If you’ve seen the The Boys series finale, then you know what I’m talking about — but how can Vought International possibly save the entire concept of “superheroes” after everything that’s happened?
Sure, a lot of people probably still feel like “not everyone in that group is the same.” Characters from Gen V are genuinely good people, and Starlight is obviously one of the few real heroes. But still, like Billy Butcher said, the next Homelander is always right around the corner.
Even if Stan Edgar and Vought were suddenly like, “Okay, we can’t make the same mistakes again,” and both Vought and the government genuinely tried to make superheroes more controlled and decent, how do you even fix public trust at that point?
And honestly, it doesn’t even have to come from a good place. If Homelander wanted to, he could literally destroy the world. Corporate executives and government officials are still human beings living on Earth — they wouldn’t want to die either. So logically, it makes sense they’d try to create a system where superheroes are at least somewhat stable and manageable.
But my question is: in-universe, how the hell do you actually save it after all this? Most people probably wouldn’t trust superheroes ever again.
“We can turn you into a super hero, in exchange you’ll have this explosive device implanted in your brain which is on a dead man’s switch”
The same way oil companies fix public trust after an oil spill. Or Amazon after countless reports of worker abuse. Or Google after privacy violations. Or wealthy people after being on a certain island. Or fine, Jared the Subway guy.
Vought is so large and embedded in every sector it does not matter to them.
when you have a monopoly on ultraviolence, why even care what the public thinks?

