Talk:Bass Vs Metal Sonic/@comment-33067344-20180120203849/@comment-32617116-20180211211255

1. They're a string of numbers, seperated by periods (see below), with no abbreviation of a measurement or the full name of a measurement next to it and it's concerning a location. You can't just say they're clearly miles.

2. Let's-a go.

https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/deathbattlefanon/images/3/39/Temp_file_32617116_1518381077/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/400

I didn't just squint, I took a 720p HD screenshot and put it in to docs to really dig in to it. The text used on the screen is Arial (this will be important later.) Comparing it to Arial shows that they're exactly the same. I retyped the entire thing in to Docs as Arial and it's a perfect match as what's on the screen.

More proof it's Arial?

https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/deathbattlefanon/images/9/91/Temp_file_32617116_1518381411/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/400

The text used less than 50 seconds before in the same cutscene is Arial as well. I did the same process as before and it's definetly Arial alright. That's more proof.

https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/deathbattlefanon/images/5/55/Temp_file_32617116_1518381531/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/400

This is important because an arial comma looks nothing like what's used on the screen. The "commas" on the screen lack the hook at the bottom that's just as big as the rest of an Arial comma. It's definitely a period. Like what's used in a coordinate, not a full number.

More?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HCBZ8I2yC1w

NASA doesn't use commas in their distances for celestial bodies, as shown above in the video where they leave out commas for the KM distance. They're not neccesary. They only use them to seperate different slews of data. But it's neccesary to put a period in for a coordinate. Eggman is at least NASA level in terms of intelligence and likely much higher, so why would he put commas in a large number when NASA doesn't? Because he doesn't. He just puts periods in coordinates.

More?

Going by what you're saying, Little Planet is 3,246,572,691 miles away from Sonic's world. That's 34.8323485333 times farther than the sun. More than 1 million earth sized planets (Sonic's world is earth sized, or at least close to it. It shares many similarites with earth in real life as shown in Sonic Unleashed, as well as other things like it having a moon like our world and whatnot) can fit in to the sun. We can see the sun from earth because it is a close enough distance and it is very big. Now make the sun earth sized. Now it's already massively harder to see. Now make it 34.8323485333 times farther, and make it a bit smaller. That's Little Planet in this situation. However, it's shown to be much closer than that in Sonic 4 (https://youtu.be/xpZ3YZVfc20?t=50s 50-1:05) when we see full views of the two planets and neither are a speck from the viewpoint like they should be if they're as far as your say, and in Sonic CD Sonic can clearly see it (https://youtu.be/ccpY14bXcug?t=1m9s) from where he's standing. Sonic's world would be a speck in Sonic 4 (the game this "distance" COMES FROM) and Little Planet would be more of a speck in Sonic CD.

More?

What kind of genius scientist doesn't put the distance the number is describing next to the number in question? He would put mi if it were actually miles. Or just straight up put miles. But he doesn't. You know what you wouldn't have to put an abbreviation for? A coordinate. (example: https://www.whataremycoordinates.com/)

Conclusion: That slew of numbers doesn't represent miles.