@
WeeklyBattles
You're starting to hit small lines Weekly. It isn't binary assumptions when Boros has proved to generate from greater things above oxygen dependence.
Also, Boros speed to maneuver in the air and levitate isn't hard especially when he has shown speeds high enough to output NASA rockets that travel out the Earths atmosphere into space. If you just want to get into orbit around the Earth, you need to reach speeds of at least 4.9 miles per second, or about 17,600 miles per hour. If you want to completely escape Earth's gravity and travel to another moon or planet, though, you need to be going even faster - at a speed of at least 7 miles per second or about 25,000 miles per hour. Like
Assaltwaffle said, Boros has full control of his flight. He can easily especially once Boros exits out of Earth's exsophere. Boros will be entering in the status of Earth's satelites. This is why satelties don't fall back down to Earth within the Exsophere because of their velocity (or the speed at which it would travel in a straight line), and the gravitational pull between the satellite and the planet it orbits. The higher the orbit, the less velocity is required. The nearer the orbit, the faster it must move to ensure that it does not fall back to Earth.
and @
Assaltwaffle and @
WeeklyBattles
Onto the space ordeal.
https://prezi.com/8zs3qcfzpjag/space-exposure/
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19650027167.pdf
If we play in actual anatomy and science into this from NASA actual experiments about what happens when humans and other animals in vacuum of space. Let's begin with Humans. NASA scientists have concluded from testing in the vacuum of space pass out after about 15 seconds. 90 seconds after exposure, you'll die from asphyxiation. It is within the 90-180 seconds if a human is placed in pressurized environment they can still be saved. 1965, researchers at the Brooks Air Force Base in Texas ran a series of experiments on man's best friend. Dogs were the next tests in the vacuum of space only to became unconscious after 10-20 seconds. Chimpanzees were the final subjects to experiment what would happen in the vacuum of space. They did much better than the dogs and humans, with most able to survive for up to 3 minutes, with the record being 3 and a half minutes. For those under 3 minutes, they not only were fine, but the researchers were able to confirm that their cognitive abilities, with one exception, were not damaged in any way. Which, concluded the results in NASA experiments. (You can find this source on many sites including NASA database todayifoundout.com - How Long You Could Survive in Space Without a Space Suit ) So, what happens when we place a Boros species that has already survived with harsher environments greater than Earth's who has physiology greatly above humans and Chimpanzees? They obviously by should be able to survive more than 3mins if possible, especially when he will be constantly regenerating his lungs over and over and over. It going to be a loop of regen in order for Boros to not die from the lack of oxygen.
@
Assaltwaffle
On top of that your statement
"Being deprived of a vital life-sustaining gas is different than putting your body back together." <-- I agree its different but the destruction of ones anatomy only to be put back together again and again outplays oxygen dependence. This is easy for Boros if the battle gets into space.