![]() The markings are much more legible on the legs of the fursuit, where there was more space to make them bigger and clearer. The fluffy texture of the fur makes it so these small markings are difficult to see the shape of, giving them a kind of blobby appearance. It has intricate, sewn-in markings on the arms and legs, but the markings on the arms had to fit into a much smaller space. For example, look at the adjacent fursuit by MadeFurYou. The more seams there are, the more likely you are to rip one. Markings such as zigzags, flames, excessive amounts of stripes or spots, and other complex shapes may become too difficult to add to a fursuit! Also, having too many markings can make the fursuit "weaker". The Source Wall, the New Gods, who knows what beings in the DC universe can warp reality.Not all markings will look good on all fursuits! Some things are just too complicated or won’t show up. Unfortunately I'm more biased/versed in the Marvel universe so DC's reality warpers largely escape me.when one surfaces with a rich past I read up on them. LEGION and PROTEUS of X-Men fame can likewise reality, both the Beyonder trumps them in power and on scale. I'm sure Marvel has a CELESTIAL that can not so much warp reality as to manipulate/experiment/alter reality, I consider Celestials more akin to giant galaxy spanning scientists that full-on warpers of reality. In Avengers Standoff: Welcome to Pleasant Hill a character called KOBIK warped reality, she's basically a sentient Cosmic Cube (Cubes can warp reality), she created a suburb and populated with heroes and villains alike who didn't/couldn't use their powers, were unaware of previous lives, deeds, etc.unfortunately I think the Beyonder would trump her in battle. There's an old Marvel character called the SHAPER OF WORLDS (he was created by my favorite aliens the SKRULLS and he looks like half of one too!), I have to delve more of his long-forgotten feats, etc.I dimly remember him but him doing some wild things but he'd get creamed by the Beyonder. ![]() The BEYONDER, in New Avengers: Illuminati Vol 2 issue 3 warped reality to recreate an identical copy of the borough of Manhattan populated with replicas of Marvel characters in the vacuum of space.during the first Secret War he created a whole planet and transported a sizeable assembly of the Marvel universe onto it. The only one on the list I question is Phoenix, as the Phoenix Force has shown the ability to alter the future to some extent but doesn't seem to actually warp reality in the same way as the others. M, Proteus, The Sentry, and Monarch all seem to be in this category though a writer could easily change this for some of all of them in the event that they got their act together and started using any hidden potential they had. Molecule Man would probably be at the top of the list or just under Franklin, but given his nature as a universal constant I'm not sure if he could be considered a reality warper or just a part of reality itself.īelow those guys is where I would place anyone whose reality warping powers haven't been demonstrated to be universal or global, and I'm not sure that there's any point in trying to rank them as they are all in category where even destroying them utterly isn't enough to actually remove them from reality: they have a habit of just blinking back into existence. It's probable that Matthew Malloy is somewhere near the top of this list as well. I believe Wanda may be next as her power at its peak affected multiple realities, not just the 616. ![]() ![]() At peak power I would say it's probably Franklin on top, no contest.
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