1) You are allowed to have two (2) characters with "super" powers, such as super strength, super speed, and super durability. This also includes healing factors. I honestly don't give a damn if you give them super hearing or super smelling or heightened senses or whatever (meaning they are unaffected by this rule)... I just don't want too many characters that are indestructible.
2) If your character has super durability, they must have a weakness to something, such as magic, lightning, etc.
3) DO NOT attempt to bypass the first rule by giving them "strength just under 'super' level" or anything like that.
4) Characters such as Luna, who can turn into a wolf and - only in that form - has the enhanced speed and strength of a wolf, do not count as characters with "super" strength, speed, etc.
-- Edited by Sara on Saturday 4th of July 2009 08:52:32 PM
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"A story has to be finished, and no matter how distracted you get, you need to force yourself to forge ahead, word by word. If your idea is boring though, and that's why you're easy to distract...well, that's a really fantastic reason for not being able to focus on the task at hand! In that case, head back to the drawing board. And again, don't give up!"- Marjorie Liu, NYX: No Way Home interview
"Really? That's INANE. Most people in life don't HAVE great power, and the few that do are almost NEVER responsible with it. The people who have the greatest responsibility are the kids with NO POWER because we're the ones who have to keep everybody else in check."- Gertrude Yorkes, Runaways (vol. 2) #11