It wasn't just curiosity making him ask about their powers—it was preparation. Knowing their abilities on paper wasn't enough. What really interested him was how they experienced their abilities. Power wasn't just about what it could do—it was about who was wielding it. Powers weren't static; they changed, adapted, and grew depending on the user.
What mattered was how they felt them, how they used them.
Take Naomi's Lunar Dominion, for example. If he had that ability, he could probably become the moon itself. Not literally, but in the sense that he could erase a city with a flick of his wrist, reshape tides, and dictate gravity if he had enough energy. But Naomi? She couldn't do that.
At least, not yet. And even when she did reach that level, her version of the power would still be different.
That's what he needed to understand.