Maybe her culture uses a form of standardized body modification.
One example (of the many I am sure exist) is in the Tenchi Muyo! franchise, most notably in GXP (most of the characters in the franchise has been enchanced in one way or another, or is a deity)
Sheesh! “My dad was a government nuclear scientist, accidently exposed to radiation while exploring a crashed, alien spaceship. Mom was blind, and didn’t notice his purple, glowing aura.”
There’s an old story kind of like that, except the father is explaining to his daughter why she’s adopted. He was a scientist part of a group looking to explore why a remote region had increasingly bizarre mutations of the local plants and animals. Eventually they find a crashed alien spacecraft that’s giving off strange radiation and because they actually went inside they knew they’d never be able to have normal children. So he and his wife had to adopt when the time came.
I’ve been wondering where have I’ve seen a similar outfit that the one the guy at the right is wearing, then it hit me: he’s a human version of Megaman’s Flahman!
If the guy is indeed a robot, that would explain how he was “born” with his powers, and perhaps that will make him less ostracized…
So he was born with them… Why would that be weird again? I mean this is Shitropolous so for all we know he was born with powers because his mom was exposed to radiation, or volunteered for a government experiment or fell in some toxic chemicals while pregnant… We already have one confirmed case of a child getting supernatural powers from their mother practicing the dark arts while pregnant so…
(And this is assuming that dad isn’t an alien or demon or some semi-sentient protoplasm or a robot or something…)
It is difficult to discern any kind of consensus in a field so small, but I think that modern linguists tend to be in favor of an eastern origin of Uralic. A leak of an upcoming population genetics already foreshadowed that North-Eastern Europe received an influx of eastern genes at the time when Ante Aiko and the likes predicted Uralic languages to have arrived in Fenno-Scandia and surroundings namely in the iron age. A western origin would also upend the quite straightforward tree of Uralic, with the eastern languages usually serparating earlier and being associated with more easterly autosomal genetics and a higher percentages of Y-DNA N1c. IMHO, if you want to propose an non-IE origin for CWC, something like Aiko”s Paleo-European languages, which according to him survive as substrates in Sami, would make more sense. But there”s so little that can be gathered with any kind of certainty from that region that we”ll probably never really know. write custom essays
You’d think that in a universe filled with Norse gods, accidental radioactive experiments, lab-made superhumans and regular guys with big weapons, that the citizens of Marvel Earth would have no problems with mutants. But nooooo, they think that mutants are a disease and must be dealt with by killer robots. Logic.
Hey gal, you also were born with them.
Maybe she got them with puberty. Or when she traveled to a planet with a different sun.
Maybe her culture uses a form of standardized body modification.
One example (of the many I am sure exist) is in the Tenchi Muyo! franchise, most notably in GXP (most of the characters in the franchise has been enchanced in one way or another, or is a deity)
Yes, but she has normal for her planet powers, not super
616!Marvel, in a nutshel.
This
Dude, repeat after me: “Years of training in Nepal.” Done! Nobody will ever reject you again for being the natural born oddity!
Sounds like a perfect candidate for future LoSRH membership to me!
Marvel comics in a nutshell
Sheesh! “My dad was a government nuclear scientist, accidently exposed to radiation while exploring a crashed, alien spaceship. Mom was blind, and didn’t notice his purple, glowing aura.”
There’s an old story kind of like that, except the father is explaining to his daughter why she’s adopted. He was a scientist part of a group looking to explore why a remote region had increasingly bizarre mutations of the local plants and animals. Eventually they find a crashed alien spacecraft that’s giving off strange radiation and because they actually went inside they knew they’d never be able to have normal children. So he and his wife had to adopt when the time came.
Nah. He seems effective, so I don’t think so.
Dang! I was replying to @RBZ comment.
He _seemed_ effective. Now, probably not so much.
So they formed their group without knowing each other’s origin stories?
They probably didn’t introduce themselves to each other with the obligatory fight-then-ally, either.
That’s what she meant when he touched her, right?
Right?
What kind of “~ism” would this be? Bornism? Heirism?
I’ve been wondering where have I’ve seen a similar outfit that the one the guy at the right is wearing, then it hit me: he’s a human version of Megaman’s Flahman!
If the guy is indeed a robot, that would explain how he was “born” with his powers, and perhaps that will make him less ostracized…
Nice how the reporter is named for two Lois Lanes.
Ooh! Nice catch!
So he was born with them… Why would that be weird again? I mean this is Shitropolous so for all we know he was born with powers because his mom was exposed to radiation, or volunteered for a government experiment or fell in some toxic chemicals while pregnant… We already have one confirmed case of a child getting supernatural powers from their mother practicing the dark arts while pregnant so…
(And this is assuming that dad isn’t an alien or demon or some semi-sentient protoplasm or a robot or something…)
He means “his mother was exposed to cosmic radiation while pregnant”
We all are, every day. It just doesn’t do anything because we are effectively invisible so far as neutrinos are concerned
It is difficult to discern any kind of consensus in a field so small, but I think that modern linguists tend to be in favor of an eastern origin of Uralic. A leak of an upcoming population genetics already foreshadowed that North-Eastern Europe received an influx of eastern genes at the time when Ante Aiko and the likes predicted Uralic languages to have arrived in Fenno-Scandia and surroundings namely in the iron age. A western origin would also upend the quite straightforward tree of Uralic, with the eastern languages usually serparating earlier and being associated with more easterly autosomal genetics and a higher percentages of Y-DNA N1c. IMHO, if you want to propose an non-IE origin for CWC, something like Aiko”s Paleo-European languages, which according to him survive as substrates in Sami, would make more sense. But there”s so little that can be gathered with any kind of certainty from that region that we”ll probably never really know. write custom essays
Que?
You’d think that in a universe filled with Norse gods, accidental radioactive experiments, lab-made superhumans and regular guys with big weapons, that the citizens of Marvel Earth would have no problems with mutants. But nooooo, they think that mutants are a disease and must be dealt with by killer robots. Logic.
Should have gone with “mysterious”
Wow, talk about a double standard