- 167,679
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Well, it isn't as inconsistent, but, for example, Captain America, who was barely able to stop a helicopter, was also able to damage Iron Man, and the matchups should recurrently be far more uneven than they are.
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This is Superman I assume?Natse said:No, but the magazine scan claimed that he can react as fast he can fly because he would be crashing into stuff all the time otherwise. The Speed page states that "most fictional characters do not remotely tend to exhibit FTL or higher movement or perception speed in regular encounters simply because they can fly that swiftly. As such, a character should preferably prove that its regular movement speed is equal to or higher than its flight speed to be listed as such." Note that this rule was applied to comics Post-Crisis Superman.
Had that been the case, jetfighters would have supersonic reflexes.Caesar Wolfman said:And personally I can agree with the magazine. A character's perception speed and ability to turn while moving is very valid and while it should not be a definitive proof of their combat speed, it should be able to be used as further back-up if a characters lacks a lot of speed feats for the sack of quantity, since people seem to care about that.
He wasn't given the chance to probably. That and Ultron is vibranium and the force would've been sent outward. Which would I think support why Thor went with a small, steady stream of lightning to melt him instead of blasting him with one big attack. Besides, Thor was probably aware of the civilians in Thor2, I mean Jane and Selvig were trying to get people to evacuate and the civilians were more concerned of having something cool to post on facebook. Lastly, I don't think anyone would scale to Thor's charged attack. He has never come close to using this much power in any other showing.Matthew Schroeder said:It's possible. But then I question why he didn't one-shot neither Ultron or Malekith by simply charging lightning for about 5 seconds and hitting them.
Vision with Mjolnir and the Hulk sent Ultron flying. Vibranium isn't all that cracked up to be, especially when you had a hammerless Thor fighting Vision evenly in a deleted scene.Gemmysaur said:That and Ultron is vibranium and the force would've been sent outward. Which would I think support why Thor went with a small, steady stream of lightning to melt him instead of blasting him with one big attack.
Cap can be sent flying too even with the shield. Doesn't change the fact that the shield can disperse force outward.Natse said:Vision with Mjolnir and the Hulk sent Ultron flying. Vibranium isn't all that cracked up to be, especially when you had a hammerless Thor fighting Vision evenly in a deleted scene.
Simple Solution, because it's fiction. You can point out so many situations where characters could have clearly done something better like when Quicksilver could've grabbed Hawkeye and that child and moved them out of the way.Matthew Schroeder said:It's possible. But then I question why he didn't one-shot neither Ultron or Malekith by simply charging lightning for about 5 seconds and hitting them.
The thing is, this blow shouldn't impact any kind of power-scaling because Thor has never used it before or since. Therefore, it's just its own thing.Antvasima said:However, if this would wreak havok with our power-scaling, I suppose that we could continue to consider it as an outlier.
I agree with this 100%Kkapoios said:Thor has mostly 9-A+ to 8-C feats with the destruction of the bifrost bridge being 8-A.On the other hand Sokovia's destruction is 236033 times more powerful than the destruction of the bridge (and a few million times stronger than 99% of the top tier feats).How can you not even consider the possibility of this being an outlier.
MCU is inconsistent when it comes to Iron Man who could fight Thor as an almost equal while still losing to Cap and his armors getting destroyed by a speeding truck.
Thor cracked it enough to leave a hole. The energy blasted right out like a balloon popping.Caesar Wolfman said:Thor not only cracked, but shattered the Bifrost