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10[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/HeroesForHire https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/misty_knight_heroes_for_hire__7.png]]]]
11
12->''"The maximum amount of work the human organism can put out over a sustained period of time is no more than 1/60th of a horsepower. But with an atomic-powered prosthesis I can sustain indefinitely a level of work equivalent to dozens or even hundreds of horsepower. The power comes not from my body, but directly from the energy capsules. All my body does is direct that power."''
13-->-- ''Limbo'', by Bernard Wolfe
14
15There's a popular perception that [[SuperPoweredRobotMeterMaids robots are stronger]] than creatures of flesh and bone, and by logical extension this would mean that people who replaced parts of their bodies with [[ArtificialLimbs cybernetics]] would also be stronger than those with just flesh. Prosthetic arms let one lift a car or punch through a wall, legs run faster or jump higher.
16
17In reality though, it's more complicated than that. A robotic limb can be stronger in and of itself, but as those metal limbs would still be anchored in flesh and bone, someone who tried lifting a ton weight with a prosthetic arm would be more likely to rip their arm out of its socket. It could be doable but you'd [[RequiredSecondaryPowers need a lot of extensive reinforcement all over the body]].
18
19A regular trait of the HandicappedBadass. Contrast BiotechIsBetter, where an organic creation is treated as stronger than, or otherwise superior to, a mechanical one, and FakeArmDisarm, where artificial limbs tend to get beaten up more than the home grown ones.
20
21A SubTrope of BadassTransplant and ArtificialLimbs.
22
23----
24
25!!Straight Examples
26
27[[foldercontrol]]
28
29[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
30* In ''Anime/CowboyBebop'', Jet's cybernetic left arm seems marginally stronger than his own right one, although not to the point of SuperStrength.
31* Ed Elric from ''Franchise/FullmetalAlchemist'' loses his right arm and left leg, and they are replaced by metal 'automail' limbs far stronger and more durable than normal flesh. Also applies to many other characters in the same universe with automail prosthetics, including at least one man who purposely amputated a limb to replace it with a stronger automail arm.
32* Rudol von Stroheim, the [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazi ally]] in ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency'', has much of his body replaced with mechanical prosthetics after [[WeCanRebuildHim barely surviving a grenade explosion]]. His augmented limbs are able to grip objects with a force of 1,950 kg/cm2, well over double the [[MadeOfIron tested durability of the Pillar Men]].
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Comic Books]]
36* One issue of ''ComicBook/GlobalFrequency'' focuses on the potential of cybernetics, and one character explicitly notes the extensive modifications required to give someone a super-strong prosthetic, including spinal enhancements to make sure the arm doesn't simply rip out of its socket.
37* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'': Misty Knight is a private detective first appearing in the 1970s ''ComicBook/IronFist'' and ''ComicBook/HeroesForHire'' comics. She was brought back in 2006 in the ''ComicBook/UltimateGalactusTrilogy'' (in the ComicBook/UltimateMarvel universe) and then in ''ComicBook/DaughtersOfTheDragon'' (in the mainstream universe). In both incarnations, she has a bionic arm designed by Tony Stark, that grants her several superpowers, including SuperStrength, various ComicBook/IronMan-based repulsor weaponry and, due to being made of Antarctic Vibranium, the ability to liquefy metal.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Film]]
41* Spoofed in ''Film/AttackOfTheKillerTomatoes'' when the bionic man being demonstrated can only run in circles very fast because they could only afford to replace one leg.
42* The main villain of ''Film/TheBattleWizard'', simply called the Yellow Robed Monster, has both legs seared off in the opening fight. After a 20-year TimeSkip, he returns as a vengeance-crazed fighter with a pair of metal raven-like legs in place, which allows him to leap all over the place and even impale his enemies.
43* In ''Film/Bloodshot2020'', Harting's artificial arm is shown early on to be significantly stronger than normal and is able to [[spoiler:punch KT across a room]] late in the movie.
44* In ''Film/TheHand'', Jon's prosthetic hand is capable of a much stronger grip than his real hand, and he often causes people pain when he grabs them in a fit of anger.
45* In ''Film/IRobot'', Spooner's fight with an NS-5 noticeably turns around after his prosthetic arm is revealed. He first uses it to block an attack with a broken pipe, tearing the fake skin off, then starts punching holes in concrete. In this case, not only is his arm prosthetic, but he has significant reinforcement going all the way to his rib cage so he can support it.
46* ''Film/{{Kingsman}}'':
47** Gazelle from ''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'' has two prosthetic legs from the knees down, which don't make her physically ''stronger'', but allow her to do acrobatic feats and she has blades in them sharp enough to [[SingleStrokeBattle cleave a man in two]].
48** Charlie Hesketh has become TheDragon to Poppy in ''Film/KingsmanTheGoldenCircle''. He lost his arm when his subdermal chip exploded in the first film, and Poppy provided him with robotic arms. He demonstrates the strength of his second robotic arm by destroying the wall of Poppy's bowling hall with a bowling ball he threw with it.
49* Bucky Barnes/the Winter Soldier from the ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'' is a SuperSoldier enhanced with a knockoff of Captain America's SuperSerum, but he's not as strong as the Cap. However, his left arm is a bulletproof prosthetic that can punch through solid concrete, and close-ups show that he has metal reaching into his shoulder and ribs to help reinforce it. After it gets destroyed by Iron Man's ChestBlaster at the end of ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar'', he receives a new one made of Vibranium (the strongest known metal on Earth) in ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar'' courtesy of Wakandans.
50* ''Franchise/StarWars'': The second scene of Darth Vader aboard the rebel starship in ''Film/ANewHope'' shows Vader doing a NeckLift on Captain Antilles. It's not until further in the series that it's revealed that Vader is a cyborg: "He's more machine now than man; twisted and evil." In ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'', Vader reflects that his prosthetic arms are strong enough to lift a humanoid clear off the deck without using the Force.
51[[/folder]]
52
53[[folder:Literature]]
54* From ''Cyborg'', by Creator/MartinCaidin, better known through its TV adaptation ''Series/TheSixMillionDollarMan'':
55-->''"Your arm should have on the order of [[TheStrengthOfTenMen ten times the gripping and handling strength]] you once had. The same applies, of course, to your fingers. Objects you could never dent with your natural fingers before, well, now you should be able to crush them like an eggshell."''
56* In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire'', Lord Voldemort grants Peter Pettigrew a silver hand after he sacrifices his right hand to aid in his resurrection. He quickly tests it by crushing a twig into dust, showing that it's much stronger than a normal human hand. {{Justified|Trope}} by being [[AWizardDidIt of magical nature]] as opposed to mechanical like most examples of this trope.
57* ''Literature/{{Limbo|1952}}'' by Bernard Wolfe is about a post-WorldWarIII future where people voluntarily amputate their limbs as a moral equivalent to fighting wars, a case of literal disarmament. However, scientists then develop nuclear-powered prosthesis enabling great feats of strength and agility. This leads to war breaking out again over the rare metal needed to build them.
58* [[TheHeavy Prince Red]] from ''Literature/{{Nova}}'' was born without right arm and with a neurological defect that made grafting a cloned one impossible, so he was given a mechanical prosthetic. His grip strength is positively insane -- at one point, he sticks his hand into sand and clenches his fist hard enough to compress some sand into a lump of hot glass, and later he squeezes the same glass into quartz crystal. The actual degree of reinforcement of his body isn't shown, but he also can do a one-armed pull-up fast enough to make the air whiz, shatter unbreakable glass with a punch and throw stones (including aforementioned crystals) with the force and precision of bullets.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
62* ''Series/AlteredCarbon'': After Kirstin Ortega is badly wounded by the Ghostwalker and loses an arm, Takeshi Kovacs pays for the most expensive artificial limb available to replace it. Ortega doesn't even realise her arm has been replaced [[DoesNotKnowHerOwnStrength until she bends the railing on her bed]] while arguing with Kovacs. The arm comes in handy for her next round with the Ghostwalker in the final episode.
63* ''Series/TheBionicWoman'' (the follow-up series to ''Series/TheSixMillionDollarMan'', below) has ActionGirl Jamie Sommers [[WeCanRebuildHim rebuilt]] after a skydiving accident with bionic legs and a bionic right arm. Her strength and abilities are much beyond human norms, and comparable to Colonel Austin's bionics.
64* ''Series/PowerRangersCosmicFury'': Black Ranger Javi's [[AnArmAndALeg arm is amputated]] by a powerful blast of magic in the first episode. [[GadgeteerGenius Billy]] and [[{{Cyborg}} Solon]] craft him a robotic replacement. He's much stronger physically and can knock out a monster even when he's otherwise been BroughtDownToNormal, but it makes it challenging for him to play his guitar without [[DoesNotKnowHisOwnStrength breaking every string]].
65* The UrExample is ''Series/TheSixMillionDollarMan''. Steve Austin's bionic legs give him SuperSpeed and super jumping powers, while his bionic right arm gives him partial SuperStrength. [[AdaptationalBadass This is a step up from the book the show is based on]], in which the bionic parts' abilities were limited by the human body they were put on.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
69* In ''Bleeding Edge'', replacing both arms or legs with prosthetics increases Str by 1 and decreases Dex 1, replacing a single arm or leg just diminishes Dex.
70* In ''TabletopGame/{{Cyberpunk}} 2020'', cyberlimb attacks deal more damage than regular limbs, and certain upgrades can increase this further.
71* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'': In Third Edition, it was possible to replace one or both arms with magical golem arms. They provide a ''considerable'' bonus to strength, but the implantation process runs the risk of driving the person receiving it insane and turning them into a half-golem that's driven to kill every living being they see.
72* Zig-zagged in ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'', depending on edition.
73** Commercial-grade, off-the-shelf cyberlimbs usually have the average stats of a limb of the metatype they were built for. Custom-built limbs, however, can be upgraded to the maximum for the owner's metatype and further enhanced beyond that, in which case they have been custom-designed for that owner and with appropriate reinforcement.
74** The physical stats for a cybernetic limb only counts for using that limb alone: In cases where multiple limbs are involved, the cyberlimb's stats are averaged with your innate stats. Lifting a car requires your whole body's strength, so no matter how powerful your cyberlimbs you'll be hamstrung by your meat, while crushing a beer can with a cyberhand allows for the hand/arm's full strength to be used.
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Video Games]]
78* One available arm prosthesis in ''VideoGame/Cyberpunk2077'' are Gorilla Arms, implants strong enough to allow V to force armored security gates open with nothing but sheer physical strength. The door's metal plating visibly buckles under the assault until the locks can't take it any longer. Unsurprisingly, they're also great for punching people to a bloody pulp.
79* ''Franchise/DeusExUniverse'':
80** During the prologue of ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'', Adam Jensen is a normal, non-augmented human, and has no melee attack available. Then he gets his arms and legs replaced with metal ones and can break bones with ease, deliver instant-KO {{Hey You Haymaker}}s, and if he unlocks his software with Praxis kits, punch through walls and jump three meters high. However, his spine is also augmented, and it's unclear if people with just limbs augmented are any stronger. His cybernetic arms also have [[BladeBelowTheShoulder retractable blades]], but that's beside the point.
81** In ''VideoGame/DeusExMankindDivided'', Adam Jensen's artificial limbs are so strong, that his signature move is to punch through a wall to a guy to snap his neck.
82* ''VideoGame/ForgetMeNotMyOrganicGarden'': The sick boy who gets magical replacement organs from Irene, gets accused of [[spoiler:doing something "shady" by his friends who marvel at his strange improvement]]. Irene offers to [[spoiler:sell the boy's friends better organs]] to smooth things out between them.
83* Justified in ''VideoGame/{{Hob}}'', as the protagonist's replacement left arm comes from a GentleGiant robot more than twice their size.
84* ''VideoGame/KillerInstinct'''s TJ Combo was once the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world for five years straight. He was stripped of his title for his use of cybernetic enhancements in his arms, he fights to regain his lost fame and fortune (his metallic arms are shown in the {{sequel}}, in which he has to fight for his life). Subverted in the 2013 ContinuityReboot in which the story is almost the same, but instead, determined to prove himself and regain glory, TJ rips out his cybernetics and returns to the fight.
85* The player character of ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'' has a robotic arm which he can use to deliver a devastating punch that instantly knocks out enemies, something no fully limbed soldier can replicate.
86* After the second game and his first appearance, ''Franchise/MortalKombat'''s Major Jackson "Jax" Briggs wears a pair of bionic armor-plating that covers and protects both of his arms from ''VideoGame/MortalKombat3'' and onwards. It is not known whether his arms were replaced or upgraded in the original storyline. However, it is possible that he may have used bionic implants until the events of ''[[VideoGame/MortalKombatDeception Deception]]'', where he may have willingly had his own arms removed in favor of mechanical replacements.
87* ''VideoGame/NewLegends'' have you losing your left arm halfway through (in an unskippable cutscene), and after spending one whole stage sans an arm, you gain a magical stone hand which deals more damage on enemies when executing melee attacks.
88* Doomfist of ''VideoGame/{{Overwatch}}'' lost his right arm during the Omnic Crisis. The cybernetic replacement is leagues stronger than his original arm, best displayed when he uses it to punch his way out of his concrete prison cell. Notably, one of the factors in his StartOfDarkness was the fact that having an artificial arm disqualified him from his previous career as a professional boxer (because of [[TooQualifiedToApply the unfair advantage it would have given him]]).
89* Aruni from ''VideoGame/RainbowSixSiege'' has prosthetics replacing the limbs she lost to a bomb. While other operators use knives and butt stocks for melee, Aruni uses her robo-fist instead, leaving head-sized holes in soft surfaces and one-hitting barricades (other operators require three hits to break a barricade and only make small holes). Her prosthetic leg, however, doesn't make her any faster but comes with a built-in knife sheath.
90* In ''VideoGame/{{Rimworld}}'', bionic limbs are superior to normal human limbs, Bionic arms give superior melee damage and increased manipulation, which improves combat and most crafting and manual skills. Bionic legs increase movement speed. Archotech limbs, which are engineered by [[DeusEstMachina god-like planet-scale artificial intelligences]], are ''vastly'' superior to even bionic replacements.
91* Hagane, the cyborg ninja of ''VideoGame/SamuraiMaiden'', comes from a parallel universe that has highly advanced technology, to the point where any limbs or body parts lost to disease or injury can be easily and conveniently replaced with incredibly powerful cybernetic limbs and other supporting organs, such as the spine, the lungs, and the rest of your skeleton. Aside from being visibly larger than her (mostly) organic arm, Hagane can punch incredibly powerfully with it, the arm can extend like a grappling hook, and the cable can be electrified to stun a long column of enemies too close to it.
92* In ''VideoGame/{{Shatterhand}}'', Steve Herman gets robotic hands, and can just them to punch robots, and walls, until they explode.
93* ''VideoGame/SpiderTheVideoGame'' has artificial metal limbs you can collect and upgrade yourselves with, allowing you to move faster and jump higher. Your onscreen character's appendages also turns metallic each time you have them equipped.
94* ''VideoGame/TalesFromTheBorderlands'':
95** Rhys is not a particularly strong man -- he's incapable of choking out a normal bandit (who are typically bottom-barrel mooks in the Borderlands series), but in episode four [[VirtualGhost Jack]] points out that cybernetic arm is a lot stronger than his real one and therefore good for throwing a solid punch, which he does with a Psycho not long after. He comments on this when [[spoiler:he and Sasha are hanging from a collapsed bridge and he attempts to pull them both up. When his human arm begins to give out, he winces about how much weaker it is than his artificial one.]]
96* In the ''VideoGame/XCOMEnemyUnknown'' expansion ''Enemy Within'', MEC Troopers are a soldier class blur the line between {{Cyborg}} and MiniMecha, created by replacing a soldier's limbs with {{artificial|Limbs}} ones. Their [[RocketPunch Kinetic Strike Module]] is ''the'' strongest attack available to the player,[[note]]with a certain gameplay option ("Absolutely Critical") enabled, a punch with it can deal a hilarious '''''27''''' damage, able to one-shot ''all but one'' regular alien in the enemy roster[[/note]] and mounting it on the MEC suit passively grants an extra 3 mobility. An operative with 14 mobility (the maximum possible) that's augmented into a MEC trooper and saddled with the KSM, after a Foundry upgrade, can run through the battlefield at a speed matching a skittering [[BigCreepyCrawlies Chryssalid]].
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Web Animation]]
100* The character known only as [[spoiler:"Demo Man"]] from ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlueTheProjectFreelancerSaga''. A member of the Insurrection, he [[spoiler:took a MAC round fired from orbit to the face]] and came back only missing his left arm. When the Freelancers face the Insurrection again in Season 10, he uses his robot arm to fire a shotgun one handed, knock down Agent Carolina in a hand-to-hand fight, and even catch a grenade fired by Agent Maine's Brute Shot and throw it back.
101* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'':
102** James Ironwood's cyborg half has SuperStrength potent enough to lift an [[TheBigBadWolf Alpha Beowolf]].
103** [[spoiler:Mercury Black]] has robotic legs as his weapon of choice and is one of the strongest and fastest fighters in his generation because of them.
104** Averted with [[spoiler:Yang Xiao Long]] in Volume 4, whose prosthetic merely serves as a replacement and nothing more. Its utility comes from the fact it can be freely detached and re-attached and is also much tougher than the original, [[spoiler:able to withstand the same attack that severed the real arm with some literal ScratchDamage]].
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Western Animation]]
108* [[ZigZaggingTrope Zig-zagged]] with Zachary Foxx of ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfTheGalaxyRangers''. While his cybernetic arm and leg are far stronger than human norms, and the arm can double as an ArmCannon, the cyberware is still experimental and prone to {{Plot Driven Breakdown}}s, tampering ("Rogue Arm"), and malfunctions.
109* Modo of the ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'' confronts the MadScientist Doctor Karbunkle, and reminds the man that he took Modo's right arm while he was Karbunkle's guinea pig. "But I got me another one: see?" Modo retorts, pointing his enhanced and weaponized cybernetic arm at TheDragon. Karbunkle compliments Modo on his new limb, then introduces his bodyguard.
110* In ''WesternAnimation/SonicTheHedgehogSatAM'', Bunny Rabbot suffered UnwillingRoboticisation, but the process was interrupted halfway through, leaving her with metal left arm and both legs. These appendages grant her enough strength to rip out armored doors.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder:Real Life]]
114* Athlete and double leg amputee Oscar Pistorius was temporarily banned from running in the Olympics because the IAAF determined that his "Cheetah Blades" used for running offered an unfair mechanical advantage -- and they do, but only when running in a straight line at full speed. (The testers forgot to include the slowdown he faces at the beginning of the race before reaching top speed.) The decision was eventually overturned.
115* This actually is a real long-term goal of many people involved in the bionic prosthetics and implants industry (Hugh Herr is a good example), for the tech to advance to the point that one day people will actually want to replace natural parts of their body with artificial replacements that perform better.
116[[/folder]]
117----
118
119!!Aversions
120
121[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
122* Chapter five of ''Manga/GhostInTheShell'' illustrates why a lot of characters have full-body prostheses: when the whole body other than the braincase is made of reinforced titanium alloy you don't risk as much damage when strength-testing the servomotors.
123* ''Manga/JojosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders'': Joseph Joestar's prosthetic hand, unlike Stroheim's more extensive modifications, is not any stronger than the original. In fact, it is frequently smashed, cut, severed and otherwise destroyed, usually by enemy Stand users to [[TheWorfEffect demonstrate how dangerous they are]] on a target which can [[GoodThingYouCanHeal be easily replaced by Joseph's vast network of resources]].
124[[/folder]]
125
126[[folder:Film]]
127* Inverted in ''Film/ExMachina'', as Nathan [[StrongFleshWeakSteel easily]] smashes off the RobotGirl Ava's arm [[spoiler:and Kyoko's jaw]] with a single swing of his baton, [[spoiler:and they are only able to beat him because [[InTheBack Kyoko snuck up on him]]. We also see a video of Jade, one of Nathan's earlier robot models, smashing her arms off as she [[FreakOut helplessly bangs on the door]] trying to get out]].
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Literature]]
131* The protagonist of ''And A Star to Steer Her By'', a 1954 RaygunGothic novel by Lee Correy (G. Harry Stine), is a [[RetroRocket jetman]] who has lost a hand; at one point, he has to build extra tools for leverage to help him carry out repair work because he hasn't sufficient strength in his artificial hand to tighten things.
132* In "Literature/CChute", John Stuart had mangled his hands irreparably, but alien surgeons [[CloningBodyParts grew him artificial hands out of artiplasm]] instead. The new hands are weaker than the originals and require delicate care.
133* In Creator/MartinCaidin's ''Cyborg'', the basis for ''Series/TheSixMillionDollarMan'', Steve Austin's bionic limbs are stronger than his natural ones, but their abilities were limited by his human body. He couldn't lift enormous weight or run super faster, but he ''did'' have a super-strong grip and could sprint for an indefinitely long period.
134* ''Literature/HammersSlammers'': Front-line personnel who receive prosthetics are either retired or rotated to desk jobs, one of the reasons being that prosthetic limbs need to be periodically recalibrated by a powerful computer.
135* ''Literature/HonorHarrington'': Honor's prosthetic arm is treated realistically, with the arm being decidedly stronger than natural, but limited by her mostly original shoulder.
136* The protagonist of ''Literature/TheMoonIsAHarshMistress'' has several artificial limbs with micromachine tools that he swops around for various tasks, but in one scene he rejects the idea of handling a {{BFG}} laser drill because a prosthetic limb doesn't substitute for actual muscle power.
137[[/folder]]
138
139[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
140* ''Series/RedDwarf'': After Lister [[AnArmAndALeg loses his right arm]], Kryten builds him a prosthetic arm as a replacement. Unfortunately, it's a complete failure; in its default setting, it takes Lister so much effort to perform the simple act of picking up a ball that he claims that he'll have to take the morning off every time he does so. With the impulse valve adjusted to increase sensitivity, the arm taps into Lister's subconscious and instead of picking up the ball, punches Kryten in the face.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
144* ''TabletopGame/HcSvntDracones'': Body stat boosts are BioAugmentation, while artificial limbs have no advantages other than hiding small items. A reinforced prosthesis won't increase lifting strength but can make an effective bludgeoning weapon or shield.
145* In ''TabletopGame/{{Traveller}}'', strength augmentations are entirely separate from prosthetics and are much more expensive.
146[[/folder]]
147
148[[folder:Webcomics]]
149* In ''Webcomic/DarthsAndDroids'', Annie made Anakin's bionic hand [[http://www.darthsanddroids.net/episodes/0436.html weaker but more dextrous]] than the normal one.
150-->'''Pete:''' Ah, you're becoming a superior being.\
151'''Annie:''' Because I'm becoming cybernetic?\
152'''Pete:''' No, you're [[{{Munchkin}} min-maxing]].
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:Western Animation]]
156* ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'': When Ray is rendered paraplegic, he gets mechanical implants to walk again. Unlike [[FullConversionCyborg full-body cyborgs]] like Barry, Ray is no stronger than he was before because the rest of his body limits what they can do. The one time Ray tried to use them for a feat of strength (lifting a car out of mud), he threw out his back.
157-->'''Archer:''' Are you shitting me?! Bionic legs, and you ''lift with your back?!''
158* In ''WesternAnimation/ExoSquad'', [[spoiler:James Burns]] sustains heavy injuries during the battle to liberate Venus, forcing the doctors to replace AnArmAndALeg with robotic prostheses. These replacements are notably clumsier and weaker than his original limbs, effectively ending his days as a soldier and causing him considerable distress.
159[[/folder]]
160
161[[folder:Real Life]]
162* This is the subject of [[https://www.npr.org/transcripts/10580771 genuine]] [[https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/page/VeteranNBA151111/how-advanced-prosthetics-impact-future-sports debate]] within the sports world, where prosthetics have given some athletes abilities far in excess of their abled competitors. South African sprinter Oscar Pistorius' artificial legs, for instance, enabled him to outrun many of his able-bodied competitors, leading to questions about whether or not he should be permitted to compete in the UsefulNotes/OlympicGames as opposed to the Paralympics, and whether records set by athletes with artificial limbs should stand as is or be counted separately from those set by athletes without.
163[[/folder]]
164----
165
166!!Reconstructions
167[[folder:Literature]]
168* ''Literature/CityOfNoEnd'': Precisely because simply replacing limbs would be insufficient for enhancing strength, the Men of Iron must replace most of their bodies with augmentations to [[ManInTheMachine fully]] become cybernetic [[SuperSoldier Super Soldiers.]]
169[[/folder]]

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