[quote=@Burning Kitty] I was referring to information from Star Wars. [/quote] It's even possible using the Nerdist's math -- he did everything assuming the bullet enters at a 90-degree angle to the blade. Let's say it enters at a 0-degree angle -- now the bullet is traveling down the full length of the lightsaber. He didn't do the math, but it's a pretty easy extrapolation -- that bullet is vaporized. So if the question is "CAN IT," then yes. Absolutely. From what angle can it be done -- I'd have to do math, and I don't feel like doing math, but it wouldn't take long -- calculate the distance a bullet would have to travel through a lightsaber blade under these assumptions, then use that as the hypotenuse of a right triangle with a base of (saber width) and length of X. Solve for X, you find the max angle of total vaporization. But also: the way he's defining his saber traits is very suspect. Very small sample size, poorly justified, and ignoring a whole [i]boatload[/i] of contrary evidence -- sabers demonstrate hard properties when they clash, what drives that material behavior and how would it affect a high-energy projectile impact?