Thread:Tierhalibelbrylle/@comment-7497475-20131209094513/@comment-4773581-20131211104712

That still doesn't mean that there'd be a plot more complicated than "Bryan Wolf shows that he's uungodly overpowered by annihilating the designated antagonists of the story, as the entirety of, in his first actual fight with them". This level is what is known as "story-breaker". It is achieved when the only way for a story involving the character to exist is either A) have them as a lone neutral entity that neither helps or hinders the main 'tagonist parties, or does both to each in equal amounts, B) they either die or have ther powers sealed away shortly after introduction, or C) continuously introduce characters with progressively higher levels of story-breaking power.

Making a story for him, in absolutely no way, excuses his complete and utter disregard for canon information and power levels. Or, by proxy, yours.