[quote=@Host] Except Dark didn't know him well enough. Your argument is 100% assumption. No, the argument is instead that even if you have a plasma gun or a nuke, if I hit you in the temple really hard with a rock, you're going to die. But let's say this is a really strange rock that you have to put together that has no practical purpose, other than hitting people in the head. It's still a rock, technologically inferior, something you can plan for, etc. But unless you know exactly how someone's going to throw it and where it'll be (in which case you can still get hit), your best bet it to run and hope you don't get hit. [/quote] Did you not catch how I specified my reasoning. He's a regular human, which are incredibly predictable. You're also ignoring the time frame again, actually, you're just ignoring it constantly, and the very likely part about Dark either being able to spy on him and/or steal knowledge from anyone working for him he came across. It's 100% probability. Monkeys and typewriters will eventually write the works of Shakespeare, countless Darks with countless time will have already done 99.9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999% of all the things Dynamo will ever do. Your analogy is immeadiately wrong with that because it's not that you're hitting me with a rock, it's that you're hiding behind a boulder when a nuke hits. And it's still void because I've never been arguing a tech difference aside from for the specifics of why David's thing couldn't have come about anyway, I've been arguing that Dark would already know how it's made, how it works, countless ways to improve it, and countless ways to get past it, which he would have prepared for and armed Mio with. The thing is that Dark's done enough to be able to let the rock hit him and have it hit where he wants, so that it shatters upon contact with him. If we're going to do the tech side of why this isn't logically possible, you're basically saying that a fist sized rock blocked a nuke, destroyed the plane that carried it, blocked an antimatter explosion, survived a neutron star being dropped on it, and then hit someone on the other side of the milky way all at the same time. It's like saying that you're pouring water in a bowl and that the water caused all of the quantum particles to behave in the exact way that it takes to turn the bowl into a cat, when all you actually did is carry a dog into a room and spill root beer. It doesn't work. The analogy doesn't work either, but I'm bored and need something to keep from blehing.