Willow Rosenberg
The true and terrifying extent of her abilities is revealed in the show's final season when she suffers a personal tragedy and decides to seek revenge. Willow ends the series as the most powerful witch on Earth, wielding more power than even Buffy can comprehend.
The Slayers varied in strength and conviction, with many receiving grisly ends. However, Faith Lehane (Eliza Dushku) eventually proves herself as the second most powerful Slayer after Buffy.
The first "Big Bad" villain on the program was The Master, played by Mark Metcalf. According to author Jan Jagodzinski, the battle between Buffy and the evil Master is "the central issue of season one"; The Master, like all the "big bads", is a "symptom of postmodernity".
In November, the activist chimed in on the great debate over whether Angel or Spike was the “right” man for Buffy. To be fair, Angel was the right boyfriend for Buffy coming into her power. Spike was the right man to be with as she became the power.
Yoriichi Tsugikuni is the strongest demon slayer ever, as he was born with the demon slayer marks. He single-handedly invented the original sun-breathing style.
In essence, Faith's ability to have so much fun with slaying is rooted in a lack of immediate personal ties to the world — which is exactly where Buffy finds her strength. Buffy has to be strong for everyone else, which doesn't allow her to make the same mistakes Faith, or even a normal teenager, is able to.
Besides the regular powers of vampires, Dracula possessed a number of magical abilities. According to Spike, these powers were nothing but "showy Gypsy stuff." Dracula explained his powers were part of "the ancient magics." He said he risked his very soul to attain them and that he was their worldly guardian.
The Immortal was an old rival of both Angel and Spike. He was a respected and admired being known for serving no side, instead pursuing his own desires.
Buffy Summers: In addition to being a Slayer strength, she had her strength temporary increased under a enjoining spell, when she was capable of punching through Adam's armored hide; and while empowered by the Twilight prophecy, when she could lift a train with one hand.
Accounting of Buffy Summers' known kills through time. This accounting considers a total of at least 323 slays, which includes over 201 vampires, 100 demons, 8 spirits, 9 humans, 2 cyborgs, 1 robot, and 1 zombie.
The Master eventually did manage to escape his imprisonment but was slain by Buffy shortly after. However, unlike most vampires the Master did not turn to dust after being staked through the heart, instead becoming a skeleton.
Buffy – a young woman whose mystical powers allowed her to battle evil forces – dated Angel during the show's first three series, before she ultimately chose vampire and initial villain Spike (James Marsters) to be her partner.
Faith returns to Sunnydale; a new powerful evil face appears, Caleb, a former priest who is unstoppable and works for The First; Buffy leads the troops into battle. Xander loses his eye to Caleb and some of the Potentials are killed by him.
Buffy retains her Slayer powers, but her clinical death is enough for the next Slayer to be called. For the next year there are two Slayers in the world: first Kendra, who was called on Buffy's death, and then Faith, who was called when Kendra was killed by Drusilla.
Glory is a fictional character in the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer portrayed by Clare Kramer. Glory is a god from a hell dimension and was the major antagonist of the fifth season, appearing first in episode 5, with her name mentioned in 5 episodes, and appearances in 12 others to the end of season 5.
Giles shows Buffy the syringe and and explains that it's an organic compound designed to take away her strength temporarily. He admits that he's been injecting her with it for the Tento di Cruciamentum — a test every slayer must go through when/if they reach their eighteenth birthday.
Season 6
Season 6 is the darkest Buffy ever got, with a heavy addiction subplot and an attempted assault scene that I still can't get through. But it does have the zaniest villains, known as “The Trio,” two emotionally stunted nerds led by a cold–blooded misogynist who gets scarier the older I get.
Spike was initially conceived as a disposable villain to be killed off, but proved so popular with fans that Joss Whedon decided to merely injure him instead, in the episode "What's My Line, Part Two", in which Spike is crushed by a collapsing pipe organ and left paralyzed.