Latest Posts(6)
See AllForget Goku, DC Believes Superman's Dragon Ball Rival Is the Last Person You'd Expect
Superman has literally lifted and held a book with an infinite number of pages. With the help of Shazam, of course... but half of infinity is still infinity. That's the very definition of unquantifiable strength.
He's traveled from one side of the DC universe to the other near instantaneously (literally breaking the concept of infinity).... a universe proven (multiple times) to be far, far larger than the universe Dragon Ball takes place in.
He has contained a black hole in the palm of his hands with little effort.
Superboy-Prime threw a single punch and shattered space-time and reality itself.
"Some people won't ever let their hero lose in their mind and I guess that's okay."
Word.
I get wanting ya boy to win and all, but these arguments have been constantly and consistently settled.
Superman absolutely trounces Goku, every single time - at least as of now. Goku has never performed a greater feat of raw strength than Superman.
Comparing Kakarot to Kal-El is like comparing a 9mm to an ICBM fitted with nuclear warheads. Goku's still orders of magnitude less of a threat than Superman, and likely always will be. That's the entire point of Superman; he's supposed to be unbeatable.
Kraven The Hunter Review: I'm Frustrated By How Much Aaron Taylor-Johnson's Marvel Superhero Movie Squanders Its Potential
I dont think that's the insult you think it is. Not knowing the meaning of a simple 5 letter word isn't exactly something to be proud about, nor is it explicitly tied to *going to college*.
Intractability isn't a positive quality.
Who would win in a fight: Homelander or Superman?
Superman would wipe the floor with Homelander, even in a weakened kryptonite-induced state (barring Gold Kryptonite, but that's another thing alltogether).
Superman can move at billions or even trillions of times the speed of light.
He has literally lifted a book with an infinite amount of pages (yes, he was aided by Shazam, but half of infinity is still infinity).
He has contained a literal gravitational singularity (a black hole) in the palms of his hands.
He can sneeze galaxies away, by accident.
He can keep up with Wally West (not only the fastest flash, but the fastest thing that exists as something more than an abstract concept). Wally can travel the DC universe (which is many orders of magnitude larger than our own observable universe) from one "side" to the other "side" essentially instantaneously.
He has survived being directly hit by Darkseid's Omega Beams. Which can essentially completely and utterly erase people from existence.
There is no world, fictional or otherwise, where Homelander would have even the tiniest, most insignificant chance of beating Kal-El in a fight, regardless of what sneaky, underhanded tactic or tool he brought to the encounter. Kal-El is almost a literal god. And, as mentioned in the article, Homelander is merely the largest fish in the fishbowl on your counter, when the Megalodon that is Superman is ruling the ocean.
Omni-man would have much better luck against Kal than Homelander ever would, and even then it's STILL not even remotely close. Just as well, Omni-man would annihilate Homelander in an instant.
Hell, Goku would even lose to Superman, soundly - and Goku could glare at both Homelander and Omni-man and they'd spontaneously disintegrate.
The entire point of Superman is that he's the thing they measure everyone else's strength against. Superman is literally written to be that "unreachable limit", the point that no one else can or ever will be able to attain. That's the whole point of his character.
Marvel's Thunderbolts* Characters, Ranked By Threat Level
A Million. A million exploding suns.
Still under Superman by leaps and bounds, but then again it's kind of unfair to compare most Marvel heroes to DC's.
I Didn't Love Halo's TV Show, But Season 3 Being Canceled Is Still Very Frustrating
Master Chief absolutely does take his armor off, he just explicitly doesn't do so in the games. He does in the novels, and he does in the games world, we just don't see it happening. The man has to have his armor removed at various points not only for maintenance, but for upgrades, like going from the Mk IV to the Mk V armor. He doesn't remove his helmet in the game because there's no narrative reason to do so, and because it's a video game and Immersion is an important part of playing video games.
He doesn't form bonds with people because he is a highly trained weapon of mass destruction. He is a soldier, who's job is to follow orders, and complete his mission at any cost. He was also abducted as a child and forced to fulfill a roll that was meant for adults. Any person going through the same thing would have major issues with forming bonds or connections with people. He was also, you know, genetically and physically augmented to be a more effective soldier (or maybe you don't, seemingly). They pumped him full of drugs to make him more compliant, chemically castrated him, and made him suffer through pain like nobody has ever experience before. Of freaking course he tends to not form bonds with people.
And, finally.... crimeny, chief is well established to be 7'2" in the lore with his Mjolnir suit on. Elites range from 7'4" to over 8 and a half feet tall. Chief has never been portrayed to be taller than even the shortest of the Sangheili. He's a massive man, but still small compared to any given Elite.
I Didn't Love Halo's TV Show, But Season 3 Being Canceled Is Still Very Frustrating
Are you a bot, because there are so many things inaccurate in both these comments that idk how someone who claims the show wasn't adhering to lore can sit there and then say so many wrong things about the actual lore in the games.
Most of the Spartans on Reach do die, yes, but not most of the Spartans in general.
The Pillar of Autumn did not contain the "last of humanity"; earth still exists, and many other Human colonies still exist - and are functional. Billions, if not Trillions, of people are still alive during the events of the fall of reach, and afterwards. The Pillar was simply one of the last functioning Cruisers close to Reach, and it was the designated ship that was supposed to carry the rest of the surviving Spartan II's, along with Cortana, to the Soell system where installation 04 was located. It was near Reach in the first place, however, due to Operation: Red flag.
Sergent Johnson isn't even in the show, so, again, idk WTH you're even talking about.
No human is "in control" of the Covenant. It's made explicitly clear, multiple times, that Makee is merely being used by the Prophets for their own personal gain. They even attempt to have her killed when they think she has outlived her usefulness. The only reason she survives is specifically because she managed to convince the Arbiter that she was the one with the answers. Makee is "in control" of nothing, short of her own actions.
The Prophets did not send the Covenant to Reach because they were aware of Humanity's ties to the Forerunners, because that wasn't even figured out till around the events of Halo 4/5. The covenant quite literally happened upon Reach due to chance. They were scouring the region looking for Forerunner artifacts, found Reach, noticed it had them, then covertly infiltrated the planet to facilitate the Covenant fleets eventual take over of the planet.