Why are we quoting a post of mine that was made more than a month ago, especialy one that has already been addressed? I made that post when Zero G was first announced, There is no reason to comment on it now...
(Feb. 28, 2012 3:13 AM)bladermax Wrote: (Feb. 28, 2012 2:10 AM)mayaman2 Wrote: (Jan. 12, 2012 10:17 PM)LeonTempestXIII Wrote: Interesting...a swaying stadium...maybe like what would happen if you put a stadium in a bath tub filled with water?
Actually, no. That isn't what happens. I have made my own stadium that is like the stadium from the episode in Metal Fusion where Kenta and Benkei enter that competition with the water stuff, execept more sloped and easier to get stadium outs in. Twisted wins there every time. But onto topic, TT shouldn't call it Zero-G, because it is possible to make a Zero-G stadium involving complex magnet movements under the stadium, knocking a bey off course, and with powerful enough magnets, along with magnetic tips, to float beys, although unstable, creating ZERO GRAVITY. Making stadiums like ones I mentioned would revolutionize games in general, not just Beyblade.
Yeah but If there was real zero gravity, in a left spin vs right spin battle they would probably spin forever.
NO...zero gravity has nothing to do with friction...
...you can have a zero gravity environment, but still have air resistance/friction. Also, it is possible to create a vacum where there is no air resistance, and the only force acting on something would be gravity. Space is a vacum with zero gravity. If you launched a bey in space, it may possibbly spin forever, or atleast for a very very very long time, so long as no outside force acts upon it.
Also keep in mind that technicaly speaking, Zero Gravity isnt really possible. So long as planatery bodies exist, forces will always act upon an object, no matter how insignifigant