Moon Knight gained superstrength early in his costumed career, but kept on fighting crime when he lost it, and then kept fighting crime when he got it back years later, and then kept fighting crime even when he didn’t have it any longer.
As for the bunch-of-guys-in-an-alley scenario, what about Doctor Mid-Nite? His lone superpower is the ability to see in the dark: he’ll kick your ass if he’s got a couple of smoke grenades, but otherwise he’s just a fairly athletic guy.
Even if he can see without light, wouldn’t smoke block his view? And yeah, unless Mid-Nite has the mad kombat skillz, he would be more like an ordinary guy with a gimmick.
IIRC, the gimmick is that his vision extends past the visible light spectrum. So he can still pick up infrared or whatever if he’s using fairly mundane smoke grenades.
How much do you want to bet that the “lock” was just welded shut, with some bells and whistles to make it look like a real lock? That’s the sort of lock that Batman would give Brainiac to solve.
I’m not an exceptional mathematician. However, you can give me a set of numerical problems to solve and I might get the exact same correct answer that a mathematical genius gets. The big difference is that the mathematical genius is going to have the correct answer much quicker than I am. So it is with Batman. He’s simply able to connect the dots much quicker than other detectives.
Also, there are plenty of examples were Batman demonstrates his detective skills. I remember one comic where Lex Luthor tries to frame Superman for a murder. Towards the end someone asks Batman “When did you know it wasn’t Superman?” Batman replies that he knew from the beginning because evidence on the scene suggested that a propulsion device was used by whoever was used by the person trying to frame Supes to enable him to fly. That’s just the first example off the top of my head.
I go with the five-point test proposed by comic-book writer Kurt Busiek; score three or higher and you qualify as a superhero.
Powers.
Costume.
Codename.
Heroic mission.
Superheroic milieu.
Superman, of course, is the gold standard and goes 5-for-5; Bruce Wayne may not have any powers, but so long as he’s likewise rocking the cape-and-tights-with-underpants-on-the-outside-and-a-big-chest-emblem look while fighting crime and saving lives as “Batman,” he’s a solid 3 even before we start talking about how he doesn’t just work solo to bust muggers and murderers but also partners up with Robin to clash with Gotham’s superpowered costumed villains in between teaming up with fellow Justice Leaguers like Green Arrow and Plastic Man to stop the archenemies of Aquaman and Wonder Woman or whatever; throw in enough characters who likewise score at least a “3” and Batman promptly bumps up to a “4”.
I missed your post earlier, and a few days later my reply turned to vapor.
Yes, that’s exactly how Batman would reason! Kudos!
There was a similar concept when Proty II had to prove himself to the other Super-Pets for admission. He had to keep the Legionnnaires returning from a mission from entering the clubhouse for a few minutes. (This was one of four seemingly impossible tests.) He decided to hobble some machinery together inside the clubhouse to look like a super-weapon. But he “didn’t know any science.” So it was just a random concoction. But even Superboy and Mon-El kept hovering around the clubhouse, not daring to enter until they and Brainiac 5 figured out the weird, alien science involved.
It confused them enough for the few minutes, and Proty II won that round.