Nothing wrong with that, of course, but I also love how the DCEU is dealing with the unavoidable truth: in the real world, if superheroes/supervillains existed, the death toll post-battles would be catastrophically high. Thinking back, literally everyone should have been roasting in the sun or had trouble breathing in the thin atmosphere, or even worse freezing. I think Marvel just doesn't want to have to deal with that aspect of superheroes so they just avoid it entirely. re: Waterworld fun fact: The ending dryland is supposed to be the top of Mt. lol In Avengers 2, you have hundreds of Ultron droids flying around trying to kill people, but even though the Avengers are massively out-numbered and can't be everywhere, the Ultrons can't manage to kill a single person(except Quicksilver). One died and the rest were rushed to hospital, 17 of the students were wheelchair-bound when the collected their diplomas a few weeks after the fatal accident. What Happened: The slide collapse under the weight of 33 graduating students. In Winter Soldier, you have three helicarriers that hover over the coast, surrounded by buildings they're destroyed and conveniently fall straight back down into the water without damaging anything. Water Slide, Waterworld USA, California, USA.
They also have the ability to manipulate ice shards to. Now these slimes have the ability to freeze the water beneath them so they can not drown, but they also can form very tough ice shields (similar to the geo element).
In Avengers you have these massive, skyscraper-sized flying worms that conveniently avoid flying through buildings, actively dodging them for no reason other than it's a Disney movie. Lastly, we have what is supposedly supposed to be the most powerful element in the game (if we are going in chronological order) the Cryo Slimes.
In Avengers, and a lot of the Marvel movies, the stories just make it convenient that really bad things don't happen.