Super Registration Act: Difference between revisions

Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9)
(copyedits)
(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
Line 111:
* The Webcomic ''Fellowship of Heroes'' offers a world with a voluntary superhero registration project to give heroes official sanction, with an organisation that doesn't hunt down unregistrated heroes. Still, "Indie" heroes are considered rather controversial.
* In [[Everyday Heroes]], only those superhumans who are active crime-fighters are required to register with the government. For a while Mr. Mighty held a series of civilian jobs. (He couldn't be a crime-fighter after marrying a former villainess.)
* In [https://web.archive.org/web/20130904204902/http://www.heroesofcrash.com/ HeroesOfCrash] registration is an optional thing that helps superheroes get assistance from the government if necessary. It's possible to be a non-registered superhero, but it involves trade-offs.
* The Webcomic [http://sidekickgirl.comicgenesis.com/ Sidekick Girl] has this but it's a bureaucracy (for both heroes and villains) making it even more evil.
* The [[Ciem Webcomic Series]] has in its expanded universe a Judge Belliah of the [[Acceptable Political Targets|9th Circuit Court of Appeals]], a [[Complete Monster]] who [http://dozerfleetwiki2.wiki-site.com/index.php/Timeline_of_events_in_Comprehensive_Gerosha#Gerosha_Abolition tries to start one] via judicial activism. And [[The War On Straw|political mobs]]. In the end, all he succeeds at doing is winning over [[Even Evil Has Standards|two supervillains]] to join [[La Résistance]] in freeing an [[Emotion Eater]] [[Reality Warper]] powerful enough to save all of them; and gets said [[Emotion Eater]] [[Reality Warper]] [[Banned in China|banned in Belgium]].