OneDumbG0
Find Your Own Fire
Originally posted by fangirl101
No. You don't understand. If I get mostly burned by molten steel then that is the thresh hold of my limits. If I get hit with a nuke at ground zero i am supposed ot not exist.
We're talking Wolverine here and your either equivocating, or you're confusing yourself. So let me start over in case you're sincerely confused:
1) Wolverine has been dropped into molten steel. He had nearly all his flesh seared off. He was able to climb out.
2) Wolverine also got attacked by Nitro, in what effectively was a localized nuke. He had all his flesh seared off. Took him a while to grow it back.
Now. Can both scenes coincide with each other? Yes. Do they contradict each other? No. Obviously not. Does the latter feat make you scream out bloody murder, "That's bs... he took a nuke! He shoulda easily taken molten steel! That's a low feat!" No. Can Wolverine still be defeated by molten steel? Yes. Same situation with Henshaw:
1) Henshaw got engulfed in a planet-destroying blast. He was mostly destroyed, had most of his head and part of his torso intact.
2) Henshaw got engulfed in a galaxy-destroying blast. He was almost completely obliterated except for a piece of his face and part of his spinal column.
Now. Can both scenes coincide with each other? Yes. Do they contradict each other? No. Obviously not. Does the latter feat make you scream out bloody murder, "That's bs... he took a galaxy-destroying blast! He shoulda easily taken a planet-destroying blast! That's a low feat!" It shouldn't. Can Henshaw still be defeated by a planet-destroying blast? Yes.
And no amount of baseless speculation (of these imaginary upgrades) changes that. Because everything I'm asserting is supported on-panel and deduced through simple reasoning. The two feats are not mutually dispositive of each other.