The official discord link if you wish to join the discord: https://discord.gg/j5RKwCvAFu
Support the wiki on our official Ko-Fi page or Patreon page!
Misleading Titles: Difference between revisions
From The Codex
m |
|||
(33 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{|class=width="100%" style="border:4px solid #856363; border-radius:7.5px; clear:both; font-size:75%; font-family:verdana;" align="center"" | |||
! colspan="2" style="background:#FF0000; border-radius:3.25px;" align="center"|''Important Codex Wiki Articles'' | |||
|- | |||
|width="15%" "background:grey; border-radius:3.25px;"|'''Important Pages''' | |||
|[[The Codex Wiki]] - [[Site FAQ]] - [[The Codex:About|General Help Page]]- [[Tiering System]] - [[Civilization Tiering System]] - [[Codex Profile Rules|Rules for Codex Profiles]] - [[Common Editing Mistakes]] - [[Disclaimer]] - [[How to Handle Calculations]] - [[Universe]] - [[Multiverse]] - [[Omniverse]] - [[Projectile and Objects Feats]] - [[Dimensional Tiering Explanation]] - [[Common Terminology]] - [[Discussion Rules]] - [[Reference for Common Feats]] - [[Rules for Acceptable Profiles]] - [[Rules for Fanon Profiles]] - [[Misleading Titles]] - [[Mistranslations]] - [[Outside Wiki Standards]] - [[Statements]] - [[Verse Cosmology Categorizations]] - [[Fictional Universes]] | |||
|- | |||
|width="15%" "background:grey; border-radius:3.25px;"|'''Terminology''' | |||
|[[Alignment]] - [[Status]] - [[Protection Level]] - [[Threat Level]] - [[Cardinality]] - [[Grade]] - [[Dimensionality]] - [[Attack Potency]] - [[Durability]] - [[Speed]] - [[Reactions]] - [[Lifting Strength]] - [[Striking Strength]] - [[Range]] - [[Intelligence]] - [[Knowledge]] - [[Powers and Techniques]] - [[State of Being]] - [[Physiology]] - [[Equipment]] - [[No Limits Fallacy]] - [[Omnipotence]] - [[Cinematic Time]] - [[Canon]] - [[Canon|Crossover]] - [[How to Handle Canon]] - [[Multipliers]] - [[Environmental Destruction]] - [[Bloodlust]] - [[Overtime Feats]] - [[Chain Reactions]] -[[Outside Help]] - [[Space]] - [[The Kardashev Scale]] - [[Infinity]] - [[Power Source]] - [[Light Speed]] - [[Requirements for Speed of Light/Faster Than Light Speeds]] | |||
|- | |||
|"background:grey; border-radius:3.25px;"|'''Standards''' | |||
|[[Transcendence]] - [[Creation vs Destruction]] - [[Outlier]] - [[Ludonarrative Dissonance]] - [[Inconsistency]] - [[Plot-Induced Stupidity]] - [[Reality - Fiction Interaction]] - [[Powerscaling]] - [[Black Hole]] - [[Wormhole]] - [[Stabilization Feats]] - [[Merging Feats]] - [[Embodying Feats]] - [[Data World Standards]] - [[Dream World Standards]] - [[Standard Battle Assumptions]] - [[One-Shot]] - [[Speed Blitz]] - [[Penetration Damage]] - [[Blunt Force Damage]] - [[Death of the Author]] - [[Versus Threads]] - [[Information Pages]] - [[Light Dodging Feats]] - [[Lightning Standards]] - [[Void Standards]] | |||
|- | |||
|"background:grey; border-radius:3.25px;"|'''Formats''' | |||
|[[Standard Format for Character Profiles]] - [[Standard Format for Factions]] - [[Standard Format for Cosmic Forces]] - [[Standard Format for Events]] - [[Standard Format for Verse Pages]] - [[Standard Format for Locations Profiles]] - [[Standard Format for Weapon Profiles]] - [[Standard Format for Powers and Abilities]] - [[Standard Format for Civilization Profiles]] - [[Standard Format for Category Names]] - [[Standard Templates For Tabbers]] | |||
|- | |||
|"background:grey; border-radius:3.25px;"|'''Fanon''' | |||
|[[Fanon]] - [[Fanon/Community-Strongest-Character-Tier-List|Strongest Character Tier List]] - [[Fanon/Community-Weakest-Character-Tier-List|Weakest Character Tier List]] - [[Fanon/Strongest Smash Characters Tier List]] | |||
|} | |||
[[File:Planetbuster.png|thumb|center|600px|The Planet Buster is a sword noted to destroy even galaxies yet never displays this in game]] | [[File:Planetbuster.png|thumb|center|600px|The Planet Buster is a sword noted to destroy even galaxies yet never displays this in game]] | ||
==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
In various forms of fiction characters will generally throw around buzz words such as “God”, “Omnipotent”, etcetera to explain a character’s strength compared to their own. We will be explaining why the various titles and rankings given in fiction mean nothing without feats. | In various forms of fiction characters will generally throw around buzz words such as “God”, “Omnipotent”, etcetera to explain a character’s strength compared to their own. We will be explaining why the various titles and rankings given in fiction mean nothing without feats. | ||
Line 6: | Line 26: | ||
*'''God:''' This is the most common misleading name. Many believe that if someone defeats someone whose a god that must mean the character is automatically more powerful then other characters who have never faced Gods before or that the character who defeated the god is universal or above. This is completely flawed logic if the “god” in question has shown no feats regarding that. Many fictional verses use the term “god” to depict someone who is far more powerful than a standard human in strength granting them superhuman-like abilities, but not the full on universal/omnipotent power that’s associated with the Gods in various religions. One of the hugest examples for the term god meaning nothing in fiction is the character '''The Authority''' from '''His Dark Materials''', this is a character that is so weak that he would die if exposed to the wind, and even in his prime his best feat extends to creating a massive mountain. | *'''God:''' This is the most common misleading name. Many believe that if someone defeats someone whose a god that must mean the character is automatically more powerful then other characters who have never faced Gods before or that the character who defeated the god is universal or above. This is completely flawed logic if the “god” in question has shown no feats regarding that. Many fictional verses use the term “god” to depict someone who is far more powerful than a standard human in strength granting them superhuman-like abilities, but not the full on universal/omnipotent power that’s associated with the Gods in various religions. One of the hugest examples for the term god meaning nothing in fiction is the character '''The Authority''' from '''His Dark Materials''', this is a character that is so weak that he would die if exposed to the wind, and even in his prime his best feat extends to creating a massive mountain. | ||
*'''Omnipotent:''' This another common misleading name. Many believe that if someone is called “omnipotent” they must be '''Tier | *'''[[Omnipotence|Omnipotent]]:''' This another common misleading name. Many believe that if someone is called “omnipotent” they must be '''Tier High 1-A''' under our wiki’s standards, but this is not the case whatsoever. First we must understand what the word itself truly means. Omnipotent falls under two prefixes, “omni” which means all and “potent” which refers to power, thus meaning one whose called omnipotent is called all-powerful. To a tier 10, a tier 5 would be omnipotent as it’s something they’ve likely never experienced before causing massive global scale destruction. The term omnipotence is rarely referring to true infinite power or being the true god, it just regularly expresses that a character is extremely powerful. | ||
*'''Author Avatar/The Real World:''' People generally consider any author or people from the real world as automatically higher dimensional beings or omnipotent due to being an author. The reason why this doesn’t work is that authors and the real world constantly vary in fictional verses to the author just being a regular person in a fictional universe, along with the real world just being a method of [[Breaking the Fourth Wall|breaking the fourth wall]] or just a separate universe in the overall multiverse. For more regarding this read our [[Reality - Fiction Interaction]] page. | |||
*''' | *'''Ranks:''' Rankings in fiction can at times indicate power but at times do not automatically give sufficient power scaling. Two notable examples comes from, One-Punch Man where Amai Mask is an A Class Hero yet stronger then many of the S Class Heroes, and the concept of bounties in One Piece where bounties could be increased not only due to strength but due to viciousness or political power, like when a kid Nico Robin was given a bounty of 79 million because the world government wanted her for her knowledge and not due to her actual power as a kid. | ||
*''' | *'''Attack/Weapon Names:''' Generally attack names are considered hyperbolic and only are accepted if they do literally what the name says. An example of a hyperbolic attack name is Vegeta’s [[w:c:dragonball:Galaxy_Breaker|“Galaxy Breaker”]] [https://youtu.be/LKLYYfqDhgM which was merely an energy attack Vegeta used to kill Nappa], it did not destroy or “break” any galaxies. Another example is Varik’s weapon the “planet buster” which is hyped to destroy planets, stars, galaxies, and even universes, yet in battle it does none of this. | ||
[[Category:Important]] | [[Category:Important]] | ||
Latest revision as of 05:01, 13 November 2024
Introduction
In various forms of fiction characters will generally throw around buzz words such as “God”, “Omnipotent”, etcetera to explain a character’s strength compared to their own. We will be explaining why the various titles and rankings given in fiction mean nothing without feats.
Examples of Misleading Names
- God: This is the most common misleading name. Many believe that if someone defeats someone whose a god that must mean the character is automatically more powerful then other characters who have never faced Gods before or that the character who defeated the god is universal or above. This is completely flawed logic if the “god” in question has shown no feats regarding that. Many fictional verses use the term “god” to depict someone who is far more powerful than a standard human in strength granting them superhuman-like abilities, but not the full on universal/omnipotent power that’s associated with the Gods in various religions. One of the hugest examples for the term god meaning nothing in fiction is the character The Authority from His Dark Materials, this is a character that is so weak that he would die if exposed to the wind, and even in his prime his best feat extends to creating a massive mountain.
- Omnipotent: This another common misleading name. Many believe that if someone is called “omnipotent” they must be Tier High 1-A under our wiki’s standards, but this is not the case whatsoever. First we must understand what the word itself truly means. Omnipotent falls under two prefixes, “omni” which means all and “potent” which refers to power, thus meaning one whose called omnipotent is called all-powerful. To a tier 10, a tier 5 would be omnipotent as it’s something they’ve likely never experienced before causing massive global scale destruction. The term omnipotence is rarely referring to true infinite power or being the true god, it just regularly expresses that a character is extremely powerful.
- Author Avatar/The Real World: People generally consider any author or people from the real world as automatically higher dimensional beings or omnipotent due to being an author. The reason why this doesn’t work is that authors and the real world constantly vary in fictional verses to the author just being a regular person in a fictional universe, along with the real world just being a method of breaking the fourth wall or just a separate universe in the overall multiverse. For more regarding this read our Reality - Fiction Interaction page.
- Ranks: Rankings in fiction can at times indicate power but at times do not automatically give sufficient power scaling. Two notable examples comes from, One-Punch Man where Amai Mask is an A Class Hero yet stronger then many of the S Class Heroes, and the concept of bounties in One Piece where bounties could be increased not only due to strength but due to viciousness or political power, like when a kid Nico Robin was given a bounty of 79 million because the world government wanted her for her knowledge and not due to her actual power as a kid.
- Attack/Weapon Names: Generally attack names are considered hyperbolic and only are accepted if they do literally what the name says. An example of a hyperbolic attack name is Vegeta’s “Galaxy Breaker” which was merely an energy attack Vegeta used to kill Nappa, it did not destroy or “break” any galaxies. Another example is Varik’s weapon the “planet buster” which is hyped to destroy planets, stars, galaxies, and even universes, yet in battle it does none of this.