- 547
- 272
Hi, I wanted to bring up some things that I think should be noted
- in this calc, any attempt to remove the contradiction is bound to fail.
- Here the demon, by moving backward, dodges Tanjiro’s two slashes; in the calc the demon’s movement speed is about 280 m/s slower.
- Tanjiro considers something "fast" even when it’s 23 times slower, and that’s why he hits the arm instead of the neck, not because of a lack of accuracy. In this scene he was saved by Nezuko while he remained practically motionless, whereas the demon was moving. With this kind of speed gap, missing the target due to lack of skill is still ambiguous, since he had enough speed to act calmly. That would only make sense in rushed circumstances. I understand that we’re not talking about differences in the triple digit range, but while the demon moves 10 cm, he should be covering almost 1 meter... the gap is still too large.
EDIT
- In the profile, they are considered relative, but the calculation concludes that there is a gap between them. Tanjiro used his base speed for the feat. Following the anime, the demon dodges without any problem. “The calc. scene in the anime is completely different. Tanjiro dodges the attack in advance.
EDIT thx to @Zefra3011 - For this
- Here, the katana’s speed is incorrectly extrapolated from the context. The speed used is that of a BB pellet/bullet, not of the sword slash. The context says that the swordsman stopped the bullet, which was moving at that speed. The katana would be twice as fast as a regular sword… (Moreover, using the maximum speed of a sword would still be wrong, because that speed is reached only at the point where it hits its maximum peak, which in this case it hasn’t reached)
- Doma calls Inosuke’s movements "quick" and he doesn’t notice them. According to the calc, the two swordsmen being relative to him should have sword movements 39 times slower than Doma, yet they are still able to be hit him afterward.
- Scenes like the one used in the calc appear multiple times during the fight, so I think they shouldn’t be taken into account; there’s even a rule for this. The gap shown between the three of them is not that large, or at least it is not consistently so. -
Refrain from calculating feats based on dodging attacks from other characters at extreme proximity, as this is primarily a trope used to exaggerate a narrow miss rather than a literal representation of overwhelming speed. Taking it at face value is often inconsistent with the battle in which the feat occurs, where the opponents are presented as equals, but the calculation results in them being considered several times faster
EDIT thx to @Zefra3011
- for this and this
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- Here, the premise is that Yoriichi was caught off guard by something 363 times slower than him , which he would technically perceive as almost motionless, and on top of that he possesses limited precognition that allows him to see things in slow motion. Being taken by surprise under these conditions, and allowing those fragments to travel the distance shown in the panel, is impossible.
- The image does not seem to suggest an omnidirectional explosion (as assumed), but rather an explosion directed toward Yoriichi. An explosion isn't necessarily omnidirectional.
- Based on the fact that Yoriichi considers Muzan’s division to possess incredible strength, it's not impossible to assume that it is beyond Yoriichi’s capabilities since it caught him off guard. The roughly 300 uncut pieces are the ones Yoriichi was unable to handle during his action.
EDIT
-The scene shows that while Muzan’s head has exploded, the rest of his body is still present. His separation is therefore gradual or in parts, not all at once. Considering that this happens at SOS, the feat could be performed even at lower speeds
- Using Yoriichi's attack range is bad. It only works if he was exactly where Muzan was or didn't turn around to cut behind himself, which would, in a sense, increase his range, since if a piece would travel from Muzan to Yoriichi, let's say 1 meter, and after it could travel even more behind Yoriichi for 1,53 m based on the calc, for a total of 2,53 meters.
- The omnidirectionality of the explosion is straight up debunked by the panel itself; the distance they are at would barely allow Yoriichi to extend the katana to reach Muzan, let alone cutting something moving behind him, and no pieces are actually seen going behind anyway, but since it's being argued...
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EDIT:
I forgot to mention this.
- In this calc the proportions aren't correct and consistent with those mentioned by the OP. The reference points used to determine the distances appear to be the same, but the distance traveled by Tanjiro and the height of the screen end up being excessively large. (I know I used the width; I used it because it's the longest part of the image, and the pixels don’t match the OP’s.)
- The calc in question assumes that the lightning started from the distance measured at screen height, when it could very easily be farther away; there’s no distance that can be verified in any measurable way.
- Following the scene, we can see that Tanjiro moves before the lightning comes down and appears on screen. While the lightning covers several meters, Tanjiro appears to remain still rather than in motion
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