Oh. You are taking about the energy field. I was thinking that a glass dome or something had been added without my notice. I didn't know that also acted as a solid. I'm sorry that I keep overlooking these details. I guess I have a slight issue of misunderstanding some of the wording being used. I am no stranger to reading, but I have a slight tendency to miss the more subtle wording given in writing. As for the amount of heat. I still think it is pretty dam insane. The reason I thought it all flash boiled was because of the descriptors you used to describe the aftermath of the heat. I thought to form such a thick cloud that made it to where one couldn't see further than three feet in front of them would take a large amount of water from all across the park, especially since it would try to rise and clear itself thanks to the high temperatures. Another thing was the fact all the wood caught fire, and fiber glass slides were melting that had me in a panic. I was thinking of the thermal dynamics and the amount of heat that would need to radiate from those plasma balls over such a large of space, in order to cause this kind of destruction across the entire park. If the heat radiates outward from the balls, then the temperature would be immensely higher than these objects would actually burn and melt at. Unless you meant all this heat was evenly spread out from the beginning. That would take far less energy and be way less deadly. I will note I have no problem with the aftermath of what he did. I just wanted to put in perspective how powerful that actually could be given the science behind thermal dynamics.