I find temperature in space to be a tricky thing to imagine. To me, temperature means "will I feel hot and sticky or cold and shivery?" That's a subjective feeling that comes from my body's physiological response to internal temperature.
When DrPizza says that a quasar can get up to 10^6 K, should I consider that hot? It certainly would feel hot if that was my body's internal temperature! (At least for a very brief moment before my bones sublimated...) But quasars don't feel. Temperature is just a measure of energy.
One way to compare might be to imagine that the thermal energy from that quasar replaced the sun, and imagine the effect that might have on the earth. Maybe somebody can do some back-of-the-envelope math and give us an idea. But personally, without some way to bring an abstract "temperature" to bear on human life, I find it really tough to imagine heat in space in any meaningful way.
Hot and cold are adjectives used by humans to assign meaning to common temperatures on earth. Temperature itself has no human dependency. You can directly measure and calculate it with absolutely no need to feel anything. Temperature in space is just like temperature on earth. 10^6K is hot to a human regardless of where it is, so you don't need to try to theorize how it would feel.
Also, sweating and shivering are responses to ambient, not internal, temperatures. Your body is regulated, so really it's the differential that causes the physiological response with your internal temperature being essentially constant. With that said, I really have no idea what you were trying to say because none of it made any sense.
Don't be obtuse. The OP's question reflected a lack of understanding of the meaning of temperature. My comment addressed why humans often have trouble imagining temperature in space; we're wired to think of temperature as some object's response (such as our body), not as an abstract measure of energy.
If the OP's question had been "what interstellar body has the highest thermal energy?" I wouldn't have replied as such. But in my experience, discussions of temperature in space inevitably devolve into "would I feel hot or cold if I was in space without a spacesuit?".
or does it not matter? i imagine a supernova gets pretty hot but what if you could heat something to ridiculous highs? like trillions centigrade.
would something weird happen or not?