So the fourth raikage probably weighs much more than Tsunade because he's way bigger. And on top of that he's also faster than Tsunade.
As we know Force=Mass*acceleration.
And kinetic energy is (mass*velocity^2)\2
The fourth raikage can obviously accelerate faster and move at a higher velocity than Tsunade and he weighs more than her. So how in the world is Tsunade stronger than him? It doesn't make any sense.
Kishi should really take a basic physics class.
So the fourth raikage probably weighs much more than Tsunade because he's way bigger. And on top of that he's also faster than Tsunade.
As we know Force=Mass*acceleration.
And kinetic energy is (mass*velocity^2)\2
The fourth raikage can obviously accelerate faster and move at a higher velocity than Tsunade and he weighs more than her. So how in the world is Tsunade stronger than him? It doesn't make any sense.
Kishi should really take a basic physics class.
I know. It's crazy that Usain Bolt doesn't do weight lifting. He should be way stronger than the rest
Concentration of chakra. Area of impact point. Fiction.
Why doesn't anyone understand that it's irrelevant how she generates the force. It still doesn't make sense.
Saying it's a super power or chakra doesn't make a difference.
I think you might have missed the "work of fiction" part.
Fiction is okay. But I think it's retarded to completely ignore basic physics prinicipals.
Why are you asking this then? Why not ask how Rock Lee can kick someone several feet into the air and make them float there temporarily? Or how Naruto can make hundreds of copies of himself out of nothing?
It was a rhetorical question, I was merely pointing out that it's silly.
First of all, Naruto's clones can be somewhat explained because they're made of chakra which is energy. And lee kicking and make them float temporarily was just slow motion, and further more when an object is thrown upwards there are a few moments where it reaches zero velocity and it looks like it's floating. The slow motion only exaggerated it.
I'm all for fiction, as long as it has some logic behind it.