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For the last couple years Cyberpunk has had this ARG thing going on with the Witcher universe. Don't know much about it though.EXPLAIN YOURSELF
Some 4th wall/metafictional stuff recently discovered which is kinda funnyFor the last couple years Cyberpunk has had this ARG thing going on with the Witcher universe. Don't know much about it though.
ok,basically,nothing at allSome 4th wall/metafictional stuff recently discovered which is kinda funny
Nah 4th wall/metafictional stuff can be tier 1 (as here it's a canonical entity within the story of cyberpunk and literally erase a dude from existence) but there's not enough info on the being(s) to make a profile IMO it's just cool speculation.ok,basically,nothing at all
K.So I might be downgrading Adam smasher, David, and V's 8-B rating and Class G LS
All stars must eventually burn out.So I might be downgrading Adam smasher, David, and V's 8-B rating and Class G LS
I dunno if we use inverse square law for gravitational crushing attacks... not from what I've seen anyway. For explosions, it works. So I dunno if I should be commenting in that regard..Wanted to talk to you precision since one of the calcs is yours
See what you think
The basis is that the attack David did was over an area and the inverse square law negs alot of the force smasher is actually tanking
Basically Smasher would only be scaling to the portion of the wave he tanked which going by normal human body surface area is around 2 m^2 which negs the result by a large amount.
Similar to how we do explosion calcs
Do you or any other calc members agree with this reasoning?
We do it for black holes and the like (See dragonball and Yuki's black hole)I dunno if we use inverse square law for gravitational crushing attacks... not from what I've seen anyway. For explosions, it works. So I dunno if I should be commenting in that regard..
Inverse Square law is for omnidirectional forces/energy though. It asserts that the further you are from a force, the weaker it becomes. Gravity crush is just a downward force. It doesn't spread out like an explosion evenly in all directions like an explosion or the gravitational waves of a Black Hole do.We do it for black holes and the like (See dragonball and Yuki's black hole)
Plus it doesn't change the fact that this attack was done over a wide area and the actual per meter AP value is much much lower than the entire area affected's AP
Well yes, I understand thatInverse Square law is for omnidirectional forces though. It asserts that the further you are from a force, the weaker it becomes. Gravity crush is just a downward force. It doesn't spread out like an explosion evenly in all directions like an explosion or the gravitational waves of a Black Hole do.
What you're talking about regarding force acting over an area is a wholly different problem altogether.
I suppose? However I feel this would be the equivalent of saying someone doesn't scale to the shockwave of a punch if said shockwaves from a punch are like, 6-B for example. But on the wiki, we'd scale characters directly to the shockwave instead of using the pressure exerted over their surface area.Well yes, I understand that
I'm making a comparison in regards that the downwards force is over an area and thus can't fully be scaled to a character within said area
For this it would be more that Smasher only scales to the crater David made with him rather than the larger Militech craters.dunno if we use inverse square law for gravitational crushing attacks...
I'm not the best at arguing points so I'll just leave it up to calc members after this but this doesn't seems to be a great comparison.I suppose? However I feel this would be the equivalent of saying someone doesn't scale to the shockwave of a punch if said shockwaves from a punch are like, 6-B for example. But on the wiki, we'd scale characters directly to the shockwave instead of using the pressure exerted over their surface area.
I get that. I just don't see why David wouldn't use the full force of his gravity attack against Adam Smasher who murdered one of his friends (Rebecca), was going to kill his girlfriend, and was beating the snot out of him while he pushed himself to a new level to protect Rebecca... Just seems like the same force concentrated in a smaller area since large AoE was unnecessary at that point.For this it would be more that Smasher only scales to the crater David made with him rather than the larger Militech craters.
I was talking about the shockwave of a punch. Not a direct punch.I'm not the best at arguing points so I'll just leave it up to calc members after this but this doesn't seems to be a great comparison.
In this situation there no center point that receives the full force of Davids gravity crush like a punch, instead it's spread out over an area and an amount of force sufficient to crush both metal and stone is produced
The "AP" of the attack is fully dependent on how big David decides to make the area as you can see by the calculation for the two different craters he created
With that in mind Adam Smasher isn't spread out over the 1000+ M^2 of area that the attack occupies
Instead he is relegated to just the area he occupies, which we could treat as either his surface area or volume
That argument isn't useable for feats like this. Since Smasher isn't the size of a building any excessive range regarding the gravity crush would be a useless expenditure of energy.just don't see why David wouldn't use the full force
Then to be honest, David shouldn't even have an AP or Lifting Strength rating based on his gravity manipulation as the strength of it is solely dependent on the area if acts over. Against a microscopic character with normal human durability, it won't even phase them by that logic. I think the logic proposed here is enforcing rules on this a bit too harshly. It just seems like David controls the same amount of force which he can concentrate on a smaller area or a larger area.That argument isn't useable for feats like this. Since Smasher isn't the size of a building any excessive range regarding the gravity crush would be a useless expenditure of energy.
His AP/LS would just be the minimum it's shown to act over. Which afaik is still Tier 8 and Class G.Then to be honest, David shouldn't even have an AP or Lifting Strength rating based on his gravity manipulation as the strength of it is solely dependent on the area if acts over.
The point I'm making is the AP and force of the attack are entirely dependent on the area he decides to apply it to, it can vary dramatically.I get that. I just don't see why David wouldn't use the full force of his gravity attack against Adam Smasher who murdered one of his friends (Rebecca), was going to kill his girlfriend, and was beating the snot out of him while he pushed himself to a new level to protect Rebecca... Just seems like the same force concentrated in a smaller area since large AoE was unnecessary at that point.
It'd be about 50x less than what he currently scales to IIRCHis AP/LS would just be the minimum it's shown to act over. Which afaik is still Tier 8 and Class G.
Also surface area would still impact it. Smasher physically isn't large enough to take the all the energy.
Yeah, it'd only be Tier 8 destructive capacity. But it wouldn't be applicable against opponents who are smaller than the area he effects. His AP would be rated as Tier 8, but a dude who has a surface area of like, say 0.5 m^2 is going to take far less than Tier 8 damage.His AP/LS would just be the minimum it's shown to act over. Which afaik is still Tier 8 and Class G.
Also surface area would still impact it. Smasher physically isn't large enough to take the all the energy.
Nah, nah. I understand. I just feel this method can be a bit restrictive if we enforce it like this. It's more of a nitpick on my part. I personally wouldn't call myself a talented calculator tbh, lol. Just copy what I see other people doing. So a talented copier if anything.I'm not trying to insult you btw with this example I know your a very talented calculator but this is just me trying to explain as simple as possible
Because the 8-B energy is the result of spreading it over a much larger areaI don't get why we can't assume that the 8-B energy is distributed equally across every square meter it acts on.
If everyone else is fine with it, I'll go along with it but...Because the 8-B energy is the result of spreading it over a much larger area
And unlike in situations where people kick someone into a crater we cant say all that energy comes directly from the gravity since the gravity is just a static constant over an certain area
You made a mistake. You're using Adam Smasher's full surface area. But the gravity is only acting downwards. It's not acting on his entire body from every angle. You'd need the surface area of only small parts of his body. Like the top of his head. His shoulders, top of his feet, and that's pretty much it.Just to showcase what the downgrade would be like I'll do the math here and assume Smasher has a surface area of 2.96 m^2
LS: ((2960000 * 214)/9.8)/1000 = 64636.73469 Tons (Class M)
AP: 633.44 Mpa * 2960000 cm^2 = 1.8749824 * 10^9 Joules or 0.44 Tons of TNT (8-C)
Actually it looks like the wave is also capable of pulverizing steel so lets use that for an end
LS: ((2960000 * 655)/9.8)/1000 = 197836.7347 Tons (Class M)
AP: 1938.8 Mpa * 2960000 cm^2 = 5.738848 * 10^9 Joules or 1.37 Tons of TNT (8-C+)
I would say it is acting on his entire body from every angle considering, ynow it's gravityYou made a mistake. You're using Adam Smasher's full surface area. But the gravity is only acting downwards. It's not acting on his entire body from every angle. You'd need the surface area of only small parts of his body. Like the top of his head. His shoulders, top of his feet, and that's pretty much it.
It's acting downwards. From top to bottom. If it were all pressing inwards at Adam, the ground wouldn't have been compressed at all. It's not like Adam is deep under the water where that would be happening. Using his whole surface area greatly exaggerates the result.I would say it is acting on his entire body from every angle considering, ynow it's gravity
In fact I'm pretty sure I could get away with using volume on this calc
Yes but is a gravity field, it doesn't behave like a normal directional blastIt's acting downwards. From top to bottom. If it were all pressing inwards at Adam, the ground wouldn't have been compressed at all. It's not like Adam is deep under the water where that would be happening. Using his whole surface area greatly exaggerates the result.
I can't recall if it was stated to be a gravity field. But I recall it just just be a very strong downward force as opposed to acting on every part of the body. Otherwise, the stuff getting crushed wouldn't be flattened downwards. But flattened inwards.Yes but is a gravity field, it doesn't behave like a normal directional blast
Gravity doesn't impact half your body it exerts its effect over every single part of in all at once and pulls it downwards
If he's in the field and the field affects the entirety of his body I feel it's fine to use his entire body SA if not his entire volume
Adams profile describes it as this, both your calcs describe it as this, the entire time we were arguing about it you never once brought up the fact that it wasn't a gravity field.I can't recall if it was stated to be a gravity field. But I recall it just just be a very strong downward force as opposed to acting on every part of the body. Otherwise, the stuff getting crushed wouldn't be flattened downwards. But flattened inwards.
I mean it has been a while since I looked at the calcs.Adams profile describes it as this, both your calcs describe it as this, the entire time we were arguing about it you never once brought up the fact that it wasn't a gravity field.
Even the wiki describes it as increasing the gravitational field in a certain area
What gives?
It being a gravity field doesn't mean it needs to go only omnidirectionally inwards
It's fiction
This is the way the wiki has done it for ages we inject real world math into a fictitious setting even if it goes against certain narrativesI mean it has been a while since I looked at the calcs.
I would normally be fine with the its fiction excuse, but the whole reason we're here to begin with is because we're injecting reality into fiction. When it comes to that, I like to go the full way. Not throw it out the window when it starts to inconvenience a calc or smth.
That's why I'm not 100% certain about using itThat said, would you even be able to use volume for this? I don't think the force acting on something is measured by pressure over a volume.
Could youThat's why I'm not 100% certain about using it
Alternatively we could find Adam's mass and use that at least for LS
Might upgrade it a little
Which is fine but... you can't use the excuse "It's fiction" when you're arguing real physics to apply something. If that were the case we'd scale Adam to the full yield of the gravity attack because "It's fiction".This is the way the wiki has done it for ages we inject real world math into a fictitious setting even if it goes against certain narratives