15:19 As a physics major, I have always loved this moment. Shows the guys at ArcSys did their research them shifted all of their priority to cool rather than realism. None of this is actually possible, but I don't think there are any terms here that were misused. They've used real terms properly, and we can see that That Man + Sol is incredibly powerful, given the radius of the ball formed by the punch. If we estimate that to be half of a foot or sixth of a meter in radius, rearrange the Schwarzhild radial limit equation to find mass then use E = mc^2 to find energy (only from the rest mass, ignoring all kinetic energy), that punch contained 1.12e43 joules of energy. That's about par with 2.685e25 Tsar Bombas, the largest nuclear weapon ever built. That can also be written as 26,850,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Tsar Bombas, which is 26.85 trillion sets of 1 trillion Tsar Bombas. Or you could say it is on par with a supernova, where stars explode. I don't think Arc System Works intended exact numbers to be run, but that is still crazy. It just makes me love the absurdity even more. edit: corrected both instances of 1 billion to 1 trillion, corrected a typo where I said I found mass when I meant to say energy
@Sorën Sama (tl;dr at end) I'd say that you learned an application of Physics rather than Physics. I know it's splitting hairs, but it's the difference between engineering and science. Regardless, I'm happy you enjoyed it! Why did I split the hairs? Because if you want to learn physics: The Schwarzschild radial limit used in the first part of my calculation (to grossly oversimplify things that I don't understand and haven't learned) is the radius of the smallest sphere that you can form with mass without it becoming a black hole. It can also be said to be the event horizon of a black hole given the mass. The second part of my calculation used mass energy equivalence, which states that the energy contained in an object at rest is equivalent to it's mass times the speed of light squared. This doesn't have much of an application in daily life due to the fact that a "normal" amount of energy corresponds to an unmeasurably small mass, but if you work at the nuclear level you can actually measure effects from this. This conversion into energy is also why nuclear weapons are so powerful and why nuclear reactors are so efficient, and they don't even convert the majority of their mass into energy. It's also usually much more difficult to go backwards, as matter tends to favor high kinetic energy and not stay in place enough to form more mass than needed. Yet That Man could go that way. Takeaways/tl;dr: That Man making the energy into matter was the equivalent of unexploding a nuclear bomb. Then, if That Man shrunk the ball any smaller than he did, he would have made a black hole.
9:21 The music is absolutely what makes this scene as hype as it is. Perfectly timed in this video, too. I would not have cheered out loud if anything other than Storyteller was playing to this. One of the absolute best tracks in all of Guilty Gear.
2:00 this is a reference and homage to Neon Genesis Evangelion, for those that didn't know. Where Shinji did the same thing with a missile in his Eva unit.
Truthfully I am no expert in Guilty Gear lore but is there a reason why Justice looks like this? In previous games she looked like a Tekkaman Blade character but in this game she looks like an evangelion monster.
@@Black-117-Rockstar apparently if read the manga this is complete justice and the back in GG 1 was the incomplete because Sol beat her that badly when she was first sealed away.
COME ON DP FASTER JUST A LITTLE BIT OF ENERGY I'M GONNA TRYBSOMETHING FUN RIGHT NOW I GUESS SOME PEOPLE CALL IT GORILLAMODE LET'S BURN THIS CITY TO ASHES AND SEE WHAT KISKE THINKS ITS SUCH PATHETIC NEATNESS BUTNOT FOR LONG COZ YOU'LL GET SOL'D