Wiktionary
vb. to be very helpful or to do well in a particular situation
Usage examples of "come into its own".
Little did she realize that the tortuous and distorted evolution of the next three centuries would compel a Third Revolt and a Fourth Revolt, and many Revolts, all drowned in seas of blood, ere the world-movement of labor should come into its own.
Transplant technology, through two hundred years of development, had come into its own .
That had been about three centuries earlier, before the unwritten code of customary interstellar law that the Project relied on had fully come into its own.
But it doesn't really come into its own until you connect it with all of the other coverage available to us through the Junction.
Only when goods and people may cross quickly and comfortably will the Pacific come into its own, and assume its place in the scheme of things, bringing the Occident and Orient together as no gang of Chinese laborers and cooks can do now.
Tales started being written in the slick, iconographic style of MTV and embracing the anarchic philosophy of punk, a music genre just starting to come into its own.
But it has begun to come into its own in recent years, and is the method of choice in the management of many psychopathologies.
Sometimes he fancies it will exist in the distant future, when the sun has dimmed, science and civilization have decayed, and magic has once again come into its own.