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Edited by Notturno Shade: 3/25/2016 8:04:40 AMAs for Bellcross I can't really find a clip depicting his immense power. He's the big, dark blue, blue crystal orb monster in the back. I remember watching this anime, and it's disgusting how powerful he is.
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Edited by Edcub One: 3/25/2016 4:20:17 PMOk, but what are the Eva characters feats?
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Kinda posted the answer to that one at the same time as the other o3o.
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Edited by Notturno Shade: 3/25/2016 7:56:24 AMWell as For Eva Unit 1 (And Shinji, the pilot). In this scene of the Rebuild movie, Evangelion 2.22,The Eva is basically becoming god like. Why? To fulfill Shinji's wish of bringing character Ayanami Rei back. She died earlier in the movie, hence why this angel, Zeruel looks feminine. The angel absorbed, and or killed Ayanami. Now what force could bring back a dead person, or thing? Only a god really. This is why I said Eva Unit 1 on the verge of second impact.
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That doesn't really tell us how powerful they are, bringing someone to live=\=a durability feat.
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So what you're basically saying is a god like being can't take a hit from an energy blast?
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Shawn Farrell from the 4400 can revive people, but physically he is a normal human.
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We don't know how powerful this being is in terms of durability. People in fiction can bring people to life without being powerful in other aspects.
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To answer your question about the Durability of an EVA unit, each is protected by what's known as an "AT Field." Even a weak AT Field, generated by a weaker Angel can survive multiple near-simultaneous Nuclear detonations at point-blank range. The AT Field of EVA-01 is multiple orders of magnitude stronger than that, and can, in theory, only be breached by either another AT Field, or by specific, uncommon weapons. Plus, the EVA, as a pseudo-living being is also capable of self-repair.
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This still doesn't tell us if it could survive.
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Assuming that even a weak AT Field can stop DOZENS of nukes with little visible effect to the being behind it, then EVA-01 could conceptually stop the equivalent of hundreds to thousand of Nukes with minimal effect to itself.
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Even if in that's true, assuming each nuke has the power of the most powerful nuke in history (100 megatons). It's still nothing compared to the Death Star laser which fires with 53 quadrillion megatons of energy.
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Where exactly are you pulling that number from?
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Edited by Edcub One: 3/31/2016 11:22:50 PMThe minimal amount of energy required to mass scatter a Earth sized planet.
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Key question is how much of the force is from the actual blast, and how much comes from secondary reactions in the planet itself.
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Um......planets are not combustible.
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Theoretically, the planet itself isn't. However, certain materials could react to the blaster bolt, not to mention cataclysmic reactions to a massive energy blast going cleanly through it.
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It's a laser, lasers don't cause random elements to become combustible.
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Technically, it's a bolt of hyper-energized particles, more akin to a plasma shot than a laser.
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No real difference in this case.
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Theoretically, it's a huge difference. The nature of a Blaster sounds is that it rapidly disperses on impact with a surface. So whatever the Death Star is firing, it's causing subsequent reactions throughout the planet, thus the uniform detonation pattern.
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There is no evidence that blasters cause things to become combustible.
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I'm not saying that a standard blaster causes things to magically become combustible. What I'm saying is that the Death Star main cannon, which appears to be a significantly different type of weapon from "standard" blasters, appears to destroy planets from some form of internal reaction.
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It looks to be a laser. It has never been hinted that it causes chain reactions. So we can't assume it does.