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Post Info TOPIC: Heat and Cold


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 151
Date: Dec 9, 2006
Heat and Cold


I am somewhat immune to extremly high temperatures (100 degrees and up.



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Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 131
Date: Dec 10, 2006

wow, lucky you. how did you figure this out?



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Suck it.


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 87
Date: Dec 10, 2006

Are you also immune to temperatures that can freeze water, like 32 degrees and lower almost to the point of zero degrees and below. If so, then you're probably experiencing Thermokinetic energy, which is also born from autokinesis.

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Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 151
Date: Dec 15, 2006

Well, during the summer when others complain about the heat I'm just chillin in my lounge chair lol. I don't feel the heat in the air but I'm very uncomfortable in the cold Winter months. I'm very sure it's because of my cryokinesis because I have actually dropped my body temperature on purpose and I actually started to shiver and I'm better at cryo than pyro. So I guess I have my own "internal air conditioner".

-- Edited by Psychostatic101 at 13:47, 2006-12-15

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You can't see the view if you don't climb the mountain.


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 87
Date: Dec 16, 2006

Well from the sound of it, you're a thermokinetic that favors the cryokinetic part of the kinesis. So in a sense, you're a cryokinetic that experience minor affects of pyrokinesis during external temperature rise, mostly the summer months. But I've always heard pyrokinetics are more immune to high temperatures then cryos, but you need to look into both more and feel which one comes more naturally to you. But being a thermokinetic would have you at advantage durning the seasons. Hardly wouldn't have to worry about being hot or cold.

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Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 56
Date: Jan 17, 2007

great a cryokinesis then you could help me figure how to freaking make a snow ball. seriously i cant make one i try to make it like a psi ball but with cold air and water but i just cant

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Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 47
Date: Jan 21, 2007

IN THEORY, cryokinetics should be more immune to high temperatures, because cold is not created, but is when heat is absorbed and dispelled, resulting in a lack of energy. pyrokinetics could potentially get overwhelmed with heat energy, while cryos, as long as they can dispel the heat, would be literally "chillin"



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