Alpha and Omega said:
Um, no I don't think that the character would gain that type of popularity. Let's face it: many people enjoy Superman and Spider-man for their background story, sub-characters, personality, etc. . .but most people's initial attraction to a hero is probably determined by their physical capabilities.
This person need not be a feathered footed individual. He could be the strongest hero of all, strong enough that his merest touch would lead to fatality and hence his reason for not enganging in violence.
also personally, i don't consider acting in self defence to be violent, so he could get just as much action as any other hero but instead of dealing that knock out blow, he decides to let the villain stay conscience which leads to his battles being more problematic. Perhaps he feels by simply recovering the stolen atifacts is better than putting someone away (which also gives a background into why his rogue gallery are always on the loose, instead of having them escaping every five minutes), so he engages long enough to retrieve and item than vanishes, leaving his villains increasingly frustrated.
which would require him to have great combat, detective and misdirection skills, while also having an edge and a moral guide to his alter-ego.
Violence kind of grounds a conflict in reality imo; it's not necessary at every point, but it happens so much in real life[throughout man's entire history actually], so how could you present a society or the conflicts within and exclude violence? Criminals thrive on violence or the freedom that accompanies that type of behavior. Physical response has sort of been formulaic in most stories.
I don't mind his villains being violent but that shouldn't represent the characters logic. No doubt he'll have to engage in a struggle but what if he has a right not to knock these people out or hit them. the police don't go around hitting everyone they come across, they (generally) offer a form of restrain, they don't have the right to punch the lights out of criminals, so why should all superheros feel the same of their supervillains. i know some superheroes are rooted in violence but it could offer a nice change to the norm to see someone not deal with this in the routine manner and see the consequence of his actions.
A super-hero attorney maybe.
or a being who elects to influence people mentally (also is prepared for the long haul of how impossible that would be), and sort of lead by example. Yeah, a super-hero like that is possible, but I don't know how popular it would be, if most people could relate, or if it would achieve the cult-like status of other heroes
the more i think about it, an attorney/detective batman/daredevil combo-esque character is the vision i'm getting. Maybe someone who's alter ego deals with the effects of violence on people on a day to day basis. perhaps an old criminal psychologist who can see how the villains aren't benefitting from a violent approach being used in their being captured (either loop hole in law which releases them from custody or that it enhances revenge etc). so he/she decides to do it their own way.
As for being iconic, it's all in the delivery, i see a heavily dialogue based individual, lots of thought, perhaps haunted by himself, always wanting to take the easy (violent way out) but unable to. Could really work, it seems like a fresh enough angle.
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On a different note, the only hero I can think of that kind of fit that bill was Mighty Max. I don't think he used violence(can't remember specifically), but he had a guardian who did.
I never really got mighty max but he did have that big dude with the babarian looking features.
The closest i could get to was Dove from the JLU animation but he still engaged in a fight where he hit people so it's kinda different.
I'd think that violence was thrilling and the dangerous appeal of it adds another element to stories.
The story can be a violent story, those elements can still be there but it will all be one sided from the criminal side, the hero would always be on the receiving end of a up hill struggle. a struggle they have morally created for themselves.
imagine a scenario where Gwen Stacy dies and spidey goes after the goblin in a rage but then realises his morals prevent him from actually hitting the goblin even though it's the only thing he can think about. It just eats him up inside.
the character needs to deal with this frustration another way (if he can) and he grows a resentment for the criminals he sees at work and tries to help (especially when it's the goblin coming in).
anything like that. I can see it working in DC, i'm not sure it's light enough to be a marvel character. even though he himself is not violent, there is a lot of stuf going on to make him interesting enough as well as his rogues that begin to take advantage of this.
eventually when popularity grows he can become the moral background of an affiliation he joins, always disapproving with their methods and causing conflict with the good ol ways of getting things done.
heck his own angle maybe that he's the son of an old supervillain (has that ever been done before?).
i should stop brainstorming. I just want to show possibilities are there for it to become appealing and indeed iconic.
thanks, it's always nice to have a superhero thread in community everyonce in a while i think.