Originally posted by ShadowFyre
OK..so y'all are probably gonna laugh at me but what publisher is Lucifer from? And is it an ongoing series?
Originally posted by ShadowFyre
I doubt I will ever get to read it. Most of my money goes to coke and hookers. Occasionally I pay my cellphone bill as well and buy a few ongoing titles.A mans gotta keep his priorities straight.
Well some people on this board are big fans of it, so if you into that stuff you may have liked it. At least you know now what series they talking about so you can pick it up later if you want.
Originally posted by eaebiakuya
CK almost destroyed 1 multiverse. Lucifer can deal with more than 1 multiverse, right ?
Which would imply that the multiverse had to consist of a finite amount of universes.
Which in turn would mean that he would more accurately be described as a multi-universal threat in forum terms, as multiverses generally are thought of as infinite.
^ 👆 My thoughts exactly.
Marvel (and DC for that matter, at least officially until COIE) has established right from the 1960s (regarding SA) that they contain infinite universes. Hell, Marvel outright said that it contains "trans-infinity" # of universes, in some cases. And there are dozens of instances confirming that Marvel has an infinite multiverse. There's no doubt about it. I even remember some comics saying that in every single moment, an infinity of alternate realities are created, and each of these infinite realities create (as in, diverge into) infinite realities of their own, ad infinitum. That's as infinite as it gets. And there are countless other examples. Just because logic dictates that the multiverse is finite by virtue of CK destroying a specific % of it, doesn't cancel out decades of established canon.
Though that still doesn't change the fact that Lucifer wins here. 🙂
Originally posted by Galan007
It's no different than COIE AM. After his universe-busting rampage, there were only 5 universes left in the multiverse. This, however, doesn't change the fact that the multiverse was infinite.
In the sequence 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ... you don't have a greatest value. Hence the sequence is infinite.
But you could remove the numbers 6, 7, 8, 9, ... from that sequence and you'd end up with 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
However, it's nonsensical to gauge a reduction of something infinite with percentages. Because 1% of infinity is still infinity and so there's no quantifiable reduction.