• Changeling [it/its]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I was just talking about this yesterday. Superheroes live in a universe where the gods (writers) explicitly keep the supervillains around to keep the stories interesting. The existence of the villains is explicitly predicated on the presence of the superhero. In the real world, a super-powered person would be hunted by and/or coopted by world governments, would almost certainly be working class struggling to pay bills, and would quickly find that fighting crime isn’t something that super powers will generally help you with at scale. You are, at best, a really strong cop, or someone doing the work that police are “too corrupt to do”, which usually means doing cop work, but with less red tape. It’s not a solution.

      • GnastyGnuts [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        I've been re-visiting some X-Men content recently and they're easily some of the "best" superheroes because they don't go out on "patrol" doing vigilantism, beating up poor people and enforcing private property, they're just civil rights activists with super-powers.