Thread:Mesektet/@comment-366087-20151224042015/@comment-366087-20151225050918

Many of your examples are not slice-of-life. They are at the very least on a hero's journey even if not the most actiony or martial one. Oracle and Charles Xavier spend most of their time in wheelchairs, yet they are nonetheless heroes due to the point of the lives they lead. Wade spent most of his time in his room, yet he was integral to a hero's journey.

Bilbo Baggins still had to overcome temptations to fulfil his destiny.

Even Bonnie Rockwaller stepped up to help Kim a couple times, and another reason why she should not be on the Villains wiki.

Josie And The Pussycats dealt with villains and outer space tyrants. Jem—how can you guys not have Jem?—faced evil. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids—jebus, don't have them either???—were spies posing as musicians. The Amazing Chan and the Chan Clan—Great Goddess, them neither? Here's a reason why you should reconsider the focus of this wikia, actual heroes are slipping through the cracks in favor of slice-of-lifers—while the kids did almost nothing to help with solving the mysteries their father investigated, they at least were along for the Hero's Journey with him.

Give Sharon Spitz The One Ring to Lead Them All and task her to be the one to throw it in Mount Wassit, and she would be on a Hero's Journey. However, her dealing with high school and divorced parents in her canon is far from a "hero's journey". Not in itself an easy journey by no means as I can tell you from my primary occupation as a therapist—but hardly "heroic".

LOL, otherwise every mother who does even a half-arsed job of raising children would be a hero…