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DC Comics - The Legendary DC Heralds Upgrade

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Why would it scale individually? It was a collective effort and green lanterns power exponentially increases when done in group.
Has that been explicitly stated or explicitly shown anywhere? I do not remember at the moment.
I was shown scans a few months ago in our general DC Comics discussion thread in this forum, but do not have them available.

@Firestorm808

Are you willing to help out with finding them please? I think that you were involved at the time.
 
Aye, without any proper timeframe, we can't get any speed out of it for KE.
Yeah.

but my point is more so that Ant bringing that up doesn’t refute any kind of AP scaling
(Unless Ant is gonna make a
CRT scaling lifting strength to AP and vice versa)
 
The point is that this major event was explicitly treated as a massive upgrade to post-Crisis Superman at the time, and the feat in question was of around a tier 5-C scale.

See here:


Within the greater context of how this incarnation of Superman was generally portrayed in likely thousands of stories, it doesn't make any sense to upgrade him to Low 2-C.
 
The point is that this major event was explicitly treated as a massive upgrade to post-Crisis Superman at the time, and the feat in question was of around a tier 5-C scale.

See here:


Within the greater context of how this incarnation of Superman was generally portrayed in likely thousands of stories, it doesn't make any sense to upgrade him to Low 2-C.
Lifting strength isn’t an AP feat, it wouldn’t be scalable to his AP at all. It doesn’t matter how impressive it’s supposed to be.

not to mention, low ends can be outliers as well, why are you ok with him being 4-B if you’re insisting this is an anti feat for anything above 5-C?
 
Lifting strength isn’t an AP feat, it wouldn’t be scalable to his AP at all. It doesn’t matter how impressive it’s supposed to be.
I want to clarify something.

LS is only not AP if it isn't done rapidly, like a push at incredibly great speeds, or a throw.
 
Yes, and this was rapidly swift pushing, which qualifies as around 5-C according to the standards that I linked to above, if I remember correctly.
 
@Qawsedf234 @Firestorm808 @Eficiente @LordTracer

Are you willing to read through the posts in this thread that start with the one linked below, and then discuss the issues mentioned there please?

Your input would also be appreciated, @Deagonx .
And I accidentally initially omitted @Eficiente in my first request for input above.
@Vasco @Stefano4444

I think that you also performed point-by-point evaluations of the listed feats in the first post of this thread. Are you also willing to help out here further please?
 
Also, did I forget to summon others that helped out in this manner earlier?
 
I think that has to be interpreted as a regular everybody can fight everybody in order to make western superhero stories work issue, so I disagree. As I mentioned above, it was perceived as a massive event when post-Crisis Superman was powered up so much that he could move Pluto during the Our Worlds at War event, whereas Superboy Prime could withstand a point blank universe-destroying explosion.
Sorry if I sound disrespectful in any regards, but this question has been at the tip of my tongue since the start of our discussion pretty much.

How consistent does Superman scaling up to Universal characters have to be before it's worth-while? Superman has tussled with beings of these or relevant power-levels so many times that the 'everybody can fight everybody' point just seem too small a counter-argument anymore.

I will only be going over scaling because it is relevant to the validity side of these feats.

Superman has tussled with Darkseid's pre-Flashpoint Emanation (on numerous occasions shown superior post-Erad), Golden-Age Superman (whom I've convinced you has these levels of power), Orion, Superboy Prime/Time Trapper SBP, Mordru, and I'm sure there are others that we've missed. With how often he does this, can we really just keep saying 'everybody can fight everybody cuz western comics'?
 
Superman has tussled with Darkseid's pre-Flashpoint Emanation (on numerous occasions shown superior post-Erad), Golden-Age Superman (whom I've convinced you has these levels of power), Orion, Superboy Prime/Time Trapper SBP, Mordru, and I'm sure there are others that we've missed. With how often he does this, can we really just keep saying 'everybody can fight everybody cuz western comics'?
Just to add, but from what I know, the whole Superman only fights Darkseid's avatars thing is kinda... wrong. As in New Gods #15, he states he doesn't prefer using avatars and only does so when he needs to be in two places at the same time. So him using an avatar to fight Supes is an out of character move, it's usually just his regular emanation.
 
Superman has tussled with Darkseid's pre-Flashpoint Emanation (on numerous occasions shown superior post-Erad), Golden-Age Superman (whom I've convinced you has these levels of power), Orion, Superboy Prime/Time Trapper SBP, Mordru, and I'm sure there are others that we've missed. With how often he does this, can we really just keep saying 'everybody can fight everybody cuz western comics'?
There's also the fact that a lot of the moments used to argue "everyone can fight everyone", where Street tier characters fight Heralds, are outliers in their own right

compared to the consistency of Post-Crisis Superman fighting on par with multiple 2-C/2-A characters on multiple different occasions
 
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compared to the consistency of Post-Crisis Superman fighting on par with multiple 2-C/2-A characters on multiple different occasions
Personally I think that remains to be seen, but consider the inverse of this: How many hundreds, or thousands, of comics involve him fighting people who are nowhere near that level, but he still struggles? Now, I'm aware that the routine response to this is that his power level is variable or that he holds back, but I feel like this kind of overlooks the magnitude of difference between these tiers and the fact that if Superman is really that powerful, even galaxy-level beings should be utterly helpless against him, but that's clearly not the case.
 

Post Crisis​

Others​

Gods​

Superman​

Lanterns​

Rebirth​

Updated tally:

Superman​

 
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Okay. No problem.

I disagree, since nothing was stated about being able to recreate the entire universal continuum according to their whims, just the local galaxy, and even that was not clarified if it would be a very gradual feat. It doesn't seem explicit/self-evident/reliable enough for my tastes.

I am currently uncertain, as it was an unproven statement with unclear specifications regarding how it would be accomplished.

I think that has to be interpreted as a regular everybody can fight everybody in order to make western superhero stories work issue, so I disagree. As I mentioned above, it was perceived as a massive event when post-Crisis Superman was powered up so much that he could move Pluto during the Our Worlds at War event, whereas Superboy Prime could withstand a point blank universe-destroying explosion.

It was an unproven statement, and we do not know if it would have been a gradual feat, but Kyle was powered up far beyond the rest of the Justice League during the first time he took the name Ion, which was unrelated to the entity of the same name at the time.

Yes, but it should only scale to regular Wally, who we consider to be tier 4-B, not "let's bully the Anti-Monitor" peak Wally.

Yes, I somewhat agree, but it is not sufficient with one occasion in order to upgrade all the herald-level characters.

I disagree. He was apparently bound with 10th Metal chains at the time, which work like superpowered Kryptonite against him, and Superman could not do anything against Barbatos without this crutch during the preceding Metal event.
I updated the tally
 

Post Crisis​

Others​

Gods​

Superman​

Lanterns​

Rebirth​

Updated tally:

Superman​

This are the only feats left to be check if legit or not?
 
Now, I'm aware that the routine response to this is that his power level is variable or that he holds back, but I feel like this kind of overlooks the magnitude of difference between these tiers and the fact that if Superman is really that powerful, even galaxy-level beings should be utterly helpless against him, but that's clearly not the case.
This really isn’t a great counter. The difference between tiers literally doesn’t matter because he’s not using his full strength. Similar characters like Wonder Woman have even been shown to hold back to the point that they won’t kill 8-C characters.
 
Sorry if I sound disrespectful in any regards, but this question has been at the tip of my tongue since the start of our discussion pretty much.

How consistent does Superman scaling up to Universal characters have to be before it's worth-while? Superman has tussled with beings of these or relevant power-levels so many times that the 'everybody can fight everybody' point just seem too small a counter-argument anymore.

I will only be going over scaling because it is relevant to the validity side of these feats.

Superman has tussled with Darkseid's pre-Flashpoint Emanation (on numerous occasions shown superior post-Erad), Golden-Age Superman (whom I've convinced you has these levels of power), Orion, Superboy Prime/Time Trapper SBP, Mordru, and I'm sure there are others that we've missed. With how often he does this, can we really just keep saying 'everybody can fight everybody cuz western comics'?
The problem is that if a character's own personal absolute peak exertion feats are consistently many tiers below the characters that he or she fights, and the fundamental nature of the settings is that everybody can fight everybody, and that the many hundreds of authors constantly contradict each other, then it genuinely is much more logical to interpret illogical matchup results as plot-induced stupidity.

Take note that I would personally love if Marvel Comics and DC Comics had made much more sense in this regard, but they really truly genuinely don't at all, which is not remotely my fault, and to allow our wiki to remain reliable, we have to take that into account a lot. That I point out something that is blatantly true for the sake of accuracy and reliability does not make me an enemy here.

Just to take an even more extreme recent example, Al Ewing seems to love the Blue Marvel to death, so he recently let the character beat up a Beyonder (who had previously beaten the Living Tribunal) and withstand an attack from the full power multiversal Phoenix Force in its home turf/power source, The White Hot Room, which in his cosmology is far more powerful still, but the Blue Marvel has previously only been reliably stated to strictly be capable of destroying moons with his full force blows, so it doesn't make any sense to suddenly upgrade him to Low 1-A or 1-A, and although Low 2-C is a much less extreme tier, it is still a literal infinity above all of post-Crisis Superman's actual feats.
 
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This really isn’t a great counter. The difference between tiers literally doesn’t matter because he’s not using his full strength. Similar characters like Wonder Woman have even been shown to hold back to the point that they won’t kill 8-C characters.
I know, and this is incorporated into what I am trying to communicate. There are a lot of comic issues out there where Post-Crisis Superman fights people. Many times against people whom he has no reason to hold back against, and reasons to not hold back against. My point is not to say that he must not be that powerful because he can't kill them, but rather, there are many times where he is clearly injured, down for the count, extremely distressed about how the fight is going, against opponents who -- should we accept the claim that he is tier 2 -- are in essence no greater of a threat to him than I am.

The struggle is the point of the story, and all of these characters are facing serious struggles in every major story arc. Often nearly losing, or being temporarily defeated, or needing help/a team-up to overcome the challenge. They aren't holding back in these stories, they're just losing.

Now, when we look at the feats that have made it past the cutting room floor, can we interpret them in a way that does not require us to think of Superman as being some multi-universe destroying behemoth? I think so, absolutely. In which case, I think that interpretation is better.
 
Personally I think that remains to be seen, but consider the inverse of this: How many hundreds, or thousands, of comics involve him fighting people who are nowhere near that level, but he still struggles? Now, I'm aware that the routine response to this is that his power level is variable or that he holds back, but I feel like this kind of overlooks the magnitude of difference between these tiers and the fact that if Superman is really that powerful, even galaxy-level beings should be utterly helpless against him, but that's clearly not the case.
Agreed. I think that the only way to get genuinely reliable tiering for Marvel Comics and DC Comics characters is if we try to figure out a system to scale the characters from their own personal explicit feats and most consistently displayed high exertion power levels to a much greater degree than we do currently in an as unbiased and rational manner as possible, as otherwise all of the characters will increasingly be chain-scaled to each other more and more unreasonably higher through continuous revisions. Help in this regard would be extremely appreciated.
 
I think we just need to more critically apply the concept of "outliers" when comics are involved because they have so much more material than a lot of other types of media, so there will be an errant feat here or there that doesn't necessitate a broad upgrade. Like punching out Barbatos. It just doesn't make sense. Either Barbatos was weakened, or Superman extremely casually knocked out a being who was powerful enough to kill WF and eat universes, and threatened Dream of the Endless. This does not track with the overall tone of A) the kind of threat that Barbatos and World Forger represented and B) the overall helplessness of Superman in doing literally anything about them by himself.
 
Many times against people whom he has no reason to hold back against, and reasons to not hold back against. My point is not to say that he must not be that powerful because he can't kill them, but rather, there are many times where he is clearly injured, down for the count, extremely distressed about how the fight is going, against opponents who -- should we accept the claim that he is tier 2 -- are in essence no greater of a threat to him than I am.
Can you provide examples of these opponents? Because we actually have conditions about whether or not characters can scale to the peaks of Clark, Diana, Hal, etc.

They are consistently able to match a bloodlusted version of a character who is known to hold back (Note: Mind-controlled versions may not be able to overcome certain mental barriers restricting powers and clones may not be able to perfectly recreate the original character's power level.)

If a character has feats only against characters known to hold back, their scaling would be judged on a case-by-case basis. For example, many Superman villains and supporting characters exclusively battle against Superman, very few of them should scale to his 4-B rating.

Cause if the characters you have in mind don’t meet these conditions, then by our current standards, they just wouldn’t scale to a Tier 2 Superman, Wonder Woman, or whoever. Especially when some (using Wonder Woman as an example because I’ve been reading her) state that they only fight in self-defense and will go out of their way to avoid severely harming or killing their opponent, regardless of the threat they present.
 
avoid severely harming or killing their opponent, regardless of the threat they present.
I am taking a different approach. I agree that the damage they do to their opponents is strongly inhibited by their moral code. I am talking more about a) the damage that is done to them by their opponents, b) the context of the situation, the threat it poses to Earth, innocent lives, et cetera, and c) whether it is appropriate in that context to think that they let the situation go on for as long as it did, or get as bad as it did, if their opponent indeed is so much weaker than them.

I think, for the reasons you point out, examining it through the lens of "how badly did they hurt this person" is not very effective, so I think these other approaches are better.
 
kinda, these are the feats with 3+ staff that have agreed, emirp has stated that he needs more time to finish responses to the "debunks
I see.
It never directly claimed that they were going to destroy the universe, but the guy indeed was damaging the entire timestream, which its assume would be the timeline.
Agree.
I'm not fully convinced about this scaling, but i can concede and at least admit that it looks more legit than i thought, so i guess Supes downscaling would make sense here.
Looks legit, and considering Ion did fought explicit universe level threats such as Superman Prime it does make this statement less hyperbole.
I guess considering that Superman its usually potray as the strongest there its an argument for to at least scale to Flash's 2-C, less certain for 2-A considering that absolute peak Flash put a better fight agains villains who can easily dominate Superman.

The same can be say to Captain Atom, although his 2-A come from when his version of Monarch, but that version was show to be far stronger to the point to take down multiple Superman level begins at once and even a Superman with CA's powers.

Personally Monarch should have its own profile separated by CA, or at least a separated Key.
Statement looks straight and clean, same with Superman destroying the Phantom Zone, this Low 2-C statement can be used.
I still think this feat shouldn't be used, like i say Barbatos was chained and we don't see how much he was affect by Superman punch.
 
Just a note that back when Kyle Rayner first used the name Ion, no emotional entity was involved. Kyle's own powers were just evolving a massive lot.
 
a) the damage that is done to them by their opponents
This isn’t foolproof logic, and we don’t even use it now. Otherwise there’d be a lot more characters at 4-B. Plus some characters like Superman and the Green Lanterns have variable tiers, so you’d have to prove that they’re at their peaks before you can claim that a character would scale for harming them.
b) the context of the situation, the threat it poses to Earth, innocent lives, et cetera, and c) whether it is appropriate in that context to think that they let the situation go on for as long as it did, or get as bad as it did, if their opponent indeed is so much weaker than them.
These go back to the conditions we have for scaling to these characters, they have to be able to threaten the characters like this consistently (which is why I asked you to give examples).
 
It never directly claimed that they were going to destroy the universe, but the guy indeed was damaging the entire timestream, which its assume would be the timeline.
Was it explicitly clarified that the damage to the time stream was caused by the two characters in question explicitly threatening the local galaxy, or was it due to something else, such as when Parallax and Extant were trying to recreate the universe?
I'm not fully convinced about this scaling, but i can concede and at least admit that it looks more legit than i thought, so i guess Supes downscaling would make sense here.
Well, their respective peak feats in practice do not match each other at all.
Looks legit, and considering Ion did fought explicit universe level threats such as Superman Prime it does make this statement less hyperbole.
See my last post above please.
I guess considering that Superman its usually potray as the strongest there its an argument for to at least scale to Flash's 2-C, less certain for 2-A considering that absolute peak Flash put a better fight agains villains who can easily dominate Superman.
Post-Crisis Superman himself has no feats above tier High 4-C that I know of and was usually portrayed as far less powerful than that. In addition, we currently rate the post-Crisis Wally West Flash as tier 4-B.
The same can be say to Captain Atom, although his 2-A come from when his version of Monarch, but that version was show to be far stronger to the point to take down multiple Superman level begins at once and even a Superman with CA's powers.

Personally Monarch should have its own profile separated by CA, or at least a separated Key.
The collected power of Monarch's entire body was only displayed as capable of destroying a single universe, and many versions of Superman from different universes taken together, at least one of which (the "Zen master" Superman) was more powerful than the mainstream Superman, could do nothing to Monarch even together, if I remember correctly.
Statement looks straight and clean, same with Superman destroying the Phantom Zone, this Low 2-C statement can be used.
Well, it is only a single feat, and it would only apply to the post-Rebirth incarnation of Superman.
I still think this feat shouldn't be used, like i say Barbatos was chained and we don't see how much he was affect by Superman punch.
Yes, if Superman could beat up Barbatos on his own without a serious crutch (the 10th metal), the entire Metal event would have been over very quickly.
 
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This isn’t foolproof logic, and we don’t even use it now. Otherwise there’d be a lot more characters at 4-B. Plus some characters like Superman and the Green Lanterns have variable tiers, so you’d have to prove that they’re at their peaks before you can claim that a character would scale for harming them.
These go back to the conditions we have for scaling to these characters, they have to be able to threaten the characters like this consistently (which is why I asked you to give examples).

Okay, but look, these are the very sentiments that I am addressing. But crucially, if we use this reasoning to circumvent the consequences of these tiers unreasonably influencing the rest of the verse, should we not also apply it to the very feats that we are evaluating here? For instance, does Superman consistently threaten Time Trapper? Or do we have a single fight in which he didn't get immediately creamed and therefore we are scaling him to Time Trapper? This seems like the opposite of the principle you just described.
 
Okay, but look, these are the very sentiments that I am addressing. But crucially, if we use this reasoning to circumvent the consequences of these tiers unreasonably influencing the rest of the verse, should we not also apply it to the very feats that we are evaluating here?
Characters like Darkseid and Time Trapper don’t have a holding back mechanic or variable tiers, so the same logic doesn’t apply to them, and there’s multiple examples of Superman and the others fighting them competitively.
 
It just doesn't strike me as the most prudent approach. We have very different models for how these characters work and I just don't think one gets the impression reading these stories that so many of these fights are astronomical mismatches. I understand that you're saying they hold back or have variable tiers, but there are many times where this doesn't even make sense in context. When lives are on the line, when they have to ask for back-up, when it's a fight against the clock to win, how do we justify these situations as holding back? It's not like these characters stories' are low stakes. The potential consequences are the emotional investment that hooks the reader. Circumstances that warrant trying one's hardest to win as fast as possible.
 
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