@Itsthinking
I completely agree that the situation is one that they are put into not of their own volition and likely based on some fictional world that is established in Equestria literature.
(Hopefully, this also would give us a return of Daring Do in the same breath, as part of another world)
Help! I’m trapped in a burning building! I’m too handsome to die! Oh! Thank goodness, the powerponies are here…wait is THAT what ya’ll are really wearing? On second thought I’d rather burn to death than be saved by you losers.
@Itsthinking
Those Changlings were mooks though. Trying to fight an actual super villain, experienced in using their powers/weapons against much more physical opponents on a regular basis, would be several magnitudes more difficult. Plus, there’s almost certainly gonna be the whole “still getting used to powers and doing stuff wrong” thing.
I was thinking of the time on Spongebob when they all got superpowers and failed hilariously. Ahhhh, the days when Spongebob was good.
@Itsthinking
To me, B seems like the most logical of outcomes. The Mane Six’s style of heroism has always been distinctly non-violent, so I can see them floundering in a world where super strong punches serve as casual greetings.
But the even better choice is C: The Mane Six, after failing to engage the enemy physically, talk to the villain and make them realize their costumed antics are ruining their life. Some friendship talk later Lex Luther is Cut a Check and the villain becomes a productive member of society.
@ColdhardSilver
Barring anything that the actual animators oversee do, the uniform shapes are likely fixed (and in drawing them, I can’t see them adding more to make it harder on the Flash side).
Colors are outright guesses, but like, Fluttershy and green is pretty much a no-brainer.