Dynamax: Is it possible?

( Only decent non-copyright Pokémon image)

(This is my first ever theory so please do not judge this one too hard.)

I was thinking that I should start off my theories with the start of my gaming experience: Pokémon. So I searched on google the word Pokémon and realised something I have terribly overlooked. I now want to see if dynamaxing is actually physically possible (if Pokémon actually existed).

First, let’s establish what dynamaxing is: 1. A non dynamaxed Pokémon comes back into the poké ball 2. Energy from the wishing star in the dynamax band surges into the poké ball 3. The trainer then releases a super-sized version of the original Pokémon.

Now we need to find out if a rock from outer space can actually create large doses of energy( we know that a wishing star has lots of energy thanks to chairman Rose). Funnily enough, a very famous space rock has just this property: the Moon. The Moon has lots and lots of deuterium and helium-3 which produces tons of energy. 1.kg of helium-3 and 0.67 kg of deuterium contains 19 megawatt-years. That amount of energy can toast 14813160000 slices of bread.

We also need to find a way to harness that energy. NASA have already built a machine that can do just that. Only problem is that the machine they made is much bigger than the dynamax band if Pokémon. I’ll just assume that Pokémon is in a futuristic world.

So we now know that our Moon holds a ridiculous amount of energy. But the next part is where dynamax falls apart. You see, physical energy, aka electricity, works differently than you might expect. Electricity cannot be controlled; it makes it’s own path by going the way of the least resistance. Things like copper or iron have the least resistance, then a steak (random example of meat), the dry skin of a human would be next and air is extremely hard for electricity to move through, making air one of the last things that electricity wants to go through. So for the dynamax band to travel to the Poké Ball it would need to surge through the arm of the trainer and into the metallic Poké Ball.

Also, if the electricity where to go into the Poké Ball expect allot of Poké Dust because animals don’t just absorb all the energy and electricity around them; a decent bolt to the chest can most definitely stop an animal’s heart. But let’s cut the games some slack and pretend that somewhere in the genes of all Pokémon there is the ability to absorb electricity and use it to dynamax (which make Pikachu even more useless than before)

And finally, if every trainer across the land who is searching far and wide probably has a small Moon rock on their wrist so there may so much Moon in a spherical form any more. Instead, I think that the planet Pokémon would have something similar to Saturn’s rings. I think that many years ago their Moon fell toward Earth, shatter under the Roche limit, and stay as a floating ring around the planet. Maybe that day was the darkest day? But that isn’t what I’m here to talk about. This would cause a small problem currently and a cataclysmic problem for Pokémon in the next millions of years.

The small problem would be that we would not have any tides. This wouldn’t be that bad because the water wouldn’t rise or fall. The larger problem is the rotation and seasons of the Earth. The Moon has a large mass and it has a strong gravitational pull. So when the Moon goes, so does our steady axis and rotation. “But it’s only a little change of rotation. If anything, having a ring around or planet is kinda cool!” Well you know what isn’t ‘kinda cool’… Antartica being in direct sunlight 24/7 while Europe and America are submerged into complete darkness.

So in conclusion, if Pokémon had the ability to absorb electricity to dynamax , then every trainer could dynamax their Pokemon but they would have an immense shock run down their arm and in a million or so years the axis on their planet will go haywire (maybe that can explain the wild area’s weather).

Thanks for reading!!!

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