Match the feat

Started by DarkSaint8511 pages

Originally posted by DeadpoolXXX
galactus is also just a receptacle for the pc. he cannot literally channel infinite amounts of pc, nor does he contain an infinite amount of pc within him.

in this arc (and according to mr. cates) the actual power cosmic that galactus has at any given time depends on the energy of the worlds he has consumed. that's why he was more powerful than ever after absorbing the energy of the 5 exotic worlds. that's also why his "bleeding life force" was directly related to "the energy of 100,000 worlds" in the scan darksaint posted.

that's also why he consumed 4 worlds to prep for his fight with the mad celestials. it made him much more powerful.

Yeah.

I am just interested in the fact that the word 'and' was omitted, plus there was no mention of the OF (which Rage and Sin have asserted Thor does not have anyway).

Like, if you are stacking things, you would say Sodom Yat fired HV, inside of which was the power of a GL, AND the Ion entity.

P5 Colossaunaut punched with the power of the Phoenix (or 20%, if you want to be technical, w/ever), AND Cytorrak.

The Infinity Gauntlet fired with the power of the Mind, Power, Reality, Soul, Space, AND Time Gems.

Moon Knight has the power of Khonshu, Mjolnir AND the Spirt of Vengeance yadda yadda...you get my point.

Here? No 'and'. And no Odin Force - which would be nice proof for Sin/Rage.

Originally posted by DeadpoolXXX
galactus is also just a receptacle for the pc. he cannot literally channel infinite amounts of pc, nor does he contain an infinite amount of pc within him.

in this arc (and according to mr. cates) the actual power cosmic that galactus has at any given time depends on the energy of the worlds he has consumed. that's why he was more powerful than ever after absorbing the energy of the 5 exotic worlds. that's also why his "bleeding life force" was directly related to "the energy of 100,000 worlds" in the scan darksaint posted.

that's also why he consumed 4 worlds to prep for his fight with the mad celestials. it made him much more powerful.

Right. How much PC he has DEPENDS ON how much energy he draws from the planets, but the PC is not DERIVED FROM the planets. But what is your source for him not being able to channel infinite amounts of PC at full power?

Originally posted by TheHulkster
Right. How much PC he has DEPENDS ON how much energy he draws from the planets, but the PC is not DERIVED FROM the planets.
i'm just saying that there is a direct relationship between the pc galactus has access to at any given time and the planets he has recently consumed. iow- the planets don't "just" nourish him physically. they give him extra power obviously.

Originally posted by TheHulkster
But what is your source for him not being able to channel infinite amounts of PC at full power?
theoretical scenarios are irrelevant. galactus does not have infinite energy. even when amped on worlds that made him stronger than ever, his power was not infinite.

Originally posted by DarkSaint85
For rage.

For Marvel there is no set-in stone future. It changes over time.

Also, King Thor's future is hundreds of billions of years in the future. Marvel 2099 can be the official cannon, and the King Thor story line can also be the official cannon. 🙂

Originally posted by Diesldude
I agree Galactus can so much more than what energy from a planet can provide. It’s like a skinny kid and a weight lifter both hungry. Give them a burger and 90 mins later the weight lifter is going to accomplish a lot more out of that burger than a skinny kid.

Also agree with your Superman example I made a similar post explaining how Superman can power the sun.

My only concern is that the lightening strike had the energy of 100k planets. It wasn’t an all out, empty your reserves attack by Thor. It was a blast that contained the energy of a 100k planets. I’m sure with immeasurable PC Thor could have produced a galaxy busting attack with even more energy than a 100k worth of planets. But that’s what took out BW.

I think we're mostly in agreement. 👆

Notice, it says the attack has the energy of a 100k devoured worlds. We're waaaay into the weeds here, but I think that:
(1) makes it clear that it's not the direct energy of the planets, because as we discussed, Galactus is an energy converter. The full-power of the solar energy Superman converted is way greater than the actual solar energy hitting his Skin.
(2) The attack also contained the full might of the Power Cosmic, which further reinforces point (1).

Originally posted by DarkSaint85
Yeah.

I am just interested in the fact that the word 'and' was omitted, plus there was no mention of the OF (which Rage and Sin have asserted Thor does not have anyway).

Like, if you are stacking things, you would say Sodom Yat fired HV, inside of which was the power of a GL, AND the Ion entity.

P5 Colossaunaut punched with the power of the Phoenix (or 20%, if you want to be technical, w/ever), AND Cytorrak.

The Infinity Gauntlet fired with the power of the Mind, Power, Reality, Soul, Space, AND Time Gems.

Moon Knight has the power of Khonshu, Mjolnir AND the Spirt of Vengeance yadda yadda...you get my point.

Here? No 'and'. And no Odin Force - which would be nice proof for Sin/Rage.

The writer said in an interview that he has the OF as per Stilt.

It's really weird that it hasn't been brought up. It's been 6 entire issues. The power of the King of Asgard is very vague. I hope it gets specified that Thor has a very small portion of the OF that he's slowly absorbing as King because Odin is still alive.

Originally posted by Rage.Of.Olympus
For Marvel there is no set-in stone future. It changes over time.

Also, King Thor's future is hundreds of billions of years in the future. Marvel 2099 can be the official cannon, and the King Thor story line can also be the official cannon. 🙂


Yeah, which is what I was wondering about - as Marvel 2099 is the set in stone future (as per recent Spidey comics), did we ever find out what happened to people like Hulk Thor etc?

If Superman is powering the sun
and
Superman's source of power is the sun

is this then in effect a perpetuum mobile?

🤪

Originally posted by Magnificent M
If Superman is powering the sun
and
Superman's source of power is the sun

is this then in effect a perpetuum mobile?

🤪

Exactly. How can Gladiator power a sun when that isn't his power source? How can Thor or anyone else on that list do this? ABHI is excited, let's all let him have his moment.

Originally posted by Magnificent M
If Superman is powering the sun
and
Superman's source of power is the sun

is this then in effect a perpetuum mobile?

🤪

Exactly

Originally posted by Magnificent M
If Superman is powering the sun
and
Superman's source of power is the sun

is this then in effect a perpetuum mobile?

🤪

Comics,man.

Deadpool has survived by eating himself iirc.

Wolverine did the same:

Anyways, how long Superman was putting out energy for this new Sun is important, as this isn't automatically a star level feat (normally...). Not that real science actually matters in comics, but...
The total energy from the Sun that strikes the Earth yearly is 1.32 petatons. The Sun releases 90.822 petatons of energy every second. There are 86,400 seconds in a day (60 seconds for 1 minute × 60 minutes for 1 hour × 24 hours, plus it is simply official). So, the Sun should release 7.8470208 zettatons of energy daily. The Sun officially releases 7.89 zettatons of energy daily, so it is certainly close enough. There are 31,557,600 seconds in a year (the above for the amount in one day, then that times 365.25 for the number of days in a year). Using the first method of seconds in a year (90.822 × 31,557,600), we get 2.866124347 yottatons of energy. Using the second method for days in a year (7.8470208 × 365.25), this calculation yields 2.86612435 yottatons of energy, and the official one (7.89 × 365.25) yields 2.8818225 yottatons of energy. All certainly close enough to the official amount of energy released by the Sun yearly, which is currently 2.87 yottatons, so everything adds up. The GBE of Earth is 57.3 zettatons, of Uranus is 2.7 yottatons, and of Jupiter is 482 yottatons. Then you have Kappa Andromedae b, a.k.a. a massive "Super-Jupiter", which has nearly 13 times the mass of Jupiter, making it one of the largest known planets.
it's right on the dividing line separating the largest planets from the smallest stars. So, it should be within the range of ninatons for its GBE, the level of destruction for the largest of planets. That's because if you see how the GBE of Jupiter is 482 yottatons, then you ask what is the GBE of Super-Jupiters? Also known as Brown Dwarf or very low “Dwarf Star” level, Super-Jupiter level refers to the destruction of Dwarf Stars, Substeller objects that have mass between the heaviest of gas giants (those like our own gas planets, Jupiter and Saturn) and that of the lightest stars. Examples include the GBE of OTS-44 at 53.2 Ninatons and the GBE of TrES2b at 557.678 Ninatons. Though, since IT'S below certain tenatons, its under the level of small stars. This page helps to grasp an understanding of Super-Jupiters:

https://www.universetoday.com/115320/could-a-planet-be-as-big-as-a-star/?

And that's not even to mention how much energy the Sun actually puts out in its entire ~10 billion year lifespan, which is 1.2 Foe, very close to that of a Supernova, which is 1 Foe.

Not that it matters, but....

*Textual diarrhoea*

😂

Originally posted by AlbertoJohnAvil
Anyways, how long Superman was putting out energy for this new Sun is important, as this isn't automatically a star level feat (normally...). Not that real science actually matters in comics, but...
The total energy from the Sun that strikes the Earth yearly is 1.32 petatons. The Sun releases 90.822 petatons of energy every second. There are 86,400 seconds in a day (60 seconds for 1 minute × 60 minutes for 1 hour × 24 hours, plus it is simply official). So, the Sun should release 7.8470208 zettatons of energy daily. The Sun officially releases 7.89 zettatons of energy daily, so it is certainly close enough. There are 31,557,600 seconds in a year (the above for the amount in one day, then that times 365.25 for the number of days in a year). Using the first method of seconds in a year (90.822 × 31,557,600), we get 2.866124347 yottatons of energy. Using the second method for days in a year (7.8470208 × 365.25), this calculation yields 2.86612435 yottatons of energy, and the official one (7.89 × 365.25) yields 2.8818225 yottatons of energy. All certainly close enough to the official amount of energy released by the Sun yearly, which is currently 2.87 yottatons, so everything adds up. The GBE of Earth is 57.3 zettatons, of Uranus is 2.7 yottatons, and of Jupiter is 482 yottatons. Then you have Kappa Andromedae b, a.k.a. a massive "Super-Jupiter", which has nearly 13 times the mass of Jupiter, making it one of the largest known planets.
it's right on the dividing line separating the largest planets from the smallest stars. So, it should be within the range of ninatons for its GBE, the level of destruction for the largest of planets. That's because if you see how the GBE of Jupiter is 482 yottatons, then you ask what is the GBE of Super-Jupiters? Also known as Brown Dwarf or very low “Dwarf Star” level, Super-Jupiter level refers to the destruction of Dwarf Stars, Substeller objects that have mass between the heaviest of gas giants (those like our own gas planets, Jupiter and Saturn) and that of the lightest stars. Examples include the GBE of OTS-44 at 53.2 Ninatons and the GBE of TrES2b at 557.678 Ninatons. Though, since IT'S below certain tenatons, its under the level of small stars. This page helps to grasp an understanding of Super-Jupiters:

https://www.universetoday.com/115320/could-a-planet-be-as-big-as-a-star/?

And that's not even to mention how much energy the Sun actually puts out in its entire ~10 billion year lifespan, which is 1.2 Foe, very close to that of a Supernova, which is 1 Foe.

hence the feat isn't as impressive.

😂 It's hilarious how this was the supposed feat that was gonna be "star level"

Originally posted by AlbertoJohnAvil
Anyways, how long Superman was putting out energy for this new Sun is important, as this isn't automatically a star level feat (normally...). Not that real science actually matters in comics, but...
The total energy from the Sun that strikes the Earth yearly is 1.32 petatons. The Sun releases 90.822 petatons of energy every second. There are 86,400 seconds in a day (60 seconds for 1 minute × 60 minutes for 1 hour × 24 hours, plus it is simply official). So, the Sun should release 7.8470208 zettatons of energy daily. The Sun officially releases 7.89 zettatons of energy daily, so it is certainly close enough. There are 31,557,600 seconds in a year (the above for the amount in one day, then that times 365.25 for the number of days in a year). Using the first method of seconds in a year (90.822 × 31,557,600), we get 2.866124347 yottatons of energy. Using the second method for days in a year (7.8470208 × 365.25), this calculation yields 2.86612435 yottatons of energy, and the official one (7.89 × 365.25) yields 2.8818225 yottatons of energy. All certainly close enough to the official amount of energy released by the Sun yearly, which is currently 2.87 yottatons, so everything adds up. The GBE of Earth is 57.3 zettatons, of Uranus is 2.7 yottatons, and of Jupiter is 482 yottatons. Then you have Kappa Andromedae b, a.k.a. a massive "Super-Jupiter", which has nearly 13 times the mass of Jupiter, making it one of the largest known planets.
it's right on the dividing line separating the largest planets from the smallest stars. So, it should be within the range of ninatons for its GBE, the level of destruction for the largest of planets. That's because if you see how the GBE of Jupiter is 482 yottatons, then you ask what is the GBE of Super-Jupiters? Also known as Brown Dwarf or very low “Dwarf Star” level, Super-Jupiter level refers to the destruction of Dwarf Stars, Substeller objects that have mass between the heaviest of gas giants (those like our own gas planets, Jupiter and Saturn) and that of the lightest stars. Examples include the GBE of OTS-44 at 53.2 Ninatons and the GBE of TrES2b at 557.678 Ninatons. Though, since IT'S below certain tenatons, its under the level of small stars. This page helps to grasp an understanding of Super-Jupiters:

https://www.universetoday.com/115320/could-a-planet-be-as-big-as-a-star/?

And that's not even to mention how much energy the Sun actually puts out in its entire ~10 billion year lifespan, which is 1.2 Foe, very close to that of a Supernova, which is 1 Foe.

You might be right, you might be wrong, I don't know, but even if you were right, there is no way anyone is going to read this copy pasted block of text. Well, h1 will but it will be made up math on his part and you won't be able to refute his made up math because you just stole this from somewhere.

I saw yottatons and numbers and johnanvilalberto and said nah, that is among the many 99 percent of posts I won't be reading today. I would rather read every other posts today but yours. I would rather read a post about Carver biting and eating his own fungus toenails over this.

Next time just link to the original so it has a chance to take root you filthy thief.

Sure, just point the "errors" in it, and I'll address it. I've already did a calc on the chains for the fun of it

very little of this requires PhD-level scientific knowledge

Originally posted by AlbertoJohnAvil
hence the feat isn't as impressive.

😂 It's hilarious how this was the supposed feat that was gonna be "star level"

Originally posted by abhilegend
😂

😂