- 31,398
- 27,688
I don't think Samug should be scaling to Gandalf for the reasons mentioned above.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Agreed. The books and movies should preferably not scale to each other.Also, I don't think movie Smaug should have the same tier as book Smaug, the feat of shaking the mountain was book only.
I did a quick calc of this on Google spreadsheet and got 8-A results with Possibly Class M LSAlthough we do see Smaug in the movies take a giant statue of molten gold getting melted on top of him
Ah right, we discussed that in the other thread I think.Gandalf considers Smaug a being of Immense power and nothing really supports the idea that Smaug is any lesser than his ancestors from the War of Wrath, I also think the "mountain level" feats done by him and the Balrog vs. Gandalf figjt indicates some sort of parity.
That doesn't sound all that badvaguely around Glaurung at best.
It's not the worst solution, but the link between the two is somewhat shaky.That doesn't sound all that bad
@TherefirSmaug vs statue
vsbattles.fandom.com
That seems to make sense.It's not the worst solution, but the link between the two is somewhat shaky.
Glaurung is a named Dragon of relative power in the Silmarillion, with many dragons being beneath him.
Winged dragons are indeed meant to be an improvement on flightless dragons, but it's hard to outright say that every flightless dragon was inferior to even the lowest winged dragon. Perhaps specifically mighty flightless dragons like Glaurung are superior to some winged dragons, its unknown.
Moreover, Smaug is a relatively young winged dragon, in the sense that he was born several millenia after the War of Wrath, meaning there's an added divide between him and his ancestors in chronology, coupled with the lack of statements of whether he actually compares his ancestors, which adds another layer of skepticism.
Of course, that's not to say Smaug 100% does not scale, as he is still a winged dragon (and last of the great dragons), which were meant to be an improvement on flightless dragons like Glaurung, but it's muddy enough for a fair amount of skepticism.
Considering that shaking Erebor is book only, the feat is not usable to justify film Smaug's 7-C rating, and besides, the calc for Smaug is outdatedPlease clarify what you mean with debunked
I'm in favour of the first option, although I'm waiting on Merchant's response.I at least support "at least 7-C, possibly higher or whatever we make out Smaug to be"
Can somebody clarify the basis for Glaurung's and Smaug's respective tiers (Low 7-B and 7-C?) please?I'm in favour of the first option, although I'm waiting on Merchant's response.
The alternative would be "at least 7-C, possibly Low 7-B" (from Glaurung's rating) at least in terms of what I would personally accept.
Smaug's 7-C is from this thread's calcs I believe.Can somebody clarify the basis for Glaurung's and Smaug's respective tiers (Low 7-B and 7-C?) please?
Thanks. Was there anything else to do for this thread?I tidied up the grammar a little