That makes sense. That's a pretty rad concept as far as how much a writing head can take things where they want to go, particularly in a medium as imaginative as that. I get the vibe of inconsistency though, if that's where you were going.GreyICE wrote: ↑Fri Jul 10, 2020 3:36 pmWolverine's power level is entirely dependent on the writer. When he was first introduced he could heal rapidly, and his bones are unbreakable (adamantium). So cut him open, and he'd stagger around for a while holding his stomach, and then be fine.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Fri Jul 10, 2020 1:06 pmWell how is he in the comix? I left the movie theater with my friend and we agreed that CGI pretty much added to his powers when you see huge gashes coming back together like water.clearspira wrote: ↑Fri Jul 10, 2020 10:16 am Movie Wolverine is guilty of power creep. He really did not seem that tough in 1 and 2 tbh.
I'm not sure if he read the comics but we were both under the impression that like a broken leg for him would heal in a couple of days as opposed to a month, but not just defy gravity like that. Though thinking back on it, he probably doesn't deal with broken bones specifically.
As he branched out into more and more titles, his power level increased. Around Civil War 1 it reached its peak, when Nuke (a mutant who could explode in a nuclear blast and reform himself) burned Wolverine down to his skeleton with a a blast powerful enough to level a town, and Wolverine regenerated from a skeleton to just fine in about a minute.
At that point Marvel decided that he was too powerful, and like only comic books can, invented an explanation. See, Lady Death had a crush on him, so he couldn't die because she wouldn't let him. So that's why his powers kept accelerating, because she was rejecting his body's attempts to die. He turned her down, and she took away her blessing, leaving him closer to his "stagger around for a bit after being sliced open" level.
Only that's fucking nonsense, as you can tell by reading it, so everyone is ignoring it ever happened and his power is still all over the map.
Oh yeah, and in current comic continuity he's literally immortal, like all mutants who aren't Kitty Pryde.
I thought him shielding the soldier in Hiroshima/Nagasaki in Wolverine was kinda like 'wut ok I guess,' though it makes sense when it's just where a writer wanted to take it. Makes more sense than with how they did the Star Wars movies too imo.
As a