Originally posted by Damborgson
It's not hard to see why someone would argue that moving yggrdrasil would be connected with the moving of planets.This is the most recent illustration of the relation of Yggrdrasil and the 9 realms. (screw Heven, feminist piece of shit.)
Even if you take the interpretation that Abhi goes with and say that "all" Thor did was move back time, that's some genuine superman crazy bull shit feat.
Either way Yggrasil is enormous, and a very good feat any way you look at it.
Thor forced world engine to move back time.
Later Defalco retconned it by showing Odin manipulated Yggdrasil to remove Asgardians and as it saw there were no gods in Asgard, it stopped creating Ragnarok.
So in essence Thor didn't do anything.
Could you post it in the mythbusting thread?
http://www.killermovies.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=474929
Originally posted by StiltmanFTW
Could you post it in the mythbusting thread?http://www.killermovies.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=474929
And letters page from Thor 496 which states that it was all due to Odin himself (how Red Norvell survived while others like Beta Ray Bill didn't).
Originally posted by Philosophía
It truly is absolutely ridiculous. My favorite one is still the Atlantis-busting attack being blocked, but this is close for the sheer absurdity.
Yeah. I just hate the headaches that come with measuring shit underwater.
Originally posted by celeyhyga17
Missed this.I'm suggesting that Atlan was going to trigger the power as soon as it hit ground.
Aquaman caught the strike which ultimately prevented scepter from hitting ground and triggering the collapse. As the dead sea king, he had a replica that caused a similar reaction when he first woke. Definitely not as powerful, but identical in the way it was showed. Looks like a form of geokenesis. He caused an "earthquake" as stated in the comic.When Aquaman caught the scepter(true), you can kind of see the geokenesis happening. It was sort of leaking out, but nowhere near the level if it would have hit ground. I guess u can call more of a durability feat since he was sort of a conduit of that magic.
As a strength feat, I guess it's good that he stopped the dead king because he was pretty strong... But i think it's being misinterpreted as stopping the forces that sank atlantis.
I honestly don't agree with your interpretation of it, though the feat is vague enough that any argument would just go around in circles.
I will say this, though: You keep calling it a replica, when I'm not sure that's the right word. He forged the original. I don't see why he couldn't just forge another one, even if he had to use a different metal to do so. Atlantean Kings like Atlan were considered to be great sorcerers, so imbuing a scepter with the power to level a city or a continent wouldn't be beyond him imo.