Thats how.RatRace123 said:A parsec is a unit of distance and time, how did the Millennium Falcon make the Kessel run in less than 12?
Donkey Kongpimppeter2 said:What game did Mario first appear in? And what was his name?
Not that hard for gamers, but tough for everyone else
The Kessel Run has two main routes; smugglers can either take the more dangerous route that passes by a huge cluster of black holes called the Maw (where the Sun Crusher and Death Star superlaser were developed, btw) or they can fly through the Pit, an asteroid field within a nebula. The Kessel Run normally is an 18-parsec-long route, as most smugglers fly along the Pit. However, Solo flew dangerously close to the Maw, shaving a great amount of distance off his trip.RatRace123 said:A parsec is a unit of distance not time, how did the Millennium Falcon make the Kessel run in less than 12?
Donkey Kongpimppeter2 said:What game did Mario first appear in? And what was his name?
Not that hard for gamers, but tough for everyone else
Nope. Lightsabers can't cut through things like force fields and vibroblades; I figure Superman probably fits into the same category.BehattedWanderer said:Can a Lightsaber cut Superman?
'Cause he's not. Krypton had higher gravity and a red sun; living on Earth with our yellow sun and pitiful gravity is what gives him his superpowers. Kryptonite is radioactive bits of the now-destroyed Krypton, so thanks to artistic license, his usual superpowers are negated just by having bits of his homeworld near him.OptimusPrime33 said:If Superman is invincible, how can Kryptonite hurt him?
Because the lightsabers read the script?LockeDown said:If a lightsaber amounts to projecting monochromatic light into a focused beam, then why don't the blades extend to infinity?
The man has flesh made of what should at most be called a dense chitin that looks like human skin--maybe thick enough to stop bullets, but he repeatedly gets the crap beat out of him by energy weapons. And if they were doing it in the usual spot for epic lightsaber battles, which is to say somewhere dark and industrial, and away from the sun, the Superman is fucked, no?atalanta said:Han, obviously.
Nope. Lightsabers can't cut through things like force fields and vibroblades; I figure Superman probably fits into the same category.BehattedWanderer said:Can a Lightsaber cut Superman?
'Cause he's not. Krypton had higher gravity and a red sun; living on Earth with our yellow sun and pitiful gravity is what gives him his superpowers. Kryptonite is radioactive bits of the now-destroyed Krypton, so thanks to artistic license, his usual superpowers are negated just by having bits of his homeworld near him.OptimusPrime33 said:If Superman is invincible, how can Kryptonite hurt him?