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Me desperately trying to find feats.Veloxt1r0kore said:So....no High 6-C MCU?
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Me desperately trying to find feats.Veloxt1r0kore said:So....no High 6-C MCU?
So we can use the Witch feat for Strange and Ancient One?Spinosaurus75DinosaurFan said:@RanaProGamer The witch feat only scales to wizards. The Manhattan feat is actually very low if we follow the current storm standards. The Asgard feat is also outdated. The other storm feat was recalculated at Small City level. Sokovia was recalculated at City level.
I see, so what about the remaining 2 storm feats, after re-calcing them I think we can end the thread and apply the changes.Hellbeast1 said:The Witch isn't accepted because it seems to just be nebulous darkness rather then actual clouds
Can we draw a circle for the meteor and scale Iron Man's height to it? Keep in mind this is still a low-ball as Iron Man is actually closer to the camera than the meteor.Spinosaurus75DinosaurFan said:
Sorry for the late reply, is this good enough? https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/399619862361538570/651050995995901952/image0.pngSpinosaurus75DinosaurFan said:Can someone help draw a circle? I don't have the apps to do it on my laptop.
Well the Tesseract feat does seem like an outlier even if we include the neutron star feat.Revan Laha said:Just sayin, what if we consider the neutron star feat as an Ant-feat and destroying the Tasseract as true one?
Seems fair, since it took a Large Island Level explosion to kill Prime Surtur.Spinosaurus75DinosaurFan said:Island level.
Iron Man saves the world again.
What's that, 7-BDino W said:A moon size of 128.43 Kilometers would mean Titan's moon is 365.01 kilometers away. Which would give a result of 1.2078073e+17 joules. But someone should recalc it because I didn't record my method.
I'm not sure.Dino W said:Wouldn't it be more accurate to assume Titan to be the size of Earth, then angsize the moon to Titan, and then calculate the size of the moon? I got a moon size of 128 kilometers when I tried it.
But what distance did you assumed to be between Titan and the moon? We don't know that so it's easiest to just assume it to be as big as our Moon.Dino W said:Wouldn't it be more accurate to assume Titan to be the size of Earth, then angsize the moon to Titan, and then calculate the size of the moon? I got a moon size of 128 kilometers when I tried it.
365.01 km away due to his calcSpinosaurus75DinosaurFan said:But what distance did you assumed to be between Titan and the moon? We don't know that so it's easiest to just assume it to be as big as our Moon.Dino W said:Wouldn't it be more accurate to assume Titan to be the size of Earth, then angsize the moon to Titan, and then calculate the size of the moon? I got a moon size of 128 kilometers when I tried it.
But wouldn't that we be inaccurate since a planet of same size as Earth would have the same Roche Limit? In which case, the planet Titan is actually a Small Planet if it has a moon that close to it.Dino W said:Wouldn't it be more accurate to assume Titan to be the size of Earth, then angsize the moon to Titan, and then calculate the size of the moon? I got a moon size of 128 kilometers when I tried it.