- 12,465
- 4,608
Yeah, I am insane and I don't even know how this will end.
I was getting bored, so I checked random pages, until I have encnountered Spongebob's.
At least Galaxy level via hax with strings (Erased the Milky Way galaxy with a string)
This is definitely not just 3-C, but straight up 3-A, I'll explain why in short.
The string doesn't do just physical objects, it also makes up more "abstract" stuff like boundaries or changes the value of money from deleting the text.
Plus, in the feat linked in the profile, he does not just delete the galaxy, but also everything behind it, meaning that if he has erased just an arbitrary part of the universe using the strings, it means that it would have left with still a space background, but instead it became white, meaning that the universe was affected in its entirely.
Another proof I can bring is that the white space is technically nothing. As shown in SB-129, Squidward travels way too much in the future, until he ends up to the end of the universe, where there's literally nowhere, and when he goes back in the present, he describes it as such, meaning that "white space = nothingness" in the context of Spongebob is a thing (watch from 9:03 to 11:31 to get what I mean)
If this is accepted, a calc for Spongebob's speed might be done as well.
Edit: Apparentely it got already calculated, with the transcrpit itself saying that he destroyed the universe, so, yeah...
I was getting bored, so I checked random pages, until I have encnountered Spongebob's.
At least Galaxy level via hax with strings (Erased the Milky Way galaxy with a string)
This is definitely not just 3-C, but straight up 3-A, I'll explain why in short.
The string doesn't do just physical objects, it also makes up more "abstract" stuff like boundaries or changes the value of money from deleting the text.
Plus, in the feat linked in the profile, he does not just delete the galaxy, but also everything behind it, meaning that if he has erased just an arbitrary part of the universe using the strings, it means that it would have left with still a space background, but instead it became white, meaning that the universe was affected in its entirely.
Another proof I can bring is that the white space is technically nothing. As shown in SB-129, Squidward travels way too much in the future, until he ends up to the end of the universe, where there's literally nowhere, and when he goes back in the present, he describes it as such, meaning that "white space = nothingness" in the context of Spongebob is a thing (watch from 9:03 to 11:31 to get what I mean)
Edit: Apparentely it got already calculated, with the transcrpit itself saying that he destroyed the universe, so, yeah...
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