Putting on my autism hat
>can saitama beat superman lulzSaitama is limitless growth of power. If Superman wanted to blitz him, he could. Superman is far beyond Saitama's feats right now. If he doesn't, Saitama's chances of winning grow exponentially, as he would rise to the challenge
source: how Saitama grew so powerful, as displayed in the webcomic
now on to the actual, non boring question:
Superman would probably be a bit disappointed, but sympathetic. Superheroes in the DC setting are largely motivated by stronger motives. A lot of the OPM heroes have fairly corrupt motives, like greed, popularity or molesting cute boys. People are quick to leap on heroes like celebrities, and just as quick to abandon them.
If anything, the bigger thing would be how Saitama see's Superman. Cause Saitama looks down on others for how treat the concept of being a hero, and Superman is basically the pinnacle of "hero".
>>99054619>He beats everything in one punchExcept Boros
and Garou
and Evil Natural Water
>>99054673>>99054688You're both wrong.
>Everyone around him went through much greater struggles but became infinitesimally less powerful superherosNot everyone goes through greater struggles than Saitama did before. Saitama wasn't always super powerful. Saitama did literally nothing but train and fight monsters way beyond his power level for years straight. Very few heroes in that setting fight regularly beyond their means, as most of them are concerned with looking good for the population. Only major exceptions are Licenceless Rider and Genos
>Basically any Human could do that in his universe if they stuck to regimen.Also wrong. Darkshine is the result of extreme training. He became powerful, but nowhere even close to Saitama. It was Saitama's fighting opponents stronger than himself that made him so powerful. Licenceless Rider risks life and limb whenever he needs to, but has never progressed beyond average human