Talk:Re: Chapter 89/@comment-78.150.142.244-20160821060104/@comment-27247962-20160821090300

^Well I didn't know that and I can't seem to find any site when I type in 29726°C. Can you send me link to where something is written about that?

But for now i'll just counter it with this. :)

If such friction can reach such heights, how is it possible that we humans can work with something like that. The most dense and sturdiest material humans have knowledge of, tungsten, boils at 5660°C it should flat out evaporate when it would produce such friction.

So how come that materials that have a melt and boiling point much lower then the heat of that friction are able to withstand it? If you can convince me by answering that question, i might lay down my disagreement.

But that fact makes me assume that it isn't necessary to withstand that amount of heat to produce it, if lightning actually produces heat up to those lvls, which I also highly doubt until I see it with my own eyes.

Because if what you say is true, then you've just proven the Kirishima's to be more resistent to heat then Superman, who gets his power from heatobjects like the sun, but never a heat object that came close to the number you just typed: 29726°C.

Added to that that the fandom assumed the kirishimas attack to be lightning. We have no word for what that attack was, but it conveniently looked like lightning.