Originally Posted by
Loki
I'm well aware it isn't an official rule, but rather a rough rule of thumb that has been used in the past. I just can't be bothered to have to keep spelling that out in every post. And as a rough rule, it still seems to be working fairly well, given how many years the Power Pack kids claim to have aged compared to how many years have passed in the real world, and given how long Peter Parker claims to have been Spider-Man (see below)
Peter Parker recently claimed he'd only been Spider-Man for 13 years, and Ben Grimm claimed he'd been the Thing for 13 years in his last ongoing series. In the real world, Spider-Man debuted a little under 55 years ago; using the 4 to 1 conversion rate, that's 13.75 years, which actually fits the statement. The conversion doesn't work quite so well for the Thing (11.25 years since his debut at the time he made his statement, rather than the stated 13), but like I said, it's only meant to be a rough approximation. However, whatever way you cut it, Ahura was born in 1988, when their careers had to be around half that length. There's no way he can be chronologically 16 unless he's stayed in another dimension where time moves quicker (don't laugh - there's at least half a dozen characters who have done exactly this). Real world - writer presumably screwed up, or didn't care about the continuity. In-world excuse - like you said, Ahura is using what he figures is his physiological age, rather than his chronological one.