His power now, however, is not empathic. It's just pure duplication of any power he comes across with no connection to the person he copies it from.
I'd say that description is a better fit to his original power. Back then, he automatically absorbed any power from anyone he was within several meters of, whether he knew them or not. He didn't even have to be aware of their existence in order to clone their powers. Now, he has to make direct physical contact with a person and
choose to absorb their power in order to acquire it. That seems much more symbolic of empathy, because it requires a conscious choice to connect and skin-to-skin touching, and is one-on-one rather than generalized and impersonal. It's more intimate now, not less.
His father did not have the same power, he stole powers the same way Peter now copies them. By giving him this new power they've abandoned the empathic side of the character.
You're interpreting my analogy way too mechanistically and thereby missing my entire point. My point is that the technicalities of the powers are not the important thing -- that character is the root from which all else springs (when the writers are doing it right), and the powers are peripheral. So changing the powers doesn't change the character. It isn't Peter's powers that define who he is. What defines him is what he chooses to do with his life and how he chooses to relate to the people around him, regardless of which powers he has or whether he has any at all.
Well, it helps that X-Men has often had significantly better writers than this show.
That's indisputable, but if anything it proves my point -- that you can't pre-emptively say any type of power is useless, because it depends on the skill with which the concept is developed.
You're right about Kryptonite - see my comments on your average episode of Smallville (it would help it that show's writers would understand the effect Kryptonite is supposed to have on Kryptonians), but I would argue that just taking a superhero's powers away is worse. Heroes does this over and over and over again, crippling their characters so they can't use their powers until the season finale.
This is exactly why Peter's current, one-at-a-time absorbing power is better from a storytelling standpoint than his original multiple-absorption power. Since he's now
permanently less powerful, there's no further need for any gimmicks to shut down his godlike abilities, no more stupid amnesia plots or time-jumping him out of the narrative. You're describing what the show
used to do with his character, and that was lousy, but they solved the problem once and for all when they gave him his current power.
I'm not going through it all again, but IIRC I came up with a list of roughly twenty occasions in the first three seasons where one of the "good guys" had been artificially hobbled in order to get them out of the way.
Exactly -- the first three seasons. The writing in the fourth season was better because it depended less on those contrivances and more on character-driven storytelling. True, there are still some occurrences of the problem, like trapping Sylar inside Matt's head, then giving him super-impotence, then having him do an instant reform to hero status. I admit freely that Sylar's arc in the fourth season was not one of its strengths. But changing the nature of Peter's powers spared him from having to be subjected to such lame gimmickry any longer. And Hiro's powers were dialed back somewhat as well, so that he was subject to more limitations. From a story standpoint, giving your characters limitations is good, so long as you go about it the right way. So long as you don't start out making them unlimited and then temporarily hobbling them in contrived ways.