History’s biggest Badasses
Ranjit Singh
Smoke rolled off Multan’s shattered walls as Ranjit Singh sat steady in the saddle, one eye narrowed against dust and destiny. He did not roar or rant. He simply watched the breach widen, watched his artillery argue theology with iron, watched history lean his way. The Lion of Punjab understood something louder men never did: you do not need two eyes to see an empire falling into your hands.
Rank - 120
Shah Abbas I
He rebuilt the faltering Safavid Empire by crushing tribal warlords, reforming the military with gunpowder forces loyal to the crown, and reclaiming key territories including Baghdad from the Ottomans. He transformed Isfahan into a glittering imperial capital, but secured his rule with ruthless purges that weakened his own dynasty after his death.
Rank - 121
Zhu Yuanzhang
The monastery burned, and the boy who would be emperor learned that Heaven answers in smoke. He rose from famine with a spear in one hand and suspicion in the other. On the water at Lake Poyang, ships burned and rivals vanished beneath the ash-choked sky. He built a dynasty bright as fire—and ruled it like the fire never went out.
Rank - 122
Wiliam Wallace
Scottish knight and Guardian of Scotland; led a populist revolt against Edward I, shattered an English army at Stirling Bridge through tactical choke-point slaughter, lost at Falkirk to longbow attrition, and was executed by hanging, drawing, and quartering—martyrdom later weaponized into nationalist legend and cinematic thunder.
Rank - 123
Tlacaelel
Tlacaelel was the power behind the Mexica throne, serving as cihuacoatl while reshaping religion, law, and history to fuel imperial expansion. He elevated Huitzilopochtli, recast conquest as sacred duty, and helped institutionalize ritual warfare, turning ideology into an engine of empire.
Rank - 124
Charles XII of Sweden
Charles XII of Sweden was a warrior-king who personally led his armies through the Great Northern War, turning early victories into legend through ferocious discipline and reckless courage. His refusal to compromise or retreat ultimately shattered Sweden’s empire, leaving behind a mythic figure admired for bravery and criticized for destroying everything he fought to protect.
Rank - 125
Francis Pegahmagabow
Francis Pegahmagabow was a quiet Ojibwe sniper who turned World War I’s chaos into a disciplined ledger of survival and fear. He came home decorated, unheard, and spent the rest of his life fighting a country that loved his kills more than his voice.
Rank - 126
Roy Benavidez
Roy Benavidez was a U.S. Army Special Forces medic who, in May 1968, fought for six hours while grievously wounded to rescue surrounded comrades in Vietnam.
His actions redefined battlefield courage, turning sheer willpower and self-sacrifice into living legend.
Rank - 127