As an aside, should also mention that Batman is typically seen as mentally ill himself. His no kill rule is very much his vice.
This is something I wish more authors would explore in depth. Usually, only strawman characters or the "evil psychologist" bring it up, but I think it's a valid point. Gotham City has produced, through tragedy, a lot of dangerously insane people who act out according to their obsessive fixations.
It's easy to overlook and assume Batman is somehow different from all his villains. But he isn’t. It just so happens that his obsession turned out to be a heroic one. Don’t get me wrong—Batman is ultimately a hero because he conquered his demons and uses his strength for good, and yes ultimately he is an admirable characters, because he uses his pain to help others. But he is very much as much a child of Gotham as Two-Face or the Joker, and all the other villains are.
S:TAS wasn't particularly good for Superman either with some minor exceptions. Even the world of cardboard speech is undermined by the fact that Superman gets wrecked like only a few minutes after it. I remember reading some BTS trivia from the DCAU days about Tim Daly constantly needing breaks to rest his voice during recording sessions because so much of the dialogue was just him grunting and yelling in pain. Maybe it's just me but when so much of your Superman show involves the titular character being constantly hurt to the extent that the voice actor is constantly needing rest due to his voice being so hoarse from screaming so much, you're writing Superman wrong.
I agree with you. I wouldn’t call
Superman: The Animated Series badly written, especially since Bruce Timm and the team made a sincere effort to create a quality show. That’s a far cry from modern woke shows, which often ruin characters they dislike This show got a lot of things right, such as how they modernized and adapted
The New Gods, Supergirl, Mxyzptlk, and Lex Luthor etc.
Don’t get me wrong—I have few complaints about the DCAU as a whole. They made a genuine effort to highlight lesser-known characters at the time, like John Stewart and Hawkgirl, which I really appreciated. A lot of it was superbly written.
That being said, I think people overlook how obvious it is that Bruce Timm and his team were far more comfortable with, and perhaps even showed favoritism toward, Batman. This becomes especially clear later in the DCAU. Personally, I think that while they didn’t attempt any character assassination, their handling of Superman did have issues that many overlook due to nostalgia.
I think they were so afraid of making Superman overpowered—like he was in
Superfriends and the comics—that they overcompensated. They nerfed him so much that,
in their own words, he came across as a wimp, which was another issue entirely. I don’t attribute this to malice, which is why I’m not being too harsh on them. They did try, but I don’t think many of them were truly passionate about the Superman mythos in their era either.