- 6,082
- 3,115
In chapter 199 and 200 there's a feat in Dandadan in which one of the characters, Evil Eye, kicks a giant shark with people inside and sends them to the moon. The only reference we have for the timeframe is the fact that the characters were shown in the moon after the fight ended and the protagonist group landed their plane, because of this there are different ends used for the timeframes, a 30 minutes end, 15, 10, 6 and 3 minutes ends, and this discussion is to decide which end to use. The argument for the 30 minutes end comes from the average time it takes for a pilot to land from cruising altitude, however I find it unlikely that it took that much time for reasons I mentioned in the calc, here are them:
- The plane was full of holes and one of its engines had exploded, so they not only couldn't take too long but it's also unlikely that the plane remained at cruising altitude by the point the fight ended.
- Part of the group was quite injured, including Seiko, who was in the copilot seat and was fainting from her injuries, and Daiki, who was piloting the plane but has been rapidly aging to the point that when boarding the plane he could no longer walk, so neither of them was in the condition to take too long.
- Daiki who was piloting didn't receive formal training to drive a plane, his only experience came from what his father told him 4 years ago when he was a child, so it's perfectly possible that he doesn't know the full procedure behind landing a plane.
- The cast was in a time limit race because if they didn't reach their destination quickly, they would lose the chance of lifting the curse of the protagonist Momo.
- Because of the fight in the plane the time of the group's empty space was running out, which means that if they didn't land the plane quickly the passengers would notice them and chaos would erupt again.
- If they took too long the protagonist group would have ample time to take their seats again and appear normal to the passengers, however they didn't and thus had to hurry up at the last moment to not get discovered.