Chazore said:
I think it's already been established in the SW universe that there's hardly any super strong material, at best you'd need a force field to negate most firepower and even then on places like Endor the very bunker holding the shield gen for the DS mk 2 was probably the weakest area and even that got blown up so easily. After watchinbg every Star Wars movie and animation, practically everything in the show strong or weak has been shown to be easily destroyed or blown up, there's maybe one or two materials but in the end those are negated by everything else that's been blown up bay style. |
LOL your pictures just prove my point.
For one thing the you can't build an artificial solid moon sized structure without super strong materials, the stresses a structure that big would undergo are well beyond real world technology.
The Executor Class ship is over 17KMs long, yet the Death Star still stands after that enormous ship lands into it, most definitely an example of super strong materials.
The Death Star was destroyed by it's reactor exploding, that's a power source sufficient enough for a moon sized space station/ship, in order to blast something that big apart and keep it apart you have to break it's gravitational bonds, meaning that power source is probably millions of times more powerful than anything in the modern world, by which I mean all potential explosive armaments on the planet today.
My point is that a regular dude running around with a blaster isn't blowing a hole in a wall, unless he has some advanced explosive, but said explosive will probably wipe out him, his buddies and leave a huge crator in the area of the map if he uses it, basically end game style stuff.
Unless it's a regular concrete wall, there are tonnes of examples of super strong materials in Star Wars, unless you're going to ignore the laws of physics.
Regarding the AT-AT it's still in one piece, right up until it's defenses are warn down by super strong lasers from snowspeeders.
I've watched every star wars film, multiple times, the events you showed actually prove my point.












