The following contains spoilers for She-Hulk: Attorney at Law Season 1, Episode 3, "The People vs. Emil Blonsky," now streaming on Disney+.

Legal procedurals are a long and treasured part of television, with plenty of variety, from Law and Order to Matlock, Suits to Extraordinary Attorney Woo. With that variety comes a large gulf in the actual legal prowess of the lawyers featured. Some shows act as a power fantasy, with dazzling displays of charisma and wit. Others hinge more on the tension that comes with not knowing whether each case will be won or lost. Sitting somewhere in the middle of that vast spectrum is Jennifer Walters, star of Marvel's recent foray into the genre, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law.

Jen is, above all else, reliable. Her personal struggles come from superpowered hijinks interfering with her law career. If not for the world of heroes and villains she's pulled into, she'd just be another public prosecutor in New York, working her way up through the ranks. In contrast to that reliability stands Jimmy "Saul Goodman" McGill, star of AMC's Better Call Saul. Saul works as a defense attorney, but goes looking for trouble with a scheme or con for every occasion, so whose approach is actually better?

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Saul Will Do Anything to Win

Saul is every joke, every stereotype and every first thought about no-good lawyers come to life. While his morals are lacking, his results are not. Saul's not in it for the money -- or at least, not just for the money. He gets off on the high that comes with tricking others, with the money often coming just as a confirmation of his success. As such, he's willing to go to ridiculous lengths to win a case, often pulling off elaborate cons that do more than just stretch the letter of the law.

Over the course of the show's six seasons, this included arranging a fake letter writing campaign for a client, staging fake incidents to draw publicity to his cases and even meticulously altering every single mention of an address over multiple boxes of paperwork. Saul is a trickster, but he combines his flair for the dramatic with a real diligence that makes it all work. In earlier seasons one of his nicknames was "Charlie Hustle," and hustle really is the right word to describe him. He'll lie, cheat and even steal to get what he wants, but never in a way that calls the amount of work he does in into question for even a second.

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She-Hulk Won't Get Disbarred

She-Hulk called out Dennis' toxic masculinity

Jen has the one thing Saul doesn't -- a moral backbone. Saul, on the otherhand, has little to no understanding of where "the line" is, and even when he can see it, he can't stop himself from crossing it. Jen on the other hand has a very clear sense of right and wrong, a key quality for a good superhero, and this reliability is something Saul lacks, as he was disbarred during Better Call Saul's third season, which prevented him from continuing any of his client's cases while also throwing his life into a spiral.

Jen's also no slouch when it comes to the actual practice of law. The first episode sees her going up against a massive defense firm, and she's on the verge of winning when the case is thrown out on a technicality. The opposing counsel is impressed, and goes so far as to hire her for his own firm, as the head of an entirely new division. She's also won both of the cases presented to her so far in the show, through creative thinking and a strict adherence to the legal process.

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Saul Wins Against She-Hulk in Court

Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) in Better Call Saul

At the end of the day it's Jen's first big case that's the most telling for how the pair's courtroom battle would go. Jen is likely Saul's better when it comes to actually practicing the law. She's just as effective a speaker as he is, with less rhetorical tricks but a hard-won sincerity he can't match. She's a practiced attorney with plenty of experience and what seems like a natural aptitude for the field, something Saul's admitted doesn't come easily to him. Furthermore, Jen is willing to do things "by the book," which ensures she doesn't have any of the massive liabilities Saul does.

However, Jen lost that first big case, even with all of her strengths. The other side found a technicality and played it to their advantage. Saul only needs to find one weakness to win a case. She's also plainly uncomfortable with media attention, something Saul is more than happy to use to his advantage. He builds his entire practice out of advertising over the course of Better Call Saul, time and time again. Even if they weren't going head-to-head on a high profile case, it's more than likely Saul would arrange some kind of incident ot draw attention to it. Jen might be a better practitioner of the law, but if the better lawyer is the one who goes the furthest for their client, Saul wins -- no contest.