She's exceptional in that system because she has a class. Normal humans DON'T HAVE CLASSES. How is this hard to understand. Normal humans are zero level. Even your town militia is ZERO LEVEL.
Contrasted with
Kamikaze Midget post #149 this thread
No D&D character is just a dirt farmer done good.
Yet we have evidence of a fighter still being an utterly nameless "dirt farmer done good" in a published AD&D adventure.
The point is that if you can be a Lvl 1 fighter and still be serf, there is no reason why you can't be a fighter who was a serf yesterday and has just started his adventuring career.
Did you ever look at the AD&D DMG before asserting "normal" NPC had no stats? Pgs 100-106 have racial adjustments to stats, as well as minimum ability scores for classes...AND for laborers, mercenaries and merchants- the lack of stats in the adventures is because generating stats for NPCs not crucial to the main plot is left to the DM.
As for militias being strictly zero level, I give you these 2 counterexamples:
Forgotten Realms Adventures, 2Ed, p 82.
City of Daerlun
...The guard is supplemented by a local militia, numbering some 2,000 level 1 fighters...
and
City of Tantras p110
...Tantras can field a militia reserve of 6,000 men and women, all F1s.
Those are
in addition to all the regular F1s in the guard, watches and other regular forces in those cities.
IOW, a 1st level Fighter is not all that uncommon or unusual, about on par with someone who has entered the armed forces of a modern day country. I'd say that this is pretty good evidence that normal humans can and do have class levels.
The problem I have here is that in the sniper situation Batman set everything up. There was no outside intervention by others. He was the one who directed placement of things. He set it up so that the sniper only had on viable sniping location. He assigned Robin to stay there and ambush the guy. He planned the whole situation out on his own and set things into motion so that he would win. He was confident enough to go to the target area and let his less skilled protege that he personally trained fight the sniper as practice.
First, that happens every other week on
Burn Notice- it's a standard action TV/movie trope (see
X-Files and many, many others). They even do this in standard police dramas- they JUST did it on
Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior- though the backup charged with taking down the sniper is usually other cops.
Second, if Robin (not the adult Nightwing, but one of the teens that followed him) could take him out solo, he probably wasn't that much of a threat to begin with...all of which would factor into his assessment and decision as to whether to put himself into the "trap" as "bait."
Batman discovered the near detonation bomb, reacted lightning fast by jumping into a nearby safe and locked himself inside. He then road out the explosion, proceeded to preformed an impromptu safe escape and came out practically unharmed.
Safe escapes are one of the most dangerous tricks escape artist can perform. Most professional escape artists only do the trick after a lot of preparation and a tons of practice.
What's your point? Confronted with certain death by explosion, who WOULDN'T jump into the safe? One thing at a time- survive the explosion, then survive whatever predicament you got into while surviving the explosion.
And as for getting out, not only has he been long established as a competent safe-cracker (even in the freakin' TV series), Batman packs not only lockpicks in his utility belt, but other devices to get past locks, like mini-torches and acid capsules. AND a 5-10 minute air supply as well.
There was no way he wasn't getting out.
Batman's "superhuman-ness" is in his ability to plan, set up things in such a way that things will go the way he wants, react to any unforeseeable circumstances faster than humanly possible and has all of the skills to do all that he wants.
Standard action-hero trope.
Mundane reasons that in most cases require multiple of people working together to pull off. Batman did it as one person.
Nope- by your own description, he did ONE solo. The other, he had help. As for the one he did solo, again, that's not that big a surprise. Its another one that pops up in action stuff repeatedly- the last time I remember seeing it was in CSI: Miami, "Crime Wave" in which Horatio and others go into a bank vault to escape a tsunami. Classic narrative plot protection.
Batman stops the assassin going after him on his own.
You said he had help from Robin. Which is it?
Put a bomb beside Batman 20 times and 20 times Batman will survive with nary a scratch.
Again, this is classic narrative protection. 99 times out of 100, the main character does not get killed, especially in his own book/movie/show.
Batman is more than occasionally lucky.
Fortune favors the prepared mind. Also, plot protection favors the main character.
How often did MacGyver conveniently find exactly what he needed to escape whatever room he was in? The answer is, nearly every time. Those times he didn't, his immediate escape wasn't crucial to the plot because someone was going to let him out.