What If Invincible Hunted The Seven One By One?

The Seven weren't built to be hunted. They were built to be worshipped — Vought's perfect untouchable gods, protected by lawyers and PR machines and a world too distracted to ask what they actually do in the dark. Mark Grayson doesn't care about any of that. This breakdown runs the scenario one by one — what happens when the most powerful non-Vought fighter alive decides the Seven are a problem that needs solving, and works through them methodically. Homelander last, obviously. But the ones before him are more interesting than people think: Queen Maeve's conflict, A-Train's speed against someone who's fought Viltrumites, Black Noir's lethality against someone who doesn't flinch. Each fight strips away another layer of the myth Vought spent decades constructing. The Seven's whole power was that nobody credible ever came for them. Mark isn't political, isn't buyable, and doesn't need a news cycle to justify what he's doing. By the time he reaches the top floor, Homelander isn't facing a hero. He's facing the last thing Vought never planned for — someone who just doesn't stop.