Billy Butcher is one of The Boys' most unique characters - a deadly bruiser with a surprising soft spot for love. However, when original writer Garth Ennis conceived of Butcher, the character was named as a tribute to a totally different franchise that helped inspire the character. However, that's not the only change Ennis made between his initial pitch and the eventual series - Butcher also started off with superpowers nothing like his eventual TV abilities.

In The Boys Omnibus, Ennis shares his original pitch to DC Comics, which includes several details which didn't make it into the final version. Ennis notes that at this point, Butcher's character had a different name, originally going by 'Savage.' It's clear the character's name was always meant to reference his brutal actions towards wayward Supes, but Ennis also intended the name as a nod to one of his inspirations.

the boys' billy butcher

Billy Butcher's original 'Savage' name was a nod to the 2000AD comic character Bill Savage, who Ennis describes as, "an enjoyably psychopathic trucker-turned-guerilla in a Soviet-occupied future Britain."

Butcher's Original Name Connects Him to a 2000AD Character

But the Biggest Difference Is That Butcher Originally Had Superpowers

2000 ad savage

Created by Pat Mills, Bill Savage first appeared in 1977, acting as a resistance fighter against a fascist Russian government known as the Volgans. Hailing from East London, Savage is depicted with the same iconic accent as The Boys' Butcher, using excessive violence and practical thinking to win the day. A fan of 2000AD (which actually features in The Boys comics as one of the ways Frenchie tries to help the Female give up her addiction to violence), Ennis writes that he still considers Savage "as Billy Butcher's great-great-grandfather ten times removed, or whatever."

Ennis ultimately changed Butcher's name because he considered the allusion too obvious, and writes that it was for the best, as 2000AD began publishing new Savage stories shortly afterwards. However, he also its the connection remains, and that he suspects other franchises like Avatar Press' Gravel star heroes who are "Savage's b*****d offspring." Of course, as cool as it is to know Butcher's lineage as a character, the biggest change revealed by Ennis is that the character originally had superpowers.

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The Boys Could Originally Deactivate Superpowers

Ennis Calls It "The Worst Idea in History"

the boys early sketch of team

While Butcher gains powers in the Amazon adaptation of The Boys, Ennis' original pitch was very different. In his original concept for The Boys, he intended the team to be able to deactivate the powers of the Supes they hunted down, but only when the full team were in close proximity. Ennis calls it "the worst idea in history," though he also notes that it's a result of his early instinct that The Boys should be about realistic, gritty violence, "the kind of violence that occurs outside bars at 2 am, where the victim is surrounded and overwhelmed by individuals intent on his destruction."

Thankfully, Ennis decided against the team having a shared superpower before the series actually started, leading to the version of The Boys that comic and TV fans know. And while fans did miss out on Butcher's name connecting him to 2000AD, Ennis' ission means that fans of The Boys still know where Billy got his ruthless violence.

The Boys (2019) TV Show Poster

The Boys franchise is a satirical and dark superhero series based on the comic book by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson. It explores a world where superheroes, or "Supes," are corrupt, violent, and morally bankrupt, all controlled by the powerful corporation Vought International. The story centers around two opposing groups: The Boys, a vigilante team aiming to expose and defeat the corrupt heroes, and The Seven, Vought's elite team of Supes led by the ruthless Homelander.