Re: Does a fighter's prime change depending on the weight class?
A hummingbird, or a water vole are smaller animals and are always bustling around a lot. They breathe faster and their physiology is geared towards a frantic life.
Whereas an elephant, or a Greenland Right Whale, move much more slowly and have a far greater life expectancy than, say, a field mouse. Being a larger animal seems to bring a longer natural lifespan.
Granted, lots of field mice tend to get swallowed up by combine harvesters and chewed up, unlike Greenland Right Whales. There is a farm next door to me, so I did a bit of research and Paul (the farmer, not the field mouse) told me that in 30 years of farming he hasn't never found a wild elephant or blue whale in his combine harvester.
The converse of that - and this is crucial - is that Khosai Galaxy for instance has never been pursued by 18th century whaling schooners, and I recall that in the 1980's George Foreman has the devil's own time shaking them off. They were just after him all the time. Relentless.
In summary, therefore, a Fighters prime may change depending on the weight class, but that all hinges on whether they are anywhere near combine harvesters or 18th century whalers.
That is all.
If God wanted us to be vegetarians, why are animals made of meat ?
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