No, not always.Charcharo said:Because a fictional character's "power" is ENTIRELY up to the author.Ranorak said:Yup, cause we all know that knowing your enemy's weakness is instantly the same as successfully using that weakness in a way that you're always the winner.tf2godz said:you forgot about the hulk, Cthulhu, Azathoth, God, zeus and everything else in existence because his batmanRanorak said:.....How can he possibly top his last batman A-hum "Master piece"?
He already "beat" batman, so in this part he's going to single-handedly defeat Darkseid, Thanos and Goku!
Why?
CAUSE HE'S BATMAN!
Come to think of it, I really REALLY would like to hear someone make a good suggestion on how Batman could beat Goku... No wait, lets go with Vegeta.
Yes, Batman vs Vegeta.
Superheroes have limits. The have things that go beyond what they can do.
For instance, Batman is human. Therefore his limits are tied to a human. A good writer will keep this in mind when writing a story, in order to keep the willing suspension of disbelieve. So if Batman suddenly picks up a car and throws it several feet at an airborne Superman this breaks the suspension of disbelieve.
Yes, they are fictional, but a good writer tries to convince us they're not. And in order to do that he has to be consistent with what they can and cannot do. Superman can fire heat vision, and has X-rays vision. So he would clearly see if Batman has Kryptonite. Superman is also not a moron, so even if he can't see it, he knows Batman is always prepared so is probably holding kryptonite anyway. Thus, keep your range and batman is useless. Shooting the Kryptonite also doesn't work because superman is known for his "faster then a speeding bullet." stick.
And yes, you can write a character stronger then superman, batman, the incredible hulk and goku combined. If that's what you want, but that's a new character with new powers, and a new willing suspension of disbelieve.