Judge (Dog Man) has been hunted down for their soul to be collected for the following reason(s): Unlawful arrest doesn't pass the baseline, same with the harassment. Please discuss it on the talk page for this article. |
“ | I sentence you to infinity in jail! | „ |
~ The judge unlawfully sentencing Dog Man. |
The Judge is a minor antagonist in the 2018 novel, Dog Man: Brawl of the Wild, and a supporting antagonist in the 2024 novel Dog Man: The Scarlet Shedder, the sixth and twelfth main installments in Dav Pilkey's Dog Man novel series.
His Evil Ranking[]
His Villainous Deeds[]
- Due to his personality and mass abuse of power throughout the series, it can be implied that he unlawfully sentenced many other characters into imprisonment prior to the book series' events despite appearing genuinely affable and good people, such as Big Jim, Mike the Fly, and Ducky the Beetle, who were all imprisoned despite being genuinely affable and good people.
- Despite being brought evidence that Dog Man did not commit the mass larceny of robbing all of the money held within Frank's Bank, he refused to change Dog Man's sentence of fourteen dog years imprisoned with a cruel warden.
- While in a lawful sence, him stating that someone had to pay for the damages Claymation Philly had done to the Gassy Behemoth film theater is fair, he does make the claim to the heroes that when he was through with them, they would wish they were never born, implying he would charge them more than required for seemingly no reason.
- During the wedding for Chief Clarence Bailey and Nurse Genie S. Lady, the judge was merely reluctant to officiate it, yelling at everyone to scram and hurry the wedding up.
- Even though his chasing of Maude did leave him to accidentally destroy City Hall, he makes a compromise with her to blame Dog Man, who did not have anything to do with the destruction of City Hall.
- He and Maude break into Dog Man's house and kidnap him to the courtroom even though Dog Man never did anything unlawful. During this moment, he also steals the Supa Buddies' costumes, preventing them from stopping him and Maude and stopping any other threat to the city.
- In the courtroom, he charges Dog Man with moral turpitude, or wickedness, despite Dog Man not being wicked ever, and due to this, Dog Man is sentenced to "infinity in jail", an extremely harsh and unlawful punishment.
- After arresting Dog Man, he and Maude reveal their plans to immediately arrest Chief when he comes back from his honeymoon to allow Maude to keep her temporary promotion and ultimately allow the two to become unstoppable.
- When the A.I. Buddy population is created, he creates an identical A.I. Buddy of him and sends him to do his job while he watched cat videos, revealing he would not use his power outside of evil.
- While Petey, the Fair Fairy, Dr. Scum, and Grampa did worse, they also have more resources than him while many of them can build robots while nothing suggests he can do that.
Why Doesn't He Stand Out?[]
- While his mass abuse of power and unlawful punishments do allow him to pass the generic baseline, he still fails the massive heinous standard of the series to many characters like Piggy and even Maude, who all have done worse than him.
- He has many comedic moments that detract from his villainy, such as continously falling down a hole Dog Man dug in his debut, getting sprayed by a skunk, or even stealing the Supa Buddies' costumes to poke fun of the superhero genre.
External Links[]
- Judge on the Villains Wiki
- Judge on the Hate Sink Wiki
- Judge on the Dog Man Wiki
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Novels |