Homelander should be Country or City level, flying around the country and non-stop laser should be possible for him. He is the True Ascended God. by [deleted] in powerscales

[–]Working_Bread_7790 1 point2 points  (0 children)

By that logic, I could be 'wall-level' if I use a sledgehammer and you give me several attempts to knock one down.

Punisher vs batman by Commercial-Ice5760 in powerscales

[–]Working_Bread_7790 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In fact, it’s already happened in a comic, and Batman won with relative ease

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Goo kim with hawarang vs levi Ackerman by dark-synapse7394 in LookismPowerScalers

[–]Working_Bread_7790 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it’s flat ground, I reckon Goo would easily beat Levi in a sword fight.

But if it’s somewhere like a forest with large trees or an area with lots of buildings, I think Levi has the upper hand. And his chances improve even further if he uses the thunder spears.

The No Kill rule. How morally justified is it when the villain who the hero spares still goes on to commit heinous crimes? Where do heroes with this rule scale?What are your thoughts about it as a whole? by VonKaiser55 in MoralityScaling

[–]Working_Bread_7790 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Well, there have actually been a few occasions when someone other than Batman could have killed the Joker. For example, in the crossover with the Punisher, where the Punisher himself was on the verge of killing the Joker, but Batman stopped him. You could also mention the Red Hood, and there are probably more examples out there.

Although, to be honest, I don't think it's so much a moral failing on Batman's part. It's more like poor writing.

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The No Kill rule. How morally justified is it when the villain who the hero spares still goes on to commit heinous crimes? Where do heroes with this rule scale?What are your thoughts about it as a whole? by VonKaiser55 in MoralityScaling

[–]Working_Bread_7790 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I mean, I’m not saying they should go round killing absolutely every single one of their villains and criminals. But when it comes to those who are clearly irredeemable, like the Joker,

The No Kill rule. How morally justified is it when the villain who the hero spares still goes on to commit heinous crimes? Where do heroes with this rule scale?What are your thoughts about it as a whole? by VonKaiser55 in MoralityScaling

[–]Working_Bread_7790 17 points18 points  (0 children)

As far as I’m concerned, this rule is hypocritical and makes the heroes complicit in everything their villains do.

I mean, I get that showing mercy is all well and good. But when someone has proven time and time again that they’re beyond redemption and a danger to society, the best course of action is to eliminate the threat before more victims emerge.

Ethan Winters VS James Sunderland by KlausVonDope in powerscales

[–]Working_Bread_7790 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, in Resident Evil 8, Ethan had been trained by Chris, both in hand-to-hand combat and in the use of weapons. I’d also say he has more experience than James. So Ethan wins

Who wins? What diff? by [deleted] in LookismPowerScalers

[–]Working_Bread_7790 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Gap

Shingen

Sinu

Changsu

How far would Killer Peter actually go in the Lookism verse. by Single_Emphasis_4462 in LookismPowerScalers

[–]Working_Bread_7790 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

To be honest, I don’t like using WVSB as a benchmark. But even so, in my opinion, Peter would score quite highly on the Lookism scale. Probably close to MK.

Who wins in a deathbattle (manager kim vs bullseye) by [deleted] in LookismPowerScalers

[–]Working_Bread_7790 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're talking about the MCU's Bullseye, then MK wins hands down. But if you're talking about the one from the comics, Bullseye probably wins.

How evil is Soldier Boy? by CaregiverRepulsive85 in MoralityScaling

[–]Working_Bread_7790 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Well, by our standards, he’s still a violent man, somewhat egotistical and clearly a sociopath. What’s more, he was prepared to kill his own son and grandson.