When it comes to being a Dungeon Master, few things are more fun in Dungeons & Dragons than getting to play the villain. It's a chance to give your players a fun figure to rally against. A hero is largely defined by the villains they defeat, after all.

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It can be surprisingly difficult to make a compelling villain for low-level play though. Making a powerful dark lord isn't so hard, but someone who is both a challenge to low-level characters but still dangerous enough that they feel like a bigger threat can be tricky. We've put together some examples you can use in your game, or take as a starting point for your own creations.

Updated on November 22, 2024 by Jonathan Eakin: We've added a few more villains, as you can never have enough options to create the best BBEG possible for every campaign. With four more options to choose from for several different campaign types, check out even more villains to add to your campaign.

12 The Activist

For The Cause

A Nature Priest by Alexander Mokhov

Some of the best villains are the ones with a cause your players and their characters can see the value of, but whose methods are so extreme that they have to be stopped. Ecological activists are especially good for this, Poison Ivy is a classic example from comics.

A druid who feels civilization has encroached too far on nature may take violent action to restore balance, or someone seeking to steal from the rich for the poor could go too far. Sometimes a villain is a hero with a faulty conscience.

11 The Hero

Justice Served

A Devout Warrior by Michael Broussard

Every Dungeon Master knows that their party of adventurers has done some less than heroic deeds at some point or another. This is usually done for the sake of laughs at the table, but if you like enforcing consequences on your players then your next villain might be a hero.

A noble knight who has heard tale of some of your parties lapses in judgment could hunt them down to enact justice, and be completely in the right to do so. This a great way to turn the tables on your players and make them question the course of their character arcs.

10 The Pawn

Unwilling Or Unwitting

Laurana and Kitiara by Wizards of the Coast

Not every villain is a willing participant in villainy, or even aware that what they're doing could be considered evil. Playing with the ideas of a character controlled, either magically or through manipulation, can be a great way to make your characters try to find non-violent solutions.

This is also a classic way to set up your next villain, the one behind the actions of the first. Chaining your villains together like this, so long as it doesn't go on too long, can help your campaign feel less like a series of one-shot adventures and more like a connected story.

9 The Cursed

Whatever It Takes

 Liliana The Necromancer by Livia Prima

Characters who feel driven to the edge are often capable of acts of desperation, making for the perfect villain. Someone cursed to an ill fate might do whatever they can to escape it, throwing their morality to the side.

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Whether your players decide to stop them with violence or help them escape their doom as a way to remove their motivation for evil will be up to them, but is also a question of how you as a DM choose to frame the situation.

8 The Cultist

Bad Religion

Bone Devil art via Wizards of the Coast

The cultist in service to fiends or dark gods is a classic, and with good reason. They're easy to portray as clearly evil with dark rites and acts of human sacrifice, and they're perfect for low-level play since they're usually not all that strong themselves.

The threat of a cult completing a ritual to empower themselves or summon an avatar of their deity is plenty of reason enough for your players to want to stop them, especially if given the quest by their own gods.

Cultists offer a great progression from low-level to mid-level play. Your players can always discover that the cult is larger than they thought, forced to deal with increasingly powerful members of the cult as they level up.

7 The Bandit

Anything For Gold

Half Elf Rogue by Daniel Castiblanco

Motivations for villains can be a tough thing to get right. Too grand and they don't feel relatable, too simple and they're not believable. Greed is a simple solution to that problem, and it's up to your players to decide whether crime pays or not.

Any lawbreaker out to line their pockets would work, whether it's highwaymen or the thieves guild of a city. Just make sure you make them suitably despicable, if you veer too far in the direction of Robin Hood your players are more likely to sign up than put a stop to their wicked ways.

6 The Bard

The Court Of Public Opinion

Wish by Ekaterina Burmak

Not every villain your party faces has to be one they end up fighting, Spider-Man doesn't usually brawl with J. Jonah Jameson after all. A bard who keeps spreading tall tales that cast your player's characters in a bad light can create a truly memorable antagonist.

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This works especially well if your party includes a Bard, giving them the perfect rival to trade insults with. A villain who twists the reputation of the party is a tough one to defeat, since any jump to violence from your players will only feed into the bad press.

5 The Apprentice

Stay In School Kids

Finding a villain appropriate for a low-level party sometimes means letting them know they're not up against someone at the height of their power. Having them deal with a known apprentice, flunky or underling can be a good way to do this.

A wizard ally of the party might ask them to deal with their apprentice who ran off with forbidden texts, or your players might encounter a necromancer who openly admits to being the apprentice of someone more powerful.

4 The Hag

Witches Get It Done

Darkling Elder by Brian Valeza

D&D has a wide variety of hags and witches available to choose from, and most of them are of a relatively low challenge rating. They'll make a suitably sinister low-level threat for your players to contend with, and the aesthetics are impeccable.

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If you and your players enjoy it and you're looking for a way to keep it relevant as they advance in levels, you can easily introduce that first witches coven as the next threat as they seek revenge for their fallen sister.

3 The King

Power Corrupts

Talus Paladin by Svetlin Velinov

The evil king is a fantasy trope that deserves the amount of usage it sees, toppling a wicked ruler is one of the most satisfying arcs your players can experience. A king might seem like something for higher levels, but this villain scales to whatever level you need.

A king doesn't have to be a king, any person in a position of power can allow for roughly the same arc to play out. A local baron, a guard captain, a cruel ship captain, and any other person who abuses their position will fit the bill.