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Vanguard:
1) Peni Parker (infinite ammo, health regen via spider webs on the ground)
2) Venom (infinite ammo, health bonus via Symbiotic Resilience)
Duelist:
1) Iron man (hit scan weapon via Unibeam).
2) Namor (Infinite ammo, auto shoot squids)
3) Star lord (fast reload, low recoil weapon, aimbot ultimate makes it easier to secure kills)
4) The Punisher (low recoil weapon, fast reload, decent ultimate)
Strategist:
1) Cloak & Dagger (auto aim main weapon on Dagger, hit scan weapon on Cloak).
2) Rocket Racoon (fun to zip around using Jetpack Dash, plus he looks cute, lol).
3) Adam Warlock (healing ability has auto aim, left click hit scan weapon).
When he gets a little bit better at the game, then he can try out the other more challenging characters such as Hela, Hawkeye, Mantis, Luna Slow and others not mention above.
If the kid thinks Spiderman is the mostest awesome then they will have fun losing with him regardless. Just do your best to teach them what the moves do and how to play the character they like.
Just from this post asking for help with who their kid should play, it's clear they're actively involved in their child's gaming experience. Honestly, if you don't have anything productive to add, maybe it's best not to tell others how to raise their kids. Personally, I turn off all communication features and regularly check in on all my kid's activity on the PC to ensure their safety, and I'm sure this person is just as involved with their child's safety.
That's really not how it works, or at least not how it should work. Proper parenting= regulating what your kid can/can't do. Dealing with a tanrum is fine if it gives them a better overall experience. Less of course you like foul mouthed little children who disobey their parents and authority (Which has stemmed from online interaction in the wrong games.) Games aren't babysitters and parents aren't going to monitor everything their child says/hears in a game, which is why online games generally come with a TOS and or a warning.
Rivals might record/monitor its chat/voice chat, but it isn't going to stop a child (Which is the most gullible/impressionable things on the net.) from falling for, or falling in certain situations. The person saying keep them offline, was not in the wrong in any sense of the matter.
Very little aim required
However, f2p games like this (and the majority of online games in general) are designed to manipulate the psychology of younger gamers with low willpower to make them addicted. Many parents actually have no idea that this is a thing, nor truly understand the level of depravity that players spout sometimes, so giving them advice to avoid ONLINE gaming (which was the part I specified) is warranted and necessary.