Every single superhero is built on superheroic proportions. The men are mostly constructed of muscle and teeth and the women are muscle and breasts. What if the superheroic world were like the real one?
When mutations occur or scientific experiments go awry, they nearly always seem to affect the good looking people. Ugly scientist Newton P. Winkerton never gets zapped by the power-inducing ray. It's always the Henry Pyms and the Wally Wests. When someone discovers they are a mutant, it's not the Rosie O' Donnell's, but the Ororo Monroes and the Wanda Maximoffs. Strange beings from another planet or realm who charm Earthlings with the good looks are always the Mon-els and the Thors, not Squid-man from Guthar-8 or Mudgirl from the planet Blendorr. Superheroes should be just as diverse as the human population. We all are different in many ways. From our gender to our race to our shapes and sizes, we are not the makings of comic book tales, BUT... what if superheroes were just like us? The following tables give our heroes the possibilities of "being human".
Tables for game play
Table 1: Race
01-02
Amer-Indian
03-06
Asian
07-27
African-American
27-62
Caucasian
63-78
African-American
79-00
Hispanic
Table 2: Gender
01-45 Male
46-00 Female
Table 3: Marital Status
01-20
Divorced
21-35
Married/Partnered with no children
36-65
Single
66-76
Married/Partnered with children
77-85
Single with children
86-92
Seperated
93-00
Widowed
Table 4: Sexual Preference
01-04
Homosexual
05-10
Bisexual
11-90
Heterosexual
91-94
Bisexual
95-00
Homosexual
Table 5: Social Class
01-03
Homeless
04-08
Lower/Lower Class (Extended Welfare, Substandard Housing)
09-16
Lower Class (Welfare, Govt. Subsidized Housing)
17-30
Lower/Middle Class (Lives Paycheck to Paycheck, Little Savings)
31-80
Middle Class
81-90
Upper/Middle Class (Substantial Savings, College Educated)