E se o Imperador Mark substituísse Homelander em The Boys?

Homelander built The Seven on fear, narcissism, and the certainty that no one could stop him. Vought designed him as the perfect product: powerful, controllable, and completely dependent on their approval. Today, someone arrives who has destroyed planets, ruled an Empire for centuries, and doesn't need anyone's approval. And the first thing he does when he enters Vought Tower isn't pose for the cameras. It's assess everything that's wrong. In the original timeline, Homelander kept The Seven in check through terror and Vought in control through mutual dependence. In this timeline, the Emperor occupies that place. And it takes Vought exactly forty-eight hours to understand that it has made the most expensive mistake in its corporate history. What comes next isn't a story of corrupt superheroes. It's the story of what happens to a corporation designed to control power when the power it controls decides it no longer needs to be controlled.