CT Phipps
Carbon Dated and Proud
That is... a bizarre point to want to make.
Well, I mean, you can make up whatever rules you like. But, you'll be cutting yourself off from a lot of opportunity for nuanced characters by doing that.
Quick side-question: Is English your native language?
I have the feeling you think I'm objecting to the concept of an antagonist who isn't evil versus the use of the word villain to describe someone's morality versus their role in a story. I also write novels called "The Supervillainy Saga" which are from the perspective of supervillains.
Basically, I find it diminishes the use of the word "villain" to make characters into them who aren't the central antagonists of a story who aren't evil. I generally prefer antagonists and gray on gray morality with the enemy someone who can articulate their reasoning in a concise single paragraph.
If they can't, they're a bad character.
Is an orc a "villain"? I think that kind of diminishes the word there as he's a henchman. SAURON is a villain. Palpatine is a villain. The Master is not a villain because he's just....well, I hate to say Insane but perhaps a Bad Scientist. John Henry Eden isn't a villain. Are Raiders? I dunno, they're not characterized enough. Caesar is a villain but an understandable one if you accept his utterly ruthless morality but reject his goals. Father Elijah is a villain but a tragic one as he's clearly gone insane due to his obsessions.
Myron is a shitbag but a supporting character so I don't know if I could really add him to the term Villain protagonist.
Villain Supporting Character seems silly.