“Action Comics #64,” Winslow Schott was portrayed as a disturbed toymaker who used deadly toys to commit crimes. Over the decades, Toyman has evolved into more tech-savvy versions — some even revealed to be robotic or alternate characters entirely.
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Physically, Toyman poses little threat to Superman. However, his cruel and often emotionally charged schemes frequently target innocent civilians, forcing Superman into complex moral dilemmas. In many stories, Toyman begins as a reformed individual but is drawn back into crime for personal or tragic reasons, using his toy-themed weapons in elaborate plots.
In “The Great Toyman Trivia Contest,” he devises a bizarre revenge plot aimed at the man who stole the first toy he ever made. In “Superman: The Animated Series,” Toyman kidnaps Lois Lane and engages Superman in a psychological game of cat and mouse, coming dangerously close to victory. At his darkest, such as in the 1990s comics, Toyman has even murdered children — most notably Cat Grant’s son — proving that a villain doesn’t need superpowers to hit Superman where it counts.
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