Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

Teen Titans (2003)
Fighting for truth, justice and the last slice of pizza, these five superheroes are living proof you're never too young to save the planet. Protecting Earth and beyond, the Teen Titans use martial arts and gadgetry to battle villains.
Fighting for truth, justice and the last slice of pizza, these five superheroes are living proof you're never too young to save the planet. Protecting Earth and beyond, the Teen Titans use martial arts and gadgetry to battle villains.
The show primarily focuses on universal themes of heroism, friendship, and personal growth within a superhero context, addressing external threats and internal struggles without explicitly promoting a specific political ideology.
The 'Teen Titans' animated series features a visibly diverse main cast, including characters of different races and alien origins, consistent with its comic book source material. The narrative focuses on superhero adventures and character dynamics without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or centering on overt DEI themes.
The show features female characters like Starfire and Blackfire who frequently engage in and win close-quarters physical combat against multiple male opponents, including henchmen, robots, and other main characters, using their strength and martial arts skills.
The animated series "Teen Titans" (2003) does not feature any explicitly identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. The show primarily focuses on superhero action, friendship, and coming-of-age stories for its main, heterosexually-coded cast, resulting in no direct portrayal of queer identity.
The 'Teen Titans' animated series from 2003 does not depict any transsexual characters or themes. The narrative focuses on superhero adventures and team dynamics, without engaging with gender identity in this specific context. Therefore, the net impact is N/A due to no depiction.
The "Teen Titans" animated series (2003) faithfully adapts its core characters from DC Comics, maintaining their established genders. No major or recurring characters who were canonically male or female in the source material are portrayed as a different gender in the show.
The 2003 animated series "Teen Titans" maintained the established racial depictions of its core characters from the DC Comics source material. There are no instances where a character canonically established as one race was portrayed as a different race in this adaptation.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























