@ILS
As for Krayt; telekinetically throwing Cade around, utterly dominating Nihl, being far better than Wyyrlok, and being immeasurably more powerful than Jao Assam and Darth Wredd, who hefted and dropped a satellite so large it flattened hundreds of Sith (these two being several orders of power lower than Cade and all of Krayt’s lieutenants, who he’s already far beyond), strike me as overall more impressive than Viti.
In other words, you have two guys who can perform a telekinetic feat that kind of shits on most anything Vitiate has shown by this point, then you have a long list of people who are better than them, and then you have Krayt at the top.
Then, by Krayt’s association with Luke (meaning he’s inferably beyond the likes of Vader and Caedus), you can start scaling off of them, Starkiller, Rivi-Anu, OCW Anakin and his later massive power growth as both Anakin and Vader, etc and it becomes even more messy for Viti, given how colossal their telekinetic feats are. Benching capital ships, blowing up huge portions of frigates, dragging massive dreadnoughts fast enough to get in the path of missiles before a long line of large power growths… nope, I like Krayt’s chances here.
As for examples:-
1. Vaylin tore apart a multi-story power station and destabilized its core; the resultant explosion killed thousands in the vicinity.
2. Tulak Hord pulled a Starship (as big as Endar Spire) from the sky to the ground.
3. Darth Jadus prevented disintegration of a Harrower-class Starship in the space.
4. Revan overwhelmed a Strike Team comprising of a protagonist, Satele Shan, Darth Marr, Lana Beniko and more with a wave of Dark Side energy in a battle.
5. Darth Nihilus lifted a massive Starship (i.e. Ravager) from the ground and also held it together in space, to prevent its disintegration.
Vitiate is superior in raw power to the above.
@DarthAnt66 - Read your post, excellent debating.
However, you shouldn't be crossing between the game and the novel. Drew just doesn't have any idea about anything in KotOR II. Just stick to using the novel's passage about the horrors that Surik faced on Malachor V - don't go to KotOR II's quotes or anything. After all, the idea of KotOR II was that Surik was the only Jedi who could live completely and utterly without the Force (not even with unconscious ties), which is why Traya considered the Exile her greatest disciple and had difficulty understanding how she did it even though Traya herself had been Severed. Throughout the game, characters talk about not even being able to sense the Exile's Force connection. She's not a walking Malachor V (that'd be Nihilus) - she's a walking Nathema.
Even if you disregard that, it's worth noting that she only got through Malachor V the first time by Severing herself, and the second time with Force Bonds with her companions, the latter of which she didn't have and the former of which she didn't do when she walked Nathema.
Regardless, it doesn't make any sense that someone who has been completely unable to feel the Force before suddenly finds it so overwhelmingly difficult to do the same thing again.