Super powers are already an infinite glitch. Theyre supernatural so are inherently glitches. Things like flight, like super man flight, generally don’t take effort from the user so already break thermodynamics in small ways. But if you’re breaking a law of nature at all you’re already going infinite.
Imagine you have a bunch of people with this style of flight. Imagine a sort of ski lift device but unpowered. Have them fly to the top and ride it down. Because no weight is going up, only down, the ski lift doesn’t need to be powered. Additionally, because it doesn’t take power (food) for people to fly up, then you get free energy extracted at the bottom.
Congratulations, you have created a perpetual energy device with a single super power.
Most comic superheroes derive the energy for their powers from some external dimension, or in the case of Superman, the Sun.
This pushes the questions onto how things work rather than where the energy comes from. And good luck getting answers there. Writers often contradict themselves.
And I seem to remember there being a story (possibly non-canon?) where Superman is forced to turn a handle forever to generate “free” energy to power the planet.
As long as the amount of energy it takes for them to fly upwards some amount is less than the amount of energy it would take for them to physically move upwards then you’ve got free energy. I only used superman as an example because he’s probably the most iconic example of effortless flight. Compare it to characters like bird man that flap wings to fly.
Even if somehow there is not a single example of a character that doesn’t use energy to fly and every author made up some strange way to collect energy, you’ve still made a hyper efficient power plant using a previously unusable energy source. Like if they get power from something like “magic” in the air that recharges over time, then that’s still a brand new energy source.
Super powers are already an infinite glitch. Theyre supernatural so are inherently glitches. Things like flight, like super man flight, generally don’t take effort from the user so already break thermodynamics in small ways. But if you’re breaking a law of nature at all you’re already going infinite.
Imagine you have a bunch of people with this style of flight. Imagine a sort of ski lift device but unpowered. Have them fly to the top and ride it down. Because no weight is going up, only down, the ski lift doesn’t need to be powered. Additionally, because it doesn’t take power (food) for people to fly up, then you get free energy extracted at the bottom.
Congratulations, you have created a perpetual energy device with a single super power.
Ok… but what if I was curious abou… you know what, nevermind.
throws homemade mtg super hero themed combo deck in the trash
Most comic superheroes derive the energy for their powers from some external dimension, or in the case of Superman, the Sun.
This pushes the questions onto how things work rather than where the energy comes from. And good luck getting answers there. Writers often contradict themselves.
And I seem to remember there being a story (possibly non-canon?) where Superman is forced to turn a handle forever to generate “free” energy to power the planet.
As long as the amount of energy it takes for them to fly upwards some amount is less than the amount of energy it would take for them to physically move upwards then you’ve got free energy. I only used superman as an example because he’s probably the most iconic example of effortless flight. Compare it to characters like bird man that flap wings to fly.
Even if somehow there is not a single example of a character that doesn’t use energy to fly and every author made up some strange way to collect energy, you’ve still made a hyper efficient power plant using a previously unusable energy source. Like if they get power from something like “magic” in the air that recharges over time, then that’s still a brand new energy source.
Or just fucking teleporting lol
I think you’re thinking of the Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal comic https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/2011-07-13