SweepTheLeg31
29388
516
17
Although some of these may not be magnetic, when he removes all the iron from your blood you'll know.
May 17, 2025 2:35 PM
SweepTheLeg31
29388
516
17
Although some of these may not be magnetic, when he removes all the iron from your blood you'll know.
aShogunNamedMarcus
Welcome to DIE
SweepTheLeg31
Blood water Magnetic experiment. https://youtu.be/8Lcaw2Ij9dk?t=181
armorgamesmfa
Mr Fantastic defeated this guy with a wooden gun.
MagnorCriol
I mean, the jokes are funny and all, but it's not like all of these characters haven't already been existing in the comics, and magneto isn't unstoppable there, so it's hardly an insurmountable problem in the MCU either.
thebonesofmyancestors
Put out some snipers from a distance. Problem solved. He's not superman. He can only deal with what he knows about.
Pokegeologist
So when does he start stripping the metal out of our blood and tissue?
sochilln
TrueNorthernLights
You forgot Loki. Loki, though not a "hero", wouldn't let some guy from another dimension take over. He doesn't use metal, is one of, if not THE, most powerful magic user, and wouldn't give a damn about taking out an elderly Holocaust survivor, considering said survivor was currently trying to take over.
StephenDaniels
Scarlett Johansen would wink at him and giggle a little and that would be the end of any aggression from him. Well, that would work on me anyway.
Grendus
Pretty sure Cap can just... beat up Magneto.
Monkeynutsjoe
If it's classed as a metal on the periodic table, he can control and manipulate it.
RoombaTheAssaultVacuum
X MEN! WELCOME TO DIE!!!
Vergenbuurg
As OP didn't properly credit it, I will. Dorkly on YouTube: https://youtu.be/HG7R4Bc-lYg
NikkiHuskyMum87
Thank you!! My first thought was "wait, isn't this a Dorkly video?"
ElCapitanCrusher
NairouTryyshokk
One of my biggest complaints about this is that it is never quite fully described the full extent of his powers. What we understand as magnitism is one of the fundamental forces of matter. Its not just ferros metal it effects. And if it is literally just control over metal then it includes things not nagnetic. They could actually give a limit to his force but they dont. Lets say i can shoot lightning, if you maje that "as much as i want" of course i could make a big enough bolt to erase a planet
NairouTryyshokk
But that is not how powers should be written. They just need to give us a stat, like 1000 tesla for example. Would finally tell us what he can and cannot do.
goflyblind
Them3OtherGuys
Yeah, just like how he was able to defeat the Sentinels without breaking a sweat in Days of Future Past...
HellNoIWontFixYourComputer
Cause they were made of plastics, apparently *sigh*
ubnty
He couldn't affect the wiring at all? Or were they made of electrically conductive plastic? The '70s prototypes he had to shove metal (railroad rails) into beforehand so he could affect them.
Socialites
Man I feel that sigh in my core
Filanwizard
See what cap needs right then is a sniper out at like 800m with a barret .50 rifle. While magneto is busy complaining, pretty little headshot he never saw coming. Dude aint a Jedi.
LoudBirb
So... this already happened in the comics in 2012. Tony Stark beat Magneto because he'd already built an armor made entirely of carbon nanotubes in case care he ever needed to fight the extremely famous villain with magnetism powers.
9GAGTechnicalSupport
Is his heart also made of carbon nanotubes?
dinomanm3
I recall that one was a stalemate (Tony also built a satellite that somehow tapped into Jupiter's magnetic field from afar and used that to counter Magneto) until Magneto realized there were more important things than the fight and faked being beaten.
Redshadow09
Didnt you need more metal in your blood for magnetio to pull that off though?
qtRaven
Not in the comics.
AndyLalor
MCU Cap wears leather, but in the comics, he wears chain mail. Magneto could totally Iron Man him.
Stefnos
lets not forget Magneto was once beaten by Richard Reed with a very badly made fake wooden gun xD
ElbowDeepInAGoblin
An elderly Holocaust survivor who adopted Hitler's whole schtick...Punch him, Brian.
astrangehop
Ugh now I want an Irish hulk
ElbowDeepInAGoblin
...Bruce. What the fuck, brain...
PineappleLoopsBroether
Nono….. it’s brian now.
ElbowDeepInAGoblin
Brian Brainer
petety
MCU is Marvel Comic Universe right? Isn't Magneto a Marvel comic character?
Snooj
Yes but it specifically refers to any Marvel characters that are *allowed* to appear in it. Which is why Spider-Man and Deadpool movies have been touchy with who can be in them and when they can appear in other movies. Fox and Sony own some of the rights. It's weird.
ThisUsernameWasntTakenIGuess
MCU is Marvel Cinematic Universe and Magnito will almost certainly be in it post secret wars. He hasn't been so far due to Fox owning the IP since the 90s or something. :D
LankyBootyGriswald
MCU refers to Marvel Cinematic Universe. But yes, Magneto is in fact a Marvel character.
Snooj
Is vibranium ferromagnetic?
cousteau
Is Magneto limited to ferromagnetic metals, or just all metals in general? I've seen him handle adamantium bones just fine. (Is adamantium ferromagnetic?)
Snooj
It's magnetic powers, although magnetism is still a scale and technically you can control *anything* with a strong enough magnet. Adamantium is canonically an alloy and subject to magnetism. Maybe not very strongly, but enough that Wolverine is susceptible to it even though there have been some inconsistencies in the comics. Which also means you can put fridge magnets on his body and they'll stick if strong enough.
cousteau
So according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permeability_(electromagnetism)#Values_for_some_common_materials "austenitic stainless steel" (which I think I knew what it meant at some point) is pretty much non-magnetic (I had no idea), and the same goes for metals such as aluminum or copper, and some stuff such as concrete seems to not be magnetic at all.
cousteau
And for example copper is less affected by magnetic fields than water, so if adamantium happened to have a similar permeability to copper, and Magneto can manipulate the adamantium in Wolverine's bones by magnetic means, then he could manipulate any human with water in them just as well.
ps238principal
I question the writer's understanding of what ferrous and non-ferrous metal is.
levyathyn
Magneto controls all metals. His control over magnetic materials is just stronger, from what I understand, and the name is just... catchy, a good name.
Ekaris9
Magneto's main gimmick is that he CAN manipulate non-ferrous metals. It's comic-book-shennanigannery. Iron Man beat Magento with super-science super-magnets that reverse all polarities around the things he tried to screw with. I can't say I like how convoluted these things get, even if I love comics.
andexer
METAL!
vorodar
Well, I figured that he was a mutant, not literally magnetic. He probably has telekinesis over metallic objects or something. It'd be far from the strangest mutation.
idrinkcheapbeer
see, Magneto controls metal. on an epic scale. he isnt "magnetic"
Poppypoppoppop
Or that the Hulk actually don't care who or what is in front of him. Smash means smash
thisisjunk
See the comment from @purr.
WhatzitTooya
Eddie currents are magical.
Alistairetheblu
kahlas
I question your knowledge of what non-ferrous mean. In metallurgy all the word ferrous means is the metal alloy contains iron. All electrical conductors are susceptible to magnetic fields. Including things like the Aluminum plate in the following video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0amdIcZt5I&t=540s&ab_channel=Veritasium
applesforjuice
Yeah cobalt and nickel aren't ferrous, but are magnetic. Also magneto doesn't control magnetism, he controls metal. Magneto is just a name.
kahlas
Magneto can control and generate magnetic fields. Which is how he controls metal.
IAmGodot
Magento can manipulate ferrous and non-ferrous metals
cousteau
He chose the name "Magneto" just to trick people into using aluminum weapons and shields against him, and then BAM!
NotSomoneElse68
You can magnetize a frog.
NotSomoneElse68
https://youtu.be/KlJsVqc0ywM?si=63QHeE-oTjCKPKvm
cousteau
Can Magneto manipulate any metal, or only ferromagnetic metals? Because my understanding is that it's any metal. Even adamantium, which I somewhat suspect to be non-ferromagnetic. "Magneto" might just be a misnomer.
AMercer
In X-Men First Class he kills Sebastian Shaw with that coin. That was a silver coin and non-ferromagnetic. In the movies at least they have never shown any kind of metal he was unable to control.
cousteau
How about… metal music?
My headcanon now is that he's actually a damn good guitar player and can play some sick guitar solos.
MrFrAnK9000
Don't let Magneto's name fool you, his power is not magnetism, its the power to control all metal
Soosas
Thanks! I hate it
Revyloution
He should use the astronomers table of elements
69thStPepper
Magnetism has an effect on non-ferrous metals, too, just not the same effect. The electro part of electromagnetism is pretty important
applesforjuice
Ferrous means iron. Cobalt and nickel are not ferrous but are ferromagnetic (magnetic). Anyway, you're right and magneto is just a name, he controls metal not magnetism.
Cinammontoastcrunch
I've seen enough demonstrations of Lenz's law to know how true this is
qPRdxH4UXm36HS9rJgLA
Powerful magnetic field can induce eddy currents in non ferrous materials allowing them to be manipulated.
cousteau
That'd require an alternating magnetic field though, right?
poscduke
They make it clear adamantium can be manipulated by magnets so Vision and Captian are out of luck. Iron man probably also used Steel hence the name iron man. I don't know if they specified what Thano's gave or thors hammer are made of
battery1979
The Mark Iii was gold and titanium alloy.
applesforjuice
He uses a titanium alloy he says it in the first movie
Pryde217
Mjolnir is mad of uru I think, which is basically neutron star stuff. Was the glove uru too? I can't remember and I refuse to check.
ProfFurryPaws
in the MCU, yes. Thanos had his gauntlet made by the dwarves in the same forge that made Mjölnir and Stormbreaker. Last surviving giant dwarf Peter Dinklage confirmed this in Infinity War.
ProfFurryPaws
in the original comics story, there wasn't ANYTHING special about the gauntlet other than the gems. It was literally Thanos' normal costume glove. Having the Infinity Gems attached is what made it powerful.
dinomanm3
Magneto can push and shove around Mjolnir, but only after Thor throws it. Pretty sure Thor's grip strength is more than Magneto's pull on it while he's holding it. Also IIRC, Magneto can't lift it, so once it hit the ground, he could only move it horizontally along the ground.
Pryde217
Look, I'm just the barely competent materials guy; I couldn't even remember the name of Thanos' fancy prostate exam glove. You want more, you're gonna have to call the Powers Department. Good luck getting those freakin' weirdos to agree on anything.
purr
fun fact: if something is seemingly unaffected by magnets, you just aren't using one that is strong enough.
zushiba
Somewhere that one frog
Imademyselfsquirtle
Or you know. People think too big about their powers and abilities. They don't fine tune it to think small.
jesuisgur
Neutrons, photons, neutrinos... And the thing is that you can't project a magnetic field very far (doesn't it decrease to the 4th power with distance ?)
FireLynxNL
That reminds of the floating strawberry in a magneticfield
RummageSaleBubbler
cousteau
Problem is, it can go either way. Some stuff is (slightly) repelled by magnets.
melsinaow9000
I love those vids showing a strong magnets swing towards a copper thing and slowing down in the weirdest way.
cousteau
I think that's because copper is a conductor, not magnetic. The magnet induces an electric current in the copper pipe, which makes it an electromagnet, and the magnetic force from the electromagnet pushes the magnet upwards so it falls slowly.
qPRdxH4UXm36HS9rJgLA
Depending who is writing the comic he might have full control of electroweak forces and just tear you apart at a chemical level.
mytruepersonality
don't you mean the Comical level...
RufusPimperton
And this is why you can't go five panels into an xmen comic without hitting an omega level mutant
CaptSchmidtGaming
Comics are indulgent for those with no restraint. Learning about comic book thanos was just... a joke... like where's the plot?
hydrocarbon82
A magnetar (neutron star with insanely high magnetic field) can literally rip atoms apart.
RummageSaleBubbler
Levitating a frog
cousteau
I remember seeing this video a long yomr time ago. Found it amazing.
cousteau
I have no idea what yomr means and how it snuck in there.
RummageSaleBubbler
> yomr (noun)
>
> Definition: A nostalgic, vaguely measured period of time that doesn't fit neatly into traditional units like days, years, or seasons. It's used to express that something occurred so long ago it now exists in the realm of memory and myth.
cousteau
Yeah either that or I tried to type "time" on my phone keyboard, messed it up by pushing the keys too much to the right, tried to delete it and retype it, but failed to delete it. This didn't happen back in the yomr time when this on screen keyboard understood me.
PanNonOpticon
There is diamagnetism. So even if that what you said was true, if you mix diamagnetic material with weak magnetic material, you will have stuff that is unaffected be magnets.
proxyinitiative
Gravity itself is a magnetic field people are just dumb
neithermenoryou
Pretty sure with a strong enough magnet you can overcome even that. Like for example our own sun, a fairly mid star as far as power output goes, has a strong enough magnetic field near the surface that it'll literally just tear atoms apart and split them into a plasma. Granted iirc it would have to be close enough the solar wind and other radiation would have already turned it into plasma long before then but still.
Tengenstein
Blood isn't very magnetic. Like imagine if it was; MRIs would blend people.
OldSchoolNewRules
And yet someone will try to sell you a magnetic wristband to increase your blood flow.
DreamPhreak
But what they're saying is still technically true: its possible with a powerful enough magnet, one exponentially far stronger than MRIs.
Tengenstein
Yeah but with blood, the H2O in it is more magnetic than the heamoglobin itself. Humans are a lot more water than Iron
Rulweylan
The problem you've got is generating that strong of a magnetic field without also killing yourself through the incidental metal from miles around hitting you.
Beefkins
Blood IS magnetic. Blood carries iron via henoglobin, so it's ferrous. MRIs take advantage of this to create images that are sensitive to the disruptions in the magnetic field caused by bleeds. This is called susceptibility weighted artifact.
Tengenstein
You don't need to be ferrous to be magnetic, nor does being magnetic mean being ferrous. It depends entirely on molecular or atomic structure Iron oxides can vary from strongly magnetic, to non magnetic. Hemoglobin is less magnetic than the h20. So sure bloods magnetic, but it's the water not the iron, and it's so weak even the MRI magnets can barely move it even in close proximity.
Beefkins
Saying water is magnetic is inaccurate, water is diamagnetic. Water has two lone electrons, but all of its electrons are paired. MRI takes advantage of water's dipolar structure in order to manipulate its magnetic moment. Susceptibility weighted imaging takes advantage of the distortion of the magnet's magnetic field, using a gradient T2* sequence usually, to detect the presence of paramagnetic compounds like deoxyhemoglobin, ferritin, and hemosiderin. Paramagnetic, diamagnetic, and ->
Beefkins
ferromagnetic compounds all distort the magnetic field.
Tengenstein
Yes, thus my point, the interaction is so weak, that we can use MRIs without being blended (because that's kinda what happens when you walk into into a high speed spinning molecular seive). Its so weakly magnetic MRIs need to be that strong just tivpick up that tiny a resonanc. Hemoglobin changes depending on oxygenated status, but again it's magnitudes weaker than elemental Iron, and you're not going to pull the Iron out of Heam with an MRI.
OnyxTurret
MRIs work precisely -because- it is slightly polar / magnetic.
Tengenstein
Yes, but that's the water, not the iron. Compare how oxygenated and deoxgenated blood looks in an mri, and then compare what happens if you walk in with say handful of elemental iron filing, or a belt buckle. The former is a tiny change in the charge of hemoglobin, the latter is bigger example that elements in different chemicals gave different properties. Potassium in bananas fine, Potassium in cyanide, less so.
OnyxTurret
MRIs use a strong magnetic field to align all polar molecules, not just water. It then hits them with a transverse magnetic field causing all the polar molecules to wobble, or precess. If blood didn't respond to the magnetic field, you couldn't do fMRI.
Tengenstein
Yes, but blood isn't a chemical. its a mixture, a solution, You don't have molecules of blood, the main chemical component of blood is water. Water is a polar molecule. And the reason the magnetic fields of MRIs gave to bexso strong us because organic chemistry is so weakly magnetic. If we weren't we'd give to quench MRIs each time someone went near one.