Powers: Difference between revisions

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** Although with only nine (known) levels it doesn't go overboard.
* [[Power Nullifier]]: See [[Green Rocks]] above. Rinse, repeat.
* [[Precision F -Strike]]: Despite the [[Cluster F -Bomb|fairly liberal use of swearwords]], especially from the cops, some of them are perfectly placed:
{{quote| '''Walker:''' No.<br />
{{spoiler|'''Satan:'''}} No, what?<br />
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* [[Super Registration Act]]: As a result of the events at the end of the first volume, the second starts with a repeat of the first volume's end report--a presidential order that all super heroes need to be registered. The authorities are just ''sane'' in this milieu - they treat it no differently than a driver's license.
** Then, later, in a panic, the President gets Congress to declare the use of any powers illegal. Most people quickly come to realize how ''idiotic'' this is, because it prevents law-abiding superheroes from doing their thing, but ''does nothing to actually stop supervillains''. It's similar to Prohibition: a law that empowers ''criminals.''
* [[Take That]]: A particularly epic one against John Byrne, which was the page image for [[Small Name, Big Ego]].
* [[The Virus]]: Part of a major story arc.
 
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