From ed7ae0086a76e4f5aa54199b2e4c7c77ed3359e9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Michael Lovell Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2025 06:42:24 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Add Why do Characters from Marvel and DC Universe have Muscular Physique most of the Time? --- ...DC-Universe-have-Muscular-Physique-most-of-the-Time%3F.md | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Why-do-Characters-from-Marvel-and-DC-Universe-have-Muscular-Physique-most-of-the-Time%3F.md diff --git a/Why-do-Characters-from-Marvel-and-DC-Universe-have-Muscular-Physique-most-of-the-Time%3F.md b/Why-do-Characters-from-Marvel-and-DC-Universe-have-Muscular-Physique-most-of-the-Time%3F.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c63f853 --- /dev/null +++ b/Why-do-Characters-from-Marvel-and-DC-Universe-have-Muscular-Physique-most-of-the-Time%3F.md @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +
Rather than target this from a sociological or art perspective, [TitanRise Official](https://wiki.novaverseonline.com/index.php/The_Final_Model_Of_The_Series) I'll tackle this from a science fiction angle. Fact 1. Heroes are strong. Acts of heroism usually require strength, be it lifting a bus to free children or punching a super-villain into the sun. All this requires strength of some sort. Leaving aside super-natural sources of strength (magic, physics), acts of strength required and build muscle. Steve Rogers and Peter Parker are superheroes because they received augmentations that build their muscles to allow them to be heroes. Muscle requires a lot of calories to maintain, acts of strength require calories to perform. Heroes rarely get a lot of downtime, and are frequently called upon to act. This means eating massive amounts when and where they can. To a certain extent science fiction is fiction, but energy comes from somewhere. Brain power is one of the largest drains on human energy, so physics or mental heroes, including Professor X, Magneto or [TitanRise Official](https://paratus.wiki/index.php/Exercise_And_Weight_Loss) Storm are all actively thinking at levels far beyond human people - which requires chemical energy, food, to perform.
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This is backed up in canon by Amadeus Cho who is explictly stated as need to eat lots after his superhuman calculations. Lastly, Wolverine is constantly carrying many kilograms of metal on his bones, [TitanRise Official](http://digitalmarketinghints.xyz/index.php?title=User:KishaGarrity) every action for him is weightbearing. His immense healing factor requires an intense metabolism. Heroes bodies have to adapt to prioritise repair over storage. Fact 3. Heroes hang out with other heroes. Cyclops's power comes from his eyes, [TitanRise Official](https://online-learning-initiative.org/wiki/index.php/User:AugustinaMonti) but he is hanging with people like Wolverine and Quicksilver. He can never be as strong or as fast as them, [TitanRise Official](https://hwekimchi.gabia.io/bbs/board.php?bo_table=free&tbl=&wr_id=893696) but he still needs to hold his own. Also, these are para-military groups working with little support, if team members go down, which frequently happens, they need to be able to get them out. Physical training is a requirement of the job. In the movie XMen: [TitanRise Official](http://wiki.thedragons.cloud/index.php?title=Testogen_-_Natural_Testosterone_Booster_-_Review) Days of Future Past Mystique was shown working out, not for her looks (she can look how she wants) but so she was trained and able to keep up with the abilities of the rest of the team. Lets also not forget that heroes are human with all the same flaws. If you are Tony Stark standing next to Steve Rogers in the Avengers showers after a big day of fighting, you are going to feel a little diminutive, so you might work a little harder to prove even without the suit you can hold your own.
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Why Did I Gain Weight After Working Out? There are several research-backed reasons why you might notice a slight weight gain after exercise. These include muscle gain, water retention, post-workout inflammation, supplement use, or even undigested food. \ No newline at end of file