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Detective Asura is on the case.I need to look into some stuff.
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Detective Asura is on the case.I need to look into some stuff.
I agree with this option.Option 2: We consider Superman restoring infinite future timelines wiped out by the Time Trapper during his confrontation with Jaxon as inconsistent with the other feats he has which caps at tier 4-B to 2-C, therefore we remove the "possibly 2-A" tier and leave Pre-Crisis Superman and those who scale to him to tier 2-C.
All we know is that the ring energies was used to wipe out all of Earth's possible futures when it entered the time dimension. The location it was in doesn't change the fact it did it via its energy. And the energy coming from Superman's and Jaxon's clash was what restored all the timelines.For Time Trapper thing, gl power rings didn't wipe all timelines through it's own power, it was because trapper setted up things which caused rings to enter time dimension thus happened it. you might say it's because of rings' power but it seems very unlikely to happen through by them directly, what's been implied that it was happened due to some plot devices, it lacks context on how it wiped out timelines, and the reason why all of them restored afterwards.
You... answered your own point.Also Jaxon and Superman's fight was around city level. I'm aware DC=/=AP but it seems highly unlikely them to be in Tier 2, specially superman, if we exclude time trapper.
He's not actively rewriting a timeline here, he's countering/matching energy capable of destroying all timelines, hence stopping the timelines from being destroyed.My point is we don't know about the things which trapper arranged before and how it affects that feat. Superman once admitted he can't change history or rewrite timelines. This is the best superman can do I can do is give it my best...
The context is all there. The rings destroyed the timelines and the clash between Superman and Jaxon restored. The story makes that very blatant and clear cut.I think it's very inconsistent give Tier 2-A for superman, we can't take a statement at face value ignoring the context. I could interprete it another way as I explained above though you can simply ignore this calling it as a headcanon. 2-A is too much.
I'm still fine if we go with Option 2.Okay. @Emirp sumitpo I know you offered an alternative, but you initially indicated that you were amicable to Option 2. With the other three agrees in this thread, are you comfortable with that solution still?
Option 2 seems fine.I know this comes out of nowhere, but can I offer any suggestions to fix this? These are only suggestions and do not hesitate to share your impressions.
Option 1: We give Pre-Crisis Superman a variable tier based on the fact that many of his feats caps at tier 4 to 2. "Varies from 4-B to 2-C to possibly 2-A"
Option 2: We consider Superman restoring infinite future timelines wiped out by the Time Trapper during his confrontation with Jaxon as inconsistent with the other feats he has which caps at tier 4-B to 2-C, therefore we remove the "possibly 2-A" tier and leave Pre-Crisis Superman and those who scale to him to tier 2-C.
I'm sorry to sound rude, but this honestly seems like downplay for the sake of downplay. None of what happened in the comic seems to indicate that the futures were simply prevented from happening by any other force than total annihilation, in fact it directly says they were very specifically "wiped out".I tend to also regard that feat as not being indicative of power in that sense, as timelines can be weird that way. I do not get the impression from reading the comic that the best way to interpret the feat is the raw destruction of universes, but a collapsing of variations in time, which can be achieved through non-AP related means.
Well, that has been accepted and applied, so you would have to wait to attempt to revise it again.Also just a note, but i also think Supergirls scaling to Anti-Monitor still counts as a 2-A feat anyway, and i honestly have problems with that AM revision that i feel i should address in another thread.)
The version of the Anti-Monitor she fought wasn't 2-A yet thoughbut i also think Supergirls scaling to Anti-Monitor still counts as a 2-A feat anyway
So? Still ****** up his armorThing is, Supergirl didn't fought the Anti-Monitor directly. She caught him off guard as he was about to kill Superman and the Anti-Monitor blasted her to death right after she assaulted him, then had to retreat.
2-C featSo? Still ****** up his armor
We already finished this topic.So? Still ****** up his armor
But nothing in the story outright implies that, if anything it outright states that the energy of the rings wiped out the timelines and the energy produced by Jaxon and Superman negated the rings, restoring all timelines and universes.Still neutral, but that last line doesn't make sense.
Just causing a timeline to cease existing in the first place has also been called 'wiping out' the time line. And 'wipe' from existence isn't an uncommon term for a person whose history has been compromised.
It's probably the most common descriptor, barring erase(d), specifically for erasing histories/people temporally.
I didn't say it did, I just disagree with your insistence that the word wipe out is proof.But nothing in the story outright implies that, if anything it outright states that the energy of the rings wiped out the timelines and the energy produced by Jaxon and Superman negated the rings, restoring all timelines and universes.
See, here's the thing, you're not actually addressing any arguments.And how exactly does wiping out all future timelines simultaneously and then restoring them with the energy also simultaneously (because in the story the effects were basically instant) somehow constitute less than 2-A energy?
time trapper arranged smth before it was happened. there is a possibility it could happened through a chain reaction or through some method instead of raw destruction of timelines like deagon said. It's hard to deny it using direct statements. I bet role played by time dimension there. there are so many instances that destruction of creation of multiverse happened via chain reactions in dc.I am neutral regarding whether or not we should scale Pre-Crisis Superman to 2-A, given that his feat with Jaxon was very explicit, but also the only one of that magnitude.t
Gonna be honest, how often is someone wiping out a timeline (worded or implied like that) usually anything else than total annihilation or erasing a timeline entirely? Because every instance I've seen that somehow refers to wiping out of timelines (which isn't much in Pre-Crisis from what I've researched) but either its used in the way I'm interpreting or the context isn't the exact same as here.I didn't say it did, I just disagree with your insistence that the word wipe out is proof.
I'm not addressing that argument because it doesn't make any sense, the Green Lanterns interpretation of it being something that outright destroyed those universes is pretty much the only way you can interpret that feat. Nothing implies they were moved out of existence, they were outright destroyed. How can it only be diverting or putting timelines back to place when the story outright says that all of them are gone, they weren't sent to the void, they just outright don't exist anymore. Hell, the timeline the Legion came from is directly said to just outright not exist anymore.See, here's the thing, you're not actually addressing any arguments here.
We're saying we don't know if they were simply diverted or destroyed by the Green Lanterns' energies. Thusly, we also don't know if the energy that Superman and Jaxon countering the energy (as they explicitly just countered the energy to do this) restored or simply put the timelines back on track.
Tons of times. Other than erase or destroy (in the context of causing a cataclysm that wipes out future worldlines from happening, like in Doctor Who), I've never seen it not called wipe out.Gonna be honest, how often is someone wiping out a timeline (worded or implied like that) usually anything else than total annihilation or erasing a timeline entirely?
I didn't claim they were moved out of existence, I said their probability thread was cut. Time was diverted from ever letting them happen in the first place.Nothing implies they were moved out of existence, they were outright destroyed.
You do realise that diverting these futures from ever existing in the first place would also make it so that they were completely gone right? Those possibilities wouldn't exist in the first place along that line of history.How can it only be diverting or putting timelines back to place when the story outright says that all of them are gone, they weren't sent to the void, they just outright don't exist anymore. Hell, the timeline the Legion came from is directly said to just outright not exist anymore.
You're totally misinterpreting my argument.But fine, lets say for whatever reason I'm wrong and somehow the GL energy only held back all the infinite timelines from existing... wouldn't that still be a 2-A feat? Holding back all the infinite timelines/universes of Earth AD with your power, and the literal instant that power is countered all the timelines instantly return back to normal isn't a chain reaction feat, it's literally about as 2-A as you can get especially on that scale.
Which would happen if the possibility thread was cut in the first place. Like Jesus, man.This isn't just changing the course of history either, because ALL of the timelines were destroyed except one, they weren't all altered, they were outright gone.
I'm pretty sure Superboy Prime was weakened at the time.However, Superboy-Prime explicitly displayed an upper limit of Low 2-C in terms of feats, so I do not think that he should scale from Pre-Crisis Superman
Can you name a few because my search is showing up blanks, especially ones in which wiping out is done in a way that isn't Low 2-C in nature. Especially given similar context to whats happening here. I also don't know of any instances where someone wiping out an infinite amount of timelines through any means is not considered 2-A and is somehow infinitely less than that.Tons of times. Other than erase, I've never seen it not called wipe out.
The possibilities literally all came back INSTANTLY after the effect was done, it wasn't possibilities being built up over a period of time, the Green Lantern rings all instantly wiped out all the futures, and the literal moment Jaxon and Superman hit each other all of them were restored and the timelines instantly fixed. This isn't a case like Owl Man destroying the Original Earth 1 and causing a chain reaction that prevented all change throughout time, this was a very sudden and immediate reaction that was instantly reversed by the conflict between Jaxon and Superman.You do realise that diverting these futures from ever existing in the first place would also make it so that they were completely gone right? Those possibilities wouldn't exist in the first place along that line.
Doctor Manhattan erased timelines via erasing the possibilities, Darkseid damaged orrey due to a chain reaction. Owl man tried to destroy multiverse by destroying prime earth, like that.What instances? IIRC, Flashpoint and Infinite Crisis were totally different kinds of chain reaction events.
if you mean Superboy vs Monarch, yes,, he lost power, the Monarch claims that Prime was starting to run out of fuelI'm pretty sure Superboy Prime was weakened at the time.
Sure. I'll be a minute.Can you name a few because my search is showing up blanks, especially ones in which wiping out is done in a way that isn't Low 2-C in nature.
That's literally because they were in the future where it happened. This is what happens when you're in the future and alter the past. For example, the timeline change happened instantly from the perspective of Neutron in Young Justice.The possibilities literally all came back INSTANTLY after the effect was done, it wasn't possibilities being built up over a period of time, the Green Lantern rings all instantly wiped out all the futures, and the literal moment Jaxon and Superman hit each other all of them were restored and the timelines instantly fixed.
Again, this is based on a single probability thread. He erased all the possible futures where the Earth could happen along those lines, not literally every single Earth- containing Earth.Like this isn't just preventing one timeline from being created, its completely nullifying the entire Multiverse of future earths, of which there are literally infinite, and that energy needs to be countered for all timelines to pop back into existence like they never left over a period of at worst moments.
Those instances aren't the same as the one that happens in this story, like I mentioned with Owl Man.Doctor Manhattan erased timelines via erasing the possibilities, Darkseid damaged orrey due to a chain reaction. Owl man tried to destroy multiverse by destroying prime earth, like that.
Appreciate itSure. I'll be a minute.
Except the comic never implies that it happens over a period of time depending on the viewer though, its shown from Superman and Jaxons perspective to instantly effect them on impact, the Green Lantern also doesn't infer in dialogue that it took place over a period of time or that it was not also instantaneous for him as well. Hell he pretty rapidly informs Superman of the fact like its basically fixed everything instantly.That's literally because they were in the future where it happened. This is what happens when you're in the future and alter the past. For example, the timeline change happened instantly from the perspective of Neutron in Young Justice.
It's relative to the people who originate from said futures, which is how time travel can even work in the first place.
Cause again, it'd be instantaneous regardless. They were in that future anyway, and the Legion of Superheroes' future still remained a possibility from Superman's perspective. He then got sent back to the past by the clash.Except the comic never implies that it happens over a period of time depending on the viewer though, its shown from Superman and Jaxons perspective to instantly effect them on impact, the Green Lantern also doesn't infer in dialogue that it took place over a period of time or that it was not also instantaneous for him as well. Hell he pretty rapidly informs Superman of the fact like its basically fixed everything instantly.
I was referring to when he was doing the retcon punch.if you mean Superboy vs Monarch, yes,, he lost power, the Monarch claims that Prime was starting to run out of fuel
I could find some stuff from Marvel (like Loki describing Kang's fuckery in the MCU) and some more obscure fiction, but I can't find anything specific from DC at all in similar circumstances (that's to say timelines, rather than people).Appreciate it
AhI was referring to when he was doing the retcon punch.
That's not even always true from the perspective of DC though. COIE had the Anti Matter wave hit all of existence in all times in one big move, and there was still instances where the past or present versions of earth would be affected at different times and be absorbed entirely before future version of said earth were also consumed. This was happening even before the Monitor fully intervened as well.If you affect the past, it affects the future immediately from the perspective of the people who are in the future. It would affect everything instantaneously.
Fair enough, but it happened mere moments later so i don't really think it would make much of a difference anyway.Also, Jaxon didn't vanish instantly in 1975. So you're wrong anyway.
So TBF, i'm gonna argue that unless proven otherwise, my point still stands that wiping out genuinely is used in the context of destruction or elimination of things in the DC Universe. If a timeline is wiped out from what I've seen, there's nothing to imply that Wiping Out Timelines means anything else than the textbook definition of Wiping Out.I could find some stuff from Marvel (like Loki describing Kang's fuckery in the MCU) and some more obscure fiction, but I can't find anything specific from DC at all in similar circumstances.
So I'll take the L here for now.
Can you provide any actual DC statements of wiping out in terms of timeline destruction, by the way?So TBF, i'm gonna argue that unless proven otherwise, my point still stands that wiping out genuinely is used in the context of destruction or elimination of things in the DC Universe. If a timeline is wiped out from what I've seen, there's nothing to imply that Wiping Out Timelines means anything else than the textbook definition of Wiping Out.
Never said they're similar, just it could happen without raw destruction of timelines.Those instances aren't the same as the one that happens in this story, like I mentioned with Owl Man.
"No chain reaction" claim could be right but we don't know enough context about how rings managed to destroy it. You are taking that two statements at face value. I mean how the hell that fight can generate 2-A level energy? Fight was around city level, RIP to the ppl in town if they actually generated that much power.This is an entire Multiverse of Alternate Timelines/Universes being erased, and then instantly being brought back, no chain reaction, after the energy that wiped them out was countered. Jaxon and his like were all put back in place mere moments after the event happened and its shown that everything was restored basically the moment the energy was reversed.
There were no people for the most part. It was a dead future that the fight erased in the first place during the clash. So there'd be no city to erase.Fight was around city level, RIP to the ppl in town if they actually generated that much power.