There are 4 villains and 4 totems.
1) Binary Bard (Mordred) - Astrolabe Totem (in the giant clock chamber)
2) Captain Crawfish - Ship Totem (in the bottle on his shelf)
3) Black Widow - Paint Brush Totem (her self portrait)
4) Dr. Hare - Golden Carrot Totem (at the bottom of the ant nest)
There are 4, one from each super villain's dream. (see related question)
The true villain, who is using you to acquire the powerful totems from the villain dreams, is Dr. Jupiter, or as he is better known, Zeus, the power-hungry god of Mythology Island. Once you have given him the totems, he tries to take control of Poptropica and you have to stop him (as many players did previously on Mythology Island). The battles are very similar, but a little shorter.
There are 6 villains to defeat on Super Power Island.
And Be a Villain has 216 pages.
the word villain has two syllables.
five
he has many of them
Betty Jetty is on top of the skyscraper and you need to be able to fly to chase her. To get your flying power, catch all 5 of the other super villains using your wits. Once they are all back in prison, the phone on Main Street will ring -- answer it to receive your super flying power! (on this island only) There is an icon at the lower left that lets you turn the power on and off. Fly to the top of the building and chase Betty Jetty. If you can chase her for two minutes without being hit by too many of her green glowing orbs, then you can get close enough to knock her down. When Ned Noodlehead tackles her, he receives the Island Medallion. But get a hot dog from the park and bring it to his comic book store, and he will probably swap for it.
Caligula was a villain. he was an awful roman emporer who killed many people for no reason
This line, in Act 3 Scene 5 is Juliet's comment on her mother's line "That same villain Romeo". Juliet's aside shows that as far as she's concerned, Romeo is many miles from being a villain. Which we already knew, of course.
Probably about 4 or 3.
Yes, it is possible for one villain to kill off another villain, especially if they have conflicting goals or interests. This scenario of one villain eliminating competition or perceived threats is a common trope in many stories and can add tension and complexity to the plot.