Leonotis
Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2025
- Messages
- 27
- Points
- 13
I’m going to say it: I am so tired of the Overpowered (OP) Hero trope. The character who gets a shiny, world-breaking ability that makes every challenge feel like a minor inconvenience. Where’s the tension? Where’s the fun?
I'm just bored of it.
What truly gets my creative engine running is a hero who has to outthink their limitations instead of simply overpowering them. Because the best abilities, the most memorable ones, sound absolutely terrible on paper.
Think about it:
Luffy(One Piece): Made of rubber
Ueki (The Law of Ueki): Can turn trash into trees
Mirio (My Hero Academia): Can phase through solid objects... but is blind, can't breathe, and falls through the floor while doing it. What a drawback!
On paper, these are C-tier, "stupid" powers. Yet, in the story, they are absolutely incredible.
What makes them so good isn’t raw strength it’s creativity.
These characters take a seemingly weak or deeply limited ability and turn it into a devastating, completely unique fighting style. They rely on strategy, experience, and sheer grit to innovate and find a weakness their opponent never saw coming. They train not just their power, but their minds, to maximize an imperfect tool.
That's the kind of hero I want to write. The underdog who wins because they understand their power better than anyone else. The genius who uses the environment, who sacrifices to get the upper hand, and whose victory feels earned.
It's not about the ability but about how they use it.
So, writers, I beg you: give your heroes a handicap. Give them an ability that makes me scratch my head. Give them a reason to be clever. Let's make our readers gasp not because of a bigger number, but because of a better idea.
Who’s your favorite hero who uses a “dumb” power in a brilliant way? Let me know in the comments!
I'm just bored of it.
What truly gets my creative engine running is a hero who has to outthink their limitations instead of simply overpowering them. Because the best abilities, the most memorable ones, sound absolutely terrible on paper.
Think about it:
Luffy(One Piece): Made of rubber
Ueki (The Law of Ueki): Can turn trash into trees
Mirio (My Hero Academia): Can phase through solid objects... but is blind, can't breathe, and falls through the floor while doing it. What a drawback!
On paper, these are C-tier, "stupid" powers. Yet, in the story, they are absolutely incredible.
What makes them so good isn’t raw strength it’s creativity.
These characters take a seemingly weak or deeply limited ability and turn it into a devastating, completely unique fighting style. They rely on strategy, experience, and sheer grit to innovate and find a weakness their opponent never saw coming. They train not just their power, but their minds, to maximize an imperfect tool.
That's the kind of hero I want to write. The underdog who wins because they understand their power better than anyone else. The genius who uses the environment, who sacrifices to get the upper hand, and whose victory feels earned.
It's not about the ability but about how they use it.
So, writers, I beg you: give your heroes a handicap. Give them an ability that makes me scratch my head. Give them a reason to be clever. Let's make our readers gasp not because of a bigger number, but because of a better idea.
Who’s your favorite hero who uses a “dumb” power in a brilliant way? Let me know in the comments!
The question is, if it needs just effort to improve, was it an imperfect tool to begin with? Does poor usage not reflect on the user rather than on the ability? Aren’t you just also creating the supposedly weak trope there?