Here are characters from Simon R. Green's "Secret Histories" series (they're very gonzo/over-the-top urban fantasy having to do with the Drood family, who are the secret protectors against supernatural threats/rulers of humanity).
Edwin Drood
Power Level: In A Submarine
High Concept: Black Sheep/Leader of the Drood Family
Trouble: Anything For The Family
Other Aspects: Molly, My Love (And How Did That Happen?);
An Agent, Not An Assassin
Dislike Authority Figures (Even Though I Am One);
Protect, Don't Rule;
What Happened to My Parents?
Skills
Superb: Fists, Investigation
Great: Alertness, Deceit, Endurance, Intimidation
Good: Burglary, Conviction, Guns, Lore
Fair: Driving, Might, Presence, Stealth
Average: Discipline, Empathy, Rapport, Scholarship
Stunts
False Identity (Deceit): When using one particular cover identity, any attempt using Investigation or Alertness to see through this disguise is at an additional +2 difficulty. The identity can be changed at major milestones.
Powers
Item of Power: Merlin Glass (Item of Power Rebate [+1])
Worldwalker [-2]
Stealth Mode [-2]: +3 to all Stealth rolls. Cannot be photographed or recorded by any kind of electronics unless he wants to be.
The Sight [-1]
Human Form [+1] affecting all of the following:
Claws [-1]
Mythic Toughness [-6]
The Catch [+1]: the Claws power of other Droods; Outsider attacks and mordite
Supernatural Speed [-4]
Supernatural Strength [-4]
Total Refresh Cost: -18
Remaining Refresh: 3
Notes
This is sort of a composite of different books, mostly the earlier ones. His Aspects have not changed for END OF SIXTH BOOK BIG SPOILER.
The Merlin Glass shows up a LOT, so it gets on his sheet permanently. He gets lots of other one-shot items, which I'm not sure how to model; Ritual (Crafting) is the obvious answer, but Edwin is totally not a spellcaster and that would require giving him a Discipline score which I really don't think he deserves... he's mentally tough, but it strikes me as more Conviction "forge through anyway" stuff than Discipline, and
he's mentally influenced fairly easily by the rogue armor in the sixth book, despite knowing what's happening.
The Catch for his Toughness is converted to a Dresdenverse equivalent. In the books, Drood armor can be penetrated by weapons formed from other Drood armor, strange matter (in the first book only?), certain extradimensional weapons, some alien energy weapons, stuff like that.
Next: Molly Metcalf. Thinking Wizard template with 10 Refinements and Seelie Magic.