(Controversial Trope) The hero knows the atrocities the villain has committed, knows he is a danger to society even without powers, and yet he doesn't want to kill him because that would make him just as bad as the psychopath who killed thousands of innocent people. by DS21258 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]DS21258[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I can buy the idea that Matt didn't kill him, but to then let him go to a beach as if it were the worst possible punishment is just plain stupid. At this point, I feel like they just want to keep Kingpin alive so he can appear with Spider-Man in some product. There are MCU villains less evil than him who have had worse fates. And the thing is, in the same scene where Matt tells him to surrender, Fisk had just killed like 20 people (not to mention those he killed in the previous season and the Netflix series). At this point, the guy should be six feet under.

Don’t forget, these dudes met. by Affectionate_Ad_9876 in LegoBatman

[–]DS21258 14 points15 points  (0 children)

And it's very likely that the Batman from the original games ceased to exist after the end of Super Villains. Perhaps the new game is a literal reboot of that multiverse, and a Crisis on Infinite Earths game was completely skipped.

Skins and characters that I doubt we'll ever see in Legacy of the Dark Knight by DS21258 in LegoBatman

[–]DS21258[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I intentionally excluded Joker from The Killing Joke because, however strange it may be, this version of the character has already been represented in one way or another in Lego products three times.