Electro vs Wolverine

Started by godking9 pages

Originally posted by Battlehammer
funny how people think impulses to the brain is not casuing damage......because it is.
He is stopping the impulses from reaching their destination he is not damaging anything.

Its the perfect attack against a guy like wolverine an indirect attack.

actaully by stoping the impalse he still damageing the body though slightly. he killing cells which will heal.

Originally posted by Battlehammer
actaully by stoping the impalse he still damageing the body though slightly. he killing cells which will heal.

o by stopping impules he is preventing the nerurons from sparking

this doesnt damage them at all

Infact it is more a a stasis then anything

Originally posted by Gecko4lif
o by stopping impules he is preventing the nerurons from sparking

this doesnt damage them at all

Infact it is more a a stasis then anything

Originally posted by lando005
jinzin hasn't said anything about this only you. Think about it a second how much easier is it to sell to people if he gets burn to the bone and falls with his skeleton in tact oppose to falling in pieces to try and heal? that is the only reason they are shown together not because they are fused. Hos bones are attached not fused meaning there are more than one. I dont know why i even try with you you would defend wolverine on your death bed

no I've had to argue this point many many manty times... Logan's skeletal structure is bonded on a molecular level that has turned his admantium into an entirely new bonded metal.. It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces.

Ba'al a class 100 who's smacked around Wendigo, couldn't pry him apart, Logan atributed this to his skeleton.
Hulk tried to rip Wolverine apart the same exact way.. Nothing happened..

Wolverine's skeleton is bonded. As capt stated it is a fact.

Originally posted by yugotank
Does the jinzin have the answers?

If Marvel said they are held together by magic I would be fine with that. At least it's something.....right?

Sometimes a wrong answer is better than no answer. Right? 😕

Wolverine's skeletal structure was bonded by nanomachines I believe.

Originally posted by jinzin
no I've had to argue this point many many manty times... Logan's skeletal structure is bonded on a molecular level that has turned his admantium into an entirely new bonded metal.. It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces.

Ba'al a class 100 who's smacked around Wendigo, couldn't pry him apart, Logan atributed this to his skeleton.
Hulk tried to rip Wolverine apart the same exact way.. Nothing happened..

Wolverine's skeleton is bonded. As capt stated it is a fact.


thank you

Originally posted by jinzin
Wolverine's skeletal structure was bonded by nanomachines I believe.

Are you sure? When some people follow a statement with "I believe",some people (no you,per say) are not 100% sure.

How do his claws retract back and forth?

Are they bonded by nanomachines - then unbonded- then bonded again?

Am I one of only a handful of people who question this?

Originally posted by jinzin
no I've had to argue this point many many manty times... Logan's skeletal structure is bonded on a molecular level that has turned his admantium into an entirely new bonded metal.. It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces.

Ba'al a class 100 who's smacked around Wendigo, couldn't pry him apart, Logan atributed this to his skeleton.
Hulk tried to rip Wolverine apart the same exact way.. Nothing happened..

Wolverine's skeleton is bonded. As capt stated it is a fact.


Is every single gap encapsulated in adamantium?

Originally posted by jinzin
no I've had to argue this point many many manty times... Logan's skeletal structure is bonded on a molecular level that has turned his admantium into an entirely new bonded metal.. It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces.

Ba'al a class 100 who's smacked around Wendigo, couldn't pry him apart, Logan atributed this to his skeleton.
Hulk tried to rip Wolverine apart the same exact way.. Nothing happened..

Wolverine's skeleton is bonded. As capt stated it is a fact.

"It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces. "

One large articulated piece?

Yes we all know it's "comic book" physics but if I said I had a six foot solid marble statue that can "articulate" most would say I'm crazy.

I think in the old days I would have a shot at winning a Marvel No Prize on this one.

Originally posted by Swanky-Tuna
Is every single gap encapsulated in adamantium?

If every gap was encapsulated in adamantium then it would suggest that his skeleton has been modified with more that just an adamantium covering. Right?

Originally posted by jinzin
no I've had to argue this point many many manty times... Logan's skeletal structure is bonded on a molecular level that has turned his admantium into an entirely new bonded metal.. It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces.

Ba'al a class 100 who's smacked around Wendigo, couldn't pry him apart, Logan atributed this to his skeleton.
Hulk tried to rip Wolverine apart the same exact way.. Nothing happened..

Wolverine's skeleton is bonded. As capt stated it is a fact.

the major problem with this statement is his bones are coated with adamantium which is a no mallable metal that would defeat the purpose of the durability of his bones. Besides my argument was the fact that wolverine's bones are not fused and that he has joints i know they are attached but the fact remains he has joints

and hammer stoppin impulse in the brain is not damaging it

Lando,
There is no argument that Wolverine has joints. We all agree on that. The argument is HOW are the bones linked together at the joints? Just to say they are "fused together and wont break apart" seems like an incomplete answer to me and maybe others as well. Maybe Jiznin will come up with some more detailed explanations.

Originally posted by yugotank
Lando,
There is no argument that Wolverine has joints. We all agree on that. The argument is HOW are the bones linked together at the joints? Just to say they are "fused together and wont break apart" seems like an incomplete answer to me and maybe others as well. Maybe Jiznin will come up with some more detailed explanations.
i'm not arguing the bond it was capt who was trying to say he had no joints that was the problem

Originally posted by yugotank
Maybe Jiznin will come up with some more detailed explanations.

there's just one little problem...there IS NO explanation.

Originally posted by masterbruce
there's just one little problem...there IS NO explanation.

Huh? How can that be? This is travesty. 😠

Is there not one person on this forum who has a clear explanation?

Originally posted by yugotank
Are you sure? When some people follow a statement with "I believe",some people (no you,per say) are not 100% sure.

How do his claws retract back and forth?

Are they bonded by nanomachines - then unbonded- then bonded again?

Am I one of only a handful of people who question this?

The reference to nanomachines was in the Weapon X book where they went into full scientific detail about how his skeleton was bonded.

How do his claws retract back and forth? I'm guessing in the same fashion that his elbows and wrists bend, while bonded the skeleton remains fully articulated...

I don't really see how this is up for debate when multiple variations of Wolverine have been seen to have been blown completely off his skeleton while remainging in one solidary piece.

616 included. 😬

I don't pretend that it makes sense, but it doesn't make less sense than people getting their superpowers from radiation. So in relative comparison with everything else, why is Wolverine the only comic book character who gets slapped with this ridiculous standard of real world comparisons?

Originally posted by Swanky-Tuna
Is every single gap encapsulated in adamantium?

I'm guessing not, the weapon x book describes the bones as being porous as to allow marrow to form inside the skeletal structure.

Originally posted by yugotank
"It's also caused his skeleton to become one large articulated piece as opposed to seperate pieces. "

One large articulated piece?

Yes we all know it's "comic book" physics but if I said I had a six foot solid marble statue that can "articulate" most would say I'm crazy.

I think in the old days I would have a shot at winning a Marvel No Prize on this one.

Like I said, i don't pretend that it makes sense. 😬

Originally posted by lando005
the major problem with this statement is his bones are coated with adamantium which is a no mallable metal that would defeat the purpose of the durability of his bones. Besides my argument was the fact that wolverine's bones are not fused and that he has joints i know they are attached but the fact remains he has joints

and hammer stoppin impulse in the brain is not damaging it

And no one said it was maleable... my best explanation for this whole nonsense would be that Wolverine's skeleton is put together like an action figure, with hinges and joints from seperate parts, but basically made up of the same material and one solidary piece as a whole...

In any case it's a comic book fact that Wolverine's skeleton is bonded, whether or not it makes sense to any of us is irrelivent in a world where people just take flight into the sky with no explanation whatsoever. 😐