What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?: Difference between revisions

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** Ultimate later upped the ante, having Kitty specifically train herself (off panel) to control her phasing ability; her theory that, if she can make her atoms ''separate'' enough to phase through things then she could ''condense'' them to gain invulnerability and super strength.
* The Legion of Substitute Heroes is composed of rejected applicants to ''[[Legion of Super-Heroes|The Legion of Super-Heroes]]'', who banded together in an effort to show their powers were not useless. Some members included Chlorophyll Kid, who has the power to make plants grow super fast (he also says he can communicate with plants; he can't, but that doesn't stop him from talking to them); Color Kid, who can change the color of objects; Infectious Lass, who spontaneously generates infectious diseases; and Stone Boy, who has power to turn into stone (at which point he becomes completely immobile.) Surprisingly, several members managed to prove their point and "graduate" into the LSH proper. Of course, considering some of the heroes the Legion ''did'' admit, like "Bouncing Boy" and "Matter-Eater Lad", you have to wonder just how ''bad'' your powers had to be for them to actually ''reject'' you.
** Fire Lad was another member of the Substitute Heroes with the same problem as Polar Boy, his powers to create and control fire were not lame, they were ''dangerous'', and like Polar Lad, he had a hard time controlling them. True to the fears of the bona-fide Legionnaires who rejected his membership, he caused almost as many disasters as he prevented.
** Matter-Eater Lad is one of the ones who sounds useless in theory, but in practice... well, if there's anything you need to break into, or any dangerous item you need to dispose of, the guy who can eat his way through, and digest, ''anything''... he's your man, er, lad. Another problem he had was that his powers have a very limited range, and when you're in a team where ''every'' member can fly (via their standard team issue flight rings), this is a handicap.
*** Likewise, Bouncing Boy is extremely useful because of one of his [[Required Secondary Powers]]; dude's good enough at physics and trig to ricochet off walls and into bad guys, which is pretty damn hard to do quickly.
** Some of the applicants were written so obviously planned-to-fail that it boggles the mind what made them think they'd be a contributing member in the first place. Double Header opened with the remark "Two heads are better than one!"... and immediately started bickering with himself. And Arms-Fall-Off-Lad could detach his arm and use as a club, apparently not considering that blunt instruments aren't that difficult to obtain.
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** The Blue Raja throws forks. He doesn't throw knives because it wouldn't be sporting.
{{quote|'''Blue Raja:''' "I'm not 'Stab Man', I'm not 'Knifey Boy', I'm the Blue Raja!"}}
*:* The Shoveler, who shovels. He does, however, shovel ''very'' well. Though to be honest, a shovel does make a pretty handy weapon.
*:* Invisible Boy, who can turn invisible ''only when nobody is watching him''. And he has to be naked for it to have any real effect. As unlikely as it might seem, he and the team actually find themselves in [[This Looks Like a Job For Aquaman|a situation where this power is useful]]. {{spoiler|Automated turrets, it transpires, do not count as somebody watching}}.
*** Though to be honest, a shovel does make a pretty handy weapon.
*:* The Spleen... Three words: "[[Fartillery|Pull my finger]]". The Spleen is also an example of a particularly lame [[backstory]]—a [[Gypsy Curse]]d him to forever be he who "dealt it". In the Gypsy's defense, {{spoiler|he ''did'' rip one and blame it on her.}}
** Invisible Boy, who can turn invisible ''only when nobody is watching him''. And he has to be naked for it to have any real effect. As unlikely as it might seem, he and the team actually find themselves in [[This Looks Like a Job For Aquaman|a situation where this power is useful]]. {{spoiler|Automated turrets, it transpires, do not count as somebody watching}}.
*:* The Bowler is the only member of the team with a ''genuine'' useful power—a magic flying bowling ball.
** The Spleen... Three words: "[[Fartillery|Pull my finger]]". The Spleen is also an example of a particularly lame [[backstory]]—a [[Gypsy Curse]]d him to forever be he who "dealt it".
**:* Don't forget the Sphynx... he can cut guns in half with his mind.
*** In the Gypsy's defense, {{spoiler|he ''did'' rip one and blame it on her.}}
*:* Then there are the folks who were ''rejected'' by the Mystery Men for being even ''more'' useless:
** The Bowler is the only member of the team with a ''genuine'' useful power—a magic flying bowling ball.
**::* The Waffler, who carries a bunch of waffle irons around with him and also boasts a personal [[Theme Tune]].
*** Don't forget the Sphynx... he can cut guns in half with his mind.
**::* Ballerinaman, who pirouettes in a tutu.
** Then there are the folks who were ''rejected'' by the Mystery Men for being even ''more'' useless:
**::* The PMS Avenger, whose powers only works for five days out of the month.
*** The Waffler, who carries a bunch of waffle irons around with him and also boasts a personal [[Theme Tune]].
*** Ballerinaman, who pirouettes in a tutu.
*** The PMS Avenger, whose powers only works for five days out of the month.
{{quote|"You got a problem with that?!"}}
**::* White Flight and the Black Menace, whose powers are unspecified ("[[A Worldwide Punomenon|They work together]].")
**::* And Pencilhead and Son Of Pencilhead, two generations of heroes who erase crime.
* ''[[X-Men (Comic Book)|X3]]'' takes this to new heights with Kid Omega, whose abilities are... retractable inch-long spines. Apparently inspired by comic character Quill. But while Quill can usually shoot these spines, these just... stay there. While this could be a devastating power if you were intent on killing everyone at a chronic cuddler retreat, in combat with people with guns, psionic powers, and various other super-abilities, it's kinda weak. Despite this, he acts as though he is an impressive mutant, using his quills for intimidation purposes on multiple occasions. (Not a bad idea, but useless in the circles he travels in.) It's made worse by the fact that his only on-screen kill is a defenseless, crying woman whom he comforts with a hug then impales on his spines. Some sources describe the spines as poisonous, but still not all that interesting.
** The comic version is decidedly more interesting but just as useless: he has a "transparent mind" that makes all of his thoughts visible to passersby. When amped up by performance-enhancing drugs, however, he reveals himself to be an incredibly powerful psychic.
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{{quote|'''Adam:''' I'm a frog.
'''Dulcea:''' Yes, a frog! Like the one you kiss ''*kisses Adam*'' and get a handsome prince. }}
*:* Something of a case of [[Lost in Translation]]. Frog/toad powers would have been considerably more [[Badass]] (even expected) to the Japanese audience of the original ''[[Ninja Sentai Kakuranger]]'', where the guy getting them was named ''[[wikipedia:Jiraiya|Jiraiya]]''. (No, not [[Naruto|that Jiraiya]])
*:* In the series, Adam certainly doesn't fall behind the others, though. In fact, the Frog Zord's ability to breathe fire and release dozens of mini-Frog Zords that surround and shock your opponent make it a ''lot'' more powerful than the ones that are reduced to biting, despite being based on cooler animals. All that ''and'' getting to kiss [[Ms. Fanservice|Dulcea]]? Adam got a hell of a deal.
* Deconstructed in ''[[Sky High]]'', where the [[Start of Darkness]] for the [[Big Bad]] was that she was a Technopath before that became a well respected superpower, so she was relegated to sidekick, unable to show how powerful she really was. The deciding factor for whether one is a Hero or sidekick? The coach, based on his first and only impression. More generally, the sidekicks' powers tend to fall under this, with plenty of "heroes" who contribute little.
* In 2006 Israeli movie ''Giborim Ktanim'' (''Little Heroes''), one girl is blessed with the power of being able to hear people from a distance. Sweet.
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== Literature ==
* [[Averted]] in the ''[[Circle of Magic]]'' series. What kind of lame power is "thread-magic?" While it's not quite as spectacular as, say, Tris' [[Shock and Awe|lightning magic]], Sandry still uses it to tear several villains apart, {{spoiler|escape a kidnapping}}, and [[Boring but Practical|make really durable clothes]].
* ''[[Harry Potter/Harry Potter and Thethe Half-Blood Prince (novel)|Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince]]'' reveals that Harry's special power is [[The Power of Love|his capacity to love]]. Dumbledore's explanations aside, Harry's immediate reaction -- "So what?"—seems a bit on-the-mark. Taking into account Dumbledore's explanations, though, it's the most [[Badass]] power of love ever. Just to drive this home, in ''Order of the Phoenix'', the essence of love can melt metal on contact. Further, just being capable of love can banish Lord Voldemort from you if he possesses your body. As well, when Voldemort, in book 4, uses blood from Harry to resurrect himself, he becomes more powerful due to stealing Harry's mother's protection... but in book 7, we learn this {{spoiler|[[Nice Job Fixing It, Villain|protects Harry from Voldemort's killing curse, which gets the bit of Voldemort's soul in Harry's body instead. Harry's self-sacrifice in this instance also protected the inhabitants of Hogwarts from Voldemort]].}}
* Some of the magical talents in [[Piers Anthony]]'s ''[[Xanth]]'' are so widely useful and powerful that their possessors are known as Magicians and eligible to rule the magical land. And on the other hand are those with the power to make a small colored spot appear on the wall, play a magic flute, or make people in the vicinity age slightly faster. Much is made in the series out of finding real uses for even the feeblest talents, and a lot of crappy powers turn out to be surprisingly powerful, at least when facing [[Plot Tailored to the Party|the right plots]]. The spot-on-the-wall talent, for instance, can be used multiple times in order to make pictures, often quite convincing ones.
* Tim Burton's ''Oyster Boy and Other Stories'' features a whole array of kid heroes with this trope, one being Stain Boy whose only power is to make nasty stains.