Kingmaker wrote:Comic book physics extends to other sciences as well. In Iron Man 2, a shirtless Ivan Vanko is hit by a speeding SUV and slammed into a wall multiple times... and is fine.
Actually he's not fine, he's knocked out. He's not crushed, which is more what you'd expect. If you look closely though (and the Hot Toys are an excellent duplication) you can see his legs actually have some of the exoskeleton around them. Granted we can't see what's under his pants but it seems perfectly logical to assume the entire exoskeleton is connected. If so, getting knocked out (since he wasn't wearing a helmet) but not crushed makes perfect sense.
Tony Stark slammed himself face first into the concrete roof of his garage while building the Mk. II. Again, completely fine. (Not to mention some of the stuff he does should would them to hose him out of the suit afterwards in reality).
That scene I think was played more for laughs but yeah, there is is. Obviously the way he bounces around in the suits is crazy but I can hand wave that away as Stark-tech.
"Peak human" really just means their super attributes are not an explicit superpower. Steve Rogers is super strong, he just doesn't have super strength.
I'm not sure what kind of line that is to draw. That's like saying that Thor's ability to flip a tank by smacking the front of it isn't explicitly super strength, he's just strong for an Asgardian. I always took 'peak human' to mean the absolute best a human could be, with the best diet, training and a bit of genetic luck. I mean, we're not only talking about how hellishly strong Steve's handshake must be but the fact one of his arms weren't ripped from their sockets means he's also exceptionally durable. But my point was only that Steve seems to be getting significantly upgraded or he's never really cut loose.