In the chapter, the author considers the implications of a constructivist approach to understanding superhero media for scholarly analyses concerning the relation between social interactions, judgments, and superhero missions. The approach, social cognitive domain theory (SCDT), grounds the development, refinement, and application of moral and nonmoral social concepts in heterogeneous social interactions and arrangements. Particularly, special attention is given to comic, television, and film portrayals of T'Challa (Black Panther), Carl Lucas (Luke Cage), and the time-traveling X-Man Lucas Bishop. Previous work explores the parallels of their narratives for understanding the ubiquity of heterogeneous social and moral judgments, as their narratives can be partly distinguished through their grounding in national, local, and societal contexts, respectively. In keeping with this work, the present chapter explores the potential of three features of social judgments for understanding superheroes along three social interactional dimensions.