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He/Him- 3,854
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bumping for Ant to notice me lol.
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Is it explicit that this post is ok to apply?If you two have reached agreements here, they can probably be applied now, yes.
I agree with 10-A for weakest onesActually, assuming I'm not late to the party, I've figured out how to tier the West Indian Manatee profile
- AP: 10-A to 9-C (At the low-end strength, they weigh 200 kg and are at least 2.7 m long, making it stronger than a normal 84 kg man by weight & size. At most, they’ll be superhuman in weight at 600 kg and 3.5 m long)
- Durability: 10-A to 9-C (Has more surface area than a human. Their bones are very dense and solid. They also have a minimal fat layer, but should still have strong muscles due to their capacity to go at its top speed at its weight. Is mostly muscular despite their fat-like appearance)
This seems fineActually, assuming I'm not late to the party, I've figured out how to tier the West Indian Manatee profile
- AP: 10-A to 9-C (At the low-end strength, they weigh 200 kg and are at least 2.7 m long, making it stronger than a normal 84 kg man by weight & size. At most, they’ll be superhuman in weight at 600 kg and 3.5 m long)
- Durability: 10-A to 9-C (Has more surface area than a human. Their bones are very dense and solid. They also have a minimal fat layer, but should still have strong muscles due to their capacity to go at its top speed at its weight. Is mostly muscular despite their fat-like appearance)
In SeththeProgrammer's research on the gorilla's strength in this video, how superhuman in strength the gorilla is varies by even credible sources. I predict similar results would happen if we try to go further on stuff like this. Nonetheless, the statement is more of supporting evidence to males, so it sounds acceptable.So while doing a bit of research I came across this source, which is from an organization meaning it is reliable, it states that a silverback gorilla is >10 times stronger than a human, could use it to upgrade the gorilla.
For Western Coyotes sure, but Eastern ones even shares adn with wolves and are much more robust than Western Coyotes:
- Coyote related stuff: Weight isn’t the only factor in strength, size is also a factor. I find it problematic that Coyotes are near the 10-B dogs in weight, which would mess up scaling since pitbulls and huskies should be stronger.
Will plan to add an at least 10-C female key/varies tier to the Husky and pitbull. Also, Since Huskies and Coyotes of the same weight can be considered to be physically comparable, a 25 kg coyote should have LS of 75-100 kg.For Western Coyotes sure, but Eastern ones even shares adn with wolves and are much more robust than Western Coyotes:
Also, there so much weight difference between then and Western ones:
And not only that, but there an big difference between their skulls density:
Not only that, but I don't think that an wild eastern coyote bigger than an husky should've weaker when their bones are much robust and larger than western ones, just look at the skull difference between these two subspecies.
Broken link for meAdded this link in the section with the capybara AP in my reply of lots of changes.
bumpSo while doing a bit of research I came across this source, which is from an organization meaning it is reliable, it states that a silverback gorilla is >10 times stronger than a human, could use it to upgrade the gorilla.
Original Source:bump
Yeah it would upgrade them because their profile currently says that they're 6x stronger than the average human.Original Source:
It really upgrades them, though? I thought they were actually stronger than that.
I suggested this in a CRT, but I'll also ask for the Common Starfish, Seven-Eyed Star, and Crown-of-Thorns sea star to gain body control. Sea stars extend their stomach out of their mouth to digest prey (which falls under control over anatomical features), and even the Common Starfish's page somewhat says this.Continuing from here, also my current suggestions here & on the Polar Bear's tier need to be evaluated.
Also, I'll need the American Bison's durability to have some support for it's own kinetic energy. But I'll post it later if I have the chance.
This is finished here:
American Bison: 9-B in AP & durability surprisingly for it's weight class, higher KE (There should be a link to it tanking a bull cattle charge to the head which the link is here. Although a scan of 2 buffalos instantly dying does exist, they're stated to be stronger than cattle, regularly butt heads against each other, & has a thick skull (their skull's frontal bones are up to 3.8 cm thick, consistent with the statement that their bones are 10 times harder than beef bones). They do charge at each other to display their fitness, but not to the death. It's hard to say that they can withstand a full head-to-head collision with each other despite their thick skulls. However, there is this instance of one Bison withstanding a charge from another one, so they do scale to the durability of their charges if one charged at a still one at full speed.
The scan for one withstanding ramming against a smaller, weaker bull still exists in the WABAC Machine. However, the bull was smaller)
You should see the discussion rules first on CRTs. Get a credible source that shows this body control thing is the case for stuff like IRL.I suggested this in a CRT, but I'll also ask for the Common Starfish, Seven-Eyed Star, and Crown-of-Thorns sea star to gain body control. Sea stars extend their stomach out of their mouth to digest prey (which falls under control over anatomical features), and even the Common Starfish's page somewhat says this.