Every month, the community votes on who currently holds the title of the "Badass of the Month."


The bad (frustrating):

The good:


To understand Superheroine Central, you have to go back to the early 2000s. The internet was shifting from Geocities fan pages to dedicated content management systems. For fans of heroines like Power Girl, Wonder Woman, and Supergirl, finding high-quality art and stories that focused on intense, dramatic, often adult-oriented situations was nearly impossible.

Superheroine Central launched as a solution to that fragmentation. Initially, it served as a central hub (hence the name) linking to various independent artists and writers who specialized in "superheroine peril"—a genre that includes bondage, mind control, costume tearing, and vulnerability.

Unlike DeviantArt or Tumblr, which had fluctuating content policies, SHC built its own infrastructure. By the late 2000s, it had transformed into a premium membership site featuring:

The keyword "Superheroine Central" became synonymous with "the place where the gloves come off"—literally and figuratively.

Yes, if you:

No, if you: