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The Homelander[1] is a character in the adult superhero comic book series The Boys created by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson. The Homelander is the public superhero persona of John Gillman, the psychopathic, narcissistic, and extremely powerful leader of The Seven—the world’s premier and secretly hedonistic team of superheroes (referred to as “Supes”) bred and funded by the multi-billion dollar conglomerate Vought-American. Beneath his public image as a noble hero, the Homelander recklessly abuses his powers for personal gain and cares little about the well-being of those he professes to protect, and has been described as a personification of negative perceptions of the United States.[2][3] As a parody of the DC Comics character Superman, the Homelander’s powers include superhuman strength and speed, flight, X-ray and heat vision, and invulnerability.[4][5][6][7] He serves as the archenemy of Billy Butcher, the leader of “The Boys”, a team of CIA-sponsored vigilantes dedicated to opposing corrupt Supes.

In the Amazon Prime Video television adaptation of the same name developed by Eric Kripke, the character, simply known as Homelander, is portrayed by Antony Starr. This version is the megalomaniacal son of Soldier Boy and the father of Ryan Butcher, born as a result of Homelander raping Billy Butcher’s wife Becca (a crime committed by Black Noir in the comics). Kripke has stated that he views the series’ version of Homelander as a metaphor for U.S. president Donald Trump.[8] Starr has reprised his role as the character in both spin-off instalments of the franchise, including The Boys Presents: Diabolical and Gen V, and outside media such as Death Battle!. Starr’s performance has received acclaim.[9][10]

Appearances

Comic book series

The Boys (2006–2012)

Homelander is a supposedly patriotic superhero who leads the superhero team The Seven. He is the most powerful superhuman created by Vought-American. The company’s cover story for Homelander is that he is an alien who landed in the United States as an infant, much like Superman. In reality, he and the rest of the original roster of the Seven were grown in a secret laboratory, the progeny of genetic material taken from Stormfront, who was injected with Compound V while still a member of the Hitler Youth. Homelander spent most of his young life chained down with a hydrogen bomb strapped to him in case he tried to escape. His mother was a mentally disabled woman who died giving birth to him. Homelander remains under the financial thumb of V, as their money funds the Seven’s hedonistic lifestyle. Homelander eventually tries to encourage the other superheroes to do what they want, but relents due to his fear of his boss “The Vought Guy”/”The Guy from Vought”.

Until the events of the series’ climax, Billy Butcher is tricked into thinking Homelander had raped his wife Becca, who then died giving birth to a superhuman baby Butcher had then killed. In Issue #40, the Boys receive a series of incriminating doctored photos seemingly showing Homelander engaging in grisly acts of murder, cannibalism, and necrophilia against men, women, and children. In private, Homelander shows signs of suffering a mental breakdown, talking to his own reflection in a mirror, and having bouts of nausea. He eventually decides that he is damned anyway for the acts depicted in the photos, and decides to give in to any intrusive thoughts that cross his mind.

From Herogasm onward, Homelander resolves to free himself and the superhero community from Vought-American’s control. In Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men, he leads the other superheroes in a coup d’etat against the United States, launching an attack on the White House and killing everyone inside, including the president. During the subsequent confrontation between Homelander and Butcher, the masked Black Noir arrives in the Oval Office and reveals himself as a clone of Homelander (the first of the Seven grown after him), created solely to kill Homelander if he ever went rogue. Gradually driven insane due to not being allowed to kill Homelander, Noir reveals he committed the atrocities in the photos, including raping Butcher’s wife, to trick the initially truly benevolent Homelander so that Noir would finally be allowed to fulfill his purpose. Outraged, Homelander attacks Black Noir. Black Noir and Homelander violently brutalise each other as Butcher flees, due to Homelander’s lasers destroying the room. A badly wounded Noir emerges from the White House holding only a section of Homelander’s arm and ribs, having torn him apart with his bare hands. Butcher then orders the waiting Marines to open fire, bringing Noir to his knees, before killing him by beating his head open with a crowbar and crushing his prefrontal cortex with his hands, hoping that Noir’s memory of raping Becca is destroyed in the process.

Television series

The Boys (2019–2026)

Antony Starr plays Homelander in the TV series.

In the television adaptation, Antony Starr plays Homelander as an adult, with Rowan Smyth playing him as a child in the first season, and Isaac Weeks playing him as a child in the fourth season. As interpreted within the television series, he is considered by some reviewers to be analogous to DC’s Superman.[4][5] As leader of the Seven, Homelander is viewed by the general public as an affable, sincere and acclaimed superhero and a modern icon of America; however, having been poorly raised in a laboratory environment by Vought scientist Jonah Vogelbaum, he is in fact a sociopathic narcissist who is openly contemptuous of both humans and Supes that he considers “lesser” beings. He is also highly self-righteous, nihilistic, hedonistic, delusional, possessive, paranoid, vindictive, insecure, insensitive, racist, hypocritical, reckless with his powers, and incapable of accepting the possibility of any flaw in his person or decision-making.

In 2011, eight years before the events of season one, Homelander rapes Billy Butcher’s wife Becca after she is assigned as his assistant; however, he lets her live and, unbeknownst to him, she gives birth to a son named Ryan. His discovery of the lies surrounding Ryan’s existence influences his decision to maim Vogelbaum and murder his pseudo-mother figure and Vought CEO Madelyn Stillwell. However, his emotional ineptitude and sociopathic traits initially alienate him from his son, and the loss of Stillwell’s moderating influence on his behavior unbalances him further. He enters a sexual relationship with Stormfront despite a difficult beginning, and conspires with her to remove his son from Becca’s care and turn the public against “supervillains”, hoping to create public outcry for an increase of superheroes and for their induction into the United States Armed Forces. However, during Butcher’s rescue attempt of Ryan and Becca, Stormfront is critically maimed by Ryan after attacking Becca. Before Homelander can hurt the boy in retaliation, Maeve blackmails Homelander into letting him go and leaving her alone.

In a series of television interviews, he is forced to denounce his relationship with Stormfront and apologize for his actions. Partly to moderate Homelander’s behavior, CEO Stan Edgar and Vought’s board of directors install Starlight as co-captain of the Seven. However, after learning that Stormfront has committed suicide, Homelander becomes even more unstable and lashes out in a spiteful rant during his televised birthday celebration, claiming he is the world’s savior. This skyrockets his approval rating with rural white males; to remove Edgar, Homelander bribes his adoptive daughter Victoria Neuman into opening an investigation into him (ousting him from Vought on corruption allegations) with Homelander assuming control of the company himself. Before leaving, Edgar chastises Homelander and warns that he will not be there to clean up his messes. He appoints Ashley Barrett as his puppet ruler and antagonizes Starlight by reinstating the Deep[a] as a member of the Seven, and falsely announcing that he is in a relationship with her during the finale of American Hero.

After Starlight denounces Homelander and Vought and abandons her superhero persona via a livestream, Homelander claims to have ended the relationship himself and accuses her of engaging in human trafficking via her charitable foundation, the Starlight House. After learning that Queen Maeve not only acted as an informant for the Boys but also slept with Butcher, Homelander has her detained at Seven Tower with the intention of harvesting her eggs. Homelander later learns that Soldier Boy is his father after receiving a call from him; Homelander then savagely murders Black Noir, having confirmed this information with him. He later picks up Ryan from Mallory’s house after intimidating her. When Homelander attempts to connect with Soldier Boy by introducing him to Ryan and proposing that the three could be a family, Soldier Boy disowns Homelander as a weak, damaged, attention-seeking disappointment and attempts to kill or depower him, as part of his deal with Butcher. Homelander turns against Soldier Boy after the latter strikes Ryan, but is instead forced to reluctantly fight Queen Maeve, gouging her eye out. Having won Ryan back from Butcher, he later introduces him to supporters at Vought Tower. There, a pro-Starlight protestor hits Ryan in the face with a soft drink can, provoking Homelander to kill him with his heat vision. This, to his own surprise, brings him the applause of his and Stormfront’s supporters, while Ryan is impressed.

Having won over his son and in control of Vought, in the fourth season, Homelander faces a murder trial and lacks purpose having gained “everything [he’s] ever wanted.” Recruiting the help of the ultra-intelligent Sister Sage, he seeks to gain control of the government, believing that humans are inferior and have “too much control.” At the trial’s conclusion, he orders three of his fans to be killed, starting a brawl immediately after being exonerated. He also organizes Ryan’s first “rescue” (a Vought publicity stunt) forcing him to use his power to kill the “criminal” actor. After trying to kill Hughie, he has a fight with Ryan for seeing Butcher and suffers a mental breakdown; experiencing a hallucination of himself who states he must purge his “human” side.

Visiting the lab where he was raised, he proceeds to torture, humiliate and kill the people responsible for testing on him in an act of revenge, with the exception of Dr. Barbara Findley, whom he leaves locked up amongst the corpses of the staff. Following the events at the lab, Homelander begins to connect with and support Ryan. Later, Homelander informs his team that they will have to be more cruel and ruthless for the greater good, before he orders the Seven to kill Cameron Coleman, who is believed to have leaked evidence exonerating Starlighters. Homelander, along with most of the Seven and Victoria Neuman, attend a party organized by Tek Knight, in which he plans, along with Sage and Neuman, to turn the congressmen against presidential candidate Robert Singer. Homelander learns from Firecracker that the mole is still alive; the two soon become intimate when she feeds him her breast milk. Homelander subsequently begins to give Firecracker more influence on the team. Believing him to be the mole, Homelander kills Webweaver and sends the Deep and Black Noir to kill Butcher and the rest of the Boys, without success. Feeling betrayed by A-Train, Homelander expels Sage from the Seven, having discovered she hid the fact he was the mole. Later that night, Homelander overhears how his son talks about his mother and Butcher, which leaves him in shock. Homelander discovers Butcher’s gift and, in a fit of rage, destroys his apartment and scolds Ryan, making the latter leave. Afterwards, seeking to sabotage Singer’s presidential campaign, Homelander outs Neuman as a Supe, and orders the Seven to kill everyone in Vought who may have leverage over him, to gain total control of the company. When Neuman is killed by Butcher, Sage reveals to him that it was all part of her plan, and the new president of the United States, Steven Calhoun, swears loyalty to Homelander, declares martial law and deputizes him and his superhuman army. Calhoun then shows Homelander the pod that Soldier Boy is being held in.

A year later, Homelander begins to enact his increasingly authoritarian rule on America, having political dissidents sent to internment camps and purging the government. He releases Soldier Boy to help him search for V1, with which Homelander can become immortal; despite deeming him to be unfit to be so, Soldier Boy ultimately chooses to give his son the formula, believing that Stormfront would have wanted it. Having enabled his position and believing the world will soon descend into a war between humans and Supes, Sister Sage, seeing Homelander’s potential immortality as a threat to her goal of total self-isolation and peace, defects to the Boys. Soldier Boy, trying to leave Vought behind, is forced into stasis by Homelander. The latter then executes Calhoun and kills Frenchie while searching for a rogue Sage, who had helped the Boys replicate Soldier Boy’s nuclear depowering beam by using Kimiko as the test subject. Having had a hallucination of Stillwell as an angel who promised him Godhood, Homelander prepares to declare himself so before the entire world. He also recruits psychics to act as his “thought police” to hunt down and execute heretics. In a final confrontation, the Boys kill Oh Father and the Deep while Butcher and Ryan restrain Homelander for Kimiko to hit him with the nuclear depowering beam. Without his powers, Homelander is effortlessly defeated by Butcher. Showing his true colors to the world, Homelander realizes he is powerless and desperately tries to bargain with Butcher, offering to gift him Vought amongst other pleas. Butcher ignores Homelander and instantly kills him by impaling him through his skull with a crowbar and splitting his scalp from his head, causing his blood and brain matter to spill out. A camera recording Homelander’s planned speech broadcasts the scene worldwide, leaving his legacy tarnished.

Gen V (2023–2025)

Homelander appears during the chaos at Godolkin University in the first-season finale of Gen V after being called by Ashley Barrett. Upon arrival, he sees the fallen Supes from “the Woods” and Cate Dunlap’s left arm being blown off. When Marie Moreau starts to address him, Homelander does the wait a minute gesture and asks Marie what kind of Supe attacks her own kind. Before Marie can explain, Homelander speaks loud enough for the spectators to hear by telling Marie to “stay back” and blasts his heat vision at her. After this, he makes the real perpetrators of the attack, Cate and Sam Riordan, the ones who saved the day, and Marie and her group are locked up. Homelander watches his cover-up be mentioned by Cameron Coleman with satisfaction.

The episode “Cooking Lessons” revealed that Homelander and Marie are the only success stories of Project Odessa, an experiment by Vought to create “god-like” superhumans.

Web series

Seven on 7 (2020–2021)

In the following 2020–2021 promotional web series, Seven on 7 with Cameron Coleman, which bridges the events of the second and third seasons, Homelander continues dealing with the aftermath of Stormfront being revealed to be a Nazi, as well as filming promos for Vought’s streaming service, Vought+, and to celebrate Christmas.[11][12]

Death Battle! (2020–2022)

In the 2020 Amazon Prime Video-sponsored The Boys promotional episodes of Death Battle!, in promotion for its second season,[13] Homelander (voiced by Yong Yea) participates in the Seven’s simulated battle royale, declaring himself the winner after killing Billy Butcher (standing-in for Black Noir), before throwing aside the laser baby to fight Stormfront, a consequence of which Wiz and Boomstick are uneasy of.[14][15]

In a 2022 episode, Homelander is pitted against Nolan Grayson / Omni-Man (from Invincible). Through a simulated battle, the hosts determined Omni-Man’s superior strength, skill, and experience would prevail against Homelander if the two fought to the death.[16]

The Boys Presents: Diabolical (2022)

In The Boys Presents: Diabolical, Starr reprises his role as Homelander from the live-action series. Homelander first appears in the final moments of the episode “An Animated Short Where Pissed-Off Supes Kill Their Parents“, executing the title characters (escaped Supe teenagers with abnormal powers from the Red River Assisted Living for the Gifted Child) with his heat vision on Vought’s behalf, after they kill their parents due to the events of The Boys episode “Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men“. Ghost was the only survivor of the attack. Vought covered up all the deaths that were caused where one news report states that Homelander saved Ghost’s mother from a “natural gas explosion” that took the life of Ghost’s dad.

Homelander next appears in the episode “I’m Your Pusher“, set in the same continuity as The Boys comic book series while honoring Great Wide Wonder during a promotional campaign, despite very visibly and secretly noticing that the Great Wide Wonder was not mentally after hearing his erradic heartbeat. Homelander witnesses his drug overdose (induced by Billy Butcher) lead him to crash into Ironcast during a stunt, killing them both. In order to cover up what happened, Homelander, Queen Maeve, and Jack from Jupiter blame a “Cold War satellite” controlled by the evil Galaxius for their deaths claiming it is “hidden in the light of the Sun” which the watching crowd eagerly believed as they flew away.[17][18]

In the season finale, the prequel episode “One Plus One Equals Two“, a young Homelander makes his debut as a member of the Seven. Flashbacks of his childhood reveal the systematic torture he received from Vought scientists testing the extent of his powers, as he falsely claims to have had a positive childhood as a baseball prodigy. His superior Madelyn Stillwell, who has been manipulating him, warns him of Black Noir, the “Homelander before Homelander”, claiming that he will seek every opportunity to destroy him.[19][20] Assigned to tackle a hostage situation at a chemical plant ahead of Noir as his first mission as a superhero, Homelander attempts a peaceful resolution; however, after accidentally killing a hostage and injuring the eco-terrorist leader by lasering the latter’s broken gun, he kills the remaining eco-terrorists and all but one hostage in a psychotic episode after they collectively berate him for his recklessness. After Black Noir arrives on the scene, Homelander attempts to explain his actions before resolving to kill Noir to cover them up. After Noir tricks Homelander into blowing up the compound, he gains his trust by mercy killing the last witness to Homelander’s murders in its aftermath, and writes him an excusatory speech to provide to the press outside, claiming the eco-terrorists had a bomb. Everyone bought that speech. Later at Vought headquarters, Homelander tells Stillwell that she was wrong about Noir.[21]

Development

The character was designed as an evil version of Superman and Captain America in terms of powerset and costume. His cape pulled to the left resembles the first costume of Captain Marvel a.k.a. Shazam.[22] Homelander’s backstory in the original comics is similar to that in the television adaption of The Boys.[23]

Garth Ennis describes Homelander as: “an almost entirely negative character. He is really just a series of unpleasant urges kept in check by his own intelligence, which is enough to understand that he can have anything he wants so long as he doesn’t push his luck too far.” Also: “It might help to think of the Homelander as having all the self-control of… let’s say… a fourteen-year-old.”[24]

The Boys producer and showrunner Eric Kripke has stated that while Homelander can “in theory” be killed, a plot twist which involved the character being killed by his clone Black Noir in the comic book version was not used in the television adaptation, where Black Noir is instead depicted as a black man and the character’s psychopathic traits are amalgamated with Homelander.[25][26][27]

Powers and abilities

In The Boys, Homelander’s powers include heat vision, super strength, super speed, flight, super hearing and enhanced vocal cords, Homelander is nearly invulnerable. He also ages slower than a normal human, due to Compound V. Homelander additionally has X-ray vision, which enables him to see through anything. According to TheWrap, He is much stronger than anyone else in The Boys universe.[28]

In the television series, Homelander has the same powers as his comic counterpart, with the stipulations that his X-ray vision can not see through zinc, and he ages like a normal human. In the season one finale “You Found Me“, Madelyn Stillwell states that Homelander has no weaknesses, saying, “there isn’t a weapon on Earth that they haven’t thrown at him; they’ve all failed.”[29] However, in season 5, it is revealed that his powers can be temporarily neutralized by the high-level radiation of Soldier Boy’s energy beam or enriched uranium.[30]

In other media

Video games

Homelander as he appears in Mortal Kombat 1
  • Homelander appears in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II as a purchaseable operator in multiplayer modes, voiced by Antony Starr.[31]
  • Homelander, based on Antony Starr’s likeness, appears in Mortal Kombat 1 via the “Kombat Pack” DLC,[32][33] voiced by Jake Green.[34] In November 2023, prior to Homelander’s addition, Starr revealed that while he would be providing his likeness for the game, he would not be voicing the character.[35] In his arcade mode ending, Homelander starts to lay waste to America until a portal from the Mortal Kombat universe opens and a demon horde emerges from it. After destroying them and regaining public favor, he travels through the portal to take part in the Mortal Kombat tournament.
  • Homelander was introduced into Mortal Kombat Mobile in 2025 as a collectible character.[36]
  • A cosmetic outfit based on Homelander is available for the operator Ace in Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege. The bundle was released in March 2025.[37]
  • Homelander appears in The Boys VR video game The Boys: Trigger Warning with Jake Green reprising his voice role.

Music

Notes

  1. ^ The Deep had sexually assaulted Starlight in season one

References

  1. ^ Robertson, Darick; McKay, Adam (March 10, 2015). The Art of The Boys: The Complete Covers. Dynamite Entertainment. ISBN 978-1-60690-576-0.
  2. ^ Smail, Gretchen (August 2, 2019). THE BOYS' Homelander Represents the Worst of America”. Nerdist. Archived from the original on August 2, 2019. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  3. ^ Coates, Lauren (October 26, 2020). The Boys' Homelander represents how the world sees America”. Polygon. Archived from the original on July 9, 2022. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Rubin, Peter (July 26, 2019). “Amazon’s 'The Boys' Tests the Limits of Superhero Fatigue”. Wired.com. Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Hale, Mike (July 26, 2019). “Review: 'The Boys' Deconstructs the Superhero, With a Light Touch”. The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 8, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  6. ^ Sarner, Lauren (July 20, 2019). 'The Boys' star Antony Starr dishes on edgy new superhero show”. New York Post. Archived from the original on July 20, 2019. Retrieved July 20, 2019.
  7. ^ Gass, Zach (June 12, 2021). “Omniman (& 9 Other Best Known Alternative Versions Of Superman)”. Screen Rant. Archived from the original on July 9, 2021. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
  8. ^ Murray, Conor (October 23, 2024). “Prime Video’s ‘The Boys’ Mocks Trump’s McDonald’s Stint With Homelander, Its Trump-Like Antagonist”. Forbes. Archived from the original on August 29, 2025. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
  9. ^ Darwish, Meaghan (August 6, 2019). 'The Boys': Why Homelander Is TV’s Best New Villain”. TV Insider. Archived from the original on August 7, 2019. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  10. ^ Pulliam-Moore, Charles (November 16, 2020). “The Fascism Is the Point”. io9. Archived from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved November 16, 2020.
  11. ^ Gribbin, Sean (October 7, 2021). “Black Noir’s Season 3 Arc Involves The Boys' Scariest Supe”. Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on July 2, 2022. Retrieved October 7, 2021.
  12. ^ Ryan, Danielle (November 12, 2021). The Boys Roasts Disney With A ‘Vought+ Day’ Video”. /Film. Archived from the original on July 13, 2022. Retrieved November 12, 2021.
  13. ^ Spangler, Todd (March 16, 2022). “Rooster Teeth Hires Amazon Studios’ Adam Bersin as Head of Marketing (EXCLUSIVE)”. Variety. Archived from the original on March 16, 2022. Retrieved March 16, 2022. [Amazon Studios Head of Marketing, Adam] Bersin said he was attracted to Rooster Teeth after working with the company on custom-content partnerships for several of Amazon Studios[‘] launches, like the Death Battle for The Boys” Season 2.
  14. ^ The Seven Battle Royale (The Boys). DEATH BATTLE!. September 17, 2020. Archived from the original on December 30, 2020. Retrieved September 17, 2020 – via YouTube.
  15. ^ BREAKDOWN: The Seven Battle Royale (The Boys). DEATH BATTLE!. September 17, 2020. Archived from the original on November 3, 2020. Retrieved September 17, 2020 – via YouTube.
  16. ^ Omni-Man VS Homelander (Invincible VS The Boys). DEATH BATTLE!. May 23, 2022. Archived from the original on August 5, 2022. Retrieved June 18, 2022 – via YouTube.
  17. ^ Milligan, Mercedes (February 2, 2022). “Prime Offers a Taste of 'Diabolical' in New ‘Vought-A-Burger’ Teaser”. Animation Magazine. Archived from the original on July 5, 2022. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  18. ^ Maas, Jennifer (February 16, 2022). The Boys: Diabolical Trailer: Simon Pegg Finally Plays Hughie Campbell”. Variety. Archived from the original on July 13, 2022. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  19. ^ Swanstrom, Kevin (March 5, 2022). “Homelander Diabolical Finale Is Canon For The Boys Season 3, Says Kripke”. Screen Rant. Archived from the original on March 7, 2022. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  20. ^ Stinson, Katherine (March 15, 2022). “Is Black Noir Actually Homelander’s PR Agent? There’s Proof in 'The Boys Presents: Diabolical'. Distractify. Archived from the original on June 7, 2022. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  21. ^ Maas, Jennifer (March 5, 2022). “How 'Diabolical' Connects to 'The Boys' Season 3: Yes, That Finale Is Canon”. Variety. Archived from the original on July 6, 2022. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  22. ^ Berlatsky, Noah (September 4, 2020). “The Triumph of Evil Supermen”. The New York Observer. Archived from the original on September 25, 2020. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  23. ^ Harn, Darby (October 26, 2020). “5 Ways Homelander In Amazon’s The Boys Is Comics-Accurate (& 5 How He’s Different)”. Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  24. ^ Rybandt, Joe (September 9, 2008). “The Writer and his Editor: Ennis & Rybandt”. Newsarama. Archived from the original on June 3, 2016. Retrieved September 9, 2008.
  25. ^ Venable, Nick (October 11, 2020). “Does The Boys' Black Noir Reveal Mean That Big Homelander Comic Twist Isn’t Happening?”. CinemaBlend. Archived from the original on July 7, 2022. Retrieved October 11, 2020.
  26. ^ Reimann, Tom (September 4, 2020). “Can Homelander Be Killed? The Boys’ Eric Kripke Weighs In”. Collider. Archived from the original on September 6, 2020. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  27. ^ Griffeth, Trey (September 4, 2020). 'The Boys' Showrunner On If Homelander Can Be Killed”. Heroic Hollywood. Archived from the original on November 24, 2020. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  28. ^ Calhoun, Raquel (July 19, 2024). ‘The Boys’ Universe Supes Ranked: Who’s the Most Powerful?”. TheWrap. Retrieved June 15, 2026.
  29. ^ The Boys Season 1, Episode 8: “You Found Me” (July 26, 2019) Kripke, Eric; Saunders, Anne Cofell; Sonnenshine, Rebecca.
  30. ^ The Boys Season 5, Episode 4: “King of Hell” (April 22, 2026)
  31. ^ Tassi, Paul. “This Is What Homelander, Starlight And Black Noir Bundles Look Like In ‘Call Of Duty,’ Plus Release Dates”. Forbes. Archived from the original on July 14, 2023. Retrieved July 15, 2023.
  32. ^ Onder, Cade (July 21, 2023). Mortal Kombat 1 Reveals Homelander, Peacemaker, and Omni-Man as DLC”. ComicBook.com. Archived from the original on August 1, 2023. Retrieved July 21, 2023.
  33. ^ Parrish, Ash (July 24, 2023). Mortal Kombat adds Omni-Man, Peacemaker, and Homelander to roster”. The Verge. Archived from the original on August 10, 2023. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  34. ^ Reeves, Brianna (June 11, 2024). “Mortal Kombat 1’s Homelander voice actor isn’t who fans expected”. Dexerto. Archived from the original on June 11, 2024. Retrieved June 11, 2024.
  35. ^ Teale, Rory (November 12, 2023). “Antony Starr confirms he’s not voicing Homelander in Mortal Kombat 1. Dexerto. Archived from the original on November 13, 2023. Retrieved November 14, 2023.
  36. ^ Mortal Kombat 1 – Homelander Story Ending Cutscene. Mortal Kombat 1. June 5, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024 – via YouTube.
  37. ^ Makuch, Eddie (March 18, 2025). Rainbow Six Siege Crossover With The Boys Out Now With Homelander And Black Noir”. GameSpot. Archived from the original on March 19, 2025. Retrieved March 19, 2025.
  38. ^ Romano, Nick (December 2, 2022). “Metro Boomin samples Homelander from ‘The Boys’ on new album”. Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on February 14, 2023. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  39. ^ The Chalkeaters (June 8, 2024). ROLL OUT THE FALLOUT! – Original Animation ■ The Chalkeaters ft. Black Gryph0n & Benny Benack III. Retrieved June 8, 2024 – via YouTube.