But Elyon was so awesome as a villain. Really, if you're gonna be on the side of evil, where's the fun in having kindness?
And even when she was evil, she was evil because Cedric had made her believe that her friends and parents were lying to her for her whole life. At the time, she didn't care whether or not her side was evil as long as she got vengeance and reclaimed her birthright. She snapped out of it when she began to discover how warped the "truths" Cedric had told her were, and actually showed conflict within her, something that Elyon in the show rarely, if ever, did, except for some doubts that she quickly shook off by next episode.
Just getting suspicions wasn't enough. Sure, with the way Phobos was warping the truth she had no reason to suspect him of being
evil, but she still needed to ask herself bigger questions like "What if my brother has some fault in this war?" That would lead her into taking actual action in order to uncover the truth, like she did in the comics. But instead she always missed her chance to hear what the Guardians had to say and thus was shocked when Phobos turned out to be a villain. Again, how am I supposed to respect a Queen who was her evil brother's guillable puppet until the very last moment?
But again, she was good in Season 2. Even though she only showed up for the first half and final episode, she was much better written there by Greg Weisman, IMO, than she had been all of Season 1.
But it was called "Neptune's Spatula" and he was called Neptune. I thought the explination was that the Neptune in the episode was a god from Atlantis where the Neptune in the movie was king of the ocean who just shared his name (probably due to his ego.)