I just realized something that suddenly makes things a whole lot different:
Originally posted by Kelly_Suxxxors
Until the New Jedi Order series, Star Wars took place in one (count it) one galaxy. In the NJO another galaxy was discovered and its inhabitants (The Yuuzhan Vong) couldn't be felt in the force. The jedi couldn't force choke them, anticipate their moves, etc. .......This made the Jedi rethink their views on the force, the general consensus thereafter being that the force wasn't all-binding and that only things within their original/known galaxy were made up of "The force."*ahem.* Also, the lightsaber has NEVER had the reputation of being able to cut through anything. The lightsaber is ultra-sweet (This is true)and it cuts through flesh and a lot of other things like they were butter, but there have always been things that lightsabers couldn't cut through. Vibro Blades, Amphistaffs, and Vonduun crab armor are all capable of withstanding a lightsaber strike.
Some idiot here proposed that since star wars takes place in the future that they're capable of constructing stronger materials than Marvel is..
Newsflash: A LONG TIME AGO, in a galaxy far far away.....
So this means the X-Men might even stand a greater chance than we thought. . .
Y'know... Magneto doesn't just control magnetism. He has control over the whole EM spectrum. Enough so that he can make holographic projections, not that it would help but shows his control, and burn things with microwaves. He can lift non-metallic objects and has the power to create wormholes.
And the kicker is they're making him stronger.
Indeed, the X-Men are hacked out the wazoo nowadays. I don't find them nearly as interesting now that everybody's an embodiment of an element or the top avatar of something.
Originally posted by CreshoskNever mind, I read further and it turns out the were just on a sentient planet that cut them off from the force. force still applies.
I just realized something that suddenly makes things a whole lot different:So this means the X-Men might even stand a greater chance than we thought. . .