Unicron would trounce a Jedi, because he is Orson Welles. Filled with green pea-ness, if you will.
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... I can't let this go any longer. You mean archon, right?Knight Templar said:but i'm a Arcon! also i am confused in 4,5 and 6 they kill like crazy. but in 1,2,3 killing is not as O.K.tiredinnuendo said:To quote neverending story, "No! You don't understand anything!"Knight Templar said:why not? i'm no monster. killing is a parth to the dark side. also lets say i'm a Arcon from starcraft.
But yes, a Jedi is still totally beatable.
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Oh yeah, anyone that's good at Soul Calibur can probably beat a jedi.Slycne said:This is all strangely appropriate considering that Yoda and Vadar are characters in the new Soul Calibur.
True. It makes sense for the Jedi to be represented differently in different media. The movie Jedi would appear weak in an anime, hence the power upgrade, and the splitting of force powers int distinct 'special moves' eg force pull, force push,force speed etc works in the context of a video game.Fraser.J.A said:@clockpenalty
Good point. I had to think about that one for a second, but it's obvious really: different audiences. Movie audiences are more interested in seeing relatable characters and watching human drama, novel readers are more about living inside the mind of a remarkable character, anime viewers just want to see shit get blowed up. And boobies.
Wrong. Even movie jedi would sense the Rifleman's evil intent, even if he were across the galaxy. Anime Jedi would force crush him from that distance, too.chenry said:@clockpenalty
One hunting rifle, 700 yards. Jedi dead on the floor before you even hear the shot.
Sure worked nicely for them in Episode III, huh? I'm detecting sarcasm here, yes? Even if that were the case, a droid could do it instead, because there would be no intent to sense, just cold steel, so to speak.clockpenalty said:Wrong. Even movie jedi would sense the Rifleman's evil intent, even if he were across the galaxy. Anime Jedi would force crush him from that distance, too.chenry said:@clockpenalty
One hunting rifle, 700 yards. Jedi dead on the floor before you even hear the shot.
ComradeJim270 said:Sure worked nicely for them in Episode III, huh? I'm detecting sarcasm here, yes? Even if that were the case, a droid could do it instead, because there would be no intent to sense, just cold steel, so to speak.clockpenalty said:Wrong. Even movie jedi would sense the Rifleman's evil intent, even if he were across the galaxy. Anime Jedi would force crush him from that distance, too.chenry said:@clockpenalty
One hunting rifle, 700 yards. Jedi dead on the floor before you even hear the shot.
I also humbly submit the nuclear-armed Mobile Infantry of the novel (not the movie, which is parody and is about as true to the book as Spaceballs is to Star Wars) Starship Troopers. Escape the explosion somehow? That's ok, you're already dead from the radiation, it will just take about a week.
Knight Templar said:irenicus from BG when hes at full power. he shadows gods at that point, controles a army and was geting stronger. tell me how he would fail.
Thanks for adding that all up for me; been awhile since I've had physics classes.LordOmnit said:Okay, just to humor you, I did the math and...Ciarog said:How much momentum can one be expected to block using the force? Most shotgun gauges have a muzzle velocity between 1,100 and 1,350 feet per second (335-410 meters per second). A 12-gauge shell will generally throw over an ounce of lead in the air and most automatics hold five to eight of them, all off which can often be fired off by a skilled shooter in little more than a second. Anyone getting hit by all that metal at ranges below 5 rods or 25 meters ain't gonna be in much condition for swordplay.
There is a reason why they use very small objects at high speeds in guns. That is because of the effect described in Newton's Third Law of Motion. Once object A acts on object B, object B acts with the same magnitude with opposite direction on object A. So accelerating all those pellets with a combined mass of about .0378 kg to 410 m/s (at the max of the range you noted) in, say, a tenth of a second is about 154.98 N of force acting on the shell. Take that and divide it by a 150 pound man (using 68 kg for consistency of units) and you get 2.28 N of force acting on the person which will induce a speed of about .2279 m/s on that person.
Just think about that, if a fly splatter-died against the windshield of a bus having a mass of 1000 kg (just for shit's sake) and it weights less a few grams, then the equation F = ma would look like:
(MASSIVE NUMBER)a1 = (tiny number)a2
and would even out to a very tiny a1 and very large a2 so, essentially, the same force that will more than murder a fly will effect a miniscule acceleration on the bus' part.
The same is applied to the whole gun-thing in that we don't frequently fire things that will send us flying back at immense speeds, so we can't imagine that our foes would be flying back at immense speeds and our projectiles won't have too much force behind them save for their shape which- against some ethereal force- doesn't matter.
they still can cut your arms or legs for self-defence, like Obi-Wan in 'A new Hope'Knight Templar said:i could kill a jedi. they cant kill people or they become sith