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5[[quoteright:349:[[WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mandark_supervillain.png]]]]
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7The common nerd is, at worst, a bit annoying. Sure, he might have NoSocialSkills and be overly fond of telling people about his Franchise/{{Pokemon}} collection, but come on - he wouldn't hurt a fly.
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9And then there's this jerk (usually but ''definitely not'' [[AlwaysMale always a guy]]). Either his lack of social niceties is caused by [[TheSociopath a complete disregard for other people,]] or else his loneliness and constant rejection has turned him bitter and twisted. Either way, he's out to get everything he's ever wanted, by any means necessary, including revenge for any real and imagined slights he's suffered.
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11He's often an EntitledBastard who thinks that his superior intelligence (which may or [[KnowNothingKnowItAll may not be as superior as he imagines]]) should automatically make him adored and successful, and that the people failing to give him his due deserve some sort of [[DisproportionateRetribution exaggerated punishment]] for it. He often does suffer from genuine [[FreudianExcuse bullying and mistreatment,]] but by the time he gets to his MotiveRant he's done so many horrible things that his audience will be [[FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse less than sympathetic]] - no matter how many lockers you were stuffed into, it just doesn't justify sending demons to rip the living souls out of peoples' bodies.
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13The NerdyBully and InsufferableGenius are this trope's somewhat more benign cousins, who settle for being [[{{Jerkass}} Jerkasses]] instead of going straight for outright villainy.[[note]] These examples are usually more impressive than the Evil Nerd as well: He may ''think'' he's a genius, and [[KnowNothingKnowItAll whether that's true or not,]] he tends to be [[DirtyCoward too afraid of direct confrontation]] to become a successfully bully.[[/note]] On the flip side, the EvilGenius or MadScientist are what the Evil Nerd often ''wants'' to be but can't quite live up to - regardless of his actual intelligence, he's fundamentally [[EvilIsPetty too petty and narrow-minded]] to conceive of a genuinely visionary plan, evil or otherwise.
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15Since the Evil Nerd is generally [[GeekPhysiques not the fittest or best-looking,]] there is likely to be overlap with BrainsEvilBrawnGood and BeautyEqualsGoodness as he faces off against the better-groomed and more physically capable heroes. Compare the EvilCripple, whose broken morality is symbolised and/or caused by a more visible handicap, as well as NerdyBully, which he may overlap with or have graduated from if he's past his high school years.
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17Contrast NerdInEvilsHelmet, where the villain's nerdiness offsets his evil instead of being the foundation of it.
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19Administrivia/NoRealLifeExamplesPlease We all know that nerds in RealLife are not always nice.
20
21----
22!!Examples:
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24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Comic Books]]
27* ''ComicBook/AstroCity'':
28** Simon Says is a TeenGenius who turned to crime after being relentlessly bullied in school.
29** The Mecha-Nerds are a group of high school science fair winners who were turned into robots, then decided to go on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge.
30* Cliff Carmichael in ''ComicBook/FirestormDCComics'', who inverts the usual jock/nerd dynamic common in superhero comics by being the bully that torments the LovableJock protagonist.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Comic Strips]]
34* ''ComicStrip/ScaryGary'': Leopold [[ArtificialHuman grows an evil lab assistant]] in his lab from a box of store-bought "LAB NERD" mix, though it seems the base nerd isn’t inherently evil considering Leopold admits he tried to jazz it up a bit because he had to cut corners after his funds for the project ran out. The resulting nerd claims to be just as evil as Leopold, but the key word here is "claims".
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
38* ''Film/TheSpiritOf76'' has science geek and UFO buff Rodney Snodgrass, who wants to capture the time travelers and use them for his high school science fair project. He steals part of their time machine and destroys it by accident, almost causing them to be trapped in TheSeventies forever.
39* ''Film/Ghostbusters2016'' has Rowan North, a geeky guy whose misanthropy pushes him to summon evil ghosts. His MotiveRant toward the Ghostbusters leaves them unimpressed.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Literature]]
43* The Technical Boy in ''Literature/AmericanGods'' is a version of this trope that's actually achieved the elevated stature he craves. Instead of being bitter and resentful, he's [[SmugSnake smug and conceited]] about how his intelligence has allowed him to be successful even in the complete absence of any social skills.
44* ''Franchise/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'': Lucien, the BigBad of ''Portal Through Time'', wears a frilly outfit that makes him “look like a villain from a gothic novel” and names his time travel device the Wand of Wells after Creator/HGWells, author of ''Literature/TheTimeMachine''.
45* Norman Birdwell in the first of the ''Literature/BloodBooks'' is an odious loser who summons demons in a poorly considered effort to become cool and get girls, not caring that every time he sends the demon out to do a favour for him, it kills an innocent before returning. [[EveryoneHasStandards Even other nerds can't stand him,]] even aside from the demonology thing -- he keeps getting into heated arguments with them about roleplaying games and just generally being a {{Jerkass}}.
46* Harold Lauder in ''Literature/TheStand'' is fat, gross and considers himself [[SurroundedByIdiots the only fully sentient person around.]] He actually flirts with subverting this trope since his genuine intelligence makes him valuable in the post-apocalyptic world and he finally gets some of the social acceptance he's been lacking, but in the end he can't overcome his baggage and joins the BigBad.
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
50* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' fought a few, most notably the Trio in Season 6. Notably, they were the least threatening of her seasonal {{Big Bad}}s, with their blundering being used mostly as a backdrop for Buffy's own struggle against depression, and their petty sense of entitlement and failure to consider the ramifications of their actions contrasted against the Evil-with-a-capital-E that she usually fought. Out of the three, only Warren was really evil. Even then, he was still pretty pathetic.
51* The Technical Boy in ''Series/AmericanGods2017'' may be the literal embodiment of the trope, being the God of Technology and the Internet who takes the form of the most odious sort of tech-geek. Interestingly, he's [[AdaptationalVillainy even more evil than his book counterpart]], reflecting the creators' belief that nerds have gotten eviler since the book was published.
52* Robert Daly from the ''Series/BlackMirror'' episode "[[Recap/BlackMirrorUSSCallister USS Callister]]" is a nerdy, asocial programmer. He disproportionately takes out his frustrations with his co-workers by creating virtual copies of their minds, placing them in a video game mod, and abusively forcing them to reenact his power fantasies. He finds it easier to use his technical skills to force clones of his coworkers to act out his sci-fi fantasies than to actually learn how to get along with them in real life.
53* The BigBad from Season 2 of ''Series/VeronicaMars'', [[spoiler: Cassidy Casablancas, initially seems like a sweet, geeky foil to his douchy older brother Dick but turns out to be far more ruthless and psychotic than Dick ever was. Downplayed in that the bullying and abuse he's suffered for being small, brainy and self-conscious rather than confident and athletic like Dick isn't the direct motivation for his crimes, but it's implied that it is part of what made him cracked enough to be capable of them.]]
54* [[EvilCounterpart Evil Abed]] from ''Series/{{Community}}'' is every bit as dorky as the real Abed, but has gone from being bad at relating to people to outright hurting them ForTheEvulz and exploiting them for his own bizarre plans.
55* The Bureau of Normalcy in ''Series/DoomPatrol2019'' employs the Beard Hunter, who is fat, awkward and still lives with his mother. Somewhat downplayed in that as dorky and clueless as he is, he's technically less dysfunctional than [[DysfunctionJunction the heroes]].
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
59* One of the sample Heroes in ''TabletopGame/BeastThePrimordial'' is a man who grew up being praised for his book-smarts but who has found that those don't amount to success and popularity in the real world. He's concluded that [[MisBlamed that must be the Beasts' fault, somehow,]] and so goes around [[VanHelsingHateCrimes hunting them]] while wearing an ill-fitting BadassLongcoat and a FedoraOfAsskicking.
60* The sample adventure for the ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'' roleplaying game has as its main villain a teenager named Keith Dicks, who is unpopular, unaccomplished and spends most of his time watching crappy science-fiction and fantasy shows on TV. Through a wish granted by an evil genie, Keith has gained the power to make the protagonists of his favorite franchises come to life, and is sending them out to kill everyone who's been mean to him.
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Video Games]]
64* ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'' villain Midnight Master is an evil alternate universe version of friendly loser Percy Winkley, in Praetoria he got fed up with being a laughingstock and decided to show them all... and it worked.
65* Berdly from ''VideoGame/{{Deltarune}}'' aspires to be this in Chapter 2, but [[spoiler: he does a HeelFaceTurn at the end. That's assuming you don't [[KillItWithIce kill him first]].]]
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Visual Novels]]
69* Dennis from ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework'' is unattractive to girls, yet is always looking for a way to get into their pants, regarding of morality or even consent.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Western Animation]]
73* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': Comic Book Guy often gets this treatment in WesternAnimation/TreehouseOfHorror episodes. For example, one episode casts him as The Collector, an evil supervillain who collects people like comic books and stores them forever in plastic bags. The prize of his collection is Creator/LucyLawless / [[Series/XenaWarriorPrincess Xena]], who he kidnaps.
74* Mandark from ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory,'' since ''[[BigDamnMovie Ego Trip]]'', became this. Earlier, he was once the bitter rival of the main character, Dexter. Since then he is now a full-on villain. [[RetroactiveContinuity In his "first meeting" with Dexter,]] the latter makes fun of him for his [[FreudianExcuse hippie attire and name, "Susan"]]. This enrages Mandark and he becomes Dexter's ArchEnemy.
75* Control Freak is a recurring villain in both ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'' and especially ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo.'' He's a fat, pasty, {{gonk}} geek who's completely obsessed with pop culture. He frequently uses his UniversalRemoteControl to [[RealityWarper warp reality]] and make the Titans' lives miserable, usually by placing them inside television programming -- including the ''Teen Titans Go!'' cartoon itself.
76* [[EvilGenius Tobey McCallister]] of ''WesternAnimation/WordGirl''. He may not be that strong on his own, but the boy genius' [[RobotMaster giant robots]] often pose a threat to the city at large. The fact that he has a [[VillainousCrush crush on WordGirl]] and a [[MommasBoy weakness to his mother]] lead to this being PlayedForLaughs.
77[[/folder]]

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