

Discover the MBTI types of The Boys characters — Homelander, Butcher, Starlight, Hughie, and more
Victoria Neuman’s INTJ cognitive stack makes her the show’s most dangerously patient strategist. Her dominant Ni drives her long-term political vision with extraordinary clarity—she sees the trajectory of superhero politics years in advance, positions herself as the anti-Vought crusader precisely because she understands how that narrative will lead to power, and constructs her path to political authority with the certainty of someone who has already mapped the endgame. Her auxiliary Te executes her vision through institutional channels with cold efficiency, running congressional hearings, building a political career, and eliminating threats by exploding heads with strategic timing that maximizes both her safety and her political advantage. Neuman’s tertiary Fi surfaces in her genuine attachment to her adopted daughter and the moral rationalizations she constructs to justify her actions—she believes she is building a safer world, and this private conviction allows her to maintain psychological coherence despite the violence she inflicts. Her inferior Se shows in her careful avoidance of direct physical confrontation, preferring to operate through institutional power and political positioning rather than visceral action. Her arc from apparent hero to revealed puppet master to political power broker illustrates the INTJ’s most dangerous capability—when strategic patience is combined with the ability to eliminate opposition literally, the result is power that no institution can check.
“Change doesn't happen from the outside. It happens from within.”Learn about INTJ →
Stan Edgar’s INTP cognitive stack makes him the only person in the show who consistently outmaneuvers Homelander through pure intellect. His dominant Ti drives his cold analytical approach to corporate power—he treats superheroes as products in a portfolio, evaluates every situation through a framework of logical efficiency, and manages Vought’s empire with a detached rationality that remains unperturbed even when Homelander stands inches away threatening murder. His auxiliary Ne allows him to see multiple strategic possibilities simultaneously, anticipating moves and countermoves across corporate, political, and superhero chess boards while maintaining contingency plans that adapt to shifting circumstances. Edgar’s tertiary Si surfaces in his deep institutional knowledge of Vought’s history, including its founder’s Nazi origins, and his understanding of how corporate systems maintain power through accumulated structural advantages rather than individual brilliance. His inferior Fe manifests as his genuine blind spot—he fundamentally underestimates the power of emotional connection and loyalty, unable to comprehend that Homelander’s need for love makes him more dangerous, not less, and that his own cold detachment will eventually alienate every potential ally. His arc as the corporate mastermind who is ultimately outplayed by forces he cannot quantify illustrates the INTP’s limitation—when analytical brilliance dismisses emotional reality as irrational, it creates vulnerabilities that no strategy can address.
“I don't care about your feelings. I care about the bottom line.”Learn about INTP →
Homelander’s ENTJ cognitive stack operates at a pathologically unhealthy level that makes him the show’s most terrifying figure. His dominant Te demands absolute control over every system he touches—Vought’s corporate hierarchy, The Seven’s operations, and public perception are all domains he manages with executive authority, punishing any inefficiency or disobedience with overwhelming force. His auxiliary Ni provides the narcissistic vision of himself as humanity’s rightful god, a singular conviction that he is destined to lead that he reinforces by manipulating media narratives and eliminating anyone who threatens his self-image. Homelander’s tertiary Se manifests in his theatrical public performances, his need for immediate adulation from crowds, and his laser-eye violence that represents the ultimate expression of physical dominance over his environment. His inferior Fi is the source of his deepest pathology—raised in a Vought laboratory without love, his undeveloped personal emotional world creates an insatiable need for validation that no amount of power can fill, most devastatingly revealed in his mirror scenes where he oscillates between self-worship and self-loathing. His arc from controlled corporate asset to unhinged authoritarian illustrates the ENTJ’s darkest trajectory—when the drive for dominance develops without any emotional foundation, leadership becomes tyranny.
“I can do whatever I want.”Learn about ENTJ →
Soldier Boy’s ENTP cognitive stack makes him the show’s most entertainingly irreverent and dangerously adaptable character. His dominant Ne drives his rapid adaptation to a world decades removed from his own era—he assesses new situations with quick-witted flexibility, generates sharp observations about modern culture that cut through political correctness, and refuses to be constrained by anyone’s expectations or rules. His auxiliary Ti provides the tactical analytical intelligence beneath the bravado, allowing him to evaluate combat situations, assess power dynamics, and construct strategies with a cold rationality that his casual demeanor disguises. Soldier Boy’s tertiary Fe surfaces in his surprising capacity to connect with others when his guard is down, particularly his complex dynamic with Butcher—the hints of genuine camaraderie and mutual respect reveal social needs he would never acknowledge openly. His inferior Si manifests as his traumatic relationship with his own past—the abuse he suffered from his father, his betrayal by Payback, and his decades of Russian captivity represent accumulated experiences he can neither process nor escape, triggering destructive PTSD episodes when sensory memories overwhelm his present awareness. His arc as the original superhero who returns to find the world has moved on without him illustrates the ENTP’s existential challenge—when adaptability meets a reality that no amount of quick thinking can reconcile, even the most flexible mind breaks.
“I'm the original. Everyone else is just a cheap knockoff.”Learn about ENTP →
Ryan Butcher’s INFJ cognitive stack creates the show’s most emotionally complex young character, caught between two competing visions of his future. His dominant Ni gives him an intuitive understanding that extends beyond his years—he senses the tension between Homelander and Butcher, perceives the emotional undercurrents in adult conversations, and grasps the implications of his own powers with a depth that makes his internal conflict genuinely tragic. His auxiliary Fe drives his natural empathy and desire for connection, making him responsive to whichever father figure is present—he absorbs Butcher’s protective warmth and Homelander’s seductive validation with equal openness, because his need for parental love is his primary emotional driver. Ryan’s tertiary Ti surfaces in his growing analytical awareness of the contradictions between what the adults in his life tell him and what he observes, developing a capacity for independent judgment that both sides simultaneously need and fear. His inferior Se manifests in his dangerous relationship with his own physical powers—his accidental killing of Becca represents the catastrophic eruption of uncontrolled physicality, and his ongoing struggle to manage laser vision and super-strength reflects a fundamental disconnect between his gentle nature and his destructive capability. His arc as the child both sides are fighting to claim illustrates the INFJ’s vulnerability—extraordinary empathic sensitivity that can be shaped toward compassion or toward destruction depending on who provides the emotional framework.
“I just want to be good.”Learn about INFJ →
Hughie Campbell’s INFP cognitive stack makes him the moral conscience of The Boys despite his anxious, unassuming exterior. His dominant Fi drives everything he does through a deeply personal sense of justice—Robin’s death by A-Train doesn’t just anger him intellectually but violates his core values so profoundly that he abandons his safe life to fight the most powerful beings on Earth. His auxiliary Ne fuels his creative problem-solving abilities, allowing him to find unconventional solutions to seemingly impossible situations—planting bugs in Vought Tower, discovering corporate secrets, and seeing connections between disparate pieces of evidence that the more action-oriented team members miss. Hughie’s tertiary Si manifests in his connection to the normal life he lost, his nostalgia for the simplicity of working at the electronics store, and the accumulated trauma that builds with each violent encounter, making the cost of his crusade increasingly personal. His inferior Te shows in his struggle to assert authority, make hard tactical decisions, and his recurring temptation to take Temp V for the executive power and physical control he naturally lacks. His arc from a terrified civilian watching his girlfriend explode to someone who can stand toe-to-toe with superhumans through courage alone illustrates the INFP’s extraordinary potential—when values are strong enough, even the most unlikely hero can transform fear into action.
“I'm not a superhero. I'm just a guy.”Learn about INFP →
Starlight’s ENFJ cognitive stack makes her the show’s embodiment of authentic heroism in a world of corporate corruption. Her dominant Fe drives her instinctive connection to people and her natural ability to inspire—her viral public speech exposing Vought rallies millions because she communicates with genuine emotional conviction that viewers recognize as real, and she naturally assumes leadership roles within both The Seven and The Boys. Her auxiliary Ni provides the visionary clarity that distinguishes her from other well-meaning characters, seeing what heroism should truly mean and recognizing that the entire superhero industry is fundamentally corrupt, not just specific individuals within it. Starlight’s tertiary Se manifests in her willingness to use her powers directly when principles demand it, her growing comfort with physical confrontation as the stakes escalate, and her practical adaptability in dangerous situations. Her inferior Ti shows in her occasional difficulty with cold strategic calculation—she struggles to accept morally compromised plans even when logic dictates they are necessary, and her transparency sometimes puts the team at risk when discretion would be tactically wiser. Her arc from the idealistic small-town girl who joined The Seven to the revolutionary leader who dismantles the superhero-industrial complex illustrates the ENFJ’s transformative power—turning moral vision into collective action.
“I'm done being afraid. Real heroes don't need capes.”Learn about ENFJ →
Frenchie’s ENFP cognitive stack makes him The Boys’ most emotionally expressive and creatively resourceful member. His dominant Ne drives his inventive genius—he improvises explosive devices from household chemicals, devises creative solutions to problems involving superpowered opponents, and approaches every situation with an innovative flexibility that makes him indispensable when conventional tactics fail. His auxiliary Fi fuels the deep personal bonds that define his character, particularly his relationship with Kimiko—he connects with her through patient emotional understanding that transcends language barriers, and his guilt over past actions drives a moral intensity that persists despite the violence surrounding him. Frenchie’s tertiary Te surfaces in his practical execution skills, translating his creative ideas into functional weapons and tactical plans with enough organizational discipline to make his inventions work under combat conditions. His inferior Si manifests as the traumatic memories that haunt him—the children he was forced to harm, his complicated history with organized crime—representing accumulated past experiences that he can neither process nor escape, creating cycles of guilt and self-destructive behavior. His arc from haunted criminal with a genius for chemistry to a man who finds redemption through authentic love and purposeful action illustrates the ENFP’s healing journey—discovering that creative passion and deep personal connection can transform even the most painful history into a meaningful future.
“There is beauty in everything, even the broken things.”Learn about ENFP →
Mother’s Milk’s ISTJ cognitive stack makes him The Boys’ moral and operational backbone. His dominant Si drives his meticulous attention to detail and respect for doing things properly—he researches targets thoroughly, maintains files and evidence with obsessive care, and insists on planning and preparation in a team that tends toward chaos, drawing on accumulated experience to guide tactical decisions. His auxiliary Te manifests in his organized approach to missions, his ability to coordinate team operations with military efficiency, and his direct communication style that cuts through Butcher’s manipulation to focus on what actually needs to be done. MM’s tertiary Fi surfaces in his deeply personal motivation—Soldier Boy killed his grandfather, and this private wound drives his entire involvement with a moral intensity that is never performative but always authentically felt. His inferior Ne shows in his OCD, which represents the pathological extreme of his need for order—when the chaotic, unpredictable world of fighting superhumans overwhelms his structured processing, his anxiety manifests as compulsive behaviors that attempt to impose control on the uncontrollable. His arc from Butcher’s reluctant second-in-command to the team’s true leader illustrates the ISTJ’s essential value—when principle and discipline are maintained in a world of moral compromise, they become the foundation that others desperately need.
“I don't do collateral damage.”Learn about ISTJ →
Kimiko Miyashiro’s ISFJ cognitive stack drives her fierce devotion to the found family that replaced everything she lost. Her dominant Si creates a powerful connection to her stolen past—memories of her brother Kenji, her life before being kidnapped and injected with Compound V, and the normalcy she was denied fuel her present actions with deep personal motivation. Her auxiliary Fe manifests in her extraordinary protectiveness of the team, particularly Frenchie, expressing care through physical defense, gentle gestures, and the sign language communication that becomes their intimate emotional vocabulary. Kimiko’s tertiary Ti surfaces in her tactical intelligence during combat—she assesses threats with analytical precision, identifies the most efficient way to neutralize opponents, and makes rapid strategic decisions that demonstrate sharp thinking beneath her quiet exterior. Her inferior Ne shows in her difficulty imagining a life beyond violence—her dream sequences of musical numbers represent the alternative existence she yearns for but struggles to believe is possible, as the weight of accumulated trauma makes peaceful futures feel unreal. Her arc from mute, caged weapon to a woman who chooses to fight on her own terms—and who learns to communicate love through patience and trust—illustrates the ISFJ’s resilience: rebuilding a sense of home and belonging even after the original one has been utterly destroyed.
“...”Learn about ISFJ →
Stormfront’s ESTJ cognitive stack makes her a terrifyingly efficient propagandist who modernizes hatred for the social media age. Her dominant Te drives her systematic approach to building a white supremacist movement within Vought’s corporate structure—she runs social media campaigns with marketing precision, generates viral content strategically, and organizes her followers with the efficiency of a corporate executive launching a product. Her auxiliary Si anchors her entire ideology in the traditions of her Nazi past—she is literally a World War II-era supe who carries the accumulated beliefs of that period into the present, viewing her mission as preserving and perpetuating a historical tradition of racial supremacy. Stormfront’s tertiary Ne surfaces in her ability to adapt fascist messaging for modern audiences, repackaging old hatred in new language and finding creative angles to radicalize people through memes, livestreams, and populist rhetoric that feel contemporary. Her inferior Fi is the personal wound that fuels her fanaticism—her love for Frederick Vought and the genuine grief of losing him creates a private emotional core that makes her ideology feel personally sacred rather than merely political. Her arc as the villain who reveals the fascist roots of Vought’s superhero industry illustrates the ESTJ’s capacity for organized evil—when institutional thinking and respect for tradition serve a monstrous ideology, efficiency becomes a weapon of mass radicalization.
“People love what I have to say. They believe in it.”Learn about ESTJ →
The Deep’s ESFJ cognitive stack makes him the show’s most pathetically human superhero, driven entirely by his need for social belonging. His dominant Fe creates an overwhelming dependence on external validation—he measures his worth entirely through others’ approval, crumbles when expelled from The Seven, and becomes easy prey for the Church of the Collective because they offer the group acceptance he cannot live without. His auxiliary Si reinforces his desire to return to his former position within the established hierarchy, clinging to memories of past status and desperately trying to restore the social order in which he felt valued. The Deep’s tertiary Ne surfaces in his occasionally creative but usually misguided attempts to regain relevance—his publicity stunts, aquatic rescue attempts, and bizarre schemes to prove his worth show imagination without strategic judgment. His inferior Ti manifests as a near-total absence of independent analytical thinking—he accepts cult programming without question, follows Homelander’s increasingly deranged orders without logical pushback, and cannot evaluate situations through any framework other than social approval. His arc as the character who cycles repeatedly through expulsion, manipulation, and desperate return to the group illustrates the ESFJ’s worst-case scenario—when the need for belonging becomes so consuming that it replaces all other values, including basic human dignity.
“I'm relevant. I matter.”Learn about ESFJ →
Queen Maeve’s ISTP cognitive stack drives her jaded pragmatism and eventual redemption. Her dominant Ti provides a cold, accurate analysis of Vought’s corrupt system—she understands exactly how the superhero industry works, sees through corporate propaganda with cynical clarity, and calculates the personal cost of resistance with detached logic that initially leads her to choose survival over principle. Her auxiliary Se manifests in her formidable combat abilities and her comfort with physical confrontation—her fight against Homelander is a masterclass in tactical physical engagement, and her drinking represents Se-driven coping with emotional pain through sensory numbing. Maeve’s tertiary Ni surfaces in her growing conviction that the trajectory of Homelander’s power will lead to catastrophe, developing a long-term understanding that the system she enabled will eventually destroy everything if left unchecked. Her inferior Fe emerges as the catalyst for her transformation—her genuine feelings for Elena, her protective instinct toward Starlight, and her eventual willingness to sacrifice herself for others reveal the suppressed emotional warmth that her cynical armor was designed to protect. Her arc from jaded, alcoholic team member who watches atrocities in silence to the hero who fights Homelander one-on-one to save others illustrates the ISTP’s redemption—when emotional stakes finally outweigh analytical self-preservation, action becomes heroic.
“Saving people is a hobby. Not a job.”Learn about ISTP →
Black Noir’s ISFP cognitive stack operates almost entirely through action and internal feeling in the absence of verbal communication. His dominant Fi creates a deeply private emotional world that the audience only glimpses through his cartoon hallucinations—the animated characters he sees represent an internal value system and emotional processing that he cannot express through speech, revealing a rich inner life of guilt, loyalty, and suppressed trauma behind the mask. His auxiliary Se manifests in his extraordinary combat abilities, making him one of the most lethal fighters in the show—he processes the physical world with fluid sensory awareness, responding to threats with immediate, precise violence that requires no verbal coordination. Noir’s tertiary Ni surfaces in his understanding of Homelander’s true nature and the long-term implications of Soldier Boy’s return, showing a capacity for deeper pattern recognition that his silent exterior conceals. His inferior Te shows in his inability to organize his knowledge into communicable strategy—he knows critical information about Soldier Boy and Homelander’s connection but cannot translate it into the kind of structured, verbal argument that would convince others to act on his insights. His arc from silent, obedient enforcer to a character whose hidden emotional world is finally revealed illustrates the ISFP’s tragedy—possessing deep feeling and moral awareness but lacking the means to express them before it is too late.
“...”Learn about ISFP →
Billy Butcher’s ESTP cognitive stack makes him a force of controlled chaos aimed directly at Vought’s empire. His dominant Se drives his street-smart approach to every confrontation—he improvises weapons from whatever is available, reads physical situations with predatory awareness, and thrives in the visceral chaos of combat against superhumans despite having no powers of his own. His auxiliary Ti provides the tactical intelligence that makes his recklessness effective, analyzing Vought’s corporate vulnerabilities, constructing plans that exploit supes’ psychological weaknesses, and delivering brutal verbal assessments with an analytical precision disguised by his crude language. Butcher’s tertiary Fe surfaces in his genuine capacity to lead and inspire loyalty—despite his abrasive exterior, he builds a team of misfits who follow him into impossible situations because they sense the authentic human connection beneath his cynicism, particularly his bond with Hughie. His inferior Ni manifests as his singular, obsessive fixation on destroying Homelander, a tunnel vision that blinds him to the broader consequences of his vendetta and drives him toward self-destructive decisions like taking Temp V. His arc from grieving husband seeking revenge to a man who must choose between vengeance and protecting the people he has come to love illustrates the ESTP’s ultimate test—whether immediate action can be tempered by consideration of what truly matters.
“I'm gonna butcher you. Hence the name.”Learn about ESTP →
A-Train’s ESFP cognitive stack drives his desperate pursuit of fame and his agonizing journey toward conscience. His dominant Se manifests in his total identification with physical speed and performance—he lives for the rush of running, the thrill of public appearances, and the immediate gratification of being the fastest man alive, making his body literally his identity and Compound V addiction the inevitable consequence of needing more sensation. His auxiliary Fi provides the buried personal value system that gradually awakens throughout the series, surfacing most powerfully when his brother’s paralysis by Blue Hawk forces him to confront the racial injustice he had ignored for the comfort of corporate acceptance. A-Train’s tertiary Te emerges in his attempts to play corporate politics at Vought, showing strategic thinking about his career positioning and brand management that reveals a more calculating mind than his impulsive exterior suggests. His inferior Ni manifests as his inability to see the long-term consequences of his choices until they become unavoidable—he cannot foresee that his Compound V abuse will destroy his heart or that his silence about Robin’s death will haunt him. His arc from shallow fame-seeker who kills Hughie’s girlfriend without remorse to a man who confronts systemic racism at personal cost illustrates the ESFP’s moral awakening—discovering that authentic identity matters more than the performance of success.
“I'm the fastest man alive. That's all that matters.”Learn about ESFP →
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Homelander is commonly typed as ENTJ — though a deeply unhealthy one. His dominant Te demands total control and efficiency, while his Ni fixates on a vision of himself as humanity's rightful leader. His childhood isolation created a narcissistic wound that makes his ENTJ traits pathological rather than productive.
Billy Butcher is widely typed as ESTP. His dominant Se makes him a man of immediate action — street fights, improvised plans, and brutal directness. His auxiliary Ti gives him tactical cunning, and his inferior Ni shows in his single-minded obsession with destroying Homelander regardless of consequences.
Hughie (INFP) and Starlight (ENFJ) are considered a strong match in MBTI compatibility. Hughie's Fi-Ne provides moral conviction and creative thinking, while Annie's Fe-Ni brings leadership and emotional clarity. They complement each other — she pushes him to act on his values, and he reminds her why those values matter.
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