Originally posted by DiesldudeThat, too. 👆
I think a better analogy is when you tie a rope to a fire truck and then the other end to yourself. Then you start moving and pulling the truck with you.
I used the platform example because I wanted to draw a clear distinction between flight and physical strength - you'd still have to have the necessary leg muscles to pull the truck with you.
There is no doubt that anytime Superman moves something while flying, unless that object is tied to him and he just flies, that he is using his strength to do so. Like I said, if he didn't, for example when he pushes a planet - his hands would simply turn onto themselves from the elbows etc.
Originally posted by DiesldudeIf you had flight, and tried to move a car on top of a building - if your arm muscles can't lift that car without flight, then you won't be able to lift it and drag it up on top of the building with flight.
When he moves a planet, he's lifting it and then his flight pushes him and the weight of the planet.Unless his strength is doing all the heavy work and his flight is just moving him.
Same principle applies here. His hands/muscles still have to exert the force necessary to move the car/planet.
Originally posted by carver9
And what is that?
Originally posted by carver9
That's if you apply real world logic to this. If Superman outright tells us that his flight is moving an object, then that's what we need to go by.
Doesn't really matter since they're such off the charts displays of powaaa any way you look at it.
Originally posted by celeyhyga17
That scene yes. It's definitely his flight powaaa. I like PR's take on flight using another "muscle". It's still strength as in strength of will, but not actual muscle strength. When Supes lifts shiet then flies, obviously he had to have been strong enough(muscle usage) to lift before he takes flight. Planetary shiet like Hype's stoppage of the rogue planet or Supe's/J'onn, gonna say mostly flight/dur/str.Doesn't really matter since they're such off the charts displays of powaaa any way you look at it.
Its not purely strength though which is what I'm saying. If they are not grounded, it's obvious flight is what's pushing against said object.
New take on Scooby Doo. They turned Shaggy into a hipster and Velma into some 11 year-old midget nerd.
http://comicbook.com/2016/01/28/dc-comics-to-reboot-scooby-doo-the-flintstones-more-hanna-barber/1