Originally posted by kgkgI never implied such, I don't think.
😉 am not even saying he wins
But here I grabbed the quote from the rules for ya man.
"It is also assumed that the characters fight at their optimum levels of ability - not explicitly weakened or unusually powered up for those who have variable power levels"
See what I'm saying now?
We can only assume, Gladiator was in his highest powered up moment when he did such a feat, since he's very very inconsistant in that aspect. He's not once duplicated the event, and so it can't be used as viable evidence. However, this entire team of girls he's facing is almost always near Superman-level.
Originally posted by Juntai
I never implied such, I don't think.But here I grabbed the quote from the rules for ya man.
"It is also assumed that the characters fight at their optimum levels of ability - not explicitly weakened or unusually powered up for those who have variable power levels"
See what I'm saying now?
We can only assume, Gladiator was in his highest powered up moment when he did such a feat, since he's very very inconsistant in that aspect. He's not once duplicated the event, and so it can't be used as viable evidence. However, this entire team of girls he's facing is almost always near Superman-level.
But I disagree to the part where you said he couldn't do this and that. “Because there is no "limit" to powers to show that was beyond him.........
However his normal showing “optimal” is "thor" level and he looses here
Originally posted by thesilverspiderOptimal showing however, a GL handles Gladiator.
it depends who is more confident right............ 😉