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Not even remotely what I saidThat doesn't make sense; your suggestion is to ignore the consistency of the other scenes in favor of one with a better pixel scale.
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Not even remotely what I saidThat doesn't make sense; your suggestion is to ignore the consistency of the other scenes in favor of one with a better pixel scale.
Thats so true. Even in the manga, multiple characters have used the word “world” to refer to a specific region or society 1, 2, 3, 4, rather than the entire world itself. That’s why this scene exists, to make it clear that "world” this time actually refers to the whole world.Second of all, the word "world" famously has a lot of definitions most of which don't really help here. World can straight up just refer to a specific region, society, or just inhabitants of earth. Which is pretty detrimental as even a kilometer around 1 kilometer in diameter can cause an extinction event.
I meant more that without a sensible point of reference, calculations should contain standard dimensions for the object in question or be consistent with the destructive capabilities of the narrative. If this type of disproportionate object is accepted, it would be good to clarify this, but I will trust your judgment.Shouldn't even need to have a thread to be reinforced if we're being honest like unless you have some sort of stated distance its just that you shouldn't be picking some random arbitrary distance to just throw in a calc to use anyways especially for something like this when the perspective used isn't one that shouldn't be taken for use in calcs due to the obvious inconsistencies
You should evaluate the context of the sentence itself rather than the general context. The term “world” is polysemous. You would need to evaluate the situation and the sentence to understand exactly what it is referring to.Thats so true. Even in the manga, multiple characters have used the word “world” to refer to a specific region or society 1, 2, 3, 4, rather than the entire world itself. That’s why this scene exists, to make it clear that "world” this time actually refers to the whole world.
Also heavily agree to this post.
Basically. To put it simply, whether or not it's narratively consistent does not have any impact on whether the method used for the calculation is correct.If I understand David's point correctly, he is saying that regardless of whether this makes sense narratively, you cannot support the calc. because the method used to obtain the magnitude is inflated or incorrect. Supporting it with narrative is, in effect, supporting a calculation with incorrect numbers just because it is similar to things in the past. Even if the author and animators had a different idea, they didn't represent it as they should have in order to represent their idea.
Actually, I think it should.Shouldn’t this be a calc thread?
It absolutely should, I threw it into CRT section out of habit since I mostly post thoseShouldn’t this be a calc thread?
Can you please move thissnip
This doesn’t even apply to the meteor that was summoned by Doom’s gate, as it’s impossible to see a meteor that's even 100 meters to the naked eye before it stars ablation (burning up via hitting the atmosphere). According the source you posted, the closest a meteor can be to you if you’re directly under it is roughly 100 km, since ablation starts between 85-110km. Using pythagorean theorem you’ll find that the farthest you can see a meteor from the ground looking straight ahead is 1,120 km because that’s the farthest you see even tiny meteorites burn up (the earth is curved after all, you can see meteors ablating at the horizon). FYI the Clover Kingdom's diameter is roughly 1,842.89 km which is well above 1,120 km limit that was listed given how it was summoned at the end of the kingdom yet still visble from everywhere within said kingdom.To be all fair, even really small meteors can be seen from almost 1200km, so I think a 100 meters meteor wouldn't be hard to see
The values don't have to be the same for the issue to be the same.
The core problem is that animators and artists usually don't take these distances, whether it's the height of the atmosphere or the distance from the moon, instead inflating sizes for dramatic and stylistic effects. And THAT then creates inconsistencies such as this.
So saying "it's much smaller than the moon" doesn't save it from suffering from the exact same problem.
I used the scene that gives us THE most direct size comparison for the meteor and even explained why that is the case.
Say less. I already posted it in the translation request thread, just waiting to hear back so I have absolutely no issue getting the text evaluated.First of all, your constant use of untranslated novel over the source material is heavily questionable both due to the uncertain canonicity and a lack of a proper translation. So please first clear that up.
No need to guess what Conrad meant considering his initial plan was to destroy the country down to it's continental foundation. He wanted to wipe everyone clean, so if's targeting the country + the world, then his logically that destruction would spread farther than said country so surface swiping is a reasonable estimate, and I'd argue even a low ball. Given how this meteor was visible to the whole country before even entering the atmosphere, it should have the potential to do that.Second of all, the word "world" famously has a lot of definitions most of which don't really help here. World can straight up just refer to a specific region, society, or just inhabitants of earth. Which is pretty detrimental as even a kilometer around 1 kilometer in diameter can cause an extinction event.
So the statement itself could have a lot of different meanings all of which would be comparably valid, leaving us no reason to assume it's straight up surface wiping.
That's assuming he's surface wiping which we can't prove. I mean the simple fact we don't use thy 646 petatons value inherently tells us that we don't consider the meteor to be a surface wiper.
Furthermore, even if we did assume that, the 646 petaton value is made strictly using our real world's values while BCs earth has a vastly different geography. So even if we were to take the most generous route it still wouldn't mean we can use that value for reference.
3 problems with this.
1. I already addressed this. I'm not suggesting the meteor caps at 100 megatons, but that the size is inconsistent and the angsized value can't be used as a result. So at best you're not actually addressing any arguments here while at worst you're further supporting my claim by pointing out how the calculated values are completely off.
The fact the meteor can be seen from from anywhere in the country with the naked eye before even entering the earth's atmosphere, tells us it has a lot of material, and it does burn when it actually hit's the atmosphere but because it's so massive it's damn near impossible to even see the size change. Furthermore, Asta was halting it's momentum with the twin dividers so he was slowing it's descent.2. That aside this line of thinking just outright doesn't work because it assumes our values are perfect when many of them are just standard assumptions and measurements. The meteor could be far denser than just basic average meteors and it could be flying far faster than the calculated 17474.31 m/s which would all make up for the difference in values. Hell we don't even know what speed the 100 megaton value from your link used.
I mean generally speaking 90% of meteors completely vaporize before even hitting earth while this one doesn't even seem to be getting smaller which on its own implies it's more durable and likely denser than a standard meteor.
3. It could just not be applicable for calculations. For example, we wouldn't say a human moving at relativistic+ speed only having 7-A kinetic energy makes the calc from because they're stated to have star level AP. We would just say that rel+ speed isn't usable to scale their AP. Meaning the results of a calculation can be VASTLY below the "narratively intended" destruction. However that does NOT mean we should use inaccurate measurements to force a calculation into meeting our expectations.
It doesn't seem to be for dramatic purposed given how it' suppose to show what is being seen from a human's perspective. In addition to exhibiting the accurate behavior you would see of a meteor.It lighting up the sky fits exactly the idea of it being drawn bigger for dramatic purposes. This line just repeats what's already been addressed.
Um no, like I pointed out earlier, the most direct size comparison is this shot below which is orthagonal to the screen, not the hot you used earlier.Like I said before it's the only actual scene that gives us a direct size comparison. You saying this scene is inconsistent is no different from me saying the angsizing is inconsistent. The only difference is that pixel scaling is way more reliable than angsizing.
And it's not "impossible" to portray Asta and the meteor in the same frame while staying true to their sizes.
There is no glare covering Asta in the shot above. And the anti-magic trail is not the same width a black divider, it's much larger you can't even see it. Asta's radiating a ton of anti-magic since he was given a substantial boost by Liebe, it' litreally leaking out of him. The imperial divider sword is canocally a sword of light, so when it's not being drowned out by anti-magic it glares. Neither of the swords or Asta are distinguishable, all we see is a trail of anti-magic that eclipses Asata and all other features with the exception of the imperial sword when it glares.Because there's a giant glare of light completely covering Asta and his giant swords are stuck inside of the meteor.
The only thing we can truly distinguish there to use for reference is the width of the anti magic trail. Which is actually detrimental because unless the trail coming off of Astas body is for absolutely unknown reasons several hundred times wider than Asta himself and his anti magic sword, the shot would still make meteor would still be nowhere near even 1 kilometer.
Actually this shows the trap behind Asta which shouldn't be much wider than his body and swords is comparable in width to the swords. Hell I'd say it's almost identical in width.
So under the assumption the width of the trail behind asta is comparable to the width of Astas body, this actually completely supports the 100 meter size…
Meanwhile Asta himself but being visible is against, completely fine because he's covered in a giant glare of light from the top and in the anti magic train from the bottom. So this argument actually just solidifies the OP.
Even if I were to steelman this and say Conrad wants to surface wipe, that wouldn't justify the use of calculation with an invalid measurement method. Like I pointed out already, we can't justify using incorrect calculations by them fitting our expectations.
Like I stated earlier, Asta isn't covered by light in this scene yet he still isn't visible. So again, the shot you used for comparison dratically deflates the calc.Both of these scenes show Asta completely covered by light and therefore invisible. However even if that wasn't the case, that would only mean the meteor size is inconsistent and wouldn't justify using the angsized size.
All ablation does here is make it brighter which is a question of luminosity not size.This doesn’t even apply the meteor that was summoned by Doom’s gate, as it’s impossible to see a meteor that's even 100 meters to the naked eye before it stars ablation (burning up via hitting the atmosphere)
That's not what the source says at all….According the source you posted, the closest a meteor can be to you if you’re directly under it is roughly 100 km, since ablation starts between 85-11km.
And I already told you that it's not. It doesn't matter whether it's a moon or a meteor or a galaxy. Key problem is that animators aren't searching up cosmic distances to accurately draw these objects and instead inflate them for dramatic and stylistic reasons.AS stated noted issue is you're comparing a large meteor to the moon.
Except they're 2 vastly different scenes. This does not even remotely imply the animators were angsizing the objectively correct size it should appear exactly 100 kilometers above the ground.The animators specifically did take the distance in the account given that they're the same studio animated the Gremmy meteor scene correct? When Gremmy summoned the meteor it was already ablating which is consistent with how a celestial body like that would behave, unlike the Doom's Gate meteor that was summoned and completely emerged + descended before even entering the atmosphere and ablating.
This is extremely misleading. Yes, we do get different values when measuring different shots. However not all shots give us equally good look at an object. So what we use is the most direct shot that leaves the least amount of room for error.Also if you ang size any element in animation studio you're going to get variation from scene to scene, at the point you might as well nuke pixel scaling in general.
Sure, and the trail left by Astas body is equally comparable to the meteor as his swords would imply in the scene which is pixel scaled in the OP.um no, you did not. The most direct size comparison is this scene where Asta and the meteor are in an elevational view, which require no weird angular scaling.
Yes because he's covered by a trail of anti magic.And as stated earlier Asta's features are indistinguishable
Alrighty then.Say less. I already posted it in the translation request thread, just waiting to hear back so I have absolutely no issue getting the text evaluated.
So, not surface wiping. So the values isn't even "narratively consistent" like you said, but rather much higher than what Conrad wanted to do.No need to guess what Conrad meant considering his initial plan was to destroy the country down to it's continental foundation.
That just isn't true. If a calc that close to surface wiping was made for a feat that's accepted to surface wipe, ESPECIALLY if it was considered a lowball, the feat would just be scaled to surface wiping.![]()
We didn't we didn't use 646 petatons is because we have calc that was a reasonable low ball.
Having 1 similarly shaped country really doesn't prove the entire planet has comparably large geography.And even if BC has varying geography, we have countries like the land of the sun which is shaped like japan and is BC's version of Japan, so the results shouldn't be too different.
Man saying they "accurately animated the mechanics" when literally all they did was make the meteor burn is just being misleading. They literally just animated the scene pretty much 1:1 to manga. Same way the same studio animated Madaras meteor 1:1 with the manga and it wasn't burning.Considering Studio Perriot animated the mechanics of Gremmy's meteor accurately the same should be extended to SotWK. They accurately illustrated the ablation mechanics.
This doesn't in any way address the argument I made which you're replying to. I don't know if you accidentally replied to the wrong part of my comment but this reply doesn't address what I said in the slightest.The fact the meteor can be seen from from anywhere in the country with the naked eye before even entering the earth's atmosphere, tells us it has a lot of material, and it does burn when it actually hit's the atmosphere but because it's so massive it' damn near impossible to even see the size change. Furthermore, Asta was halting it's momentum with the twin dividers so he was slowing it's descent.
Is it? Or is it supposed to portray the situation as dire? You're looking at this as a powerscaler searching for some powerscaling purpose but that's just simply not what it is.It doesn't seem to be for dramatic purposed given how it' suppose to show what is being seen from a human's perspective. In addition to exhibiting the accurate behavior you would see of a meteor.
I'll say this one final time.Um no, like I pointed out earlier, the most direct size comparison is this shot below which is orthagonal to the screen, not the hot you used earlier.
![]()
Yeah but his swords are stuck inside of the meteor and his body is covered in anti magic.There is no glare covering Asta in the shot above.
Can you prove this?And the anti-magic trail is not the ame width a black divider, it's much larger you can't even see it.
The swords are stuck inside of the meteor and Astas entire body is covered in anti magic.The imperial divider sword is canocally a sword of light, so when it's not being drowned out by anti-magic it glares. Neither of the swords or Asta are distinguishable, all we see is a trail of ant-magic that eclipses Asata and all other features with the exception of the imperial sword when it glares.
![]()
Okay first of all, yes they're indistinguishable BECAUSE THEY'RE COVERED IN ANTIMAGIC. That is why I used a shot where he's NOT COVERED BY IT.This doesn't support the 100 meter size in the lightest. Not only is Asta and other relevant features indistinguishable without the glare, but 100 meters or even 20km would till be too small to see without ablation via naked eye much les above the atmosphere proper.
Yeah and like I said in both this and my previous comment, he's not visible because he's completely covered in anti magic.Like I stated earlier, Asta isn't covered by light in this scene yet he still isn't visible. So again, the shot you used for comparison dratically deflates the calc.
Lost the notifications of this thread but David seems to have responded my part, but I want to note that the Chelyabinsk was seen even from 100 to 200 km awayIt's talking about meteors that get destroyed even before hitting the ground lol. Plus, the biggest meteor to hit earth in modern days was the Chelyabinsk meteor, which was 18 meters long
I'm currently leaning towards OP. As it was already stated by others, narrative consistency point that was brought up later doesn't make sense either because size isn't only defining factor in destructive capability.
Can I write you down as agreeing with the thread or are you still waiting for more counter-arguments/discussion?This seems fine to me
Ablation makes it visible to the naked eye, you can't see the object without it. The point i'm stressing is that there's a giant door in space with, and everyone in the kingdom can see that door an it's features as well as the meteor it released. Literally above the lower thermosphere. Do you think you could see a 100-200 meter door 160+ kilometers in the sky, would you even be even to tell there's a door?All ablation does here is make it brighter which is a question of luminosity not size.
So unless you can show me some research stating that even a 100 meter meteor is invisible 100.1 km above the ground when a 20 meter meter is visible 100 km above the ground, this argument really doesn't hold up.
(ntm the whole "it's invisible" argument falls under the same issue of objects having inflated size for dramatic purposes)
That's not what the source says at all…
And i'm saying that we should stop treating the meteor like a cosmic distance. 100-1000k is much closer to the planet then the moon, considering the moon is considered our closest astronomical object. Bleach isn't focusing on the moon or sun for scale. THEY'RE NOT the focus of the scenes you're using fas examples, while the scene the Doom Gate cene that's used for the calc DOES use the meteor as the focus.And I already told you that it's not. It doesn't matter whether it's a moon or a meteor or a galaxy. Key problem is that animators aren't searching up cosmic distances to accurately draw these objects and instead inflate them for dramatic and stylistic reasons.
How are they vastly different scenes? They're both scenes have a meteor as the focus, not some background astrological object. If the door and meteor are a 100 meters, why can they clearly be viewed by people on the ground despite the fact they're both located in space? and why are they both described a large object in space that everyone can see in the kingdom below?Except they're 2 vastly different scenes. This does not even remotely imply the animators were angsizing the objectively correct size it should appear exactly 100 kilometers above the ground.
If they did pay that level attention then we wouldn't have the shots that show the meteor only around 100 meters wide would we?
(which is the Asta the actual case since it wasn't focused on size)Now this might be dismissed to be a case where a character is only visible for the watcher so we know where the character is, rather than to show the size of an object
The close up scene are meant to show Asta's location, and not focus on the size of the objects, hence why they're not specs, so why exactly is this so hard for you to follow or even comprehend?but I don't believe this is the case here. Unlike situations like those where the argument would actually be invalid, here Asta (or rather his swords and wings) is VERY large, nowhere near the small speck that he should be if they just wanted to show his location.
How is this misleading? Your entire argument hinges on the shots that don't focus on size, while ignoring the shots that do focus on size.This is extremely misleading. Yes, we do get different values when measuring different shots. However not all shots give us equally good look at an object. So what we use is the most direct shot that leaves the least amount of room for error.
And in the situation where different shots seem to be equally good, we simply use the average of the results. This works because the difference is usually relatively small and not 0.1km vs 160km.
So yes different shots give different results but no, that doesn't mean we have to nuke pixel scaling in general at all.
Again if we focus on shots that focus on size, and not the character we get the proper scale of the object. Whenever we see Asta from the perspective of the people on the ground, he looks like cluster of light, and a trail of anti-magic. Both clusters of light and trails of anti-magic dwarf Asta's physical stature in size since it's being emitted by him. Again, the Doom's Gate door + meteor in space is visible to everyone on the surfaceSure, and the trail left by Astas body is equally comparable to the meteor as his swords would imply in the scene which is pixel scaled in the OP.
So again unless Asta is making trails hundreds of times wider than his actual body for no reason, this scene further proves the meteor is in the hundreds of meters, not hundreds of kilometers.
Yes because he's covered by a trail of anti magic.
So, not surface wiping. So the values isn't even "narratively consistent" like you said, but rather much higher than what Conrad wanted to do.
That just isn't true. If a calc that close to surface wiping was made for a feat that's accepted to surface wipe, ESPECIALLY if it was considered a lowball, the feat would just be scaled to surface wiping.
I mean that is essentially what's going on with Toneri. Him throwing the moon gives 5-C+ values but since he stated it would have completely destroyed the planet we just scale him straight to 5-B.
Having 1 similarly shaped country really doesn't prove the entire planet has comparably large geography.
Man saying they "accurately animated the mechanics" when literally all they did was make the meteor burn is just being misleading. They literally just animated the scene pretty much 1:1 to manga. Same way the same studio animated Madaras meteor 1:1 with the manga and it wasn't burning.
And even if they didn't blatantly just animate exactly what's in the manga, meteors burning when close to earth is common knowledge. That does not in any way even remotely imply that they purposely angle sized the meteor to be 100% accurate from 80-110km away.
1. Your first argument suggests the meter could far dense, that's cool and all could be true. However, we're simply told that it's a meteor. So we don't need to make an other assumptions about it's makeup other than it's a large rock. You were saying that it's density/makeup can alter it's speed ect and i'm saying we don't need to guestimate. The point they're trying to communicate is that it's a very big rock and he wants to wreck the world, so we can just go off of that.This doesn't in any way address the argument I made which you're replying to. I don't know if you accidentally replied to the wrong part of my comment but this reply doesn't address what I said in the slightest.
Is it? Or is it supposed to portray the situation as dire? You're looking at this as a powerscaler searching for some powerscaling purpose but that's just simply not what it is
You can literally apply this exact logic to celestial bodies.
"It's not meant to be dramatic or cool, it's meant to show how big the moon is from the perspective of people on the ground. This just proves the moon is 20x bigger than our real moon"
I'll say this one final time.
1. This shot is not better than the shot pixel scaled in the OP
2. This shot doesn't help you because Asta is covered in anti-magic. You can't say he's "so small in comparison that he's invisible" because he's literally covered.
And they're so tiny that you can't even see them, The swords aren't even that width of the sword doesn't even cover Asta's full height. They're long yes, but not THAT wide. Nobody is seeing the width of black divider or the imperial word in space from the the surface of the planet.Yeah but his swords are stuck inside of the meteor and his body is covered in anti magic.
Absolutely, the swords don't even cover Asta's full height (close) unlike the giant Black Divide he created when he fought Naalith. Black Divider does not leak anti-magic. In fact it's a sword that doesn't leak and condenses anti-magic into a solid form to cut things down. When Asta first tried to use Black Divider he had issues make it take shape since it kept leaking ant-magic however, after the elf arc he no longer has that issue. So all the anti-magic we're seeing is leaking from Asta's body and away from the sword which has always been the case.Can you prove this?
The anti-magic that's leaking flows away from Asta's body, not towards the swords. And those swords aren't even visible in the posted scene.The swords are stuck inside of the meteor and Astas entire body is covered in anti magic.
And ima say this again. the leaking anti-magic is flowing away from Asta's body, not towards the swords.Okay first of all, yes they're indistinguishable BECAUSE THEY'RE COVERED IN ANTIMAGIC. That is why I used a shot where he's NOT COVERED BY IT.
Meteors by definition become visible when they make contact with the atmosphere this "meteor" was visible before it even entered the atmosphere and the door that spawned it was too.Second of all, I already asked you this before and I'm asking you again, prove that the meteor couldn't be visible like that. You keep claiming that it's be invisible unless it's this arbitrary size without providing any evidence at all. Meanwhile others have already sent you research and calculations proving that even far smaller meteors sub-100m in diameter can be seen from all across a country.
And last but not least, you have once again not actually addressed the argument I made. Instead of addressing what I said you just repeated the same thing for the 3rd time in the same reply. I really don't want to sound rude but all this does is unnecessarily stretch out the comments, making them harder to follow for others, and waste time.
we determined ang sizing shots shots of things in space is inconsistent and gives inaccurate results, especially applying for this case as both BC and Bleach were done by the same studio. These shots are usually made for dramatic effects and style rather than to showcase the actual size of an object.
Now this might be dismissed to be a case where a character is only visible for the watcher so we know where the character is, rather than to show the size of an object but I don't believe this is the case here. Unlike situations like those where the argument would actually be invalid, here Asta (or rather his swords and wings) is VERY large, nowhere near the small speck that he should be if they just wanted to show his location. One might also defend it saying it is a perspective shot but that is not the case because with perspective shots things of the same size extending away from the POV shrink in pixel count. And we see Astas sword remains essentially identical throughout so we can safely say the visible size isn't messed up by perspective.
Yeah and like I said in both this and my previous comment, he's not visible because he's completely covered in anti magic.
Regardless of whether the meteor was 1000 kilometers or 50 meters in diameter, Asta still wouldn't be visible because his anti magic is undeniably fully covering his body in that shot. So while the shot I used in the OP blatantly proves the meteor isn't that much bigger than Asta, this shot at best can't prove anything because we can't quantify how much wider the trail is compared to Astas body, and at worst is only about as wide as Asta and further proves that the meteor is in the 100 meter range.
Your own edit where you overlapped these 2 shots implies the latter is the case.
From what I found (and even in the link you posted) it's stated it approached earth undetected until atmospheric entry.Lost the notifications of this thread but David seems to have responded my part, but I want to note that the Chelyabinsk was seen even from 100 to 200 km away
And I'm telling you that the only real issue with visibility without ablation is light or the lack of, not size. Ablation literally reduces the size of meteors by vaporizing them (vaporization so intense 90% of meteors don't even reach the ground) so this has nothing to do with their size.Ablation makes it visible to the naked eye, you can't see the object without it. The point i'm stressing is that there's a giant door in space with, and everyone in the kingdom can see that door an it's features as well as the meteor it released.
I don’t know, do you have any research or calculations that we could use to determine so?Literally above the lower thermosphere. Do you think you could see a 100-200 meter door 160+ kilometers in the sky, would you even be even to tell there's a door?
Yes ablation occurs in those ranges. But that doesn't mean that's "the closest a meteor can get to you".It was a typo I meant 85-110 km z(not 11km) and i'm saying this article says ablation occurs with the ranges I stated.
I'm sorry but this outright does not address my argument. I already told you many times that the distance IS NOT THE ISSUE and you keep repeating the same size argument over and over again.And i'm saying that we should stop treating the meteor like a cosmic distance. 100-1000k is much closer to the planet then the moon, considering the moon is considered our closest astronomical object. Bleach isn't focusing on the moon or sun for scale. THEY'RE NOT the focus of the scenes you're using fas examples, while the scene the Doom Gate cene that's used for the calc DOES use the meteor as the focus.
They're 2 different characters from 2 different series using 2 different abilities to achieve 2 different results.How are they vastly different scenes?
They're both scenes that deal with meteor drops and what happens when you drop them.
Again I'll say it one final time. You're not addressing my argument.If the door and meteor are a 100 meters, why can they clearly be viewed by people on the ground despite the fact they're both located in space? and why are they both described a large object in space that everyone can see?
I think you're confused here. Him BEING a speck would tell us it's just showing us his location.You even said:
(which is where Asta the actual case since it wasn't focused on ize)
Then go against what you originally aid:
The close up scene are meant to show Asta's location, and not focus on the size of the objects, hence why they're not specs, so why exactly is this exactly so hard for you to follow?
I explain how it's misleading in the very section you're replying to.How is this misleading?
Do you have any evidence for this? If you can prove to me the trails behind Asta when he moves are like 2 kilometers wide then sure I'm open to it.Both clusters of light and trails of anti-magic dwarf Asta's physical stature in size since it's being emitted by him.
I think you don't understand what surface wiping refers to here. It's not about wiping out the surface of a country but the entire surface of an entire planet.How does destroying the country down to it' continental foundations not imply destroying surface at bare minimum? Earlier in the series we weaker have attacks that straight up said there wouldn't be anything left
So, you were wrong about the surface wiping being something that's accepted which is MY point.Then that's something that would need to discussed later then. My main point is that Conrad intended to use a meteor to wipe out the world.
We don't just randomly make assumptions.That doesn't mean we can't make logical assumption given how we still use averages of the our own planet to make calcs for fictional series . IIRC, even in Naruto, the moon hollow. Internally it's nothing like ours yet we still use averages to scale it, do we not?
Once again this does not address the argument I'm making in the section you're replying to.There aren't any crazy inconsistencies with the summoning. Studio animators know that a giant door and a meteor is visible outside of the planet's atmosphere. I'm pretty sure they have a decent inkling of the sizes they're drawing.
I'm not making any assumptions. I'm pointing out that you are.1. Your first argument suggests the meter could far dense, that's cool and all could be true. However, we're simply told that it's a meteor. So we don't need to make an other assumptions about it's makeup other than it's a large rock. You were saying that it's density/makeup can alter it's speed ect and i'm saying we don't need to guestimate. The point they're trying to communicate is that it's a very big rock and he wants to wreck the world, so we can just go off of that.
Actually this would most likely cause the meteor to appear to shrink even faster. Normally a meteor would be getting closer to earth which would make it appear larger (since the closer an object is the larger it appears). However since Asta stops it, it means it won't be appearing any bigger as a result of getting closer and instead should just be shrinking due to vaporization.2. You also said that 90% of meteors vaporize before hitting earth, and this one doesn't seem to get smaller. What I said was the meteor's descent was being slowed by Asta hence why it didn't seem to get smaller.
That is not correct. 6-12 kilometers is the size of the meteor when it hit earth and it's based on the craters and other geological evidence on earth.I also wonder why that's even relevant? A meteor of the size we're discussing wouldn't even evaporate in the earth' atmosphere considering we've been truck by large meteors in the pat since it they didn't "burn up" like the meteor from the Permian impact which is suggested to be between 6-12 km wide.
Is the narrative standpoint is "If you take the approximate distance at which a celestial object begins to burn up when approaching earth, measure the ratio between the height of the screen and the diameter of the meteor, you can use a mathematical formula that tells us the meteor is 160 kilometers!"Come again? I'm looking at this from a narrative stand point.
Which doesn't give us any information that could allow us to measure the difference between him and the meteor. Ultimately making it a big useless.And i'll say this one final time for you to understand:
1.Whenever Asta is portrayed from the viewpoint of the spectator (like the citizens on the surface of the planet) he is shown as a cluster of light and trail of anti-magic.
Because Asta leaves a trail of light and anti magic while the meteor is burning, which emits a ton of light that'd further make Asta difficult to see.2. NO one and I mean NO one from the planet is seeing Asta and the meteor in the detail at scale you initially poste
No it doesn't. Nothing even remotely suggests the perspective that gives us 0 points of reference is what conveys the size of the meteor. It makes much more sense for a scene with a direct point of reference to do that. The only thing saying that the from-earth perspective is what "conveys the size" is you.. As I stated your entire argument relies on dismissing any scene that is meant to convey the scale of these objects and that's the problem I have with your approach.
Yes because for the last time, in that show the sword are INSIDE OF THE METEOR. Of course a sword inside of a meteor won't be visible outside the meteor…And they're so tiny that you can't even see them,
This doesn't even attempt to prove the trail left behind Asta is unfathomably wider than Asta or his sword…Absolutely, the swords don't even cover Asta's full height (close) unlike the giant Black Divide he created when he fought Naalith. Black Divider does not leak anti-magic. In fact it's a sword that doesn't leak and condenses anti-magic into a solid form to cut things down. When Asta first tried to use Black Divider he had issues make it take shape since it kept leaking ant-magic however, after the elf arc he no longer has that issue. So all the anti-magic we're seeing is leaking from Asta's body and away from the sword which has always been the case.
So? I'm saying ASTA is covered by the AM trail (which objectively MUST be the case because the trail is visibly touching the meteor) and his swords are inside the meteor.The anti-magic that's leaking flows away from Asta's body, not towards the swords. And those swords aren't even visible in the posted scene.
No that's not what the link says at all. Like it straight up doesn't even mention visibility it just explains that a meteor is considered a meteoroid before it enters the atmosphere of a planet…Meteors by definition become visible when they make contact with the atmosphere this "meteor" was visible before it even entered the atmosphere and the door that spawned it was too.
No. I talked about Asta not being visible due to being covered by AM and light, and you replied by talking about the glare and the visibility of a meteor before ablation.I did address the argument you made.
I specifically explained why this counter argument does not apply to this issue. I genuinely don't understand why do you keep acting like I switched up or something when I literally mentioned a potential counter-argument so I can explain why it doesn't apply here.You yourself even even stated that it could be dismissed by saying that scene is not mean to focus on size, but then immediately you turn around and use a scene that's NOT focused on size to support your argument?
They're not used to debunk the DG calc. They're used to showcase this exact problem has already been addressed recently.Edit: The Bleach scenes that are used to "debunk" the Doom's Gate calc
I explained that in the OP and several times in the comments. Please reread those comments because I'm really not going to keep going back and forth repeating what I already said.do not use the sun or the moon as the focus of the scene while the shots of the image that's used for the Doom's day calc DOES use the meteor as the focus of the scene. So why are we even comparing them in the first place?
Honestly you can probably just skip the response and go straight to the summary.Hey all, i'll try to post my response to @DavidTPPM later tonight or (possibly tomorrow night) and then I can post my summary.
Yeah no hurry, glad to know you didn't forget about thisI'm currently tied with irl obligations that take priority, and it's a heavy week but just know that this is still on my radar. Thanks all.
Fa Jin + Gear shift GG >Asta would be still 200 exatons more of less if we use all the multipliers in the verse page and the verse is still waiting for the manga to end
For the rest of the thread, do as you please, we can pile this up with the "lightspeed cap" and after the ending, solved everything
Desire Amp GGFa Jin + Gear shift GG >
Are you even reading the thread? Wait for the final post of david and insigniaim pretty sure this can be applied
Do you know when approximately you'll be free to drop your summary?Hey all, i'll try to post my response to @DavidTPPM later tonight or (possibly tomorrow night) and then I can post my summary. I'm currently tied with irl obligations that take priority, and it's a heavy week but just know that this is still on my radar. Thanks all.
bout to post in like 5-10 min.Do you know when approximately you'll be free to drop your summary?
The OP argues that Studio Pierrot’s inconsistent scaling of celestial background objects like the sun and moon in TYBW anime are just for a dramatic effect and should call into question the ang sizing of Doom’s Gate meteor since-----
The OP argues that the scene in space where Asta slashes the meteor shows the true scaling and that all others are exaggerations. They insist that the scene they used to “debunk” the calc was the best scene to get the most accurate scale. They also suggest that this could possibly be dismissed as a scene where Asta is the focus (and not the size of the meteor) so us (the watchers) can know where he is. However, they go on to say that is not the case since Asta and the size of his twin dividers are not the specs that they should be in comparison to the meteor-----
Inconsistent Measurements
When evaluating the size of objects depicted by an author, it's important to consider that the author may have depicted them inconsistently for artistic reasons. A primary example occurs if the author has to show a large object and a comparatively small object at the same time. In such a case they might have to depict the two objects as similar in size for the sake of making both easily visible to the reader. When deciding on the appropriate size scaling to use, such inconsistencies should be taken into account.
an absurdly huge door appeared in mid-air.
"What the-...!!" Asta was lost for words upon seeing such a thing. Shortly after, he was assaulted by a powerful gust of wind and was blown out of the sky, landing in the middle of a forest.
"I will not give up. I will not give up... Asta..." While repeating Asta's words from that time, Conrad turned to the door and began floating upwards. Simultaneously, a pitch-black hole appeared directly in front of the door, and out of it began to peek a gigantic meteorite, big enough that it could be seen no matter where you were in the kingdom.
It began to descend.”
“This would be the end of everything.
Given Conrad was using Forbidden Magic and sacrificing his very life, he had little time remaining.
Before he died, he would save this country.... no, this world...!!
"I.... I won't give up either!!" Asta, lying face down in the middle of the forest, picked up his Demon-Slayer sword once more.”
Reference For Common Feats:Final Result
Conrad's Doom's Gate = 594.1 petatons (High 6-A)
Meteor's Force = 1.626996e+19 kg (Class E)
However, in the case of a ground-based explosion where the explosion is generated on the ground, we use the following formula:
W = R^3*((27136*P+8649)^(1/2)/13568-93/13568)^2, where W is the yield in tons of TNT, R is the radius and P is the shockwave pressure in bars, where we generally use 1.37895 bars or 20 psi of pressure. There is no need to halve the explosion yield result in the case of ground-based explosions.
R = 20037.50 km or 20037500 m
P = 1.37895 bars
W = 20037500^3*((27136*1.37895+8649)^(1/2)/13568-93/13568)^2 = 6.46570851e+17 tons of TNT or 646.57085 Petatons (Multi-Continent level)
Inconsistent Measurements
When evaluating the size of objects depicted by an author, it's important to consider that the author may have depicted them inconsistently for artistic reasons. A primary example occurs if the author has to show a large object and a comparatively small object at the same time. In such a case they might have to depict the two objects as similar in size for the sake of making both easily visible to the reader. When deciding on the appropriate size scaling to use, such inconsistencies should be taken into account.
Ngl I completely forgot about this. I'll try to write the summary by the end of the week