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Superhero Prevalence Stages
- 445 statements
- 86 feature instances
- 20 referencing feature instances
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When it comes to settings that contain superheroes (or superpowered individuals by any other name), each setting or work can be ranked according to how common and well-known superpowers and superpowered beings are in it. For ease of categorization, we can divide this spectrum into three categories: Early, Middle, and Late stage. This refers not to the date of publication— an Early setting could be published very recently or a Late setting very long ago— but to the setting's progression from "relatively down-to-Earth with a few Acceptable Breaks from Reality" to "wacky crazy crossover land where anything goes." | |
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Watchmen never got past this stage with superheroes being seen as a fad and being made illegal after a few years. Supervillains were just regular criminals who wore costumes while it was trendy before going back to normal. Thanks to the one superpowers hero, Doctor Manhattan and retired genius, Ozymandias, the setting has enough technological advancements to become an Alternate History. | |
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Hero by Perry Moore, about a teen who ends up as a trainee with the League of superheroes. There are multiple other trainees, and his father is also a superhero. | |
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Worm. There are dozens of heroes and villains ("capes", collectively) in Brockton Bay alone; the world has thousands. The Protectorate is far from the only superhero team, but it is dominant in North America and has clout even with foreign groups. Its parent organization, the PRT, has existed long enough to create a nomenclature for power types and guidelines for dealing with a variety of types of powers; these have existed long enough to become more or less standard, at least among capes and their fans. Word of God states that Cauldron is the only reason parahumans became this organized, rather than operating solo or in small, unconnected groups. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_16861a09 | type |
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The first scene of The Incredibles takes place in the Middle period, but the setting quickly shifts to Late after the superhero ban is put into effect. | |
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The Incredibles | hasFeature |
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X-Men: At least since the 1980s, the X-line x-ploded in popularity and x-ponentially x-panded its cast to include several mutant groups, both heroic and villainous: Starting in 1980/1981, the Hellfire Club and Mystique's incarnation of the Brotherhood are introduced and become recurring enemies for the X-Men, achieving some successes against the team: the Hellfire Club's corruption Jean Grey into the Dark Phoenix and the Brotherhood becoming federal agents. In the mid-1980s, the original five X-Men reorganize into the X-Factor team, who work in secret to help young mutants. Also, the X-line introduces their first class of "the new generation of mutants", the New Mutants. From the late-1980s onwards, at least a villain team is introduced per year: Alliance of Evil and the Marauders (1986); the Horsemen of Apocalypse (in 1987); the mutant-hunting cyborg Reavers (in 1988); the Mutant Liberation Front (in 1990); the Acolytes and the Upstarts in the main X-books (in 1991); the Dark Riders in pre-Peter David's X-Factor and Nasty Boys in Peter David's X-Factor (in 1991); the Morlock offshoot Gene Nation (in 1995). A case could be made for Grant Morrison's run on New X-Men: During its first year (2001-2002), Xavier assumes publicly he is a mutant, and the Xavier Institute welcomes a whole generation of teenage mutants. During its second year (2002-2003), Xavier founds the X-Corporation, basically a global NGO operated by mutants and for mutants, bringing under the same umbrella the main X-Men team of the period (Cyclops, Emma Frost, Beast, Wolverine and Jean Grey), former New Mutants/X-Force/Generation X members (e.g., Syrin, Monet, Cannonball), a few former enemies (Feral and Thornn) and independent mutants (like Japanese Sunfire and Russian Darkstar). The "mutants as minority" metaphor is more pronounced: mutants live in their own New York neighbourhood, referred to as "District X" or "Mutant Town". Starting in 2019, the X-Men franchise officially becomes this with the Krakoan Age mega arc: Xavier, Magneto and Moira assemble the many mutant factions (X-Men and adjacent teams, Hellfire Club, Morlocks, Acolytes, etc.) on the mutant island of Krakoa to form a single nation. Some X-Men even act as members of the ruling government body, the Quiet Council. On the human side of things, a data page shows that human members of several antagonistic groups of the Marvel Universe (e.g., SHIELD, A.I.M, HAMMER and HYDRA) joined forces to found ORCHIS, an organization dedicated to ensure mankind's survival against the mutant threat. They are also the main antagonists throughout the "Krakoan Saga". |
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X-Men (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Starting in 2019, the X-Men franchise officially becomes this with the Krakoan Age mega arc: Xavier, Magneto and Moira assemble the many mutant factions (X-Men and adjacent teams, Hellfire Club, Morlocks, Acolytes, etc.) on the mutant island of Krakoa to form a single nation. Some X-Men even act as members of the ruling government body, the Quiet Council. On the human side of things, a data page shows that human members of several antagonistic groups of the Marvel Universe (e.g., SHIELD, A.I.M, HAMMER and HYDRA) joined forces to found ORCHIS, an organization dedicated to ensure mankind's survival against the mutant threat. They are also the main antagonists throughout the "Krakoan Saga". |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_202462bc | type |
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Alphas falls here, no-one wears costumes and the very existence of superhumans is kept secret by the government. The only thing that differs it from most Early settings is supervillians (albeit non-costumed ones) are numerous, and highly organized. Of course given that at the end of Season One, Rosen reveals the existence of Alphas, it may become Middle stage soon. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_22147342 | type |
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Arrow starts to move into the 'Middle Stage' with the second season; with the introduction of super-powers (albeit, reasonably grounded ones); the emergence of other costumes figures; and Oliver now re-branding his alter ego as the 'Arrow', working alongside Quentin Lance (who now serves essentially as his The Commissioner Gordon) while increasingly being perceived as a 'hero' rather than a 'vigilante'. By the third season, the show is firmly in the Middle Stage. | |
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Empowered starts right off as Late. Suprahumans are ubiquitous and derive their powers from a wide variety of sources, and a single organization regulates them all. | |
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In Kotoura-san, this is the main goal of Yuriko Mifune's ESP club even though she doesn't have Psychic Powers herself. However, her mother did (Super-Senses to be exact), and was Driven to Suicide for being called a fake. Yuriko also suffered by proxy, hence her motivation. | |
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By the time the protagonists are born in From the New World, all humans have "power." They live alongside sapient humanoid mole rats, who don't have any superpowers. This technically isn't a case of Everyone Is a Super because the mole rats are actually deformed humans, not Uplifted Animals as is claimed for most of the series. Only a very small percentage of humans had powers when they first started to appear, and it wasn't long before they slaughtered the vast majority of those who lacked powers. | |
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In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A's, we have superpowered team vs. team action, but there is still a considerably Muggle presence (as in, there are some who are still relevant to the plot). | |
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Gotham, much like Batman Begins above, naturally falls here by way of the premise. In the first season, the primary antagonists are non-powered mob bosses and the odd serial killer or other criminals, with villains like Catwoman, Penguin, and Riddler only beginning to form the bases of what will be their future identities, and are seen as outliers. It starts edging into Middle in the later seasons, as villains like Freeze, Poison Ivy, Scarecrow, and Madhatter begin cropping up and become recognized criminals; and, of course, there's Bruce Wayne coping with the loss of his parents... | |
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Untold Tales of Spider-Man is a good representative of the Early Stage for Spider-Man and the Marvel Universe: The series is set in the early days of Spider-Man (Lee/Ditko era), when he operates on his own under police, the Bugle and people's distrust. The series gives another nod to the early adventures of the original X-Men and the prejudice against mutants, invoked by a human scientist masquerading as one. Some of the expanded rogues' gallery (Batwing, Headsman, Commanda and Scorcher) reflect the types of villains of the period: Commanda, Scorcher and Headsman gain their abilities through the use of technology, while Batwing is a kid who accidentally drank some liquid that mutated him. |
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The DCAU's Justice League and Justice League Unlimited fit here, particularly the latter. Dozens of superheroes and villains operate in large, organized teams, working with (and occasionally against) the government on a large scale. | |
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Batman Begins falls here. No superpowers, relatively grounded tech, mob bosses rather than supervillains, etc. Fitting, since it was loosely based on Batman: Year One. | |
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Mystery Men seems a pretty quintessential example. Soft sci-fi is showcased throughout the film, the plot focuses on a team of heroes going through some rather disorganized recruiting, the existence of superheroes is widely known (though disorganized unlike later stage works), and one "celebrity" superhero takes on a number of sponsors (although all of the sponsors in question are corporate ones). | |
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After the failure and dismantling of Freedom Force, government mutant liaison (human) Valerie Cooper suggests they form a second government-sanctioned mutant team, X-Factor, this time with heroic mutants. The original lineup consisted of former X-Men Havok (Cyclops's brother) and Polaris (Magneto's daughter), Quicksilver (Magneto's son and former Avenger), and X-franchise C-Listers Wolfsbane, Strong Guy and Multiple Man. | |
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In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha, we have exactly one superhuman (the title character) and her pet/mentor at first. Half-way through, they are pitted against her superpowered rival and some superpowered Space Police joins the fray towards the end. | |
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In the 1980s, authors Chris Claremont and John Byrne introduced Alpha Flight, a team of Canadian superheroes (including Canadian mutants) that works for the mysterious Department H, a branch of the Canadian government. In their on panel debut (Uncanny X-Men #120-121), the then Canadian Prime Minister orders them to go after the X-Men and reinstate Wolverine as their agent. | |
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Aberrant immediately jumped into this stage after the awakening of novas, who immediately began reshaping the world. Project Utopia rose to bring them under some measure of control, and the nations of the world each had their own legislative response to the emergence. | |
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Palladium's Heroes Unlimited initially had a very sketchily-described setting that could have been thought of as Early-to-Middle in its first edition due to relative dearth of published materials, but after the revised edition rolled in, several more supplements were released which pushed the setting squarely in the Late stage, with the Century Station (a "city of the future" fallen on hard times after its main benefactor/employer was revealed as an alien criminal and dragged off-planet to face justice) and Gramercy Island (The Alcatraz / Extranormal Prison built near Century Station) setting having dozens of heroes, villains, teams and organizations active in a single large metropolitan area, and plenty of hints at a much bigger world beyond which is likely common knowledge (or nearly so) to the average inhabitant. Later books only cemented this. | |
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Power Rangers, post-"Zordon era": The Rangers are a known quantity now, and with the format changing to have new teams every year there's room for occasional team-ups. As for relationships with the government, Power Rangers Lost Galaxy (season 7) hints that the local authorities are Secret Secret Keepers and Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue (season 8) sees the military field their own Ranger team. Private businessmen, independent scientists, secret martial arts orders and city officials have since replicated this, and multi-season team-ups tend to occur around franchise anniversaries. What keeps it out of Late stage is Superman Stays Out of Gotham: it's only in these specials that multiple teams operate, and the lower budget after the Saban era means we're no longer guaranteed that a given team will meet even their immediate predecessor or successor. In any given series, a maximum of three episodes is about something other than the single team that's seen as the world's only hope responding to monsters created by one central villain who turned up in the season premiere. The Mythology Gag is common, but if this was The DCU or the Marvel Universe, no Time Travel episode would be complete without someone from Power Rangers Time Force making sure they don't screw up history, alien threats would mean crossing paths with the predecessors of the cast of Power Rangers S.P.D., whose Earth branch should already be getting up and running by now, etc. but we're not there. There are Mythology Gags that would make nice Worldbuilding if the obvious similarities to things in other seasons were pointed out onscreen... but they're not.note In the current season, Dino Charge, Keeper's trap for Big Bad Sledge resulted in his asteroid cargo falling to Earth and wiping out the dinosaurs. Oops. The heroes are powered by the Energems that Keeper had and Sledge wanted, which he had hidden on Earth, which work exactly like the Dino Gems of Dino Thunder, which... are fragments of the meteor that wiped out the dinosaurs. The connection's obvious to us, but until someone from PRDT shows up and PRDC's Mission Control says "Oh, yeah, you're the guys who've got those "Dino Gems" that got created when the meteors interacted with the Energems!" it's not canon... and history says that's not gonna happen. Such examples are legion, so if they got mentioned with any regularity, you'd be one step closer to a comic book 'verse. |
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The Whateley Universe starts off in the Late Stage, with kids manifesting their mutant powers and going off to a Superhero School of roughly 600 teenagers with dozens of powered teachers and staff. The backstory of Charlie Lodgeman is set starting in the late 1800s, and the universe was already Middle Stage at that point. He and five others form the superhero team the Mystic Six. | |
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In Iron Man the hero fights terrorists and his only superpowered enemy has a knockoff of his power suit. | |
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In the Savage Worlds setting, Necessary Evil, in which each of the players create a four color supervillain that team up to defeat the aliens that have taken over the world, superpowers and their affects are almost commonplace. While ordinary people do exist, almost everything will be influenced by the growing number of superpowered individuals. The main governing body in the world has a practical means to negate superpowers, no matter their origins, and it is not uncommon to encounter machines, buildings, or technologies given to the world by superpowered people. A major refugee race is the Atlanteans, of all things. In the original setting history up until the early 20th century was fairly common, although superheroes and villains did supposedly exist even in the earliest points in history. | |
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Tiger & Bunny is well into the Late Stage. NEXT have been around for forty-five years and are generally regarded as a normal occurrence. A reasonable Super Registration Act (for superheroes, not NEXT) is in full operation, and superhero is an actual career that people get salaries and can go to specialized colleges for. Watching supherheroes arrest criminals and save lives is a national pastime, complete with a hybrid news-RealityTelevision show covering their exploits. While most superheroes are technically competing against each other, joint operations are common for larger threats, facilities are shared, and many of the superheroes are actually friends. | |
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A late case is Captain Marvel, set in the nineties, between Cap's disappearance and Tony Stark becoming Iron Man. At most there is the MacGuffin from Cap's movie being used by an alien scientist disguised as human to run advanced space tech. | |
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Nolan's The Dark Knight falls here: The sci-fi is starting to go a lot more soft, the existence of the Batman is an established fact of Gotham life, his cooperation with the police has gotten a lot more regular now that Gordon is promoted and once they bring Harvey Dent in, and the Joker is a bona fide supervillain (albeit sans superpowers). | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f76cba1 | comment |
With the 2011 DC relaunch, several titles focused on a hard year one (as opposed to in the previous universe where there had been a "Year One" for the current age of superheroes but there had been superheroes in prior eras). The rest focused on year five which seems to be middle stage: lots of secret organizations alongside several heroes acting publicly but only beginning to meet each other and organize. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f76cba1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f76cba1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
New 52 (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f76cba1 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f89c8b8 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f89c8b8 | comment |
PS238 is Late, superheroes and villains have been around for several decades now and the principal setting is a grade school for their kids. It turns out that the stages are cyclical in this universe, in the late stage the powers that be take someone and let them decide whether people should still have powers, in previous cycles they all chose "no", Tyler on the other hand decided that he had no right to make the decision for everyone else on earth. Nodwick took place during the medieval Heroic Age. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f89c8b8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f89c8b8 | featureConfidence |
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PS238 (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_5f89c8b8 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_65d07453 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_65d07453 | comment |
Captain America: The First Avenger falls here: Captain America is the only Super-Soldier, created to fight a threat with a science-fiction bent to their methods, without any superhumans to oppose him, except the Red Skull, an archnemesis whose origin involves Cap's super-soldier serum. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_65d07453 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_65d07453 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Captain America: The First Avenger | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_65d07453 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_694ab80 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_694ab80 | comment |
Batman Beyond brings the DCAU setting back to the Middle after Justice League Unlimited took it far to the Later extreme. (Chronologically that is. Justice League is set earlier, but Batman Beyond was created first.) The League does show up again in a limited capacity in the third season, but it seems nowhere near as large or organized as it was in Unlimited. While this is itself unexplained, the episode gives an explanation for why Beyond remains in the Middle Stage: Terry never goes beyond part-time, and takes responsibility for protecting Gotham City rather than going national, just like Batman : The Animated Series. The Doylist explanation may simply be that Beyond was created before Justice League, let alone Unlimited, and that the third season interactions were a way to establish common continuity with the then-new JL show. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_694ab80 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_694ab80 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman Beyond | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_694ab80 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_69d15cc0 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_69d15cc0 | comment |
The Avengers may have still qualified as a middle stage work, but subsequent Marvel Cinematic Universe works made the transition into late stage. The series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. deals with the resurgence in appearances of technologies used to make superheroes and follow the way SHIELD and the world copes with this. Captain America: Civil War firmly sets the series in this, with the governments of the world finally moving (and failing) to take control of the Avengers. By the finale of Avengers: Endgame, there's a veritable army of superheroes and their allies assembled to oppose the forces of Thanos. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_69d15cc0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_69d15cc0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Marvel Cinematic Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_69d15cc0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6a4c8f1b | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6a4c8f1b | comment |
One-Punch Man has heroes (most of which fall under the Badass Normal or Science Hero camp, though there are a few with legitimate superpowers) working for the Hero Association, who divides them into alphanumerical classes and ranks depending on how big of a threat they're perceived to be able to take on, and C-class heroes are expected to meet a crime-fighting quota to keep their registration. The ranking system inadvertantly creates a cutthroat atmosphere for lower-ranked heroes trying to rise in the ranks, with some less-scrupulous heroes willing to throw their fellow heroes under the bus if it makes them look good, and the highest-ranked A-class hero setting himself up as a gatekeeper preventing anyone from getting into S-class that he feels isn't worthy. While heroes technically don't have to apply with the Hero Association, they do if they want recognition and payment for their efforts, as the Association encourages civilians to think of vigilante heroes as nothing more than costumed weirdos. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6a4c8f1b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6a4c8f1b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
One-Punch Man (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6a4c8f1b | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6d564c8 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6d564c8 | comment |
The Freedom Force games start with early as Energy X creates heroes and villains, but quickly reaches middle period as more and more heroes join the Freedom Force. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6d564c8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6d564c8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Freedom Force (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_6d564c8 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_765e567a | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_765e567a | comment |
In Villains' Code, there are plenty of "capes" (superheroes) and villains thanks to a number of Mass Super Empowering Events over the years. The government's rule is diminished, as the "capes" themselves have largely taken over the role of the city government and police. In fact, the villains have their own organization that polices itself in order to avoid a large-scale war with the "capes". Some on both sides are nostalgic for the "good old days" (i.e. the Middle stage), when larger-than-life "capes" and villains fought openly with no rules or regulations, no concern for PR. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_765e567a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_765e567a | featureConfidence |
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Villains' Code | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_765e567a | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_76e539c2 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_76e539c2 | comment |
In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS and beyond, every named character who matters is a superpowered mage, cyborg, clone, mutant, etc. In a variation, this isn't the result of more super-people popping up in the world. Rather, it is because the series moves away from Earth and into other worlds where magic is commonplace. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_76e539c2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_76e539c2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_76e539c2 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7717b5b8 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7717b5b8 | comment |
Dragon Ball Online moves the Dragon Ball setting from the Middle to something of a Late. 300 years of Goku and Vegeta's descendants interbreeding with Earthlings means practically every human has at least some Saiyan DNA, and on top of that the Namekians have migrated to Earth while Majin Buu spawned an entire race of beings like himself. After Goku's death Gohan wrote a book that introduced the general public to the basics of Ki control, and an upsurge of interest in martial arts led to characters like Krillin and Tenshinhan opening new dojos to pass on their techniques, meaning super-powered martial arts are now commonplace. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7717b5b8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7717b5b8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dragon Ball Online (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7717b5b8 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7bf7e326 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7bf7e326 | comment |
Base Raiders takes place after this stage, which culminated in the event known as "Ragnarok" where all the Earth's superheroes and villains disappeared at once. Now there's a thriving black market in super-empowering artifacts looted from the hidden bases of the vanished supers, which is where the PCs come in. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7bf7e326 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7bf7e326 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Base Raiders (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7bf7e326 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7ceff43d | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7ceff43d | comment |
The Super Powereds setting is firmly in this stage. There are hundreds of government-licensed Heroes. About 1 in a 1000 people have superpowers, although only 3/4 of those are full-fledged Supers with the ability to control them. The rest are called Powereds and suffer from Power Incontinence. According to the backstory, the government has stepped in early on during the discovery of the existence of Supers and Powereds, not long after World War II and laid the ground rules for Heroes operating within the US. Since the focus of the main series is on students, they obviously don't have to deal with any supervillains. The worst they face are superpowered domestic terrorists/supremacists. Even in Corpies, which features Corporate Sponsored Superheroes, most of what the protagonist does is clean-up and rescue work. One big fight isn't against a supervillain but against a superpowered gang. While the book does end up having a supervillain after all, he turns out to have died some time ago. All the actions were undertaken by the AI he had built in his name. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7ceff43d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7ceff43d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Powereds | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7ceff43d | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7cf5a07 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7cf5a07 | comment |
Its sibling series, The Flash (2014), starts off somewhere in between the Early and Middle stages. Barry Allen is the only known superpowered hero (though Firestorm makes his debut in the middle of the first season), but the Mass Empowering Event that granted him his speed also gave rise to a large number of metahuman criminals, and there is technology that falls on the softer side of Moh's scale, like Captain Cold's Freeze Ray. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7cf5a07 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7cf5a07 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Flash (2014) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_7cf5a07 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_81f5d35d | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_81f5d35d | comment |
Kamen Rider started off like this. In the Showa era there were at most two heroes operating at the same time, and the villains were secret societies that tried to conquer the world from the shadows. The only Muggles aware of this were typically the Riders' civilian allies, though it does stretch suspension of disbelief at times (nobody seems to report on Japan's best and brightest getting kidnapped). The Heisei era also started off like this, with a few minor tweaks and justifications, but moved towards the Middle Stage around Kamen Rider 555. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_81f5d35d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_81f5d35d | featureConfidence |
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Kamen Rider (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_81f5d35d | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_86aff994 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_86aff994 | comment |
The Rangers are a known quantity now, and with the format changing to have new teams every year there's room for occasional team-ups. As for relationships with the government, Power Rangers Lost Galaxy (season 7) hints that the local authorities are Secret Secret Keepers and Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue (season 8) sees the military field their own Ranger team. Private businessmen, independent scientists, secret martial arts orders and city officials have since replicated this, and multi-season team-ups tend to occur around franchise anniversaries. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_86aff994 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_86aff994 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Power Rangers Lost Galaxy | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_86aff994 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_87cf8985 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_87cf8985 | comment |
Champions, in its current incarnation, is clearly at the late stage, with its large numbers of heroic and villainous superteams, plenty of organisations, governmental or otherwise, dealing with superhuman matters, and aliens, magic, monsters and super-science mostly in plain sight for a few decades at least. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_87cf8985 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_87cf8985 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Champions (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_87cf8985 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8bed22e | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8bed22e | comment |
No Ordinary Family Was there for most of its single-season run; the Powell family were for the most part the sole heroic superpowered characters, with the few others being uninvolved in heroics, or working for the Big Bad either directly or indirectly, and all superpowers had a common source. The general public was also unaware of the existence of supers. The last few episodes seemed to show some progression towards the Middle Stage. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8bed22e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8bed22e | featureConfidence |
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No Ordinary Family | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8bed22e | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8d90d456 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8d90d456 | comment |
The Magic Order is about a Wainscot Society of wizards that secretly live all over the world, inspired by Harry Potter and the Order's main job is to protect humanity from knowing about the Eldritch Abominations that threaten reality. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8d90d456 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8d90d456 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Magic Order (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_8d90d456 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90a3a7f4 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90a3a7f4 | comment |
Kim Possible: The eponymous main character only has Charles Atlas Superpower, and the only persons with real superpowers are Dark Action Girl Shego and her Team Go brothers. Two other characters have powers that they got through Kung Fu magic. Except for a few one-shot magic-based characters, all other powers are technology-based. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90a3a7f4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90a3a7f4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kim Possible | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90a3a7f4 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90b916ba | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90b916ba | comment |
The Bruce Timm's Batman: The Animated Series and Superman: The Animated Series fall pretty squarely here. The existence of the heroes is well known, they fight powered villains, work directly with the police, team up frequently but are not yet part of an organized team, and the sci-fi is pretty soft. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90b916ba | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90b916ba | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Batman: The Animated Series | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_90b916ba | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9321b7f4 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9321b7f4 | comment |
Starting around 2003's Kamen Rider 555, the Kamen Rider franchise hit this stage. Rather than evil human organizations, the villains tend to be monsters (of either the ancient or alien varieties) who generally don't care about operating in secret, and certain events are public knowledge because of how big they werenote Kamen Rider Drive starts off with an incident where the entire planet was frozen in time for several minutes, and Kamen Rider Build has Japan split into three separate nations because of mysterious walls that erupted from the Earth in 2007. In some series (like Blade, Fourze, and Wizard) the Kamen Riders are regarded as an urban legend, but in others (Double, Drive, and Ex-Aid) their existence is well-known and they're officially authorized agents of the police and/or government. The franchise flirts with Late Stage at times (each new series adds anywhere from two to six more Kamen Riders to the Shared Universe), but the "common crossovers" aspect is downplayed, mostly because getting past shows' actors back for cameo appearances can be somewhat difficult. |
|
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9321b7f4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9321b7f4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kamen Rider 555 | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9321b7f4 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_94b4367c | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_94b4367c | comment |
The Boys, where the "Supes" have been around for over a decade, are employed by corporations and even star in movies about themselves. And of course, the backlash has started. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_94b4367c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_94b4367c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Boys (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_94b4367c | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_95521c97 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_95521c97 | comment |
In The Spectacular Spider-Man Peter seems to be the only superhero, with "super-criminals" being a new phenomenon mostly created to fight him specifically. Word of God says that this is because Sony only had the rights to use Spider-Man characters; if given greater freedom more heroes would have appeared. It has also said however that the other features of the Marvel universe ca. 1962 exist, they just aren't acknowledged in the show proper. The Fantastic Four are around, Tony Stark is in captivity, while the X-Men and Ant-Man are active but under the public's radar, Captain America is frozen in ice, Don Blake has not gone on vacation in Norway yet, and the Hulk is considered an urban legend. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_95521c97 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_95521c97 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Spectacular Spider-Man | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_95521c97 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_960062b7 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_960062b7 | comment |
In the backstory of My Hero Academia, babies suddenly began being born with superpowers, and the resulting societal chaos led to the rise of heroes and villains. By the time the series begins 80% of humanity has some kind of superpower (called "Quirks" in-series). While not everyone is an actual superhero, the ones who are get subsidized by the government and work together to fight villains and rescue victims. The title refers to a Superhero School for would-be heroes, and at least 6 such schools exist in Japan alone. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_960062b7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_960062b7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
My Hero Academia (Manga) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_960062b7 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9707f576 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9707f576 | comment |
Magellan starts off in Late Stage, with a girl motivated to become a superhero because she was saved years earlier by one of many well-known supers. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9707f576 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9707f576 | featureConfidence |
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Magellan (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9707f576 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9a29f3a4 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9a29f3a4 | comment |
Top 10 is set in a city where literally every person is a Differently Powered Individual. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9a29f3a4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9a29f3a4 | featureConfidence |
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Top 10 (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9a29f3a4 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9aa54175 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9aa54175 | comment |
Finally the Big Game (2023) crossover series has the Fraternity deciding to get rid of these new superheroes to stop the world from becoming a Later Stage again. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9aa54175 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9aa54175 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Big Game (2023) (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9aa54175 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9e82c3cb | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9e82c3cb | comment |
Wanted says the world used to be a Standard Superhero Setting but the majority of the villains united into a group called the Fraternity and built a machine that altered reality into a world where superheroes were just fiction and the heroes were depowered and turned into actors who played them in movies and TV shows and the Fraternity secretly rules the world above all governments. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9e82c3cb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9e82c3cb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Wanted (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_9e82c3cb | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a15ee289 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a15ee289 | comment |
Last Child of Krypton: At the beginning of the crossover, there's a single superhuman (Superman) and his existence is unknown to the public. Later on, some more characters become heroes and several supervillains pop up (and then it turned out that there was a more standard version of the DC Universe before, but Second Impact and SEELE causing The Purge in secret so there would be nobody capable of stopping "the Scenario"). In the rewrite, though, there are a grand total of two superheroes (Superman and Supergirl) and a single supervillain who is an alien menace. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a15ee289 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a15ee289 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Last Child of Krypton (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a15ee289 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a8d6bd09 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a8d6bd09 | comment |
Superman of 2499: The Great Confrontation: Played with. After five centuries, there're no super-heroes operating other than the heirs of Superman and Batman. Muto and the descendants of the Joker are the only super-villains around. Then Katherine reclaims her ancestor's Supergirl mantle. And a new Green Lantern is appointed. And an Amazon travels to the Man’s World... | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a8d6bd09 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a8d6bd09 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Superman of 2499: The Great Confrontation (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_a8d6bd09 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_aab02655 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_aab02655 | comment |
Marvel Comics's 2006 crossover Civil War and its direct sequel series Avengers: The Initiative delved into the need for a government-regulated body of superheroes, with the latter focusing on the recruitment and training of rookie superheroes. The event also led to the creation of the 50-State Initiative: an official superhero team for every state of the USA. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_aab02655 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_aab02655 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Civil War (2006) (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_aab02655 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_afeeacf6 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_afeeacf6 | comment |
The Force Awakens, the first installment in the Star Wars sequel trilogy, follows suit by having the only prominent Force user be Kylo Ren, given Luke Skywalker's disappearance prior to the film's events. That is until The Reveal that Rey is also Force sensitive and Luke Skywalker's cameo at the very end of the film. That still leaves only three active Force users (counting Supreme Leader Snoke), which is actually one less than the original trilogy. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_afeeacf6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_afeeacf6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Force Awakens | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_afeeacf6 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b00aafbe | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b00aafbe | comment |
The Ultraverse: The line begins in the early- to mid-1990s, in "modern times". By this time, superpowered people named Ultras start to appear in the United States. Some of the more well-known Ultras work with private companies (like Hardcase for a Los Angeles film studio and Prototype for a technology company). In time, as more begin to appear in the public eye, an Ultra named Contrary finds students for a secret private school she operates, and an impromptu interview with Hardcase on television gives Prime (the strongest of them) the idea to have Ultras deal with their own kind - which leads to the creation of the Ultraforce. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b00aafbe | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b00aafbe | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Ultraverse (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b00aafbe | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b370ddd1 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b370ddd1 | comment |
Thor lands here, for while he and all his foes are Asgardians, there are agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. on hand who know about superheroes. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b370ddd1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b370ddd1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Thor | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b370ddd1 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b4996199 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b4996199 | comment |
Spider-Man: roughly since the 2000s, Spidey's corner of the Marvel Universe has become a universe unto itself: Many Spider-Men operate/have operated in the main Marvel Universe (so-called "Spider-Person"): Peter Parker in New York, Kaine (Parker's clone) in the West Coast, Miles Morales (a refugee from an Alternate Universe) in Brooklyn, Spider-Girl (Anya Corazón) in New York. Other creations of the period are Silk (Korean Cindy Moon) and Spider-Boy (Bailey Briggs). The enormous quantity of Spider-People culminated in the Spider-Verse crossover cycle. Even the first two Spider-Women, who were at first separate characters, began to be increasingly attached to Spider-Man: The second Spider-Woman (Julia Carpenter) abandoned the mantle and took on the role of Madame Web, a mystical mentor to the Spider-People. The third Spider-Woman, Mattie Franklin, originated in a 1998-1999 Spider-Man storyline, and worked with him for a time before retiring and dying years later. Spider-Man's Rogues Gallery has become enormous, the many villains eventually join forces with each other in a repeat of the infamous Sinister Six. In one specific storyline, Sinister War, there have been at least three groups operating like it: the "Savage Six", the "Sinister Syndicate", and Dr. Octopus's "Sinister Six". |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_b4996199 | featureConfidence |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bb4af8d3 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bb4af8d3 | comment |
Young Justice features a large Justice League (with sixteen members at the start of the series), a well-organized Legion of Doom and a history of superpowers going back to at least World War II. The legal issues are also addressed, with Batman noting that the Justice League has U.N. approval to operate in most (but not all) countries. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bb4af8d3 | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bb4af8d3 | featureConfidence |
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YoungJustice | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bb4af8d3 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bcea8f7c | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bcea8f7c | comment |
Freedom City and possibly the flagship settings of most Superhero Tabletop Games are set in a mid-to-late scenario. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bcea8f7c | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bcea8f7c | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_bf09bf33 | comment |
Six years in, the Arrowverse is edging into the Late Stage. Team Arrow and Team Flash, originally just support teams built around a single hero, are now full-fledged superhero teams with multiple powered/costumed members, often working with fellow superhero team the Legends and several other unaffiliated heroes. Multiple different supervillain teamups have occurred. Magic, advanced technology, aliens, demons, and freak-accident induced superpowers all exist alongside each other. Special prison wings have been built to contain supervillains, an organization called the Time Bureau works with the UN to police time travelers, and there are apparently enough superpowered folk around for a black marketeer to build a business around kidnapping and selling them. A brief time travel excursion to the 2040s sees the setting go full late stage, with the government outlawing superpowers and rounding up dozens of "metahumans" to be imprisoned and experimented on. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c41214bf | comment |
Comics like Kick-Ass, Huck and Superior play the Early Stage straight with newer superheroes starting out, inspired by comics and not being aware of each other. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c41214bf | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c61f3112 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c61f3112 | comment |
Early Golden Age comics, prior to 1940 when the Justice Society of America first appeared, belong here, as do most later ones. Characters like Superman and Wonder Woman were assumed to be the only superheroes in their respective continuities. Only later that they were combined into publisher-specific, overarching universes encompassing many different heroes. Superman first met Batman in 1945, not on comics but in the radio serial The Adventures of Superman. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c61f3112 | featureConfidence |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c83a00e4 | comment |
Superwomen of Eva 2: Lone Heir of Krypton: The setting falls between the Early and the Middle Stages: there're few super-heroes and they operate exclusively in one city. There're no super-hero teams, and the two only named heroes -Supergirl and Wonder Girl- have only teamed-up once or twice. However, they're going from beating thugs and crooks to fight alien gods and mythological creatures. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c83a00e4 | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c83a00e4 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c8f642ca | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c8f642ca | comment |
While El Goonish Shive has had aliens, magic and anime-style martial arts since the beginning, the series officially entered this category when Elliot adopted the superhero identity of "Cheerleadra". While Elliot is far from the world's only super-powered being, since he/she is the world's only known superhero, as far as most people are concerned, the world is an Early Stage superhero world. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c8f642ca | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c8f642ca | featureConfidence |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_c8f642ca | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_caec3927 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_caec3927 | comment |
The first Pretty Cure All Stars movie was a Bat Family Crossover featuring characters from the six seasons screening up to that point (a total of 14 heroines), and a new movie was made every year, incorporating the team from that season (and Sixth Rangers from the previous season who had not been introduced when the last movie was released). By the time of the fifth movie (coinciding with the tenth season, Doki Doki! PreCure), there are 32 Precures, and at one point in Doki Doki Precure, one of the villains comments that at this rate it won't be long before there are a hundred. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_caec3927 | featureConfidence |
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Pretty Cure All Stars | hasFeature |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_cb6abef3 | comment |
The Avengers falls at the upper edge of the middle stage. Superheroes are starting to become a fact of life, although villains are rare enough that the only team up thus far is between Loki and his mysterious benefactor, neither of whom are from Earth. The relatively small number of superheroes means that the Marvel Cinematic Universe remains middle stage at this point, though it also paves the way for later films to slowly transition into late stage. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_cb6abef3 | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_cb6abef3 | featureConfidence |
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The Avengers (2012) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_cb6abef3 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ce50887e | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ce50887e | comment |
Dragon Ball is an odd duck, roughly Middle stage crossed with World of Weirdness. Strange creatures and martial-arts-based superpowers aren't exactly common, but they're not unknown to the general public either, and there's no real Masquerade to keep them from finding out. There's not much organization more formal than a few loosely-affiliated martial arts schools. In the Z era, the characters travel to space where they find that the galaxy at large tends more toward a Late era setting, but Earth stays more or less Middle thanks to an implied Weirdness Censor that has all but a handful of characters perpetually acting like they somehow forgot about the last time the Earth was invaded by aliens. A low-key Masquerade is introduced, not to keep Earth in the dark about superpowers per se, but to tone them down enough that the non-powered Mr. Satan can take credit for defeating Cell and leave the populace believing he's strong enough to save the planet from any superpowered threat. Some of the non-canon movies feel more Late, such as Bojack Unbound, in which Earth apparently has friendly enough relations with other planets to be able to invite a bunch of aliens over for a martial arts tournament. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ce50887e | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ce50887e | featureConfidence |
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Dragon Ball (Manga) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ce50887e | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d4222dba | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d4222dba | comment |
The Batman (2022) falls here. It is set in a grounded universe with no superpowers. Batman's tech is very realistic and low-key (instead of the glider-cape of previous continuities, he has a wing-suit used by real-life mountaineers). Batman spends most of his time fighting street criminals and Mob bosses, and investigating corruption. Even the film's main antagonist, the Riddler, is less the classic colorful "super-villain" and more a politically motivated serial-killer and terrorist who radicalizes his online supporters. The cops, for the most part, don't trust Batman and barely tolerate his presence, with Jim Gordon being the sole exception. The ending of the film however hints at this setting starting to move towards the Middle Stage with Batman becoming a more public figure and being viewed as a hero by the city, and the reveal that the Joker is around and might make his presence felt in Gotham someday soon. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d4222dba | featureApplicability |
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The Batman (2022) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d4222dba | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d55e038b | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d55e038b | comment |
On the human side of things, a data page shows that human members of several antagonistic groups of the Marvel Universe (e.g., SHIELD, A.I.M, HAMMER and HYDRA) joined forces to found ORCHIS, an organization dedicated to ensure mankind's survival against the mutant threat. They are also the main antagonists throughout the "Krakoan Saga". | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d55e038b | featureApplicability |
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Dark Reign (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d55e038b | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d7e4b25b | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d7e4b25b | comment |
Gamma is set in a future where every major city on Earth has a handful of superheroes dedicated to protecting it from monsters and supervillains, while getting logistical and medical support from the muggle-run Earth Defense Force. Flashbacks also show the Early Stage right after the setting's Mass Super-Empowering Event, although it is not the straightest example, as the first superheroes emerged after the planet was almost overrun by super-monsters and supervillains. | |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d87bc6e | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d87bc6e | comment |
Mutant City Blues is set in a pretty realistic mid-to-late scenario: superpowers are common enough that forensic investigation of a crime scene includes canvassing for known effects to determine if someone with powers had something to do with it and police procedure includes laws dealing with such things as having been possessed and forced to commit a crime, but overall empowered people are still a minority and powers are not really that Earth-shattering (Power at a Price being the rule of the day). In-Universe, people actually wanting to be "superheroes" or "super villains" are equally looked upon as being deranged. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d87bc6e | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_d87bc6e | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ddad77ae | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ddad77ae | comment |
Astro City started off Late, and has occasionally shown hints of Middle in some flashbacks. But even then, it seems to have a fairly wild, anything goes kind of setting. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ddad77ae | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ddad77ae | featureConfidence |
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Astro City (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_ddad77ae | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_de45e305 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_de45e305 | comment |
In the My Brother is a Superhero series, Zack/"Star Guy" is the world's first superhero. The concept certainly existed, however, as both Marvel and DC Comics exist in this universe and Luke reads them religiously. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_de45e305 | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_de45e305 | featureConfidence |
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My Brother is a Superhero | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_de45e305 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e293455a | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e293455a | comment |
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel start out as early stage horror/superheroes, with only one Slayer and only one ensouled vampire. Over the course of each series "champions" become more numerous, and in the continuing comics they pretty clearly reach stage 2. The Buffyverse shifted into the Middle Stage in the BtVS finale, where a spell was cast activating the powers of all potential Slayers everywhere, with the post-series comics dealing with the repercussions of this. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e293455a | featureApplicability |
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e293455a | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e3ed54c7 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e3ed54c7 | comment |
In Pretty Cure's eleventh season, HappinessCharge Pretty Cure!, there are Precures operating worldwide. However, since each Pretty Cure series is basically an Alternate Continuity outside of Crossovers, it snaps back to an Early/Middle Stage in the next season, Go! Princess Pretty Cure. | |
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Pretty Cure | hasFeature |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e6267766 | comment |
Star Wars Legends (formerly "Star Wars Expanded Universe") was, in general, even more high-powered than any of the movies, with hundreds, if not thousands of Jedi and Sith battling each other across millenia of galactic history. Even installments that were, similarly to the original trilogy, set after major Jedi purges (like Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords) featured more Force users at once than there were named ones in all six movies combined. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e6267766 | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e6267766 | featureConfidence |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e8734f10 | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e8734f10 | comment |
The Secret Service and King Of Spies are spy stories inspired by James Bond where yet another Extra-Strength Masquerade keeps villain threats from reaching the newspapers. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e8734f10 | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e8734f10 | featureConfidence |
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The Secret Service (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_e8734f10 | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_f491337b | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_f491337b | comment |
Jupiter's Legacy and Supercrooks are set in a Later Stage where superheroes are celebrities and most of them are second generation who don't bother with secret identities. Word of God says they're set in an Alternate Universe where the Fraternity never took over. The Jupiter's Circle prequel is set in a Middle Stage where a first generation Justice League style group has been active for a while. | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_f491337b | featureApplicability |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_f491337b | featureConfidence |
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Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_f491337b | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_fa5e90fd | type |
Superhero Prevalence Stages | |
Superhero Prevalence Stages / int_fa5e90fd | comment |
City of Heroes/Villains. Player heroes start out with a contact in the Federal Bureau for Superpowered Affairs, villains join the organization that rules a small island nation, and Praetorian metahumans are conscripted into a special division of their universe's police department. Enemies run the full spectrum from normal humans to gods, often within the same group. | |
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City of Heroes (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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