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Fictional superhuman characters; consisting of human, semi-human or non-human beings with extraordinary abilities and qualities that exceed those naturally found among ordinary people and creatures. These qualities may be acquired through natural ability, self-actualization, supernatural or technological aids.
Q - An omnipotent being in Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager, who puts the characters of these shows through various and trials and tricks, seemingly for his own amusement. At times, he seems to be working toward becoming a better, more moral being, or possibly trying to grow the characters and humanity in general in ...
This also does not include characters whose universes are absent of logic or causality and carry an ignorance to the laws of physics, such as Bugs Bunny and Donald Duck. Must be a superhuman trait - This category does not include characters who can lift less the 2,000 lb (910 kg) [1 ton]; if the character is non-human, the character must exceed ...
The young Q ends up bringing him into the Milky Way galaxy through the Guardian of Forever while looking for something new to do with himself, and 0 assembles other seemingly omnipotent beings from the original Star Trek, including Gorgan (the entity who turned children against their parents in "And the Children Shall Lead"), The One (the being ...
Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds (6 C, 100 P) Fictional characters with superhuman strength (8 C, 208 P) T.
Immortal energy beings with vast powers. Only one is known to exist, choosing to live alone in human form on the planet Delta Rana IV. That one committed xenocide against the Husnock. According to Time Magazine, Captain Picard found the Douwd he met an alien "being of extraordinary power and conscience" and felt they should be left alone. [1 ...
At the beginning of creation itself, countless billions of years ago, before the current Cosmic Order, creation was composed of a single and sentient universe, whose omnipotent intelligence was referred to as the First Firmament. For countless ages, the First Firmament was the sole being in creation, until its loneliness became unbearable.
An initially unrelated character called the Beyonder was tied to these older characters by Steve Englehart for his "Secret Wars III" story in Fantastic Four #318–319 (September–October 1988). The Beyonder first appeared during the first Secret Wars, as a being that was stated to be the omnipotent embodiment of an entire separated multiverse ...