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Lifting Strength

Introduction
Lifting Strength is the amount of force, along with mass one can lift. One's lifting strength however does not only extend to lifting, but to also pulling, pushing, tearing, and physically grabbing and holding down people. It is normally assumed by many that lifting strength is a useless statistic that means nothing to a character, however, lifting strength plays a huge role in various different scenarios, as one with a high enough lifting strength could resist telekinetic/graviational crushes and grapple people that could've potentially had higher Attack Potency then them, defeating them through this method. Lifting Strength is equally as important as a stat as every other statistic.
Lifting Strength Levels
| Kilogram | Metric tons | Newton | Pounds (lbs) | Level | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unknown: True | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Similar to Unknown-D in the Tiering System, these are characters that are essentially featless and have no showings, they cannot even be given a tier due to their physiology or biology in most cases. Eldritch beings are a common example of this. |
| Unknown: Inconsistent | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Similar to Unknown-C in the Tiering System, for characters that are inconsistent without a reasonable way to explain why. |
| Unknown: Lower Reality | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Similar to Unknown-E in the Tiering System, as one cannot truly quantify the energy within a "fictional world", one cannot truly quantify the distance within it either. |
| Absolute Zero | None | None | None | None | For beings that produce no energy at all, normally being rated at 11-C. |
| Low Subhuman | Lower finite values | Lower finite values | Lower finite values | Lower finite values | The lifting capacity of extremely small beings, normally the size of bytes and data. |
| Subhuman | Lower finite values | Lower finite values | Lower finite values | Lower finite values | The lifting capacity of very small beings, normally the size of insects. |
| High Subhuman | Higher finite values | Higher finite values | Higher finite values | Higher finite values | Stronger than typical subhumans, but still below average human strength. Normally small animals. |
| Below Average Human | 20-50 | 0.02-0.05 | 196.2-490.5 | 44.1-110.2 | Usually the mass of incredibly small objects, lifted by the likes of little kids, the weight of small children. |
| Average Human | 50-80 | 0.05-0.08 | 490.5-784.8 | 110.2-176.4 | The weight of an adult human, or a large dog |
| Above Average Human | 80-120 | 0.08-0.12 | 784.8-1177.2 | 176.4-264.6 | The weight of a washing machine, or a tumble dryer |
| Athletic Human | 120-227 | 0.12-0.227 | 1177.2-2226.87 | 264.6-500.45 | The weight of a mature lion |
| Peak Human | 227-545.2 | 0.227-0.5452 | 2226.87-5348.412 | 500.45-1201.9603 | Olympic weight-lifters, professional strongmen, and powerlifters |
| Superhuman | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Any level clearly above peak human that does not have an exact value. |
| Class 1 | 545.2-1000 | 0.5452-1 | 5348.412-9810 | 1201.9603-2204.62 | The world record for deadlifting feats in real life |
| Class 5 | 1000-5000 | 1-5 | 9810-49050 | 2204.62-11023.11 | Capable of lifting small trucks, etcetera |
| Class 10 | 5000-10^4 | 5-10 | 49050-98100 | 11023.11-2.20×10^4 | The weight of an adult elephant |
| Class 25 | 10^4-2.5x10^4 | 10-25 | 98100-245250 | 2.20×10^4-5.51×10^4 | The weight of Big Ben (the bell), a truck, a large motorboat |
| Class 50 | 2.5x10^4-5x10^4 | 25-50 | 245250-490500 | 5.51×10^4-1.10×10^5 | The weight of a semi-trailer truck |
| Class 100 | 5x10^4-10^5 | 50-100 | 490500-981000 | 1.10×10^5-2.20×10^5 | The weight of a tank |
| Class K | 10^5-10^6 | 100-1000 | 981000-9810000 | 2.20×10^5-2.20×10^6 | The weight of the largest animal: blue whale, the heaviest of air-crafts |
| Class M | 10^6-10^9 | 1000-10^6 | 9810000-9.81x10^9 | 2.20×10^6-2.20×10^9 | The weight of the largest ship |
| Class G | 10^9-10^12 | 10^6-10^9 | 9.81x10^9-9.81x10^12 | 2.20×10^9-2.20×10^12 | The weight of the human world population, the largest man-made structures |
| Class T | 10^12-10^15 | 10^9-10^12 | 9.81x10^12-9.81x10^15 | 2.20×10^12-2.20×10^15 | The weight of the heaviest mountains |
| Class P | 10^15-10^18 | 10^12-10^15 | 9.81x10^15-9.81x10^18 | 2.20×10^15-2.20×10^18 | The weight of small moons or small asteroids |
| Class E | 10^18-10^21 | 10^15-10^18 | 9.81x10^18-9.81x10^21 | 2.20×10^18-2.20×10^21 | The weight of the atmosphere of the Earth |
| Class Z | 10^21-10^24 | 19^18-10^21 | 9.81x10^21-9.81x10^24 | 2.20×10^21-2.20×10^24 | The weight of large moons or small planets |
| Class Y | 10^24-10^27 | 10^21-10^24 | 9.81x10^24-9.81x10^27 | 2.20×10^24-2.20×10^27 | The weight of larger planets |
| Pre-Stellar | 10^27-2x10^29 | 10^24-2x10^26 | 9.81x10^27-1.962x10^30 | 2.20×10^27-4.41×10^29 | The weight a solid object can reach before the gravitational collapse to a small star |
| Stellar | 2x10^29-6.3x10^32 | 2x10^26-6.3x10^29 | 1.962x10^30-6.1803x10^33 | 4.41×10^29-1.39×10^33 | The weight of a smaller star up to the most massive star |
| Multi-Stellar | 6.3x10^32-1.6x10^42 | 6.3x10^29-1.6x10^39 | 6.1803x10^33-1.569x10^43 | 1.39×10^33-3.53×10^42 | The weight of the most massive star to the mass of the Milky Way |
| Galactic | 1.6x10^42-6x10^43 | 1.6x10^39-6x10^40 | 1.569x10^43-5.886x10^44 | 3.53×10^42-1.32×10^43 | The weight of the Milky Way to the mass of the most massive galaxy |
| Multi-Galactic | 6x10^43-1.5x10^53 | 6x10^40-1.5x10^50 | 5.886x10^44-1.4715x10^54 | 1.32×10^43-3.31×10^53 | The weight of the most massive galaxy up to the weight of the observable universe |
| Cosmic | Unquantifiable | Unquantifiable | Unquantifiable | Unquantifiable | Being capable of lifting something comparable to a hypermass. Generally considered to be lifting a universal space-time contuum up to an infinite amount of universal space-time continuums. |
| Hypercosmic | Unquantifiable | Unquantifiable | Unquantifiable | Unquantifiable | The mass of something completely beyond even universal continuum hypermasses, it is incredibly unexplainable and indescribable in it's mass. |
| Unknown: Undefinable | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | The user does not have a way to properly define their lifting power, this is normally due to not having a physical form, being above or transcendent to aspects that would allow one to quantify the form, etcetera. |
Additional terms
At least
Should be used to denote the lower cap of a character, if the exact value is indeterminate. Usually listed for characters that have done a feat superbly casually.
At most
Should be used to denote the higher cap of a character, if the exact value is indeterminate. Usually listed for characters that have done a feat that is questionable compared to their other feats.
Likely
Should be used to list a hypothetical statistic for a character, but inconclusive due to lack of feats or viable power-scaling. Probability of said hypothetical statistic should be favorable.
Possibly
Should be used to list a hypothetical statistic for a character, but inconclusive due to lack of feats or viable power-scaling. Probability of said hypothetical statistic should also be indeterminate.
Higher, Far Higher, Even Higher, and Much Higher
Higher
The term "Higher" refers to a character being significantly more powerful than the their average stats, often due to the use of an attack, weapon, or power amplification. It indicates an enhancement either within the same tier or beyond it to an unknown amount, where a character's strength surpasses typical feats but no specific feat has been demonstrated to fully support this higher level. The difference in power is clear but lacks a concrete placing.
Far Higher
"Far Higher" indicates an even greater increase in power compared to the standard for that tier, but like "Higher," there is no specific feat supporting this claim. It signifies a notable amplification, often in the form of a weapon or transformation.
Even Higher
"Even Higher" is used to describe a character with power that greatly exceeds the standard upper range of their tier, often due to a massive amp, special weapon, or other power boost.
Much Higher
"Much Higher" represents a power increase that is drastically beyond even the prior "Higher" variants.