Originally posted by Jimmy Buggs
Grimm what are you talking about. He dies all the time. But he gets sent back. Thats the explaination for all of it. Who ever thinks wolvie cant be killed is a dummy. he dies all the time.
True, but he can't come back if he doesn't have a body to come back too now does he?
I get annoyed with wolverine's healing factor just as much as the next guy, but I actually like what they've done giving him the somewhat immortality abilities, because it explains why he can heal from a skeleton so readily. Even if he had a bone skeleton and it was completely destroyed, from what they showed he probably would come back anyways since he can choose whether or not to do so... it's his soul that's got the healing factor, his body doesn't matter.
Still, in a fight to the death I still say spiderman wins 50-55% of the time, it's just that wolverine won't STAY dead. Capiche?
Originally posted by Soljer
Obviously he can....
Which is why this entire Civil war thing is messed up
Wolverine can't come back from the dead when his body is a skelaton, because if thats the case then you also have to say that Wolverine can heal from a single cell, and if he can do that, whats to stop drops of blood from turning into new Wolverines?
It is beyond any logic even for a comic book
Originally posted by Grimm22
Which is why this entire Civil war thing is messed upWolverine can't come back from the dead when his body is a skelaton, because if thats the case then you also have to say that Wolverine can heal from a single cell, and if he can do that, whats to stop drops of blood from turning into new Wolverines?
It is beyond any logic even for a comic book
No. It IS logical.
Wolverine's healing factor isn't embedded in his cellular structure anymore. It isn't encoded into his DNA. It's a part of his SOUL.
Each time he 'dies,' his body REALLY dies.
He goes to the 'after life,' fights his demon, and chooses to return to life.
This representation of Wolverine actually makes MORE sense than the representations in the past. I used to care that Wolverine came back from a skeleton, or came back from the dead. I disagreed with it.
The way it's explained now? It makes perfect sense.
And to answer your question about drops of blood becoming new Wolverine's - he only has one soul. Therefore, there can be only one of him. No chopping him in half to clone. 😉.
Originally posted by Soljer
No. It IS logical.Wolverine's healing factor isn't embedded in his cellular structure anymore. It isn't encoded into his DNA. It's a part of his SOUL.
Each time he 'dies,' his body REALLY dies.
He goes to the 'after life,' fights his demon, and chooses to return to life.
This representation of Wolverine actually makes MORE sense than the representations in the past. I used to care that Wolverine came back from a skeleton, or came back from the dead. I disagreed with it.
The way it's explained now? It makes perfect sense.
And to answer your question about drops of blood becoming new Wolverine's - he only has one soul. Therefore, there can be only one of him. No chopping him in half to clone. 😉.
DNA isn't part of you're soul 😐
So now Wolverine's healing factor isn't even a mutant power? Its just some obscure spiritual thing he has?!?
Originally posted by Grimm22
DNA isn't part of you're soul 😐So now Wolverine's healing factor isn't even a mutant power? Its just some obscure spiritual thing he has?!?
You misused 'you're' this time.
Seems you can't ever get that right, good try though.
Also, I don't understand why you point out that a soul lacks DNA, when I specifically stated in my post that his healing factor WASN'T solely encoded in his DNA, but rather was a part of his soul.
Why can't Wolverine's mutation affect him spiritually? Or affect the spiritual world? We have mutants that can exist as pure energy. We have mutants that affect vaguely defined 'probability fields.' We have mutants that can shift time and space. Why not have a mutant that has a, seemingly, immortal soul?
Originally posted by Soljer
You misused 'you're' this time.Seems you can't ever get that right, good try though.
Also, I don't understand why you point out that a soul lacks DNA, when I specifically stated in my post that his healing factor WASN'T solely encoded in his DNA, but rather was a part of his soul.
Why can't Wolverine's mutation affect him spiritually? Or affect the spiritual world? We have mutants that can exist as pure energy. We have mutants that affect vaguely defined 'probability fields.' We have mutants that can shift time and space. Why not have a mutant that has a, seemingly, immortal soul?
*About to rant*
*Realizes Dead Girl is a mutant*
*sits back and mumbles* glare
Originally posted by Grimm22
It still doesn't change the fact that Wolverine cannot survive a nukeAll it indicated was that Wolverine is nearly impossible to kill
Originally posted by srankmissingnin
For the record, Wolverine being immortal has been canon since Barry Windsor-Smith's MCP Weapon X story (then came out when? '91?)... as I have said before. 😉
Originally posted by capt it up
yup and remeber the amount of crap we got for saying it quite possiable he immortal since it been stated and thought by many people over the years
Meh, I had a problem with Wolverine regenerating from a skeleton BEFORE it was explained as it is now.
Because, before, I assumed it was part of Logan's DNA or cellular structure that facilitated regeneration. No cellular structure? No regeneration.
Now? It's spiritual, it's on another level. I'm totally fine with it now.
Originally posted by Soljer
Meh, I had a problem with Wolverine regenerating from a skeleton BEFORE it was explained as it is now.Because, before, I assumed it was part of Logan's DNA or cellular structure that facilitated regeneration. No cellular structure? No regeneration.
Now? It's spiritual, it's on another level. I'm totally fine with it now.