>>125911489>>125911566>Why?It cements the idea her body is rebelling against her ideals; if she wants to be an acrobat or gymnast, she expects to have a more lithe build, or at the very least a slow puberty. But because of a mixture of nature [her dad's genes] and nurture [being a tomboy that grew up in the circus doing chores to earn her keep], she has this Tifa-like physique instead. Instead of just struggling with macromastia she has to adjust to the balance of her entire body from the get-go.
It cements the idea she's a fish out of water. Rather than being socially isolated because she's the only person* that can see her tits, she's isolated because of the Captain Marvel situation where strangers come to the conclusion she's an adult. Other schoolkids bully her or crush on her, and it's not helped that she grew up with a different life experience than them. It opens up more obvious, interesting, relatable writing opportunities rather than shutting them down and causing arguments.
The story as it is, has gotten away from everyone. The original premise was about Audrey trying to do something, with the tits being a roadblock and her having to adapt, the inconvenience was the focus of the gags. Then a splinter formed between the people trying to focus on the original intent, the people who just wanted to see big tits and increased them, people who kept expanding the lore and backstory, and people who felt shamed by the general reception to the project and trying to rebrand it as a serious endeavour, or moving into different eras of the timeline entirely to get away from the original conceit. You can say that making the character a muscle tomboy from the offset is just another splinter and that we have yet another subset of the GG group, and it's true. But this idea allows us to keep most all of the appeal that every other group sees in GG in the first place; the inconvenience, imbalance, the tits, the room for writing and cast/setting expansion.