Originally posted by FrothByteThe concrete koed Loki. If Loki was extremely durable then the concrete should have felt like soft fluffy bed.
Loki was never KO'd, and Spidey is not in Hulk's strength level. Doesn't matter if it's just concrete, it's the amount of force you hit it with that matters. After all, you can break every bone in your body if you hit water hard enough.
Originally posted by TheVaultDwellerIn SM1 he dodged flashes punch perfectly after his Spidey sense allowed him to assess everything around him without looking like a flying spitball and paper airplane. In SM2, there was that diner scene where he knew a car was coming from behind and dodged accordingly with MJ in hand. It seems like he's able to tell a direction with it.
That's kind of what I was thinking. Like if there were 20 Lokis surrounding him, his spider sense probably won't be able to pick out which is the real one. But, if they attack, his senses might tell him which direction the actual threat is coming from.
Originally posted by h1a8
It shouldn't have hurt him period, no matter who did it. I question his durability after that.
That's not what I asked you. Because you seem to be completely ignoring who was actually doing the slamming, and the enormous amount of force they've been shown to be able to exert, and just focusing on one element of the scenario. Nice dodge though.
Originally posted by Arachnid1
In SM1 he dodged flashes punch perfectly after his Spidey sense allowed him to assess everything around him without looking like a flying spitball and paper airplane. In SM2, there was that diner scene where he knew a car was coming from behind and dodged accordingly with MJ in hand. It seems like he's able to tell a direction with it.
Yeah, well that is in line with what I was thinking. Like I said, it might not necessarily tell him exactly "Loki number 3 is the right one", but should they attack, and therefore threaten his well-being, his sense would say, "Okay, the real danger is coming from that specific direction. The rest is just a distraction.", for example.
Originally posted by TheVaultDwellerSo being slammed into a giant comfy bed by Hulk would actually ko a human? Or being slammed into a bunch of foam would actually ko a human?
That's not what I asked you. Because you seem to be completely ignoring who was actually doing the slamming, and the enormous amount of force they've been shown to be able to exert, and just focusing on one element of the scenario. Nice dodge though.
Originally posted by h1a8
So being slammed into a giant comfy bed by Hulk would actually ko a human? Or being slammed into a bunch of foam would actually ko a human?
Still dodging the question. Hulk slamming a human into a bed, with the same level of force he was slamming Loki, would most likely destroy the bed and kill the human. And by all means, prove that being extremely durable means concrete would would feel like "foam" to said individual, considering one is a solid substance whereas the other has a degree of elasticity and give to it. Once you do that, and actually answer my question, I will continue addressing yours.
Originally posted by h1a8
Harder and more durable are two different things.Water is more durable than concrete.
With enough water and pressure, water can destroy steel.
Ah, so now it is "with enough pressure". So why can't it be the same with concrete? With enough force a concrete block can KO Superman. Heck, if a piece of styrofoam hit you at 300 mph it's still going to hurt you like crazy.
Originally posted by FrothByte
Yes, Hulk slamming a human full force into a comfy bed would kill a human.
His example is also flawed for another reason. An increase in personal durability won't miraculously make a totally different object change from being stiff and rigid (concrete) to being supple and elastic (a bed mattress).