Entrapta

[2][3] She later reappeared in the reboot series, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, with a bigger role and more character development than her original depiction.

Entrapta quickly joins the Rebellion, though after a partially-botched rescue mission to the Fright Zone, she is nearly incinerated and left for dead by the other princesses.

Convinced by Catra that she was abandoned by her friends on purpose, Entrapta is recruited into the Horde and she creates highly effective weaponry for them.

When Adora and Bow arrive to rescue Entrapta, she is reluctant to leave, due to both the island's resources and her feelings of abandonment.

[16] Vivian Kane of The Mary Sue says that unlike She-Ra: Princess of Power where Entrapta was "a full-on bad guy", she gets more character development in She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, serving as positive "representation for girls and women in STEM fields", while arguing that her story raises "issues of scientific ethics".

[6] Beth Elderkin of Gizmodo described Entrapta as a chaotic neutral character, more developed than in She-Ra: Princess of Power or later versions, who only cares "about the pursuit of knowledge" and often makes morally ambiguous choices.

[5] Caitlin Chappell of CBR praised the series for "better represent[ing] the autistic community" and argued that Entrapta sees her imperfections, and those that others have, as "beautiful."