Wouldn't we refer to a combo like Duo ____ F230CF as a zombie of sorts?
Beywiki Wrote:The origin of the name "Zombie" is not its ability to steal spin, but its "life after death" ability. The term "Life After Death" is used to describe a zombie's ability to continue spinning on its side after it has fallen over. If your Beyblade is still making complete rotations, it is still considered to be spinning. To have this ability, your Beyblade must be perfectly round at the points that touch the stadium floor when it falls over.
CF is perfectly round at the points that touch the ground...
Considering the fact that CF has such a wide edge that provides support for the entire beyblade
even after it has stopped spinning , as opposed to the edge of RDF/EWD type bottoms, couldn't that be referred to as the beyblade's "side?" Since it won't topple any further than CF's rim?
Ingulit Wrote:When a CF-using Beyblade starts spinning at low spin rates, it leans on the disk of CF and continues to spin thanks to CF's circular shape. CF's disk is so wide that most Beyblades will not topple any further, meaning CF's LAD bonus can be applied to nearly any custom. The tip is an aggressive tip and it has some issues with scraping at high spin rates, but its ability to give LAD is almost unmatched...
Regarding the Chrome/Metal wheels...
Beywiki Wrote:The AR used on a Zombie are either compact or aligns with the WD in order to prevent any recoil from hits.
Doesn't Duo's metal frame and core align perfectly? Don't Reviser and Dragooon (Reviser Dragoon F230CF) align?
1) Aren't these F230CF customs perfectly round at the points that touch the stadium floor?
2) Don't these customs continue to spin on their "side" after they have fallen?
3) Don't they use metal/chrome wheels that align well and are round to some extent?