Originally posted by Cosmic Cube
Storm would defeat Carnage with one huge thunderclap. The guy can't take loud sounds.Or she could start screaming at him.
Actually, frying him would prove much more effective. Carnage has more tolerance for noise than his "dad" (Max Carnage- they are blasting him full on with a sonic gun and he keeps coming at them. He also loves heavy metal and dated a woman named "Shriek" 😛 ) but is especially vulnerable to heat (it sends him running for the hills--- Firestar nearly killed him). So Storm could have a pretty good chance if she flies out of reach, avoids any thrown projectiles, and zaps him with a lightning bolt or sets the forest on fire.
Originally posted by Nataku8188
Carnage survived a gas main explosion at point blank range. Storm doesn't have anything to kill him, just keep him from killing her.
are you talking about maximum carnage right after black cat saves spidey from carnage then venom tackles him into the gas explosion? well i never the tornado would kill him i said it would hurt him which it would 300+ mph winds are dangerous not to mention that he would be kncked arund by trees in the tornado and like stormfront has a point the surface of lighting is extremelyhot
Originally posted by stormfront13
how hot are firestars flames??
she doesn't use flames, it's microwave radiation she projects
Originally posted by cray z 4 sarah
oh because i have an issue of maximum carnage where he is about to kill spidey then black cat saves him and venom knocks him into another gas explosion
wasn't that an electrical generator that exploded......???
during the first Carnage story line Spidey punches him onto the third rail of the New York subway system and it doesn't phase him
"At the time when it was constructed, the power generating system for New York's subway was the largest in the world. Electricity was generated at powerhouses, such as the impressive facility at 59th Street and 11th Avenue, and then sent to a network of substations, where alternating current was converted into direct current. From these substations, direct current traveled along a network of cables to the third rail, which fed 11,000 volts of electricity directly into the train car motors."
http://newyork.construction.com/features/archive/0410_cover.asp
so i'm still doubtful that a direct electrical hit will take him down