CodeCCLL
He/Him- 3,338
- 2,258
Public Vote
Option 1: Comparable to Big Bang (time and space) (technically greatest explosion seen since the beginning of the universe) [Baseline Low 2-C]
Option 2: Comparable to Big Bang (space) (technically greatest explosion seen since the beginning of the universe) [Baseline 3-A]
https://vsbattles.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Black_Cat49/_Tensura_WN:_Breakdown_Nostalgia
Option 3: Comparable to this explosion. (This may be the largest known explosion in the Universe since the Big Bang). [Very very very above of 4-B Baseline (5 × 10^54 Joule)]
Option 4: Comparable to a standard multi-directional explosion that destroys the solar system, starting from the surface of the planet. [Very Above of 4-B Baseline (1.053x10^47 Joule)]
vsbattles.fandom.com
How so this is useless nvm
I actually have a scan that will let us do that even without them. Slimereader missed it entirely and OTL just messed up
Isn't it actually a worthy thing? I mean, we are keep discussing meaning of different kanjis and how everything depends on context. Our language barrier doesn't let us fully grasp author's intentions. But if Japanese fans see feats as universal, it should actually hold some value for us. If they see characters as universal, then feats like Zalario destroying dimensions may be interpreted in the old way.
https://natalie.mu/comic/pp/tsukimichi
but cool tsukimichi author and Fuse double interview
What should Breakdown Nostalgia be considered?Other shounen animes : characters trains to learn new techniques and gain more power
Tensura: characters trains more to control ,lower their power and their attacks areas so they don't end up destroying the world
Option 1: Comparable to Big Bang (time and space) (technically greatest explosion seen since the beginning of the universe) [Baseline Low 2-C]
Option 2: Comparable to Big Bang (space) (technically greatest explosion seen since the beginning of the universe) [Baseline 3-A]
https://vsbattles.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Black_Cat49/_Tensura_WN:_Breakdown_Nostalgia
Option 3: Comparable to this explosion. (This may be the largest known explosion in the Universe since the Big Bang). [Very very very above of 4-B Baseline (5 × 10^54 Joule)]
Option 4: Comparable to a standard multi-directional explosion that destroys the solar system, starting from the surface of the planet. [Very Above of 4-B Baseline (1.053x10^47 Joule)]