Which Avenger-Team Buster takes it?
Only in case Nefaria's speed turns this into a stomp, two alternative scenarios:
1) Graviton starts with shields active
2) Speed equalized
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Which Avenger-Team Buster takes it?
Only in case Nefaria's speed turns this into a stomp, two alternative scenarios:
1) Graviton starts with shields active
2) Speed equalized
I don’t know that the speed DOES actually make it a stomp, because I’m not sure Nefaria can hurt Graviton since he became pure gravity. He just tends to completely no-sell physical attacks from Class 100s... except for some reason in that Iron Man story when he was able to be killed by a bullet because muffins. I think we’ll treat that as a lowball.
With the latter conditions in place, he certainly couldn’t hurt him.
I know Nefaria is a bit above these guys, but Graviton has EFFORTLESSLY crushed teams of Avengers with guys like Thor and Wonder Man, and likewise the Thunderbolts with Atlas.
He’s a honey badger for Class 100s.
(The beard-off in this match would be epic though.)
count nefaria also has laser vision so he could easily do a homelander and lasered graviton into crisp from afar.
[QUOTE=marshal88;5342813]count nefaria also has laser vision so he could easily do a homelander and lasered graviton into crisp from afar.[/QUOTE]
I don't know for certain but I'm pretty sure Graviton has force fields that can no sell that easily.
[QUOTE=Dark Soul # 7;5343082]I don't know for certain but I'm pretty sure Graviton has force fields that can no sell that easily.[/QUOTE]
He does indeed.
Question, if lasers are light with practically no weight to them, how do force fields stop them? Please be gentle, this is a student asking teachers that "no dumb questions" question. lol
[QUOTE=Blackid;5345354]Question, if lasers are light with practically no weight to them, how do force fields stop them? Please be gentle, this is a student asking teachers that "no dumb questions" question. lol[/QUOTE]
Same way that force fields stop sonic attacks but allow normal conversations between people inside and outside of a force field: plot-induced stupidity.
[QUOTE=Blackid;5345354]Question, if lasers are light with practically no weight to them, how do force fields stop them? Please be gentle, this is a student asking teachers that "no dumb questions" question. lol[/QUOTE]
Basically:
1. It’s comics.
2. Even using real science, gravity does bend light (although that’s more to do with distorting the space-time through which the light travels). And sufficient gravity (such as a black hole) is such that even light can’t escape.
[QUOTE=Beadle;5345395]Basically:
2. Even using real science, gravity does bend light (although that’s more to do with distorting the space-time through which the light travels). And sufficient gravity (such as a black hole) is such that even light can’t escape.[/QUOTE]
This doesn't really explain why Graviton or any person with a forcefield can see at all. It's better to just chalk it up to comic book physics.
[QUOTE=Beadle;5345395]Basically:
1. It’s comics.
2. Even using real science, gravity does bend light (although that’s more to do with distorting the space-time through which the light travels). And sufficient gravity (such as a black hole) is such that even light can’t escape.[/QUOTE]
tl;dr if gravity is dummy thicc enough, not even light can resist it.
[QUOTE=Slade1;5346568]This doesn't really explain why Graviton or any person with a forcefield can see at all.[/QUOTE]
It's not intended to?
Also, if the fields in question only block potentially dangerous energies (or potentially dangerous [I]levels[/I] of energy), the harmless yet still useful stuff would get through and allow for sight.
[QUOTE=Noldere;5346744]It's not intended to?
Also, if the fields in question only block potentially dangerous energies (or potentially dangerous [I]levels[/I] of energy), the harmless yet still useful stuff would get through and allow for sight.[/QUOTE]
Yes, it's very similar to Earth's Ozone layer, but it's never been explained in comics though. It's just one of those things where you can't think too hard on it. Because if you do, almost everything in comics/fiction falls apart.
Physics and most sciences need to be kept on a leash when comics (hell, fiction in general) are in town.
How do people flying faster than the speed of sound hear each other talk?
How do speedsters operating at light-speed-ish or faster see anything in front of them?
How do characters see/detect things moving towards Earth at faster than light speeds?
How does something moving light speeds not end the universe, as it would literally require more than the energy in the universe to make that happen?
Amusingly, there's a nod to some of the above in one of the Flash's best speed feats, Post-Crisis. Happens in JLA: Elite, when Flash is fighting two different fights at superspeed about twenty-five hundred miles apart. Simultaneously. In different costumes.
While the Flash is normally depicted as being able to hear and see things (and converse with other speedsters) when moving at speeds beyond even lightspeed, here the narration (his thoughts) describe the fact that he is now 'moving too fast for sound'. Not 'faster than sound', but 'too fast for sound'. And there's no more speech bubbles, nothing.
And then he states 'almost too fast for light' (again, not 'almost lightspeed', but 'almost too fast for light'). And the details of the panels are getting blacked out.
The point is that he's going so fast now that event the BS comic book capacity of speedsters to hear and see things when moving beyond lightspeed is breaking down.
And what follows is the insane feat of him looking through a magical gateway between the two fights at himself - in both directions, wearing a different costume. So either he's crossing 2500+ miles (and changing his clothing) in the amount of time it takes light to cross ~3' (the distance between his 'selves' on panel), or he's literally in two places at once, take your pick (time being granular, I suppose?).
It's a pretty amusing nod to comic book physics being ridiculous.
[QUOTE=Sharpandpointies;5348016]Amusingly, there's a nod to some of the above in one of the Flash's best speed feats, Post-Crisis. Happens in JLA: Elite, when Flash is fighting two different fights at superspeed about twenty-five hundred miles apart. Simultaneously. In different costumes.
While the Flash is normally depicted as being able to hear and see things (and converse with other speedsters) when moving at speeds beyond even lightspeed, here the narration (his thoughts) describe the fact that he is now 'moving too fast for sound'. Not 'faster than sound', but 'too fast for sound'. And there's no more speech bubbles, nothing.
And then he states 'almost too fast for light' (again, not 'almost lightspeed', but 'almost too fast for light'). And the details of the panels are getting blacked out.
The point is that he's going so fast now that event the BS comic book capacity of speedsters to hear and see things when moving beyond lightspeed is breaking down.
And what follows is the insane feat of him looking through a magical gateway between the two fights at himself - in both directions, wearing a different costume. So either he's crossing 2500+ miles (and changing his clothing) in the amount of time it takes light to cross ~3' (the distance between his 'selves' on panel), or he's literally in two places at once, take your pick (time being granular, I suppose?).
It's a pretty amusing nod to comic book physics being ridiculous.[/QUOTE]
And yet DC's insisted for years that he could move at "almost the speed of light" :D