Diana Prince has never doubted her ability to make a difference, confront danger, and serve as a role model and inspiration for people of both sexes. Pyrrha doubted her ability as a champion a lot, to the point of asking Jaune if it was OK to not become a Maiden. Even her Semblance must have seemed like a cheat like unto Achilles's dip in the Styx, for how many students could hope to stand with their mostly-metal weapons against a first-rate fighter with Polarity? It makes one wonder though what Pyrrha would have been like in the story if she had never met Jaune, and had to remain with her reputation and public image as a barrier to making friends and working together with a team. (OK, so I do not have to wonder, Couer al'Aran has done it for me with his marvelous fan fics.) Unlike her namesake Pyrrha did not long for glory or the honor attached to it, and rather longed for friends, companionship, and being able to fight alongside Huntsmen instead of being continually measured against them. The disjunct between the popular nigh-invincible champion and the shy, awkward "prodigy girl" with no people skills made her a real delight as a tragic heroine.