Haha. I was waiting for someone to bring this up.
As much as I'm enjoying this debate, I can't help but think it'll be redundant a month from now. I know it's all in good fun and I'll continue reading (good arguments are being made on both sides); however, I'd consider revisiting this discussion after Endgame drops. Just my two cents. By all means, carry on.
I'm not arguing that what Marvel did there was equivalent to some sort of light speed reflexes. I'm arguing that it's akin to bullet timing *when she is in flight and using the flight as a means of propulsion*.
Okay, you can say Han Solo does it too and he's clearly not a bullet timer or even an aim dodger. But then you get into this tricky area of people who shouldn't be able to do something still do it so everyone's feats of doing it are disqualified.
Power with Girl is better.
Actually, Twickster, what is your source for 200 ton ICBM weight estimates? Largest real world I can find is just shy of 10 tons.
Edit: So I tripled that for 30 tons (it's bigger than an ICBM so sure) and put it at 7 km/s instead of 6.5. Seems like it's suddenly on par with the ship/apartment feats. Happy to be proven wrong though! 200 ton ICBM's might be real, just my quick Google stuff couldn't find anything like that.
Last edited by The Arbiter; 03-14-2019 at 10:01 PM.
"At the end of the day, Arby is a pretty prolific poster proposing a plurality of proper posts for us."
- big_adventure
Getting from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGM-25C_Titan_II
Weight is listed as 340,000 lb or 170 tons (I put in 200 tons amounting for some inflation for mass of a larger object). You might be conflating with one of the stages or the active warhead, which would be much lighter. Still, the size of the missile caught compares to the "full" rocket, including all stages.
NOTE: I have yet to verify if this is the largest ICBM ever, but fur purposes its certainly large enough to compare.
Further edit: A list of ICBMs and their size can be found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_ICBMs
Based on this, the largest ICBMs ever, the R-7 Semyorka, weighed in excess of 300 tons (280,000 kg). A photo comparison of the largest ICBM compared to human size:
Last edited by Twickster; 03-14-2019 at 10:21 PM.
Just got out of the movie theater. Y'all are overselling the missile feat. It's good, but it certainly doesn't put her well beyond anyone else.
The ship she blew up was similarly, the same kinda ship Rocket Raccoon fucked up, in GotG.
Yeah, but if you... man, we're getting into weird analogy territory, like if you disintegrated Superman's arms he wouldn't be able to go "fool! Little did you know that my arms and I are one and can be remade from me!" and will his arms back into being from pure nothingness. - Pendaran
Arx Inosaan
That pic seems about right for size. So 300 tons.
"At the end of the day, Arby is a pretty prolific poster proposing a plurality of proper posts for us."
- big_adventure
Yeah, but if you... man, we're getting into weird analogy territory, like if you disintegrated Superman's arms he wouldn't be able to go "fool! Little did you know that my arms and I are one and can be remade from me!" and will his arms back into being from pure nothingness. - Pendaran
Arx Inosaan
Believe me, nothing would please me more than considering that as legit, but there is neither an actual weight or point of reference for that feat, hence there is no way to know how much force Thor exerted. I would say the "restarting the rings of Nidavellir" greater, but then I believe that was ruled as SMvsFL together with the star feat for the time being. As it is, both DCEU Superman's and especially Carol's are way higher.