Is it necessarily? The magnetic-whatever caused a blaster bolt to ricochet violently. That behaviour has not been observed with regard to other metallic (or possibly transition-metallic) targets in the films, although shields have been known to cause broadly similar weird effects. To me, that points towards some kind of force-field.Shroom Man 777 wrote:It's obvious though, that in the context of the garbage compactor scene, the metallic paleosteel Star Warsium alloys of the door was sealed by a magnetic lock.
Force powers do work on Yuuzhan Vong, though. Or, rather, at least actively offensive ones do. They cannot, however, be detected or perceived by Force means.I mean, shit, the other side could easily say that since Magneto isn't from the SW universe, he would be immune to Force shit like a Yuzan Vong, and so all those powers won't work on him or whatever, and make for really shit debating reeking of contrived one-sided nonsense just to win.
We assume that superpowers are consistent between universes. Magneto has all his usual powers. The question is whether the environment contains objects he can easily manipulate.*SNIP deranged rant*
While you do appear to have some sort point, at least speaking for meta-game thinking, I cannot see why we must assume that Star Wars materials necessarily share the magnetic properties of present-day steel alloys. Nor do I automatically assume that they are non-magnetic. We simply cannot know, at least not from the evidence thus far presented.
I would add that even if durasteel is sufficiently magnetic for Magneto to manipulate it, that does not mean he can necessarily do so as well as he could with iron or steel. Just its greater durability might mean that he would need to expend more energy to obtain comparable effects, for example, in breaking or bending fixed structures.
Note also that I initially voted for Magneto, and I see little need to change that vote. Going purely by the film showings of either of them, he needs no steel tentacles or ripped-off towers or whatever wanktastic scenarios people are dreaming up to beat Palpatine. He can just take off his ugly movie helmet (which is magnetic), accelerate it to transonic speed and throw it in Palpatine's face, if he is so inclined. His magico-magnetic film TK is still that much stronger than film Palpatine's TK, and nothing else really matters much if either of them use their powers at all competently.
EU Palpatine, of course, would curbstomp him in turn. But that would be another question than the one the OP asked.