100% this.
Early on, Wolverine had reasonable and logical limitations. I recall reading somewhere that while his healing factor was really only supposed to be about 5x faster than a normal human. If it helps to process what that means, google the healing time for a normal human to recover from something like, say, a broken arm or a deep tissue laceration. Then do the math. Don't be shocked if you find out that by that standard Wolverine wouldn't heal instantly from most bodily traumas.
I also recall reading back in the day that his healing factor, while impressive, was not on the level of a supernatural creature like a werewolf or something like that. Wolverine was originally intended to heal much slower.
So the entire thing about him being able to reform from a single cell is next level favorite pet treatment. I'm not complaining, I just want to know why don't multiple versions of Wolverine then sprout up from a single drop of his blood like the mythical hydra? I mean he bleeds quite a bit, and I'm sure each droplet of blood contains its own biological impetus/catalyst/program to heal itself back into a full Wolvie. Maybe that has been explained somewhere? I welcome screenshots.
Wolverine was waaay more interesting when one could possibly kill him by cutting his throat. The thought was he would bleed out before his healing factor could save him. Once became Godverine, he became less interesting a character. Now he is so popular there are 7 versions of him running around but that's because Marvel is about branding more than just writing great stories and creating interesting new characters.
Protex: “Tronix! Fluxus! What’s happening there? Zenturion? He’s only one man!”
Superman: “The most… uh… dangerous man on earth…”
— Superman on Batman, JLA #3 (Mar. 1997)
“He’s the most dangerous man alive in any comic universe.” — Wizard Magazine on Doctor Doom (Nov. 1998)
“[He’s] the most dangerous man in the Marvel universe, because his greatest weapon is the way he thinks and plans, his tremendous intellect.” — Tom Brevoort on T’Challa (Sep. 2010)
what happened to the heat claws power introduced in his resurrection? How often has that been used?
Matt Murdock's cooler twin brother
I'd give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety's sake!
Thomas More - A Man for All Seasons
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This argument is similar to the Batman is too competent argument. Power creep and characters getting more powerful over time is common in comics, it happens to numerous characters, why is Wolverine now the poster boy for it being a problem? Even among the X-men many characters are getting massive upgrades in power and their fans are loving it. Everyone wants their personal fave to be an uber powerful omega level mutant who can curb stomp anyone, and God forbid if they have to struggle in a fight or actually lose. Wolverine may be more "powerful" now than when he was first introduced but in terms of the average power levels of MU characters he is low tier. Reality warpers, energy manipulators, telepaths, magic users, ect... he is nowhere near their level. All he has is a great healing factor and suddenly that is a bridge to far, that's the straw that broke the camel's back. I think there are plenty of other characters you can claim have become to powerful long before you get to Logan, but I suppose it's easier to single him out because he gets all the hate.
You pretty much said what I was going to, you beat on time kudos.
Truth is that people miss the point. What they should always ask themselves is not "is Wolverine/ Batman too powerful" but " why in their solos they are depicted a way and in textbook in another?"( Not just in power level by the way ).
Because there lie the one of the crux of the question.
And the main issue with fandom in general. We want heroes to cover all possible roles in all possible genre: chambarra, noir, Western , spaghetti Western, gangster, romance, pulp adventure and space opera, wuxia and user destructive martial battles, fantasy and science fiction. Grit and toon comedy. Forgetting that the whole reality's rules of those genres( and as consequences power leve) are so different that mix matching without adapting you get....
That scene in superfriends where superman carry the batmobile with Batman and Robin in it because otherwise they would be too slow to keep up!
In other words...
Wolverine healing factor had been boosted, as many many character's abilities, because he has been made facing challenges that he won 't survive without. You don't want Wolverine regrow from an explosion? Oh easy don't have someone like him whose main offensive ability is close effin combat, attack in close combat human explosion! Don't have him fight giant murderbots that can destroy building every week( given the sliding timeline, I think that xmen fought a sentinel each week!) Don't have him fight the frigging Hulk! Or jump on a explosive kid robot to contain the explosion! Or being thrown from miles of height by a brood possessed rogue