Luckily, My Powers Will Protect Me

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
"I love how in old comics, the superheroes will bust out with some sort of sonic device that has the bad guys doing their best Edvard Munch impressions. They always make some comment like 'Luckily, my earplugs will protect me from the effect!' ...It's like eating a bunch of Chinese food then remarking out loud, 'Luckily, my small intestine will extract the nutrients from that meal!'"

Deadpool: You can't kill me, I heal real quick!
Madcap: You can't hurt me because I feel no pain!

Both: LET'S PARTAAAY!
Heroes For Hire #11

The comic book variation on Expospeak.

Comic books are, in general, a serial medium, and you can't rely on someone reading one issue to have read all the previous issues. Thus, there needs to be a way to inform the reader about the characters and the plot up to this point.

One common way to do this is to simply drop the relevant information into the character's speech bubbles. If done well, it'll feel natural and unforced; unfortunately, it's usually done as something along the lines of "Luckily, My Powers Will Protect Me from the harmful radiations of the unshielded uranium that The Professor wanted me to pick up from these abandoned South American mines!"

This tends to be even more offputting than regular Expospeak, since the characters are speaking to no one in particular. A less-jarring variation is putting the exposition in thought bubbles, but that's surprisingly uncommon.

This began as a stylistic choice in the early age of comics in which every single panel was accompanied by a piece of narrative text. The primary advantage of this was that it allowed the authors to create faster stories without having to visually depict every single step of a process. At the time, it was not unusual for a single issue to have more than one complete story in a format which modern audiences would complain is too short. As comics evolved, it became more common for story arcs to be spread over the course of many issues. This allowed artists to draw the entire sequence of events rather than rely on narrative explanation.

The original audiences may have found this less jarring, because at the time it was very common for radio drama characters to narrate everything they saw (given the lack of a visual medium).

In modern times, this has largely been abandoned. Readers are expected to be familiar with the characters or use the internet to fill in their knowledge gaps. More recently, introductory text pages at the beginning of the issue have come into fashion. Also, fans can just look up whatever the character can do online these days, anyways. Even if it's someone really obscure like Stiltman. (But then, perhaps surprisingly, his name pretty much says it all. He was a pretty lame villain. You can read about him on the Internet.)

If a character explains his or her powers directly to an opponent, it’s Explaining Your Power to the Enemy. Not to be confused with Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me.

Examples of Luckily, My Powers Will Protect Me include:


Comic Books

  • Any old issue of The Fantastic Four will include early scenes where the characters call each other "Brother-in-law" or the like. Nobody really talks like this, especially when they're in the middle of combat. However, the authors felt the need to explain each character's family relationships to new readers, which resulted in unrealistic and redundant dialogue.
  • Something as pervasive and self-explanatory as this probably doesn't need an example, but it's hard to resist pointing out that, for several years, Cyclops managed to say "Only my ruby-quartz visor can contain my optic blasts," in literally every single issue of Uncanny X-Men... quite possibly the worst Catch Phrase of all time.
    • Which is surely rivaled by the vast number of times Psylocke referred to her psychic knife as "the focused totality of my psionic powers".[1] That kind of thing happened a lot in X-Men back in those days, although this one happened less often than a lot of fans like to believe. It is remembered so well because of its inherent clunkyness.
    • Another classic example, from X-Men vol. 1 #1:

Magneto: You haven't defeated me yet! I can still escape you, flying by means of magnetic repulsion!

    • Another character who seemed compelled to remind the reader of her powers every other issue is Rogue, who would constantly have an internal dialogue about how "Ah cain't touch another human bein', or mah powers'll absorb their thoughts and abilities."
    • New Mutants used to do this all the time, constantly reminding readers what the kids' powers were. Sunspot: "Careful Bobby, you're strong, not invulnerable!"; Cannonball: "Good thing ah'm invulnerable when ah'm blasting."; Magik griping about Limbo; etc.
    • One would think these would be redundant nowadays, ever since Marvel started listing the team lineup on the first page with a rundown of their powers.
  • Lampshade Hanging in Young Justice, when Wonder Girl makes fun of Superboy's tendency to explain that he's using tactile telekinesis. Kon-El (and by extension, the writers who want to make him distinct from Superman) protests that he has a very unusual power and it's not always clear to onlookers how it actually works.
    • Everyone on YJ made fun of that.
      • At least once every issue, Superboy will explicitly state that he's doing something with his tactile telekinesis, and at least once every issue, Impulse will Lampshade the fact that at least once every issue, Superboy will explicitly state that he's doing something with his tactile telekinesis.
    • It started in the very first issue:

Robin: Superboy, you think you can manage to..?
Superboy: Pull it out? Not a problem. All I have to do is touch it and my tactile telekinesis can-
Impulse: Man, will you stop blabbering about your stupid power?! You act like you're filling in someone who's just met you!

"What's happening? Mutant power to randomly deflect any other mutant power thrown at me isn't working!"
said by Random while being blasted into a puddle. Who the hell talks like this when they're being blasted into a puddle?

  • Used during a Paul Jenkins remake of the original X-Men story. Unlike other examples it was not ridiculous, as it was a mix of Luckily, My Powers Will Protect Me and To the Pain. Magneto was explaining how he was using his magnetic powers to torture and kill a trio of teens who brutally murdered a young mutant girl to the teens as he was killing them.
  • Venom seems to be friends with this trope, as whenever someone pulls out a gun and shoots him, he'll say something along the lines of "Ha! My other protects me from the bullets!"
    • Similarly, every time another character takes advantage of one of his main weaknesses, he'll say, "No! My symbiotic other cannot stand fire/loud noises!"
      • Although arguably, that creates a bit of fridge logic because the only time you don't hear the bang of a gun is when you're hit with it, but seeing as the symbiote protects him, it really shouldn't.
  • Brittney from Gold Digger tended to have a hard time with this, especially in earlier comics when it was just getting off the ground. Her super-speed, her inability to avoid telegraphing her blows, the fact that only "Magic, another were-creature, or silver" can hurt her. Oh, she does it a LOT. Gets better once continuity and the reader-ship is better established.
  • When Sonic the Comic included stories about other Sega games, the magician Xavier in the Eternal Champions adaptation was prone to declaring, "Your barbaric weapons are no match for the power... of magick!" or something similar. Unfortunately, his magic never actually seemed to work very well.
    • However his staff was sufficient enough to turn brains to jelly.
  • Particularly hilarious examples can be found in British comics of a certain period, when even slapstick strips were prone to this, resulting in such dialogue as "Oh no! The dishes have slipped out of my wet hands!" and "Yahoo! I've sat on a red-hot horseshoe!"


Film

  • The cheesy-yet-strangely-fascinating English dub of the Japanese sci-fi film Prince of Space has many examples of the eponymous Prince conspicuously not being harmed by evil alien laserbeams, and smugly declaring "Your weapons are useless against me!". Though it does seem kind of necessary considering they keep shooting at him every single time. Prince of Space was not immune to weapons in the original Japanese script, which also explains why he keeps dodging them.
    • To quote the riffers, "But they scare the crap out of me anyway".

Servo: Empirical data suggests the accuracy of my earlier contention that your weapons against me are without merit! Ha ha!

    • “It is my considered advice that you discontinue use of said weapon, ha ha!”


Live Action TV

  • Bear Grylls of Man vs. Wild regularly employs a real-life version of this trope; he pauses at some point in the episode just to explain to the viewers how particularly dangerous a certain course of action would be, often with a story about someone who was killed trying that exact same thing. Then he does precisely that, followed by his crew. To date, he is not dead.
    • This was parodied relentlessly and to great effect in the episode "Survivor Man" from The Office.
    • Of course, it helps that Bear is ex-SAS and is well-trained for all kinds of crazy shit like that.
  • Heroes averts this quite well most of the time, where it's frequently left ambiguous what a character's exact abilities are. We still don't know the full extent of what Sylar is ( or was, since Word of God states he lost all powers but his telekinesis and his "intuitive aptitude" after the infection in season 2) capable of; it wasn't revealed until more than halfway through season 1 that Peter could mimic others' powers when he wasn't in proximity to them, etc. On the other hand, Knox is the living embodiment of this trope. What powers him up again? Oh yeah, fear. Wait, what was it? He seems to be over it by episode 9, but good grief.
  • In Stargate SG-1, it's Teal'c saying "Luckily, my symbiote will protect me," usually from radiation or just general physical harm. Being an incubator for a Puppeteer Parasite has its advantages.


Newspaper Comics

  • On the other hand, the newspaper comic version of Spider-Man plays this trope straight. Spidey spends more time telling the audience what he can do than he does actually doing it.


Video Games

  • In X-Men Legends II, villains are constantly using this to explain their powers and weaknesses to the heroes, to the point that it's clear the writers believed that Players Are Morons:

Living Monolith: "You cannot hurt me so long as I am in the sunlight!" [Which, once you've started blocking the mirrors, leads to-] "No! Don't do that! I neeeeed the sunlight!"

  • StarCraft II instructions as provided by Zeratul in Wings of Liberty: "This chasm is vast. It is fortunate that I can phase through the shadows to the other side."
  • Satori Komeji of Touhou fame will not shut up about her mind-reading powers. Deconstructed, as this is implied to be part of the reason she's incredibly unpopular with other youkai and humans.


Web Comics


Western Animation

  • The 1990s X-Men cartoon, while free of the first two, gave its portrayal of Storm a very off-putting habit of giving the weather verbal commands, which usually ended up sounding like a mix between Luckily, My Powers Will Protect Me and a mystic incantation.
    • Storm's verbal commands were lampshaded during the 90s Spider-Man animated series in the first X-men crossover episode. Upon witnessing Storm's dramatic "Power of lightning, strike again!", Spidey jokingly raised his hand and declared, "Power of webshooters, get... really sticky!"
    • Heck, they were lampshaded in the first episode. Rogue's first lines in the series are telling Storm to ease up on it.
    • Storm also has the odd habit of trying to attack Magneto with lightning in every fight, at which point Magneto will shout something like "Fool! Have you forgotten that electricity and magnetism are related?"
  • Batfink: his two catchphrases were; "my supersonic sonar radar will help me" and "your bullets cannot harm me, my wings are like a shield of steel".
    • I don't remember Batfink ever flying like a real bat. Probably because steel wings would be way too heavy.
    • He did sometimes, in The Sonic Boomer he breaks the sound barrier.
    • At least with the "your bullets cannot harm me" line, Batfink is actually addressing someone. Bragging to the guy who's trying to shoot you that you're Immune to Bullets may not be polite, but at least you aren't talking to yourself.
      • They lampshaded it in Hugo's Hoke, when Hugo Agogo's Hate Plague prompts The Capable Karate to sarcastically ask "Why don't you get some new dialogue?"
    • Almost always subverted, in that his wings are exactly like a shield of steel, and most of the thing aimed at Batfink are entirely capable of bypassing steel shields one way or another (say, by being capable of cutting through steel). The villain typically points this out just after Batfink has delivered the line.
  • Batman: The Brave And The Bold:

Batman: Don't bother with mind control, Grodd. I'm blocking it with a technique I learned in Tibet!

This is the song that never ends, yes it goes on and on my friend.

  • The Superfriends had everyone narrate what they were doing. For example, when Lex Luthor blasts Superman with a "molecular disintegrator" and it fails, Superman goes, "Nice try, Luthor. My Heat Vision will disintegrate your disintegrator!"


Web Original



  1. Fortunately, she no longer HAS her psychic knife, so this trope has since seen its day.