang to dispatch his ultimate war machine to Earth, he arranges for Stockman to assemble the other pieces. Once the portal device is complete however, Shredder dismisses Stockman's efforts and has him taken away to the Foot Clan's facility in Tokyo. April's news broadcasts mention that Stockman is currently "missing".

In the 2018 series Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, he is depicted as a young boy named Baxter Stockboy who works at his family's grocery store. He attempts to gain popularity online through the use of his inventions.

Baxter Stockman appears in Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, voiced by Keith Ferguson. Baxter is shown to be a mutant housefly. While he works for the Foot, he often expresses uncertainty about whether he is an employee or a hostage, considering that he has never actually been paid for his efforts. When he is confronted by Robin during the final showdown, Baxter swiftly surrenders as he affirms his uncertainty about his status, prompting Robin to remark that Baxter is a great disappointment. He would later be evacuated when the hideout began to explode.

Stockman appears in the 2023 animated film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, voiced by Giancarlo Esposito.[15] He is a former TCRI scientist who created the mutagen and housed a select few animals, including a housefly. Baxter is killed during a raid, but his mutations escape thanks to the fly, who acts as a separate character named Superfly (voiced by Ice Cube), who plans to construct a superweapon so that he can build a mutant army and enslave humanity for treating him and his family as outcast. He would later mutate into "SuperDuperFly" after being exposed to mutagen that merges him with a giant whale and other animals from the Brooklyn Zoo, where he uses his new form to destroy New York, eventually the Turtles and his turned family, along with humans, manage to defeat Superfly by using anti-mutagen and reduces him to a normal fly, where he is taken custody by Cynthia Utrom.

In the original TMNT arcade game, the Turtles face the human version of Stockman on the third level (The Sewer). He flies around the screen in a flying contraption throwing Mousers to attack the Turtles. When the game was released on the NES, the rematch with Rocksteady and Bebop on the parking garage level was replaced with a second battle with Baxter Stockman in his mutated fly form.

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Fall of the Foot Clan for the Game Boy, Stockman's fly form is fought on the third level (The Highway). He swoops back and forth across the screen and shoots fireballs.

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Back from the Sewers for Game Boy, Stockman is the mid-boss in Stage 5.

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Manhattan Missions, human Stockman can be seen in his lab while you fight Usub Gerstalk.

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time, Stockman once again returns in fly form on the first level (the construction site). He first appears on screen and says, "Terminate the turtles!" He attacks from the air and walks around and shoots at you with an Uzi. First he attacks with his Uzi, but after being damaged enough to lose the Uzi, he pulls out a weapon he used in the original cartoon (which bears similarity to a revolver), which fires 'solid energy' fists and feet to strike at the turtles, snickering whenever he lands a hit with it.

In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Hyperstone Heist for the Mega Drive/Genesis, Stockman appears in human form as the fourth boss. He flies around in a machine while dropping Mousers on the player (much like the first arcade game).

The fly version of Stockman appears in the background of "Scrapyard" stage in the SNES version of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Tournament Fighters.

In addition to cutscenes, he was a boss in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, which was based on the 2003 animated series.

He appeared as a boss in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Battle Nexus for the Game Boy Advance as the penultimate boss bout.

He appeared as a boss in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Arcade Attack.

Although not a boss, Stockman is the prime antagonist for the 2014 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film video game adaptation for the Nintendo 3DS.

In the 2022 beat-'em-up Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge, Baxter Stockman is a mutated fly-human-hybrid mad scientist who assembles and activates Krang to fight against the turtles. He is given the parts of the Krang body by Bebop and Rocksteady and Tempestra, then gains the final piece when the destruction of Metalhead activated its appearance. He is chased down by the Turtles, April, Splinter, and Casey Jones, who fight him and knock him unconscious, though he activates Krang before he can be defeated.

Lord Dregg

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Lord Dregg is an alien warlord from Dimension X who replaced Shredder as the main antagonist in the last two seasons of the 1987 cartoon, voiced by Tony Jay. In his first appearances, he attempted to take over the world, but his plans were constantly foiled by the Turtles. Eventually, he started a smear campaign against them, which turned the citizens of New York against them and in favor of him. This all came to an end in the episode "Doomquest". He is unable to fight the titular villain, and when the Turtles do so, he flees in fear, and the populace finally discover that the Turtles were heroes and Dregg was the villain (after April showed them a tape of his true motives). His last attempt involved using a robotic suit to absorb the powers of several other aliens, and kill the Turtles. His plan failed after Donatello and Michelangelo used Krang's android body to shrink him down and banish him to Dimension X.

A new version of Dregg who's named Vrinigath appeared in the fourth season of the 2012 cartoon, voiced by Peter Stormare. He appears as an insectoid crime lord originating from the Planet Sectoid 1. When the Turtles incur his wrath while they were at a space port on a planet not being in the Federation, Dregg becomes one of their most dangerous enemies. He soon hires the bounty hunter Armaggon to hunt down the Turtles, later joining him in the Cosmic Ocean of Veruna in an effort to destroy the Turtles and claim a piece of the Black Hole Generator entrusted to the Daagon. Having been thwarted in this attempt, Dregg has Armaggon capture the Salamandrian G'Throkka/Sal Commander, and blackmails him and his comrade Mona Lisa/Y'gythgba into helping him capture the Turtles in exchange for sparing their world. However, after betraying them, Dregg is defeated by the Turtles and Salamandrians working together and apparently revealed to be a cyborg insect lifeform. Dregg then tracks the Turtles to Magdomar, home of the last Black Hole Generator fragment, in order to exact revenge for their destruction of his Scorpinoid. After failing to defeat them alone, Dregg contacted the Triceratons, offering to help them locate the generator fragment in exchange for a hefty bounty and the Turtles for his own vengeance. He then struck again, only to be apparently knocked into a sea of lava; however, he then swoops in during the confrontation between the Triceratons, Turtles, and Tokka and succeeds in stealing the fragment. Pursued by a flight-capable Tokka, he offers the Triceratons the fragment in exchange for saving him from her and an even larger bounty than earlier agreed upon. The Triceratons allow him on board their flagship but then jettison him into space. Dregg survived and teamed up with Newtrilizer in a plot to unleash the Vreen on New York City and take over Salamandria. Both of them are defeated by the Turtles, Sal Commander, and Mona Lisa.

Purple Dragons

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Symbol of the Purple Dragons gang.

The Purple Dragons are a street gang that is documented to have connections with the Foot Clan in few incarnations and have clashed with the Ninja Turtles in several series.

They first appeared in the Mirage comics as the toughest gang from the Lower East Side in New York City. They often are led by Hun and have a connection to the Foot Clan, though not always. The leader of the "Black Dragons", apparently cut a deal with Officer Miller, which resulted in Hun being locked up and allowed him to gain control of the Purple Dragons. He then helped the Purple Dragons' one-time-rival Shredder wipe out the group, turning them into the Black Dragons: a gang subservient to the Foot Clan. In their first fight against the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the Purple Dragons found that their guns and knives are useless against their martial arts. The turtles managed to kill most of the members before the police arrive.[16] The Purple Dragons appear again 25 years later in 2009. Decades ago, the gang's leader Hunter Mason (the true identity of Hun) delivered a brutal beating to a teen-aged Casey Jones, one of the Purple Dragons' bitterest enemies, prior to being thrown in jail. After being released from jail, Hun wiped out the Black Dragons, declaring his intentions to rebuild his criminal empire.[17]

In the 1987 series, Bebop and Rocksteady are part of a street gang that works for Shredder. This gang is possibly based on the Purple Dragons.

In the IDW comics, the Purple Dragons are led by Angel Bridge. Unlike the other incarnations, the Purple Dragons are a "community watch"[18] where they do not like mutants or ninjas from the Foot Clan causing trouble on their turf. Angel's father Brooklyn S. Bridge and Arnold Jones (who is the identity of Hun in this continuity) had formerly used the Purple Dragons where their activities made the streets of Brooklyn unsafe. The leadership of the Purple Dragons was wrested from Angel by force by a resurrected Hun. As a result, the Purple Dragons reverted to their former existence as a violent street gang.

In the 2003 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles TV series, the Purple Dragons are led by Hun and have connections with the Foot Clan. Following the Shredder's exile from Earth by the Utroms and the discovery that Shredder was an Utrom named Ch'rell, Hun began to strengthen the Purple Dragons, developing them from just a street gang to a country-wide organized crime syndicate. They began to steal illegal goods (particularly high tech Triceratons and Federation weaponry from the government), but accidentally brought a mutant called Finn. Hun also broke his previous connection with the Foot Clan to spread their influence in the city. The Purple Dragons were among those who helped the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles fight the Tengu Shredder's forces.

In the 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series, the Purple Dragons are a Chinese American gang who have connections with the Foot Clan.

In the 2018 Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series, the Purple Dragons are a trio of snobby, tech club students at April's high school who use their skills for criminal acts. They are rivals with the Turtles, especially Donatello from how they both use technology.

Hun

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Hunter "Hun" Mason is the leader of the Purple Dragons featured in the 2003 animated series.[19]

Hun (voiced by Greg Carey) was an exceptionally large, muscular Caucasian with blonde hair that he wore in a ponytail and Purple Dragon and Foot tattoos on his arms.[19] Having served as a lieutenant to the Shredder and the leader of the Purple Dragons for years, he served as a recurring foe of the Turtles and a personal nemesis for Casey Jones, having set fire to a store owned by Casey's father and killing him. In the show's finale, Turtles Forever, he is turned into a hulking turtle mutant after being exposed to mutagen imported by the dimension-stranded 1987-Turtles.

Hun was subsequently included into the Mirage comic line, where he is also portrayed as a rising crime boss and the murderer of Casey's father.

In the IDW comics, Hun is the former alias of Casey's father, Arnold Jones, who in his youth was a member of the Purple Dragons, until a girl he met brought him back to an honest life. However, following her death, and lured by the lust of power, he reverts and joins the Shredder's syndicate, but still cares for Casey. In the end, Hun sacrifices his life for Casey to save him from Agent Bishop.

The teenager version of Hun known as Young Hun appeared in two episodes which were Meet Casey Jones and Dragons Rising, both in flashbacks of Casey Jones when he was just a kid. He also appeared in TMNT Mutant Melee as a hidden character.

In the 2012 animated series, Hun (voiced by Eric Bauza) is the new Chinese leader of the often-defeated Purple Dragons bearing a resemblance to Bruce Lee and possessing considerable martial arts skill.[19]

Rat King

[edit]

The Rat King is a more enigmatic enemy of the Ninja Turtles, with an apparent telepathic influence over rats. He is one of the only villains from the Mirage comics to reappear in the 1987 series, and he later appears in the 2003 and 2012 series.

The Pantheon

[edit]

The Pantheon is a group of demigods from the Mirage comics, first introduced in the Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles issue Vol.2 #35. They are beings dedicated to the welfare of Earth's animals. The Rat King was counted among their number, but was later expelled after he abused his power to bring Splinter under his control.

The Pantheon also appears in the IDW comics, this time as a group of immortals who have interfered with humanity's development in the ancient past. Some of them, scheming as ever, even try to do so again in the present, bringing them into conflict with the Turtles. Members of this incarnation include:

  • The Dragon and The Dreamer, children of Brahma and parents of the Pantheon.
  • Kitsune, the youngest of the Pantheon, who wishes to bring The Dragon back to Earth, but abandons the plan after she falls in love with the Shredder, and Splinter and the Shredder succeed in killing The Dragon in the City at War storyline.
  • Aka, the oldest and wisest of the Pantheon, and the most benevolent of her siblings.
  • Manmoth, master of survival. This character originally appeared in the Archie Comics.
  • Gothano, a Lovecraft-esque ocean dweller and keeper of knowledge.
  • Chi-You, the template for the Chinese war god of the same name.
  • Rat King
  • Toad Baron, a hedonist and passionate party host in his pocket dimension, the Den of Delights.
  • Jagwar, a female version of the character from the Archie Comics' Mighty Mutanimals.

The Pantheon also makes an appearance in IDW's Saturday Morning Adventures spinoff as an intergalactic crime syndicate. Its membership consists of:

  • Old Hob
  • Aka and Manmoth
  • Golgotha, an alternative version of Gothano (see above)
  • Drako, a dragon who originally appeared in the 2003 cartoon series.
  • the Rat Queen
  • Scratch, originally a character from the 1987 action figure toyline

Agent Bishop

[edit]

Agent John Bishop – was introduced in the 2003 series, leader of the Earth Protection Force, a group dedicated to protecting Earth from extraterrestrial attack, in the 2003 animated series, voiced by David Zen Mansley.

Originally a soldier in the Civil War, he was abducted by aliens, which embittered him towards extraterrestrials and led him to start the EPF (short for Earth Protection Force). Through unknown means-possibly the use of clones of himself created using alien technology-Bishop survived into modern times, and first came into conflict with the turtles when the D'Hoonib Federation and the Triceraton Republic brought their war to Earth. Having forged an alliance with the Federation, Bishop helped them secure the Fugitoid Professor Honeycutt in exchange for having the Turtles to examine. Bishop had previously captured and experimented upon the Turtles' friend Leatherhead, who had previously been thought deceased, and in examining him and the Turtles found their genetic mutations to hold great promise for his never-ending war with aliens. The Turtles and Leatherhead managed to escape his clutches and fought him, but Bishop's abilities proved impressive enough to enable his escape as well. Bishop would clash with the Turtles several times, notably kidnapping Shredder's adopted daughter Karai and Master Splinter, whose mutated rodent DNA proved to be the missing piece Bishop needed to finish his Slayer Project. The Slayers, genetically enhanced clones of Bishop himself, were intended to infiltrate the human populace and weed out aliens in disguise, with little regard for any innocents who might be innocently claimed. However, the Turtles managed to destroy the Slayer project, with the only remaining specimen going renegade and reemerging as the Rat King, with Bishop being impaled by a hook used by Splinter. The Turtles would engage a returning Bishop on a number of future occasions, notably as a result of a faked alien invasion leading to him saving the President and the resulting genetic mutations that swept across New York. Eventually, Bishop would recruit Baxter Stockman to aid him and became a begrudging ally to the Turtles against the new Tengu Shredder.

A future version known as President Bishop appears in TMNT: Fast Forward. As head of the Pan-Galactic Alliance, he maintains as a friendly pro-alien liaison to the Turtles in the future after flashbacks reveal an alien prisoner saved his life 50 years in the past.

Agent John Bishop was introduced as simply John a character in Mirage Comics who appears in Tales of TMNT Vol 2 #61 as a cameo connected to Razorback.

An alternate version of Bishop, an Utrom, was introduced in the 2012 television series; this one appears as an ally rather than an enemy of the Turtles and battled the Kraang. He was voiced by Nolan North.[20]

An IDW version of John Bishop exists, as the son of Wayne Bishop, founder of the EPF.[21] Wayne infused his infant son, a sickly preemie, with alien DNA obtained from the Roswell incident to save him from an early death, but thereby turned him into a disfigured mutant who requires a robotic exobody to appear human.[22]

A reimagined, female incarnation of Bishop named Dr. Josefina Bishop appears in the 2024 animated series, Tales of the TMNT, set in the continuity of the previous year's TMNT: Mutant Mayhem. She is a brilliant inventor who is later recruited into the Earth Protection Force.

Go Komodo

[edit]

Go Komodo appears in volume 3 of the original comics, published by Image Comics. He's a powerful Japanese businessman with properties in New York who surrounds himself with the trappings of a feudal Japanese daimyo. He secretly has a curse that causes him to transform into a large Komodo dragon, and seeks the Turtles and Splinter to learn the secrets of the mutagen in their blood to gain control of the condition. To that end he hires cyborgs to assault the TMNT, setting into motion the events of the series.

King Komodo

[edit]

King Komodo is a mutant Komodo dragon who was part of Go Komodo's menagerie before being accidentally mutated. He winds up biting off Leonardo's hand (which later grew back). He winds up turning on Go Komodo, killing him and taking his identity when he realizes he can transform into an identical appearance. He leaves to take over Go Komodo's Japanese operations on friendly terms with the turtles.

Groundchuck and Dirtbag

[edit]

Groundchuck and Dirtbag are a mutant cattle and a mutant mole.

Groundchuck and Dirtbag first appeared in "Planet of the Turtleloids" Pt. 1 voiced by Robert Ridgely and Pat Fraley. Shredder and Krang originally planned to mutate a lion and a gorilla at a zoo to be their latest henchmen Due to the Turtleloid Kerma leading the two animals away while Shredder and Krang were getting the Mutagen dispenser prepared, a cattle and a mole were accidentally released by Bebop and Rocksteady and were mutated instead. Groundchuck was given high-tech armor and a crossbow while Dirtbag received road worker clothes and a high tech shovel as a weapon. They would later be transported to Shell-Ri-La by Kerma where they acted on their own and briefly sided with the two-headed dragon Herman the Horrible (who was actually a robot piloted by the Turtleloids Bork and Dwork). When the villains were defeated, Groundchuck, Dirtbag, and the rogue Turtleloids were locked up. In "Escape from the Planet of the Turtleloids, Groundchuck and Dirtbag escape from prison where they allied with the cyborg space pirate Captain Dredd. All three were defeated by the Turtles and Kerma.

In the IDW Publishing series, two characters loosely based on Groundchuck and Dirtbag named Chuck and D.B appear. While Chuck was a mutant cattle with a missing eye, a metal right horn, a bandaged right leg with a knee pad on it, and grafts, metal plating, and screws on him, D.B. was a mutant naked mole rat with bolts on his back and a skin graft on his right leg and right foot. They are among the humans that were mutated by Old Hob's bomb. Chuck and Dirty went to go work with Jasper Barlow where they became his assistants.

Antrax

[edit]

Antrax is an ant villain.

In the 1987 TV series, Antrax appears in the episode "Night of the Rogues" where he is voiced by Pat Fraley. He is among the villains that Shredder assembled to attack the Turtles. His toyline bio states that Antrax is Krang's executioner from Dimension X.

In the 2012 TV series, Antrax is a mutant ant that was created by Baxter Stockman. Its abdomen can produce clones of itself.

Scumbug

[edit]

Scumbug is an insect villain.

In the 1987 series, Scumbug appears in the episode "Night of the Rogues" where he is voiced by Barry Gordon. He is among the villains that Shredder assembled to attack the Turtles. His Toyline bio states that Scumbug was formerly an exterminator that was hired by Shredder and Krang to fumigate the Technodrome that was suffering from a cockroach infestation until he came into contact with some mutagen and one of the cockroaches.

In the 2012 series, Scumbug is voiced by Ted Biaselli. He is an unnamed stuck-up businessman who Baxter Stockman kidnapped and mutated into a stag beetle/spider mutant.

A female version of Scumbug in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, with her vocal effects provided by a blend of Alex Hirsch and some uncredited voice actors. Despite the advertisements identifying the character as "himself", the film, as well as the filmmakers, clearly identify her as female.[23] Scumbug is depicted as a mutant cockroach and the only one who does not speak. She can only speak in "vermin" that Splinter can understand. By the end of the movie, the two of them become a couple much to the Turtles' disgust.

Savanti Romero

[edit]

Savanti Romero is a former servant of Lord Simultaneous and an enemy of Renet. He appears in the Mirage and IDW Comics.

In the 2003 animated series, Romero is voiced by David Zen Mansley. He retains his Mirage backstory of being a transformed treacherous apprentice of Lord Simultaneous, and is first shown trying to capture the Time Scepter in Earth's Middle Ages. When foiled by the Turtles and Renet, Lord Simultaneous banished him further back in time to Earth's Cretaceous Period. Romero would serve as the main antagonist of the "Return of Savanti" two-parter in which he tries to avert the asteroid impact that would wipe out the dinosaurs, seeking to rule the Earth in a world where humanity never evolves. The Turtles and Renet once again defeated him, and this time Romero perished for good.

In the 2012 series, Romero is voiced by Graham McTavish and is much more comedic than his 2003 counterpart. As with his previous incarnations, he is defeated by the Turtles and Renet in Earth's Middle Ages and banished to the Cretaceous Period. However, he makes his way back to the present and begins traveling through time to build an army of monsters, bringing in the likes of Count Dracula, a mummy, a werewolf, and Frankenstein's monster. Romero enters a power struggle with Dracula who commands most of their forces, and agrees to an equal partnership with him. However, Dracula is killed during the final battle with the Turtles and Romero is returned to the Cretaceous Period, this time being killed by a dinosaur for good.

Null

[edit]

Null is a male human/demon who appears as an antagonist in the Archie Comics. In the IDW comics, Null is female and a denizen of Dimension Z.

Maligna

[edit]

Maligna is the mother and queen of the Malignoids she appears as one of the antagonists of the Archie comics and later appears in the IDW comics.

Adversary

[edit]

Adversary was a demon from the Mirage Comics.

Armaggon

[edit]

Armaggon is a great white shark-like adversary of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

In the Archie Comics, Armaggon is mutant great white shark who comes from the future.

In the IDW Comics, Armaggon is a megalodon who was accidentally mutated by Donatello when the Turtle travelled through time in an attempt to prevent the very same menace Armaggon would pose. In constant pain from his forced transformation and seeking to prevent it, Armaggon travels through time to destroy the Turtles at their very genesis.

In the 2012 TV series, Armaggon is voiced by Ron Perlman. He is an alien great white shark wearing shark-shaped armor that he uses to travel in outer space. He is a bounty hunter and an assassin who is wanted 87 star systems in the galaxy. Lord Dregg enlists him to hunt down the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Bellybomb

[edit]

Bellybomb is an alien outlaw with one eyestalk and a mouth on his stomach.

In the Archie Comics, Bellybomb was sentenced to 17 life sentences on the toxic waste dump Morbus for extortion, armed robbery, man eating, brain poaching, soul thievery, and impersonating a deity named Bob. After Slash kills the guards on Morbus, Krang and Bellybomb escape with him. Upon the ship landing on an Eden World where Rocksteady and Bebop were on, the two of them accompanied the villains back to Earth. Once on Earth, Bellybomb grafts Krang to Shredder's body while the Turtles were busy fighting Rocksteady, Bebop, and Slash. After the Turtles freed Shredder from Krang's control, Bellybomb and Krang were sent back to Morbus while Slash escapes.

In the 2012 cartoon, Vrax Belebome (voiced by Charlie Murphy) is a shady information dealer who the Fugitoid and the Ninja Turtles visit at Zayford's Cantina to get intel on the Triceraton mothership. After the Fugitoid's money was reclaimed by the Turtles following his claim of a down payment, Vrax contacted some Neutrino mercenaries to steal the information on the Black Hole Generator from Michelangelo's mind. Following the Neutrino mercenaries' defeat, Vrax was seen contacting Lord Dregg about the Neutrinos' mission and cuts him off when the Ninja Turtles return. Michelangelo intimidates Vrax to give them the plans for the Triceraton mothership which Vrax does.

Scale Tail

[edit]

Scale Tail is a cobra-like alien bounty hunter with snake-headed hands who first appeared in the 1993 video game Radical Rescue.

In the 1992 toyline, Scale Tale is mentioned to be an ally of Krang.

Darius Dun

[edit]

Darius Dun is one of the main villains of Fast Forward in the 2003 animated series and later a minor villain in the IDW comics.

In the "Fast Forward" series, Darius Dunn is the uncle, legal guardian, and only relative of Cody Jones who works as the CEO of O'Neil Tech following the death of his parents. He also contracted the Kanabo warlord Sh'Okanabo to create for him the Dark Turtles who are made from the DNA of the Ninja Turtles and the Kanabo.

In the IDW comics, Darius Dun is the financier and benefactor of the Street Phantoms.

Street Phantoms

[edit]

The Street Phantoms are a hi-tech group of criminals who appear in the Fast Forward series and later in the IDW comics.

In the IDW comics, the Street Phantoms work as the enforcers of Darius Dun.

Jammerhead

[edit]

Jammerhead is the leader of the Street Phantoms in the 2003 animated series and as Jammer in the IDW comics.

Other major characters

[edit]

Irma Langenstein

[edit]

April O'Neil's friend and ally to the Ninja Turtles and introduced in the 1987 series as April's Channel Six co-worker voiced by Jennifer Darling. She also appears in the archive and idw comics.

In the 2012 animated series, she is actually the android body of Kraang Subprime posing as a teenage girl to gain April's trust and infiltrate the Turtles' lair, the body was also used by a member of the Utrom High Council, Rook, who reveals that Subprime had stolen her creation. Irma was voiced by Kate Micucci.[24]

Venus de Milo

[edit]

Venus de Milo was introduced as the first female Ninja Turtle in Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation and was created specifically for that iteration. Unlike the four original Turtles, she wasn't trained in Ninjutsu and rather utilised ancient shamanistic magic and manipulated orbs to fight. She dons an aqua colored bandanna. Within the continuity of the series when Splinter rescued the Turtles, he accidentally left Venus behind. She made her way to Chinatown and was found and raised as a daughter by a Shinobi magician who named her Mei Pieh Chi.[25]

A new version of Venus was released in the IDW Comics continuity with Issue #127 on March 30, 2022.[26] This incarnation is a Frankenstein-like creature with telepathic abilities created by the mad mutant surgeon Doctor Jasper Barlow from the remains of a female Punk Frog named Bonnie.

Jennika

[edit]

Jennika (nicknamed Jenny) is the second female turtle introduced in the franchise after Venus de Milo. She was created for the IDW Comics series. She wears a yellow mask and her weapon of choice are tekko kagi claws. She was initially a human foot clan member. After being defeated in an assassination attempt on Splinter, she was put under the tutelage of Leonardo and began to warm up to her new family. After being stabbed by Karai, Jennika was given an emergency blood transfusion from Leonardo. The mutagen and turtle DNA in Leo's blood bonded with Jennika and mutated her into a mutant turtle.[27] Despite her loyalty to the team, due to her near-death experience, Jennika still has unresolved anger issues towards Karai.

Baron Draxum

[edit]

Baron Draxum (nicknamed Barry) is from Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (voiced by John Cena in season one,[28][29] Roger Craig Smith in season two). As the self-proclaimed protector of all Yōkai, Draxum seeks to mutate humanity to avert a prophecy predicting their destruction.[30]

Races

[edit]

Neutrinos

[edit]

The Neutrinos are extra-dimensional beings from Dimension X. They first appeared in the 1987 animated series as a group of elf like aliens, a trait which is carried over to the Archie and IDW comics. The notable members were Dask, Kala, Zak, Princess Trib, King Zenter and Queen Gizzla.

A group of Neutrinos appear in the 2012 series but re-worked as microscopic antagonists and with a different more bulky, intimidating design.

The Neutrinos appear as cameo characters in the 2022 beat-'em-up Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge.

Triceratons

[edit]

The Triceratons are a race of alien Triceratops governing a wide empire/Triceraton Republic. They are enemies of the Turtles and the Fugitoid. They're featured in the 1987, 2003 and 2012 animated shows.They are also appear in the Mirage, Archie, and IDW comics.

Locations

[edit]

Dimension X

[edit]

Dimension X is a parallel dimension that has various adaptions in each media appearance:

In the 1987 cartoon, Dimension X is the home of several characters, most notably Krang, one of the series' main antagonists. Krang typically uses the Dimensional Portal located inside the Technodrome for transportation between Dimension X and Earth, although other portals and means of travel are occasionally seen. It is depicted as a hostile, war torn galaxy with foreboding landscapes and many fierce monsters. Although it is also home to many peaceful species such as the Neutrinos. Its known locations are Balarophon, Dimension X Penitentiary, the Neutrino Homeworld, and Serot.

In the Archie Comics, Dimension X is a spiral galaxy in which numerous inhabited (or habitable) worlds are located. It was originally governed by theocrats, banishing all warlords.[31] Later, there's a conflict between the Imperial Aerwyl Fleet and the Nova Squadron.[32] Its known location are the Eden Worlds, Hirobyl, Huanu, Morbus, Palmadise, and Stump Asteroid.

In the IDW Comics, Dimension X is depicted as a warzone controlled by Krang where the Utroms, the Triceratons, and the Neutrinos are fighting for their planets.[33] Its known locations are Aerwyl, the Astraea Asteroid Belt, Balaraphon, Morbus, Neutrino, Totus, and Utrominom.

In the 2012 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles TV series, Dimension X is the home dimension of the Kraang and the Utrom. So far, it is known that the pink air of the Kraang's part of Dimension X is nitrogen mixed with sulfur and that it is very foggy. The water of Dimension X has hydrocarbon that can melt anything in the Dimension of Earth. For some reason, the water had no effect on April O'Neil when some of it was accidentally splashed on her (it was later revealed to be because she's a human/Kraang hybrid which also made her immune to the Mutagen's effects). Time moves faster in Dimension X, with Leatherhead spending decades there within the period of a year passing on Earth. Dimension X is also home to the Triceratons and has served as the battleground for a war between them and the Kraang.

Dimension X was featured, unnamed, in the 2016 sequel film to the 2014 film. The filmmakers first expressed interest in featuring the Dimension X in the sequel in 2014.[34] In the film, Shredder is transported from a police convoy to the Technodrome in Dimension X in which he agrees to help Krang conquer Earth. The Technodrome is later transported to Earth in the film's climax, though the Turtles manage to return it to Dimension X. The film never shows the Dimension X's exterior as the only scene taking place there is inside the Technodrome, while it appears off-screen in the climax.

Crossover characters

[edit]

Several characters from other comic book series have crossed-over into the TMNT universes. Notable appearances are listed below:

Batman

[edit]

Cerebus the Aardvark

[edit]

Flaming Carrot

[edit]

Gizmo

[edit]

Knight Watchman

[edit]

Power Rangers

[edit]

Sarah Hill/Horridus

[edit]

Savage Dragon

[edit]

Miyamoto Usagi

[edit]

Miyamoto Usagi is a samurai rabbit and master swordsman from an alternative universe's 16th century Edo period in Japan, where animals are the dominant species, not humans. He appeared in two episodes of the 1987 series. Usagi Yojimbo is a comic book series created by Stan Sakai starring the rōnin hero rabbit, Miyamoto Usagi, which had several crossovers with the TMNT comics; however, the TV show writers did not understand the distinction and misnamed the character after the comic book.

The character returned for the 2003 animated series with his actual name Miyamoto Usagi, and became a friend and close ally of the turtles, especially developing a strong friendship with Leonardo, since both are swordsmen, and during Season 4 he is summoned by Splinter to talk with Leonardo about Leo's new harsher attitude (as a result of the Turtles and Splinter nearly sacrificing themselves against Utrom Shredder at the end of the third season). Leonardo also ended up in Usagi's dimension when Ultimate Draco scattered the five mutants to different parts of the multiverse. In the series finale, he is invited to April and Casey's wedding.

Vanguard

[edit]

Wild West C.O.W.-Boys of Moo Mesa

[edit]

The Wild West C.O.W.-Boys of Moo Mesa are a trio of anthropomorphic cattle that work as cowboys, defending their home of Cowtown from various criminals. The group consists of Marshal Moo Montana, Dakota Dude, and Cowlorado Kid.

In issue #21 of Tales of the TMNT, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles aided the C.O.W.-Boys into stopping the Masked Bull (the criminal alias of Sheriff Terrorbull) from stealing a magic crystal shard.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The ''List of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles characters'' is a comprehensive catalog of fictional figures from the ''Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'' (TMNT) franchise, an American media property originating from a independent series created by artists and . The core narrative centers on four anthropomorphic teenage mutant turtles—Leonardo (the disciplined leader wielding dual katanas), (the hot-tempered brawler using sai), (the inventive tech expert with a bo staff), and (the laid-back jokester armed with )—who were mutated by a radioactive ooze and trained in by their adoptive father, the mutant rat (formerly Hamato Yoshi). Alongside human allies like reporter and vigilante , the turtles combat threats such as the villainous Shredder (Oroku Saki), leader of the , in adventures set primarily in New York City's sewers. Since its debut under , the TMNT franchise has expanded across multiple media, including animated television series (such as the 1987 original, the 2003 series, the 2012 version, ''Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'' from 2018, and ''Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'' from 2024), live-action and animated films (from the 1990 trilogy to the 2023 release ''Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem''), video games, and ongoing comic runs by publishers like IDW. This evolution has introduced a diverse array of supporting characters, villains, and mutants, with variations in designs, backstories, and roles depending on the iteration—such as the Kraang aliens in the 2012 series or the robots in the 2014 film. The list organizes these characters into categories like protagonists, recurring allies (e.g., the Mighty Mutanimals team), and antagonists (including , ), highlighting their appearances and contributions across the franchise's four decades of storytelling.

Overview

Franchise Iterations and Character Evolution

The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT) franchise originated in 1984 with the self-published Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1 by and under , inspired by a parody sketch of Daredevil and classic ninja tropes during a late-night brainstorming session in . The series debuted as a gritty, black-and-white indie comic that sold out its initial print run of approximately 3,000 copies through pre-orders and convention sales, laying the foundation for a multimedia empire centered on four anthropomorphic turtle brothers trained in by their rat mentor, , against the and Shredder. The franchise has spanned numerous iterations across comics, television, films, and video games, adapting to cultural shifts while maintaining core elements. published the original comics from 1984 to 2014, with acquiring rights in 2011 to continue the , blending legacy storylines with new arcs. Key animated adaptations include the 1987–1996 syndicated series by , which popularized the characters globally; the 2003–2009 series by , emphasizing darker tones closer to the comics; the 2012–2017 series; and Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2018–2020), a vibrant . Live-action films encompass the 1990–1993 trilogy, the 2007 CGI film TMNT, the 2014 and 2016 Michael Bay-produced entries, and the 2023 animated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, followed by the 2024 Paramount+ series Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. These versions, alongside video games like the 1989 arcade title and modern titles such as TMNT: Shredder's Revenge (2022), have grossed billions in merchandise and media revenue. Character evolution reflects the franchise's adaptation from mature, violent origins to family-friendly entertainment and back to nuanced portrayals. In the Mirage comics, the Turtles exhibit gritty, anti-hero personalities—Leonardo as a stoic leader, Raphael as hot-tempered, as inventive but brooding, and as laid-back yet capable—contrasting sharply with the 1987 animated series' comedic, pizza-loving versions toned down for younger audiences to align with toy marketing by Playmates. Splinter's backstory varies significantly: a pet mutated from exposure to the same ooze as the Turtles in the original Mirage comics, versus Hamato , a human ninja master transformed into a in the 1987 series and subsequent adaptations like the 1990 films. Reboots have reimagined characters to resonate with contemporary viewers, incorporating diverse representations in allies and villains to address modern social dynamics. For instance, Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Mutant Mayhem emphasize multicultural ensembles, with re-envisioned as a Black teenager in the 2012 series and a more inclusive supporting cast in recent films, while villains like the feature varied ethnicities and motivations beyond stereotypes. This evolution ensures the franchise's longevity by balancing nostalgia with fresh interpretations that promote themes of family, identity, and heroism.

Notation for Media Appearances

This section establishes the standardized abbreviations and notation conventions employed throughout the article to denote character appearances across the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT) franchise's diverse media iterations, promoting clarity and consistency in referencing. These abbreviations correspond to major comic, animated, and film properties, reflecting the franchise's evolution from its origins in independent comics to contemporary and blockbuster films. The primary abbreviations used are as follows:
AbbreviationMedia Description
MirageMirage Comics (original comic series published by , 1984–2014)
19871987 (syndicated TV series produced by , aired 1987–1996)
20032003 (TV series by , aired 2003–2009)
20122012 (CGI series by , aired 2012–2017)
ROTTMNTRise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles ( by , aired 2018–2020)
IDWIDW Publishing comics (ongoing comic series by , started 2011)
MMMutant Mayhem film (2023 animated feature film produced by )
TalesTales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles ( on Paramount+, premiered 2024 as a continuation of ROTTMNT)
Appearances are noted in character entries using concise phrases such as "Appears in Mirage, 1987, IDW," indicating primary media where the character features prominently. For distinctions between roles, major appearances (e.g., recurring or central characters) are listed without qualifiers, while minor or guest roles are annotated with terms like "minor" or "guest" (e.g., "Minor role in 2012"). Variant designs, personalities, or backstories specific to iterations are briefly noted where significant, such as Splinter's rat form in Mirage versus his human Hamato Yoshi origin in 2003. Cross-media adaptations often involve alterations to character origins, designs, or roles to suit different formats, with notations highlighting key differences for context. For instance, is typically depicted as a human criminal mutated into a in comics like and IDW, serving as Shredder's dim-witted enforcer, but in the MM film, he appears as an established in Superfly's gang without a shown human-to-mutant transformation, emphasizing ensemble dynamics over solo villainy. As of November 2025, notations incorporate post-2023 media, including the full first season (12 episodes) of Tales, which aired from August to October 2024 and features episodic adventures building on ROTTMNT's continuity; the upcoming second season, slated for December 2025, will be added upon release.

Core Team

Leonardo

Leonardo is the eldest of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, named after the Renaissance polymath , and serves as the team's disciplined field leader. Originally a pet turtle purchased in alongside his three brothers, he was exposed to a canister of mutagenic ooze from Techno Cosmic Research Institute (T.C.R.I.), transforming him and his siblings into anthropomorphic mutants. Their adoptive father, —a mutated formerly known as Hamato —raised them in the sewers, naming them after great artists and training them rigorously in to prepare for vengeance against the Shredder. Throughout the franchise, Leonardo is portrayed as stoic, honorable, and strategically minded, embodying the principles of with a strong sense of duty that often places the burden of squarely on his shoulders. He maintains order among his brothers, prioritizing cohesion and moral integrity in the face of threats, while his training under hones his focus and patience as a . In combat, Leonardo excels as a tactician, leading charges with precision and selflessness, though his serious demeanor sometimes strains his relationships within the family. Leonardo first appeared in the Mirage Studios comic Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1 in 1984, where he debuted as the leader guiding his brothers against the Shredder, and has since featured prominently in all major iterations of the franchise, including , films, and video games. In the comics, ongoing since 2011, Leonardo grapples with profound leadership burdens, such as moral dilemmas during the City Fall arc and the weight of command amid family betrayals, culminating in recent stories where he temporarily relinquishes his ninja role due to . The 2003 highlights his heroic resolve in a near-sacrifice during the series finale "Exodus," where he and his family detonate the Shredder's escaping Technodrome to thwart global domination, surviving through sheer determination. His signature weapons are dual swords, symbolizing his mastery of and leadership in melee combat, though variations appear across media—such as an odachi katana in Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2018–2020), which generates portals for tactical mobility. Leonardo shares deep brotherly bonds with , , and , often mediating conflicts to preserve unity, while holding profound respect for as both father and mentor. In certain comic runs, particularly and IDW, subtle romantic tension develops with Karai, the Foot Clan's leader, evolving from rivalry to mutual admiration and hints of deeper affection.

Donatello

Donatello is one of the four anthropomorphic turtle brothers in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, distinguished by his purple mask and role as the team's inventive genius. Originally introduced in the Mirage Studios , he was mutated from a pet turtle exposed to a canister of mutagenic ooze in a sewer incident, alongside his brothers Leonardo, , and , under the guidance of their rat sensei . As the intellectual and pacifistic member, Donatello favors strategic problem-solving over direct combat, often serving as the gadgeteer who designs essential technologies like the Turtle Van for transportation and various tech-based defenses for the lair. His analytical personality provides a contrast to his more impulsive siblings, emphasizing brains over brawn in the group's dynamics. Donatello's primary weapon is a bo staff, which he wields with precision in defensive , complemented by his prowess in creating advanced inventions such as the Metalhead robot—a remote-controlled mechanical turtle designed to battle technologically superior foes like the Kraang. In the 2012 Nickelodeon animated series, he stands out for developing portal technology to navigate dimensional threats, showcasing his role as the team's , , and . The IDW Publishing comics further highlight his technological expertise, including work with advanced AI systems integrated into robotic allies like upgraded versions of Metalhead. Donatello appears across all major franchise iterations, from the original series (debuting in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1 in 1984 and featuring in his 1986 micro-series "Kirby and the Warp Crystal") to later adaptations like the Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics. In the Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series and film, uses a high-tech Tech-Bō staff that can telescope, retract, and deploy gadgets like energy blasts for enhanced combat versatility, aligning with his brainiac persona as the group's tech-head. He maintains a close relationship with human ally , frequently collaborating on technological projects that leverage her scientific background, while his tendency to overthink situations often provides amid high-stakes missions.

Raphael

Raphael is one of the four anthropomorphic turtle brothers in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, distinguished by his red mask and role as the team's brawler. Created by and , he wields twin sais as his primary weapons and is often depicted as the physically strongest turtle, relying on brute force and street fighting techniques honed through rigorous training. In various iterations, Raphael is positioned as the second- or third-born brother, sometimes considered the youngest before , though varies across media. His origin mirrors that of his siblings: mutated from pet turtles exposed to radioactive ooze, then raised and trained in by their adoptive father, . Raphael's personality is defined by , , , and , making him the most volatile member of the team. He frequently clashes with Leonardo over leadership decisions, viewing his brother's disciplined approach as overly restrictive, which leads to intense internal conflicts and moments of redemption where Raphael learns to channel his anger for the greater good. Despite his hot-headed nature, he is fiercely protective of his brothers, often acting as their enforcer in battles against threats like the . In the original Mirage Comics micro-series, Raphael's edgier anti-hero traits are highlighted in a solo story where his temper erupts during a sparring session with , prompting him to venture out alone and confront vigilante in a series of brutal fights that evolve into an uneasy . Key appearances showcase Raphael's evolution across franchise iterations. In the 1987 animated series, he provides comic relief through witty, sarcastic one-liners amid the team's adventures, softening his comic book edge for a family-friendly tone. The 2003 animated series portrays him as a sardonic brawler with solo comic tie-ins exploring his impulsive nature and street-level vigilantism, including spin-off stories that delve into his internal struggles. In the 2012 series, voiced by Sean Astin, his rebellious side intensifies as a teen, with romantic tension developing alongside mutant ally Mona Lisa (Y'Gythgba), whom he meets during a mission and bonds with over shared ferocity. The Mutant Mayhem film depicts him as a quintessential teen rebel, tough and outspoken, yearning for acceptance while grappling with his outsider status. In IDW Publishing's ongoing comics, Raphael embarks on solo adventures as an isolated vigilante, such as in arcs where he operates independently from his brothers to combat threats, emphasizing his lone-wolf tendencies and path to self-acceptance. Raphael's weapons and skills emphasize close-quarters combat: his twin sais are used for , blocking, and disarming opponents, complemented by raw physical power and improvised . A notable variant is the "" Raphael from the Playmates toy line and subsequent reproductions like Super7 , blending his brawler style with space-themed futuristic elements. His relationships underscore his protective instincts; he shares a close, banter-filled bond with despite occasional flare-ups, and his romance with in the 2012 series highlights mutual respect forged in battle, evolving from initial wariness to deep affection during interdimensional conflicts. In IDW stories, these dynamics extend to solo exploits where his loyalty drives him to shield his family from afar, often leading to redemption arcs that resolve his rebellious streaks.

Michelangelo

Michelangelo is one of the four anthropomorphic turtle brothers central to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, characterized by his orange bandana and expertise with nunchaku as his primary weapons. Like his siblings, he was mutated from a pet exposed to a radioactive ooze, alongside their adoptive father , in the original 1984 Mirage Studios comic by creators and . He is often depicted as the youngest and most carefree of the group, serving as the team's morale booster through his lighthearted demeanor. Known for his goofy, optimistic personality, Michelangelo frequently uses humor to defuse tense situations among his brothers, embodying the role of the fun-loving "party dude." His obsession with is a recurring trait across various media, symbolizing his laid-back approach to amid the team's high-stakes battles against villains like the . In combat, he excels at improvisation, incorporating skills and creative maneuvers to outmaneuver foes, sometimes utilizing a in select adaptations. Michelangelo appears in all major franchise iterations, from the original Mirage and IDW to and films. He became an icon in the 1987 with his signature "Cowabunga!," which captured his exuberant spirit. In the 2018 Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series, he develops mystic powers, allowing him to create energy chains and portals, adding a layer of creativity to his fighting style. The 2023 film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem portrays him using modern teen slang, emphasizing his social and relatable nature. In terms of relationships, Michelangelo shares a close, banter-filled dynamic with his brother , often trading jokes that highlight their contrasting tempers—Raphael's hot-headedness against Michelangelo's levity. He has shown romantic interests in characters like in early animated media and in the 1987 series, adding youthful flirtation to his persona. These traits consistently position him as the emotional heart of the team, prioritizing fun and camaraderie.

Splinter

Master Splinter serves as the wise mentor, adoptive father, and instructor to the , guiding them through philosophical teachings and combat training while emphasizing discipline and moral balance in their fight against villains like the Shredder. As a , Splinter's character embodies paternal devotion and strategic wisdom, often retreating to the shadows to observe and counsel his students rather than leading battles directly. Splinter's origin varies across TMNT iterations but consistently ties to mutation and ninjutsu heritage. In the original Mirage Comics (1984), he begins as the intelligent pet rat of Japanese ninja master Hamato , who is killed by his rival Oroku Saki (the Shredder); exposure to mutagenic ooze transforms the rat into a humanoid form capable of wielding advanced skills learned by mimicking . He discovers the infant in the sewer, raises them, and trains them in from hiding to avenge 's death. The 1987 alters this, portraying Splinter as Hamato himself—a ninja mutated into a rat after exposure to the same ooze that affects the —allowing him to directly impart his expertise. In Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja (2018), he is Hamato , a former Hollywood action star known as Lou Jitsu, who retires to the sewers after mutation to protect his sons. Splinter's personality is defined by patience, philosophical depth, and a paternal protectiveness that prioritizes honor, inner balance, and emotional control over raw aggression. He teaches the Turtles to temper their instincts with wisdom, often through meditative reflection and stern yet compassionate guidance, evolving from a vengeance-driven figure in early stories to a more serene elder in later adaptations. His combat skills center on mastery of , including expert staff fighting with a wooden cane as his signature weapon, hand-to-hand techniques, and stealth tactics honed from years of training. is a core practice, enabling heightened awareness and spiritual focus that he passes to the Turtles; in variants like the 2012 animated series, he demonstrates enhanced durability and tactical prowess, occasionally adapting to mechanical aids for mobility in intense scenarios. As a , nurtures with unwavering loyalty, viewing them as his sons and imparting life lessons alongside combat skills to prepare them for independence. His backstory includes a tragic romance with Tang Shen, whom he loved deeply before her death at the Shredder's hands, fueling his lifelong enmity with Oroku Saki and the . In the 2023 film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, he is voiced by , portraying a more humorous yet protective variant who hides his advanced abilities to shield his family from the world.

Primary Human Allies

April O'Neil

April O'Neil is a prominent human ally of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles across various iterations of the franchise, frequently portrayed as a courageous reporter for Channel 6 News in who serves as the team's primary connection to the human world. Introduced in the original comics in 1984, she debuted as a 27-year-old computer programmer working as an assistant to the villainous scientist Baxter Stockman, whose Mousers she helps program before fleeing into the sewers and being rescued by the Turtles. In many adaptations, her role evolves from an initial damsel-in-distress archetype to a more empowered figure, reflecting shifts in storytelling emphasis toward female agency. Her personality is consistently depicted as brave, resourceful, and independent, though early portrayals in the 1987 animated series emphasize her vulnerability during frequent kidnappings by Shredder and the , positioning her as a catalyst for Turtle interventions. Modern versions highlight her strength and initiative; for instance, in the 2012 series, the 16-year-old demonstrates abilities inherited from Kraang DNA and trains as a under Splinter's guidance. In the IDW comics, she is shown as a tech-savvy who actively participates in battles alongside the s, training in combat to support their missions. April appears in nearly every major TMNT iteration, often as the Turtles' first human confidante. In the 1990 live-action film, she is a television reporter who uncovers the Turtles' existence after being rescued from the Foot Clan. The 2014 film reimagines her as an investigative journalist whose father, Dr. O'Neil, inadvertently created the mutagen that transformed the Turtles, leading her to reconnect with them as adults. In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem (2023), she is a teenage high school student and aspiring journalist who befriends the young Turtles, helping them navigate the surface world while dealing with mutant prejudice. She also features prominently in Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2018–2020) as a bold, African American teenager and the Turtles' trusted ally in their adventures. Her core skills revolve around , using her reporting career to gather intelligence on threats like the or , which she relays to . In later adaptations, she gains basic fighting abilities, including and weapon handling, after training with or themselves; the 2012 series and IDW comics portray her as proficient with a tessen fan and technologically adept, hacking systems to aid the team. April shares a surrogate sibling-like bond with the Turtles, acting as their moral compass and emotional support while they view her as family. She harbors a mutual crush on vigilante in several versions, including the Mirage comics and IDW series, though their relationship remains secondary to her alliance with the Turtles. Her father's inventions, such as advanced tech in the 2014 film and IDW comics, occasionally provide crucial tools for the team's efforts against villains.

Casey Jones

Casey Jones is a human vigilante and ally to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, created by and as a parody of crime-fighters inspired by excessive exposure to action television shows like . Debuting as the first major human character after , he embodies a hot-headed counterpart to , amplifying the Turtles' aggressive dynamics with his own impulsive . In the original Mirage Comics continuity, Jones works as a blue-collar in a rundown New York apartment building, scraping by day-to-day before channeling his frustrations into street-level crime-fighting. Jones's personality is defined by his short temper, unwavering loyalty to friends, and street-smart resourcefulness, often leading to reckless but effective brawls against urban threats. In the 1987 animated series, he provides through frequent malapropisms and bungled schemes, appearing in select episodes as a bumbling yet enthusiastic partner to . His signature style involves wielding improvised sports gear as weapons, including a for striking and a for heavy hits, all stored in a bag slung over his shoulder; he relies on raw athleticism and honed from everyday scraps. Jones shares occasional patrols with , bonding particularly with over their mutual aggression. Key appearances highlight Jones's evolution across media. He first allies with Raphael against street punks in the 1985 Mirage one-shot Raphael: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle #1. In the 1990 live-action film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, portrayed by Elias Koteas, he plays a major role as a vigilante who joins the Turtles in battling the Foot Clan, discovering their lair and aiding in the final confrontation. Later iterations include a future version, Casey Jones Jr., in Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie (2022), voiced by Haley Joel Osment, who time-travels as Splinter's apprentice to avert an apocalypse caused by the villainous Cassandra Jones. Jones's relationships underscore his personal stakes in the franchise. He shares an on-off romantic partnership with , marked by mutual support amid vigilante life. In IDW Publishing's continuity and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin (2020 miniseries), he fathers Casey Marie Jones with , a headstrong martial artist who continues his legacy in dystopian future arcs.

April's Family

April's family members appear across various iterations of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise as supportive figures who offer emotional grounding, occasional technological assistance, and safe havens for April amid her high-stakes reporting career. Mr. O'Neil, depicted as an inventor and , provides the Turtles with gadgets and prototypes in the 1987 and 2003 series, such as during episodes where family resources aid in rescues or inventions. His name varies as John in the IDW , where he contributes to tech development for the heroes. In the 2012 series, April's father is named Kirby O'Neil, a whose expertise leads to temporary into a bat-like form after exposure to Kraang experiments, highlighting family vulnerabilities in mutant threats. Mrs. O'Neil functions as a supportive homemaker with minor plot involvement in early , where she helps humanize April's through dynamics. She appears briefly in the series as part of April's civilian background, offering occasional shelter or emotional support. In the series, she is shown in portraits alongside Mr. O'Neil and sister , reinforcing themes of normalcy. The series features her in supporting roles at the family farm, which serves as a for the Turtles during retreats. Key appearances of April's family include frequent rescue scenarios in the 1987 series, brief mentions in Mirage comics, and supporting cameos in the 2012 series, where the O'Neil farm provides a secure base. Their roles emphasize providing safe houses and tech prototypes, grounding April's adventures in everyday family life. Variations include brief mutations for family members in select stories, such as Kirby's transformation, though they are absent in modern iterations like Mutant Mayhem.

Mutant and Non-Human Allies

Mighty Mutanimals

The are a team of anthropomorphic animals who ally with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to combat threats like corporate corruption, alien invaders, and environmental hazards in the TMNT franchise. Introduced in the ' series, the group formed in 1991 as mutants transformed through various scientific or mystical means, uniting after aiding the Turtles in battles against the and villains such as Null and Queen Maligna. Their debut storyline in TMNT Adventures #19 (1991) by Ryan Brown and Stephen Murphy established them as a distinct ensemble, leading to a self-titled in 1992 that ran for nine issues before cancellation due to low sales. The core members include Leatherhead, an inventive alligator mutant originally mutated by Dregg's technology; Mondo Gecko, a skateboarding lizard enhanced by cybernetics from a corporate experiment; Ray Fillet (also known as Man Ray), a manta ray musician transformed by toxic waste; Dreadmon, a wolf-dog hybrid rocker created via genetic engineering; Jagwar, a jaguar warrior empowered by ancient Mayan spirits; and the duo of Wingnut, an alien bat pilot, and Screwloose, his mosquito sidekick from Dimension X. These characters, each with unique abilities tied to their animal origins, first appeared individually in TMNT Adventures before coalescing as a team in issues #18–27. Key appearances span multiple media: the Archie series featured them prominently through TMNT Adventures #48–54 in the "Megadeath" arc, where the team disbanded after a catastrophic battle with the , resulting in most members' deaths; they made a brief cameo in Mirage's Tales of the TMNT #58 (2009). The IDW Comics revived the concept in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #35 (2013) by and Tom Waltz, integrating survivors into Old Hob's mutant army before their reformation post-"" storyline, with a focus on protecting Mutant Town. In the 2012 Nickelodeon animated series, they appeared in episodes like "The " as a reformed group combating the Kraang and Shredder, with Slash—a snake mutant created by the Kraang—added as a core member and leader alongside and Mondo Gecko. As a backup team to , the Mutanimals often tackle eco-threats and mutant rights issues, such as pollution-induced mutations or interdimensional incursions, providing support in larger conflicts while pursuing their own quests for acceptance. The group has been disbanded and reformed across continuities, reflecting themes of resilience among outcast mutants; in the 2023 film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem and its spin-off Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, they appear as younger mutants seeking societal integration, allying against Superfly's schemes.

Punk Frogs

The Punk Frogs are a group of amphibian mutants in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, initially introduced as adversaries created by the Shredder but later evolving into reluctant allies of the Turtles. Known for their dim-witted yet enthusiastic demeanor and punk rock-inspired appearance, they often serve as while providing muscle in battles against mutual enemies. Their origin traces back to the 1987 animated series, where four ordinary frogs from the Florida Everglades were exposed to Shredder's , transforming them into humanoid mutants. Shredder, seeking to bolster the , trained the newly created frogs as assassins, indoctrinating them with the belief that the Turtles were villains responsible for their mutation. Equipped with weapons modeled after historical conquerors—reflecting the names he bestowed upon them—the frogs were dispatched to to eliminate the Turtles. However, after a confrontation where the Turtles exposed Shredder's deception, the Punk Frogs escaped his control, went rogue, and began operating independently, occasionally teaming up with the heroes against Shredder's schemes. The team consists of four members: , who wields a mace and embodies brute force; Genghis Frog, armed with an axe and serving as the leader; , skilled with a and known for his strategic (if comically flawed) thinking; and Rasputin the Mad Frog, using a for unpredictable attacks. Their signature aesthetic includes tall mohawks, studded leather vests, chains, and a rebellious slang-heavy speech pattern, setting them apart from ' more disciplined ninja style. The Punk Frogs made their debut in the 1987 "Invasion of the Punk Frogs," where they launch an assault on under Shredder's command before defecting. They appeared in a handful of subsequent episodes in that series, such as "My Brother, the Bad Guy," reinforcing their role as anti-heroes. The characters were revived in the 2012 , debuting in the "The Croaking" with a modified origin involving accidental exposure to dumped in a pond, leading to similar antagonistic encounters that resolve in alliance. In the comics, the Punk Frogs are first referenced in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #110 as a operating in Mutant Town, with their full introduction in issue #125, where they clash with amid survival struggles in Mutant Town. Throughout their portrayals, the Punk Frogs function as villains or anti-heroes, their bungled schemes and good-hearted nature often undermining Shredder's plans and paving the way for cooperative anti-Shredder efforts. In later comic iterations, such as the IDW series, they are depicted as more heroic survivors navigating urban mutant society, with occasional alliances against larger threats.

Individual Mutant Allies

Alopex is a mutant who initially served as an assassin for the under Shredder in the IDW continuity, debuting in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Micro-Series #1: Raphael. After breaking free from mind control and learning about her past, she becomes a key ally to , providing combat support and intelligence during missions against threats like the . Her abilities include enhanced agility, speed, and stealth, making her an effective spy and fighter in solo operations alongside the heroes. Metalhead appears as a robotic duplicate of , first introduced in the 1987 animated series episode "The Making of Metalhead," where it is created by as a but reprogrammed by to aid . In the 2012 series, builds Metalhead as a remote-controlled to assist in battles, evolving into a more autonomous companion with advanced weaponry and reconnaissance capabilities. Though not biologically mutant, its role as a tech-based ally provides tactical support, such as infiltrating enemy bases without risking ' lives. Klunk is Splinter's loyal pet cat in the IDW comics, adopted after the events of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #100, serving as an emotional anchor for the family amid losses. While not explicitly mutated in the main storyline, Klunk's presence offers subtle companionship and occasional aid in lighter moments, highlighting the Turtles' bonds with animal allies. Cudley the Transdimensional Cowlick is a bizarre mutant cow head from the Mirage and Archie continuities, functioning as an intergalactic wrestler and transporter who ferries the Turtles across dimensions in his mouth. Debuting in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures #7, Cudley aids the heroes in cosmic adventures, using his teleportation powers for quick escapes and alliances against extradimensional foes. His unique transport role has made him a recurring solo supporter in tales spanning multiple universes. Ninjara, a from the ancient N'Kai clan in comics, allies with during their encounters with Japanese mysticism in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles vol. 1 #45-50. As a fierce warrior with heightened senses and combat prowess, she provides lone-wolf assistance in battles against threats, emphasizing her independent without formal team ties. Mutagen Man, also known as Seymour Gutz, is a blob-like in the 1987 animated series, created accidentally by exposure and seeking a cure in the episode "Enter: Mutagen Man." Though primarily antagonistic, his interactions with lead to temporary for reversal, offering brief support through his unstable form's destructive potential. Lita begins as a homeless albino girl in the IDW comics, mutated into a by Old Hob's mutagen bomb in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #101, becoming an ally under Jennika's care. Her amphibious traits and resilience aid the Turtles in Mutant Town conflicts, evolving into a time-traveling in future arcs for strategic interventions. Old Hob, a one-eyed cat and in the IDW continuity, starts as the Turtles' first major foe but transitions into an uneasy ally, particularly in arcs like City Fall, where shared goals against greater threats forge reluctant partnerships. His tactical acumen and mutant army provide transport and enforcement support, though his criminal ambitions keep alliances tense.

Superhero and Extradimensional Allies

Justice Force

The is a team in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, serving as allies and occasional mentors to while parodying Silver Age heroes like those in the . The group consists of individuals with exaggerated superpowers, often depicted as aging vigilantes dealing with the consequences of their abilities. They emphasize themes of justice, teamwork, and heroism in a world filled with mutants and villains. The team originated in the Mirage Comics story "Dome Doom" from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Volume 1 #15 (1988), where they are introduced as a real-world group rather than the fictional heroes Michelangelo initially believes them to be. In this debut, the Justice Force unites with the Turtles and to thwart a plot by their former member, Dr. Dome, who has turned to villainy using mind-control technology. This Silver Age-style narrative establishes them as defenders against dome-headed threats and sets the tone for their parodic yet earnest adventures. The story highlights their internal dynamics, including squabbles over leadership and the physical toll of heroism. Key members of the original Justice Force include:
  • Stainless Steel Steve: A metallic-skinned strongman who leads the team with unyielding resolve.
  • Metal Head: A robotic hero with enhanced strength and durability, originally a stock boy transformed by technology.
  • Zippy Lad: A speedster capable of superhuman velocity, later shown using a due to leg strain from overexertion.
  • Joey Lastic: An elastic-powered individual who can stretch and contort his body like rubber.
  • Ananda: A with telepathic and telekinetic abilities, often acting as the team's moral compass.
  • Others: Including Battling Bernice (a deceased fighter), Captain Deadbolt (who can render himself immobile for defense), and the traitorous Dr. Dome (a former member with energy dome powers).
The Justice Force has key appearances in the Mirage Comics, notably in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Volume 1 #15 and Volume 4, where retired members aid Michelangelo against lingering threats. IDW Publishing reprinted these stories in colorized editions, such as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Color Classics Volume 2 #3, preserving their legacy for modern readers. In these tales, the team battles shared villains like Dr. Dome, showcasing their role in providing superhero guidance to the Turtles during crises. In their roles, the Justice Force acts as mentors, offering the Turtles insights into heroic ethics and team coordination while joining forces against common foes. They occasionally reference shared enemies from the broader TMNT mythos, reinforcing alliances across and human lines. Variations across media highlight their parodic elements: the comics portray them seriously as flawed, aging heroes confronting real dangers, whereas the 2003 animated series amplifies the humor with a revamped roster and satirical takes on tropes.

Pantheon and Other Heroes

The Pantheon is a of immortal, divine animal-humanoid beings in the IDW continuity of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles , each wielding influence over a specific animal species and shaping human events from ancient times. These legendary figures serve as occasional allies to the in mystical conflicts, offering ancient knowledge and combat prowess against supernatural threats. Key appearances occur in arcs like "Pantheon Family Reunion," where they convene for centennial gatherings that intersect with the Turtles' battles. Aka, the eldest child of the primordial and de facto leader of the Pantheon, embodies serpentine wisdom and authority, guiding her siblings in their interventions. She first prominently aids during family reunions fraught with internal strife, using her mind-control abilities and strategic insight to counter threats like the . Gothano, the brute-force member resembling a massive , provides raw physical power in epic confrontations, often clashing with foes in brutal, earth-shaking battles. His role emphasizes the Pantheon's role in large-scale mystical warfare, as seen in IDW's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #71. The Toad Baron, an amphibian hedonist with jurisdiction over toads and frogs, operates from his lavish Den of Delights, hosting extravagant feasts that draw in allies and enemies alike. Debuting in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Universe #9, he supports the sporadically, leveraging his indulgent network and minions for intelligence and diversions in supernatural arcs. Collectively, the Pantheon distinguishes itself as non-team legendary allies, intervening in Turtles' quests with god-like detachment yet pivotal aid against cosmic and ancient evils. Among other heroic figures, Al'Falqa is an anthropomorphic warrior from , created by Mirage Studios artist Jim Lawson for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures comics. Tasked with safeguarding the sacred , he allies with the Turtles in issues #35-36, using his aerial agility and companion falcon Talyn to thwart Shredder and Verminator-X's theft attempt. His appearances highlight themes of guardianship and cross-cultural heroism in Mirage's continuity. In the 2003 animated series, the Warrior Dragon—also known as Hothead—serves as a fiery dragon ally from the honorable Inuwashi Gunjin race of winged, eagle-like warriors. Enslaved as an assassin by Darius Dunn, he breaks free after the Turtles rescue Cody Jones, repaying the debt by aiding in rebellions and battles like "The Cosmic Completist," where he commandeers an alien ship to free captives. His fire-breathing and code make him a key supporter in extradimensional conflicts. Tattoo, a sumo wrestler ally in the Mirage/Archie TMNT Adventures comics (issue #32, "The Good, the Bad and the Tattooed"), is depicted as a robust figure adorned with intricate body tattoos, drawing from sumo traditions. He provides brute strength and cultural insight in episodic alliances, assisting the Turtles in urban and mystical skirmishes with his resilient physique.

Utroms and Fugitoid

The Utroms are a species of diminutive, brain-like aliens hailing from Dimension X, characterized by their tentacled forms and reliance on robotic exosuits for mobility and interaction in larger environments. These peaceful scientists established the Techno Cosmic Research Institute (T.C.R.I.) on as a covert front after becoming stranded, where they developed advanced technologies including the mutagenic ooze intended for interdimensional travel but accidentally spilled, causing mutations like those of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. While most Utroms embody benevolence and scientific curiosity, notable exceptions include rogue elements that diverge from their collective moral code. The Fugitoid, real name Professor Zayton Honeycutt, serves as a steadfast robotic ally to , his transplanted into an android body by Utrom engineers following a near-fatal experiment gone wrong in the original continuity. Possessing groundbreaking teleporter technology coveted by intergalactic threats, Honeycutt flees persecution and joins in defending against invasions, providing crucial technological support and embodying themes of unlikely heroism. Utroms first appeared in the Mirage Studios comic Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #2 (1985), where they reveal the origins of the mutagen and their Earth exile, with the Fugitoid debuting earlier in his self-titled one-shot miniseries that same year. The characters recur prominently in the 2003 animated series' "Turtles in Space" arc, aiding the Turtles against Dimension X incursions through advanced weaponry and exile networks. In the 2012 series, the Fugitoid reprises his role as a teleporter expert voiced by David Tennant, collaborating on multiversal threats during season 3. The 2023 film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem introduces Cynthia Utrom as a T.C.R.I. executive overseeing mutagen experiments, hinting at deeper Utrom involvement in human affairs. Throughout various iterations, Utroms offer technological aid to the Turtles and other exiles, often from hidden bases, while standing in moral opposition to rogue counterparts through their commitment to scientific ethics and interdimensional peace. In the 1987 animated series, distinctions emerge between benevolent Utroms and those aligned with antagonistic forces, highlighting internal factional tensions within the species. The Fugitoid consistently acts as a bridge between Utrom ingenuity and Turtle heroism, contributing inventions like portable teleporters to thwart larger-scale invasions.

Antagonists

Foot Clan Hierarchy

The Foot Clan operates as a hierarchical organization rooted in tradition, with absolute loyalty to its leader enforced through rigorous training and ruthless discipline. At the apex is Oroku Saki, known as the Shredder, a master ninja whose armored persona conceals a personal vendetta against Hamato Yoshi (Splinter's human identity), stemming from a clan rivalry in feudal where Saki's brother was killed by Yoshi. This origin, established in the Studios , portrays Saki as a formidable warrior who relocated to to expand the clan's influence, clashing with across virtually all TMNT media, from the original 1984 Mirage issues to modern adaptations. Variations in his character include a superhuman mutation in the 2012 animated series, where exposure enhances his strength and durability, and cybernetic resurrection in the IDW continuity, augmenting his body with mechanical prosthetics after death. Directly beneath Shredder in the chain of command is often Karai, depicted as his adopted daughter in many iterations or his granddaughter in the IDW comics, where she navigates a complex role as both loyal enforcer and occasional ally to the Turtles. In the comics, Karai emerges as a high-ranking operative who briefly assumes leadership after Shredder's demise, showcasing her strategic acumen and moral ambiguity in arcs like "City at War." Her portrayal emphasizes themes of clan duty versus personal honor, evolving from to uneasy collaborator in IDW storylines, where she challenges patriarchal shadows cast by and her father. Across media, Karai's elite status underscores the Foot Clan's internal dynamics of inheritance and betrayal. Elite members form the clan's upper echelons, serving as Shredder's trusted lieutenants and embodying specialized threats. In the 1990 live-action film, acts as Shredder's enforcer and master, training Foot recruits with brutal efficiency and displaying combat prowess in confrontations with and . The 1987 introduces Chrome Dome, a massive robot constructed by Shredder to oversee Foot Soldiers during Technodrome repairs, equipped with lasers, drills, and immense strength to eliminate . The 2003 features the , five demonic entities—each commanding an element (fire, water, earth, wind, metal)—who serve as Shredder's ancient heralds, wielding sorcery to resurrect him and unleash chaos before defecting under Karai's command. In the IDW comics, contemporary elites include Koya, a hawk mutant trained from childhood by Shredder, whose aerial agility and razor-sharp talons make her a lethal scout; she regains flight via a mystical artifact and remains fanatically devoted to the clan. Her partner, Bludgeon—a —provides brute force, using headbutts to shatter stone foes and evolving through meditative discipline despite temporary blindness. Lower-tier like , warped and rhino hybrids, handle menial enforcement but highlight the clan's willingness to employ unstable, mutagen-altered soldiers. These figures collectively drive narratives of unwavering allegiance, often clashing with in battles that test the Foot's code of obedience against individual redemption.

Dimension X Threats

Krang is a prominent in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, depicted as a tyrannical Utrom warlord from Dimension X who inhabits a massive android body to compensate for his naturally gelatinous, tentacled form. Banished from his home dimension, he seeks to conquer using advanced alien technology and forms strategic alliances with Shredder and the to achieve his goals. His character was created for the 1987 animated series by David Wise, drawing inspiration from the Utrom species introduced in the original , and he frequently operates from the Technodrome, a spherical mobile fortress serving as his and invasion base. Supporting 's campaigns are the Rock Soldiers, an army of durable stone-based warriors from Dimension X who form the backbone of his extraterrestrial forces. These bulky, nearly indestructible creatures are led by General Traag, the supreme commander who answers directly to , and his second-in-command, Sergeant Granitor, both distinguished by their rank badges and equipped with blasters for combat. Traag and Granitor often lead invasions on , clashing with the Turtles in efforts to establish 's dominance through brute force and coordinated assaults. Krang's portrayals vary across media, with the 1987 animated series establishing him as an iconic, often comically buffoonish whose schemes rely on gadgetry and the Technodrome's weaponry. In the 2012 series, he appears as Kraang Prime, a more deranged and cerebral overlord who mind-controls other Utroms to form a subservient hive-mind army, emphasizing his role as a tech-savvy bent on terraforming . The IDW Comics present a graver iteration, portraying Krang as a calculating general and son of Emperor Quanin who travels to via an interdimensional portal to terraform Burnow into a new Utrom home using the Technodrome; he later loses his body and possesses other forms while allying with Shredder in a more strategic, less humorous manner.

Independent Villains

Baxter Stockman is a sociopathic scientist and recurring antagonist in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, initially appearing as an independent inventor whose creations target the Turtles for personal gain or revenge. He first developed the Mousers, robotic vermin-hunting machines intended to solve New York's rat problem but repurposed for bank robberies and extortion schemes, which ultimately backfired and destroyed his lab. Recruited by larger threats, Stockman often operates with loose affiliations, betraying allies like the Shredder to pursue his own experiments, such as nanobots injected into victims or robotic exoskeletons for survival after repeated failures. Across adaptations, he undergoes mutations—transforming into a mutant fly in the 1987 after a accident, or reduced to a spider-like form in the 2003 series while running Stocktronics—yet persists as a quirky, vengeful threat driven by intellectual hubris rather than faction loyalty. The stands out as an enigmatic sewer-dwelling villain, a madman who rules over hordes of rats and embodies the franchise's themes of isolation and monstrosity. Originating in Mirage's Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Volume 2, he emerges as a bandaged patient inheriting the title after the previous Rat King's death, using his command over rodents as an army to clash with and the Turtles in the sewers. His powers include control of rats, occasionally extending to temporary mind manipulation over other creatures like turtles following chemical exposures, though he consistently reverts to his core rat dominion. In various incarnations, such as the 1987 series where he is a flute-playing manipulator or the IDW ' supernatural entity, the remains ambiguously motivated—sometimes a pure seeking dominance, other times a neutral force with anti-heroic alliances—always operating independently from major groups like the . Agent serves as a operative turned reluctant ally, hunting as head of the Earth Protection Force (EPF) in a quest to safeguard humanity from extraterrestrial and genetic threats. His backstory traces to 1815 New Orleans, where and experimentation instilled a deep-seated hatred for non-humans, leading him to shoot down a UFO in 1947 Roswell and rise through U.S. intelligence ranks. In the 2003 animated series, debuts during the Triceraton invasion, capturing for dissection to engineer super soldiers, staging fake alien attacks for EPF funding that inadvertently cause outbreaks, and clashing with Shredder's forces while kidnapping key figures like and Karai. Though initially a ruthless independent hunter unbound by criminal syndicates, evolves into an anti-hero by the "" arc in 2105, reforming after an alien rescue to lead the Pan Galactic Alliance in promoting interplanetary peace. Other independent villains add quirky, standalone threats to the Turtles' rogues' gallery, often arising from personal vendettas or accidental mutations. Lord Dregg, an intergalactic warlord and insectoid conqueror, flees defeat in space to repeatedly invade , deploying advanced alien tech and bounty hunters like Armaggon against the Turtles in the 1987 and 2012 series without ties to Dimension X factions. Hun leads the Purple Dragons, a New York street gang transformed into an syndicate in the 2003 series, wielding peak human strength to bench 1,000 pounds while mastering and heavy weapons in solo assaults on the Turtles and rivals like . Groundchuck and Dirtbag, mutant duo from the 1987 series, originate as a and exposed to by Stockman, gaining drill arms and enhanced burrowing abilities for heists like stealing museum rubies, functioning as bumbling independent operatives post-mutation. Savanti Romero, a demonic time sorcerer from Mirage comics, acts as Lord Simultaneous's treacherous apprentice, wielding the Time Scepter to manipulate timelines and battle the Turtles and Renet across eras in pursuits of temporal dominance unbound by earthly alliances.

Recurring Supporting Characters

Human Recurrings

Irma Langinstein serves as O'Neil's coworker and occasional rival at Channel 6 News in the 1987 animated series, providing comic relief through her enthusiastic but clumsy personality and budding friendship with . She appears as a recurring human character across multiple episodes, often entangled in bureaucratic mishaps that hinder the Turtles' missions. In later adaptations, such as the 2012 animated series, her role expands to include alliances with , where she is revealed as a robotic construct designed to infiltrate human society. Renet Tilley is a time-traveling Timestress and apprentice to Lord Simultaneous, debuting in the Mirage Comics' Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #8 as a ditzy yet well-intentioned historian who aids the Turtles in temporal adventures. Her character recurs in the 2003 animated series and IDW comics, where she develops a romantic interest in Michelangelo, contributing temporal aid and human perspective to the group's battles against time-manipulating foes like Savanti Romero. Key appearances in IDW expand her role, emphasizing her growth from impulsive apprentice to reliable ally. Angel, introduced in the 2003 animated series' episode "Fallen Angel," begins as a street-smart teenager from ' neighborhood attempting to join the Purple Dragons gang for a sense of belonging. After the Turtles intervene during her initiation, she abandons the gang and evolves into a recurring ally, offering street-level insights and combat support in subsequent episodes and IDW comics. Her arc highlights themes of redemption and human resilience, appearing prominently in IDW storylines as a fighter alongside the Turtles. Tattoo appears as a massive sumo wrestler ally in the TMNT Adventures #32, his body entirely covered in intricate tattoos that enhance his undefeated fighting prowess. His recurring role involves overcoming personal hurdles, such as rescuing his pet chihuahua Inky, while aiding without transforming into a full form. Hamato , the identity of prior to his mutation, features in brief flashbacks across various TMNT media, depicting his life as a master ninja in , his rivalry with Oroku (Shredder), and his romance with Tang Shen, which establishes the Turtles' adoptive father's tragic backstory and emotional ties to their role. These glimpses, such as in the 2003 ' "Tale of Master " , underscore themes of loss and resilience without altering his core rat-mutant present.

Mutant Recurrings

, also known as Mei Pieh Chi, is a female mutant introduced in the 1997 live-action television series Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation, where she serves as the fifth sibling to the core Teenage Mutant Turtles, separated from them during their infancy due to a flood. Unlike her brothers, who rely on , Venus was raised in by the ancient shinobi master Chung I and trained in the mystic arts, granting her abilities such as chi manipulation, orb-based energy attacks, and spiritual communions that emphasize supernatural elements over physical combat. Her character expands the Turtles' family dynamic by introducing gender diversity and exploring themes of lost heritage and mystical heritage, appearing in the series' 26 episodes and related TV specials before the show's cancellation. was revived in IDW Publishing's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #127 (2022), reimagined as a shape-shifting dragon-turtle hybrid with enhanced mystical powers, integrating her into the modern comic continuity and further developing ethical narratives around mutation and identity. Jennika is a prominent recurring mutant in IDW's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comic series, debuting as a human Foot Clan ninja in issue #51 (2017) before undergoing a life-saving mutation into a turtle-like form by Splinter after severe injuries in battle. As the first official female Turtle in the IDW canon, she wields dual tekko-kagi claws and embodies themes of redemption and ethical mutation, transitioning from antagonist to ally with personal ties to the Turtles through her adoption into their family and struggles with her altered identity. Jennika's role expands the group's diversity, featuring major arcs where she leads solo missions, forms a punk rock band as the drummer—blending her ninja skills with creative expression—and confronts moral dilemmas of loyalty and transformation across over 50 issues. Mutagen Man, originally a package named Luke in the 1987 animated series, appears as a recurring blob-like in the "Enter: Mutagen Man" (Season 5, 1991), where accidental exposure to transforms him into a sentient ooze creature dependent on a and voice synthesizer for mobility and communication. His story highlights ethical concerns of unintended mutation, as he seeks a cure while clashing with , recurring in subsequent s to aid or hinder them based on his unstable form. Ninjara, a mutant wolf from the Mirage-inspired comics by (debuting in issue #28, 1991), is a recurring ally with personal bonds to the Turtles through shared adventures in dystopian futures and battles against poachers, her lupine form resulting from experimental that ties into narratives of animal rights and pack loyalty. She provides and combat support as a fierce warrior, appearing in arcs like "Moon Eyes" to explore themes of interspecies family and the ethics of genetic alteration.

Alien Races

Neutrinos

The Neutrinos are a race of diminutive humanoid aliens originating from Dimension X, characterized by their small stature, pointed ears, and elaborate hairstyles, often depicted as peaceful civilians reliant on advanced flying vehicles resembling muscle cars known as starmobiles. Introduced in the 1987 animated series' "Hot Rodding Teenagers from Dimension X," they are portrayed as extra-dimensional refugees fleeing pursuers, who crash-land on and quickly form an with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles through shared interests in high-speed races and adventure. The core members of the Neutrino royal family include Dask, Zak, and Kala, a trio of teenagers who serve as the primary representatives of their species in early encounters. In the 1987 animated series, the Neutrinos appear recurrently across multiple episodes, providing technological aid such as their starmobiles to the Turtles while offering through their enthusiastic, fun-loving demeanor and hot-rodding antics. Their storylines often involve escaping Krang's forces, highlighting their resistance to his tyrannical rule over Dimension X. The characters were adapted into the ' series, debuting in issues #2 and #3 as a direct retelling of their animated introduction, where they again team up with the Turtles against interdimensional threats. Subsequent comic iterations, particularly in IDW Publishing's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series starting from issue #17, expand the Neutrinos' role beyond , depicting them as more proactive and adventurous allies who contribute scientific expertise and mobilize their society against larger conflicts like the . In these stories, characters like the grown-up Princess Tribble (initially introduced as an infant in the ) join the fray, underscoring the Neutrinos' evolution from lighthearted supporting players to integral resistors in the broader TMNT universe.

Triceratons

The Triceratons are a species of anthropomorphic, dinosaur-like aliens resembling , characterized by their aggressive nature and horned, reptilian physiology. They breathe a mixture of and and are known for their militaristic society, which has led to the destruction of their original homeworld due to unchecked aggression. As empire-builders, the Triceratons now inhabit vast, maneuverable cities equipped with factories, arenas, and universities, from which they launch conquests across using adapted technology stolen from other races. Prominent Triceraton figures include Prime Leader Zanramon, the tyrannical leader of the Triceraton Republic in the 2003 animated series, who ruled with an iron fist and sentenced captives, including the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, to brutal gladiatorial games. Another key character is Zog, a loyal Triceraton warrior from the Mirage Comics, who was accidentally transported to alongside two comrades during a pursuit of the Fugitoid; Zog hid in the sewers, was discovered by , and later assisted the Turtles in repelling a Triceraton invasion. In the 2012 series, a version of Zog appears as a smash-happy gladiator determined to crush the Kraang. The Triceratons first appeared in ' Fugitoid #1 (1985), where the Turtles were transported to the Triceraton homeworld amid a war against a galactic federation, leading to space battles and an escape involving the Fugitoid's device. They featured prominently in the 2003 , invading Earth to capture the Fugitoid and clashing with the Turtles in multi-episode arcs that highlighted gladiatorial combat and political upheaval. In the 2012 series, the Triceratons hail from Dimension X and serve as temporary allies to the Turtles against the Kraang in episodes like "The Arena of Carnage," engaging in intense space and arena battles. The IDW Comics reboot portrays them as recurring invaders, often as brutal foes in ongoing conflicts. Throughout their portrayals, the Triceratons frequently act as temporary foes to , launching invasions for technology or conquest, but they have allied against mutual enemies like the Kraang or Utroms in scenarios involving shared threats in Dimension X. Their roles emphasize epic space battles, with navigating Triceraton warships and arenas to thwart or join these conflicts. Variations in depiction show them as brutal conquerors in the Mirage Comics and early , driven by imperial ambition under leaders like Zorax, contrasted with a more honorable society in the series after Zanramon's overthrow, where the Republic adopts a legislative system focused on justice and warfare ethics. In the IDW continuity, they are reimagined as mutants created by Utroms from prehistoric dinosaurs, adding a layer of tragic enslavement to their aggressive empire-building.

Crossover Characters

Comic Book Crossovers

The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles have engaged in numerous comic book crossovers since their debut in ' 1984 one-shot, expanding their universe through collaborations with independent creators and publishers like IDW and . These crossovers often blend the Turtles' urban ninja action with contrasting worlds, such as feudal Japan-inspired tales or surreal superhero antics, fostering alliances against shared threats and highlighting thematic contrasts between modern mutants and other heroes. Key examples include recurring team-ups with and one-shot appearances by characters from other indie titles, primarily during the Mirage era and later IDW runs. Miyamoto Usagi, the anthropomorphic rabbit created by , is the most prominent recurring crossover character in TMNT comics, serving as a steadfast ally who bridges feudal Edo-period with the Turtles' contemporary New York setting. Usagi first crossed paths with the Turtles in a cameo within #7 (, 1984), where the mutants briefly appeared in his world, establishing an early shared continuity. This evolved into direct team-ups, such as in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #19 (, 1989), where Usagi aids the Turtles against interdimensional foes, emphasizing his ronin honor code against their streetwise camaraderie. Further appearances followed in the 1990s, including vol. 2 #1-3 (, 1993), the "Shades of Green" storyline, reinforcing Usagi's role as a moral anchor in multiverse-spanning adventures. IDW continued this legacy with the 2017 prestige one-shot Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles/, where Usagi helps the Turtles navigate a time-warped conspiracy, and the 2023 five-issue miniseries Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles/: WhereWhen, pitting them against body-swapping aliens in a high-stakes interdimensional chase. These stories expand the TMNT mythos by contrasting Usagi's disciplined with the Turtles' improvisational heroism, often resolving in mutual respect and pizza-sharing downtime. Savage Dragon, the green-skinned, fin-headed police officer from Erik Larsen's Image Comics series, featured in a two-part crossover during TMNT's brief Image publishing stint, teaming up against mutant threats in Chicago. In Savage Dragon #2 (Image, 1993), the Dragon encounters the Turtles amid a demonic incursion, leading to a brawl-turned-alliance against invading forces. This continued in the one-shot Savage Dragon/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Mirage/Image, 1995), where the heroes collaborate to thwart a villainous plot involving experimental mutants, highlighting the Dragon's brute strength complementing the Turtles' agility and teamwork. The crossover serves as an entry point to Image's interconnected universe, portraying Savage Dragon as a modern, gritty counterpart to the Turtles' underdog spirit. Cerebus the Aardvark, Dave Sim's cynical, sword-wielding barbarian from the epic series, made a memorable debut crossover in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #8 (, ), blending parody fantasy with TMNT action. In this 45-page issue, Cerebus crash-lands in the Turtles' world via a portal, joining them to rescue a damsel from assassins in a chaotic bar fight and rooftop chase, with his gruff pragmatism clashing humorously against the Turtles' youthful banter. Co-written and illustrated by Eastman, , Sim, and Gerhard, the story merges distinct art styles—TMNT's dynamic inks with Cerebus' detailed —for a seamless, self-contained adventure that underscores indie comics' collaborative spirit without altering core continuities. The Flaming Carrot, Bob Burden's surreal, carrot-obsessed superhero from the Flaming Carrot Comics series, starred in a four-issue crossover published by in 1993-1994, mixing absurdity with TMNT's grounded vigilantism. In Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles/Flaming Carrot Crossover #1 (, November 1993), the Turtles and allies like Colonel Blade investigate a storm-ravaged Central American expedition, encountering the Carrot and amid ancient ruins and a "Green Fire" entity tied to sorcery. Subsequent issues (#2-4, 1993-1994) escalate the mayhem with hallucinatory battles and the Carrot's dreamlike powers, such as summoning flaming vegetables, culminating in a victory over otherworldly horrors. Written by Burden with art by Jim Lawson, the series contrasts the Carrot's whimsical chaos with the Turtles' disciplined combat, creating a lighthearted expansion of the TMNT world through interdimensional weirdness.

Recent Comic Book Crossovers (2024–2025)

Recent years have seen additional comic crossovers introducing characters from other franchises. In the 2024 four-issue miniseries Masters of the Universe/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles of Grayskull (IDW), the Turtles are transported to Eternia, allying with He-Man, Teela, and the Masters of the Universe against a combined threat from Skeletor and Shredder, blending 1980s nostalgia with mutant action. The 2025 miniseries Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles x (IDW) features the Turtles teaming with the to battle mutant threats and ancient monsters in New York, highlighting epic-scale destruction and unlikely heroism. Mighty Morphin Power Rangers/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III (, 2025) continues the Rangers-Turtles rivalry-turned-alliance against and Shredder, with morphed battles and ninja teamwork. Additionally, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles x Naruto (IDW, 2024–2025) pits against ninja from the Hidden Leaf Village, including and , in a multiversal clash of jutsu and .

Animated and Film Crossovers

The Animated and Film Crossovers section of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise features team-ups with characters from other properties, primarily through films and episodic appearances in , highlighting collaborative battles against shared threats like Shredder and adversaries. These crossovers blend the Turtles' action with the styles of partner franchises, often emphasizing interdimensional or multiversal elements to facilitate the encounters. A prominent example is the partnership with DC Comics' Batman, realized in two animated films produced by and . In Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2019), Batman, , and Robin ally with the Turtles in to thwart Shredder's alliance with and the , who deploy to transform the city's population into an army of monsters. The film showcases genre-blending action, with the heroes combining stealth, gadgets, and combat skills to infiltrate the ' lair and reverse the effects. This was followed by Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II (2021), where the teams reunite against a corrupted () under the control of the Mad Hatter and a , leading to high-stakes pursuits across Gotham and Dimension X. These films adapt comic inspirations briefly, focusing on Shredder as a common foe while delivering pulse-pounding sequences of synchronized fights and vehicle chases. Another notable animated crossover occurs in the 2003 TMNT series' season episode "" (2006), where the Turtles encounter characters from Wild West C.O.W.-Boys of Moo Mesa during a holographic simulation of Tumbleweed, . Moo Montana and his anthropomorphic allies appear in a western bar setting, providing brief support against holographic outlaws, nodding to creator Ryan Brown's ties to both franchises through mutant-themed action in a surreal, genre-mixing scenario. In a live-action television crossover, the Turtles from Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation (1997) team up with the in the Power Rangers "Shell Shocked" (1998), where the brainwashed Turtles, under villain Astronema's control, battle the Rangers, who free them to join forces against her schemes. The features joint combat against alien forces, with the Turtles' and bo staff complementing the Rangers' powers in explosive fights aboard a spaceship. This episodic team-up underscores themes of unlikely alliances against otherworldly invaders, though it predates the 2003 animated series. These crossovers often incorporate holiday or special event motifs indirectly through festive chaos, such as the Batman films' high-energy pursuits evoking seasonal blockbusters, while emphasizing ' role in expanding franchise boundaries via collaborative heroism.

Characters from Recent Adaptations

Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Additions

Baron Draxum is a alchemist and warrior from the Hidden City, serving as the primary antagonist in the early seasons of Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. He created the ooze that mutated and O'Neil's father into their current forms, with the goal of transforming all humans into mutants to conquer the surface world. Voiced by (season 1) and (season 2), Draxum evolves from a relentless villain to a reluctant ally after being defeated and forced to collaborate with against greater threats like the Shredder. His design features a goat-like appearance with four arms, emphasizing his alchemical prowess and combat skills. Big Mama, voiced by , is a powerful yokai who operates as a prim and proper mob boss in the Hidden City, owning and hosting the Battle Nexus fight ring where combatants from the yokai underworld compete. She frequently antagonizes through schemes involving mutant acquisitions and underground gambling, often deploying her minions or yokai associates to enforce her rule. Big Mama's elegant yet ruthless personality drives her recurring conflicts, including attempts to exploit for her arena spectacles. Her role highlights the series' elements, blending crime syndicate dynamics with mystical yokai lore. The Hidden City, a sprawling subterranean realm beneath New York populated by yokai—supernatural beings displaced from the surface—serves as the primary setting for many threats and allies introduced in Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. This mystical domain features diverse locales like fight rings, markets, and alchemical labs, where characters navigate yokai society rules and ancient secrets. The Turtles frequently venture there to combat villains or forge alliances, uncovering powers tied to their Hamato clan heritage. Sunita is a slime-based yokai high school student and friend of , capable of shapeshifting her viscous green body to mimic human appearances or evade detection via a . She embodies the series' theme of yokai integration into human life, joining April in adventures against thieves targeting Hidden City artifacts. Sunita's enthusiastic and feisty nature makes her a supportive ally in episodes exploring friendship across species. Todd Capybara, originally a named Todd who owned the Cuddle Cakes Puppy Rescue, was mutated into a large, friendly yokai after exposure to Draxum's ooze. Voiced by , he appears as a recurring figure, often stumbling into missions with his kind-hearted but hapless demeanor, such as during escapades or urban chases. Todd represents the unintended victims of mutation, highlighting the chaotic impact of yokai incursions on everyday lives. Huginn and Muninn are twin raven-like gargoyle yokai minions loyal to Baron Draxum, serving as his scouts, enforcers, and with their bickering dynamic and aerial agility. Named after Odin's ravens in , they assist in schemes like capturing mutants or spying on , but later seek new employment after Draxum's defeat. Their roles underscore the yokai hierarchy in the Hidden City, blending menace with humor. Casey Jones Jr., voiced by , is a teenage survivor from a dystopian future ravaged by the Shredder, arriving via time portal to warn in Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie. As the son of Jones—a recruit turned antagonist—he wields hockey gear as weapons and joins the fight against Kraang invaders, forging bonds with the team. Casey's arc emphasizes themes of legacy and redemption, positioning him as a future ally in the resistance. Master Splinter, reimagined as the former human star Lou Jitsu, provides a pivotal backstory linking the Turtles to yokai lore; as a Battle Nexus champion, he was mutated into a by Draxum's ooze after refusing to mutate the Turtles, whom he adopted and trained in seclusion. This history reveals his hidden celebrity past and initial reluctance as a , evolving into a more engaged father figure. These additions appear across the animated series (2018–2020), the 2022 Netflix movie, and IDW Publishing's tie-in comics, including the 2019 five-issue miniseries and shorts like Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Sound Off! Post-cancellation, the narrative extended through collected editions and art books up to 2025, maintaining the focus on yokai threats and family dynamics without major new comic arcs.

Mutant Mayhem and Tales Additions

The 2023 animated film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem introduced a fresh ensemble of mutant characters centered around themes of teenage outcast experiences and societal acceptance, expanding the franchise's roster with intelligent, anthropomorphic animal mutants who form Superfly's gang. These characters, created by scientist Baxter Stockman—who appears reimagined as a janitor—initially serve as antagonists but embody struggles with isolation and identity. The follow-up series Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2024–2025) builds on this by introducing additional mutants, including aquatic antagonists and a younger iteration of Agent Bishop, exploring arcs of "reject" mutants clashing with more established ones in and urban settings alongside . In November 2025, the series was announced to conclude after its second season. Superfly, voiced by Ice Cube, emerges as the film's primary antagonist: an intelligent fly who dreams of establishing a on by using alien technology to mutate animals en masse and launch an invasion against humanity. Orphaned after his mother's death and raised in hiding, Superfly rallies fellow s around his vision of escape from human prejudice, though his plan ultimately leads to conflict with the Turtles. His gang consists of reimagined versions of classic foes, portrayed as smart, teenaged outcasts seeking belonging: (voiced by ), a warthog and loyal strategist; (voiced by ), a rhinoceros providing brute strength; Wingnut, a with mechanical arms for enhanced mobility; and Scumbug, a known for her agility and resourcefulness. These characters debut in the film, where they execute Superfly's schemes before allying with the Turtles against the larger threat. Additional mutant allies appear as recruits to Superfly's cause, all depicted as teen s grappling with rejection: Genghis Frog, a frog with leaping abilities and a streetwise demeanor; Mondo , a gecko skilled in skateboarding and wall-crawling; Ray Fillet, a manta ray who navigates water and air with fin-like gliding; and , an alligator offering raw power and emotional depth from his lab origins. These figures join the narrative during the film's climax, highlighting collective solidarity before shifting toward themes of among mutants and humans. In Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, which premiered on Paramount+ in August 2024, the series extends these dynamics through episodic adventures, such as battles in "Mutant Melee" and -based conflicts, where the Turtles navigate high life with while confronting new threats. These elements drive storylines in its second and final season, premiering in December , emphasizing amid high pressures and inter-mutant conflicts between societal "rejects" and integrated figures. Specific to the series, Lee the —also known as (voiced by )—serves as a formidable new antagonist: an capable of generating shocks, who leads the East River as part of the East River Three, an aquatic gang terrorizing New York's waterways. This group, including a goldfish and seahorse , embodies territorial rivalries among outcast , clashing with in underwater skirmishes that underscore survival and turf wars. Agent Bishop receives a reinvented portrayal as a younger, tech-savvy hunter (voiced by ), heading a government initiative to capture rogue , which pits her against the protagonists in arcs exploring prejudice and redemption.

References

  1. https://www.[ign](/page/IGN).com/articles/2012/10/27/teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-metalhead-review
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