In general, harder substances can be sharpened to a greater degree. Like if u sharpen a plastic knife to the same degree as a metal one, it wouldn't work as well since it'll just bend instead of slice. With a steel knife it can be sharper without bending.
In the case of adamantium, assuming you can sharpen it somehow, you can theoretically get it to be an atom thick at it's point. Then you get all the force of whoever's swinging the thing onto a point 1 atom thick. A lot less force can do a lot more damage that way.
Originally posted by Bentley
Namor has never shown to be on Thor's level, not only on straight combat but battling the same enemies Namor always seemed vastly weaker. I would still rate him above the other two.
Yes he has. One fight that comes to mind is the fight where Thor was controlled by Morgan.
Originally posted by tsscls
So any chef is a hillbilly? The point stands. You can only get a piece of metal so sharp, even with lasers. The only thing that sets adamantium apart from the rest is it's durability. If you think about it, it shouldn't even be able to be sharpened. For the sake of this arguement, it can be. There is no reason a sharpened piece of admantium would penetrate Superman anymore than an infinitely sharp piece of titanium unless it was propelled by a force strong enough to overcome Superman's skin.
So your a chef?
That make's you a expert in medieval weapons and what damage you can do with it, or how much force you need to damage a object or person???
So iff you can't sharpen adamantium or shape it, how did they get it on wolverine's bones???