Few Marvel villains lay a more accurate claim to being an equivalent to The Joker than Arcade. The phrase "Marvel's Joker" gets tossed around a lot, as everyone loves to compare and contrast heroes and villains, especially whenever pitting DC Comics against Marvel. Any antagonist can carry a maniacal laugh or a nihilistic philosophy for the world, but only one from Marvel truly embodies the spirit of what Joker represents.

Arcade made his comic book debut in Marvel Team-Up #65, published in 1977. He was introduced as an assassin hired to kill Bill Braddock, one of several individuals suspected of being Captain Britain. The story quickly established his ties to the criminal underworld and his flair for violence. Add the disturbed mind, ambiguous origins, real name, and unnerving laugh, and readers have for themselves almost a spitting image of The Joker. What truly embodies The Clown Prince of Crime's spirit are the unhinged examples of evil on Arcade's resume.

10 Arcade Forced Young Heroes to Fight to the Death, Killing One in Front of His Girlfriend

Avengers Arena #1 by Dennis Hallum and Kev Walker

The sheer concept of Avengers Arena is enough to earn Arcade some points as Marvel's most heinous villain. He kidnaps a horde of superpowered teenagers to fight to the death for his own amusement inside Murderworld. He doesn't stop there, as he threatens the life of Hazmat, one of the strongest heroes you've never heard of. She was one of the most defiant of his captives, refusing to follow his orders. Moments before he tries to kill her, her boyfriend, Mettle, begs Arcade to take him instead. Without hesitation, Arcade obliges him.

Murderworld is the name of a virtual deathtrap-style amusement park created by Arcade himself. Murderworld first appears in Marvel Team-Up #66 by Chris Claremont and John Byrne.

The Joker has never hesitated to kill children in the DC Universe, but even he's never created a battlefield to force them to kill each other for fun. Killing one of these kids in cold blood in front of his romantic partner just adds insult to injury. Maybe Arcade's even more heinous than The Joker.

9 Arcade Killed His Own Father to Steal His Money

Avengers Arena #7 by Dennis Hopeless and Alessandro Vitti

One of the similarities shared by The Joker and Arcade is that both have ambiguous origin stories. Much like how The Joker likens his backstory to having multiple-choice answers, Arcade has often given conflicting s of his upbringing. Most of these s don't feature anyone who can corroborate his claims or provide evidence that he is telling the truth. One of these s sees him as the young heir to a billionaire's fortune.

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As a child, his father deemed him worthless and undeserving of inheriting his money. Whether Arcade's father was right to tell him that is up to interpretation, but young Arcade certainly believed him. So, on the dawn of his 21st birthday, as a rebuttal, Arcade decided to kill him and take his money by force. This is how Arcade discovered his lust for murder, putting him on the path he's on today.

8 Arcade Turned Central Park into a Killing Field for Kraven

Amazing Spider-Man #17 by Nick Spencer and Humberto Ramos

In the first part of the "Hunted" storyline, Kraven the Hunter's cloned son conspires with Arcade, utilizing his skills as the world's foremost architect of death machines. In one of Arcade's most ambitious schemes, he and Kraven kidnap Spider-Man and his most vicious villains, trapping them inside Central Park, which is closed off from the rest of New York City by an impregnable dome created by Arcade. Things worsen for Spider-Man when Arcade and company unleash an army of robots set to attack everyone.

There's a reason why The Joker has so many supervillain team-ups. Joker is efficient at what he sets out to do, and what he sets out to do is often diabolical. Arcade is similar in that he has diabolical plans that other villains know he can pull off. This is no different.

7 Arcade Tortures Wolverine and Drives Wendigo Into Mindless Cannibalism

Wolverine #8 by Saladin Ahmed, Daniel Warren Johnson, and Martín Cóccolo

One thing The Joker and Arcade have in common is that they make formidable adversaries for any superhero they face. While Batman is The Joker’s primary rival, his manipulative and chaotic tactics can unsettle just about anyone. Similarly, Arcade, although he debuted in a story featuring Spider-Man and Captain Britain, has frequently clashed with Wolverine, especially in this story, which features Wendigo, a kid named Leonard who was transformed into a Marvel hero despite his cannibalistic curse.

In the midst of Logan trying to get him to control his urges, they're ambushed by Arcade. The supervillain wants to push Wendigo's buttons and send him over the edge, like how Joker always wants to bring the worst out of people. To prove his point, he tries to goad Wendigo into eating people like a mindless monster.

6 Arcane Framed Wolverine for a Series of Murders

Wolverine/Gambit: Victims #1 by Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale

When five women are all murdered in a similar vein to Jack the Ripper, Gambit investigates to figure out who killed his friend, Alexandra Davies, an undercover detective who was among the victims. He stumbles upon Wolverine, who not only winds up framed for these murders, but remains unsure of how he wound up in London with blood on his costume and claws. This is an elaborate meddling on behalf of Arcade, with the help of Martinique.

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Martinique is the daughter of Jason Wyndgarde, a.k.a. the original Mastermind, a mutant artist of illusion. Maintaining his legacy, she adopts his name, but with justice in her mind. When Arcade tells the telepathic mutant that one of the X-Men has been committing Jack the Ripper-style crimes, she jumps at the chance to help, but soon enough, she learns the truth.

5 Arcane Killed His Assistant, Miss Locke, Because She Got to Close

Wolverine/Gambit: Victims #4 by Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale

Continuing from the previous entry, Mastermind assists Arcade with his plot because he tells her that Wolverine killed his longtime assistant, Miss Locke. Using her psi-lock powers, Mastermind invades everyone's minds in search of the truth. She discovers not only that Gambit and Wolverine have alibis, but also that Arcade himself killed Miss Locke. The two used to play "games," but when she got a little too close for his comfort and took things too far, going so far as to slash his face, he retaliated by murdering her.

Out of guilt, he created a new game: dump Miss Locke's body in the street as a killer's victim, kill four more women, and pin the blame on Wolverine. Arcade is as much of a master manipulator as The Joker. He manipulates Mastermind and manufactures a ruse. Like The Joker, developing a romance with Arcade is ill-advised for anyone's health.

4 Arcane Destroyed a Mutant Safe Haven in Manhattan

X-Factor #31 by Peter David and Pablo Raimondi

As Manhattan’s mutant population increased, so did anti-mutant racism. In response, local mutants formed their own community in the abandoned ghettos of Alphabet City. Officially known as District X, the area was more commonly referred to as Mutant Town. Taylor, a former Purifier, hired Arcade to take revenge after X-Factor had him exiled from William Stryker’s anti-mutant sect. This led Arcade to activate a series of bombs throughout Mutant Town in an effort to destroy it completely.

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Arcade takes The Joker's Jester of Genocide and brings it new meaning. Joker has killed hordes of people before, but in one fell swoop, Arcade wipes out one-third of an entire species of mutants. The Joker is often stopped by Batman before he can commit actual genocide, but here, Arcade succeeds.

3 Arcade Literally Allied with the Devil

Blaze #8 by Larry Hama and Henry Martinez

The one difference between Arcade and The Joker is probably that the latter at least has standards for who he will and won't work with. At least Joker draws the line at Nazis. Yet, to a fault, Arcade's evil does not discriminate, hence why he decides to offer his hand in service to the Devil himself.

Ex-Ghost Rider, Johnny Blaze, hires a hooded Masked Monk for his traveling Carnivale Quintano, convinced that some of his artifacts connect to Blaze's missing children. As it turns out, The Masked Monk is Arcade at the mercy of The High Priest of Baal after g a contract for new traps. He literally signed a deal with The Devil just to progress his precious Murderworld.

2 Arcade Personally Hunts Mutants for Sport in the Original Ultimate Universe

Ultimate X-Men #55 by Brian K. Vaughan and Stuart Immonen

The Arcade of Earth-616 (Marvel's main continuity) and the Arcade of Earth-1610 have slight contrasts, but at their core, both men are still bone-chillingly vile. The Arcade of the original Ultimate Universe has a more refined, straightforward origin story that grounds him in reality. For the Ultimate Arcade, he's a former gaming prodigy notorious for crafting a first-person shooter called Murderworld. His life is turned upside down when Magneto kills his sister during the Ultimate War.

Compiled in Ultimate War #1-4, this event sees the Ultimates/Avengers confronting the X-Men in battle when the former mistakes the latter for working with Magneto, who declares war against humankind after killing 800 humans in the destruction of the Brooklyn Bridge. Magneto demands that humanity surrender to mutantkind, or else the entire population will either be annihilated or enslaved.

Arcade brings his newfound hatred for mutants to reality television, where he hunts mutants on an island for worldwide amusement. This Arcade is not only physically stronger and more imposing compared to the main canon, but also features a wider array of technology, including reverse-engineered web shooters.

1 Arcade Ran a Prison for Mutants in the Age of X Reality

Age of X: Alpha #1 by Mike Carey, Mirco Pierfederici, Gabriel Hernandez Walta, Walden Wong, Paco Diaz, and Paul Davidson

The Ultimate Universe isn't the only vicious version of Arcade from an alternate universe. In what is considered Marvel's worst timeline, Arcade makes a brief yet impactful appearance. In this universe, Arcade, whose real name is Harcourt Teesdale, becomes the governor of a prison specifically designed for mutants called Alcatraz Penitentiary. Mutants are not imprisoned for actual crimes but simply for having the "wrong" DNA, at least according to Arcade. He abuses his power by ordering mutants like Scott Summers to be tortured.

This is a world where the X-Men don't exist, so Arcade's misdeeds go unchecked, and few things are scarier than an unpoliced maniac. Gotham City would be thrust into chaos if The Joker's crimes weren't policed, and his Marvel counterpart has that luxury in the Age of X.

The Joker in Batman: The Animated Series (1992)
NAME
Arthur Fleck
Alias
Red Hood, Clown Prince of Crime, Ace of Knaves
Created By
Bill Finger, Bob Kane, Jerry Robinson
POWERS
Criminal Mastermind, Expert Chemist, Weaponized Props, Psychological Manipulation, Combat Skills, Unpredictability, High Pain Tolerance, Charisma, Escape Artist
RELATIONSHIPS
Batman (archenemy), Harley Quinn (former psychiatrist, on-and-off girlfriend), Penguin (frequent collaborator), Two-Face (frequent collaborator)
HISTORY
The Joker's history has been depicted with various origin stories, the most common being his transformation into the Joker after falling into a vat of chemical waste that bleaches his skin white, turns his hair green, and lips bright red. This disfigurement drives him insane, leading him to become Batman's greatest nemesis.

The Joker is a psychopathic criminal mastermind with a warped sense of humor. Initially introduced as a remorseless serial killer, the character evolved over time, often oscillating between a prankster and a homicidal maniac. His relationship with Batman is one of the most complex in comic book history, defined by their mutual obsession. Over the decades, the Joker has become an enduring icon of chaos and madness, embodying the antithesis of Batman's order and justice.