Thread:ShonenChicoBoy/@comment-25456115-20150126135756/@comment-2089817-20150126162217

Eh... It's still too topsy-turvy for me to agree that it is a poison without knowing the rate at which it spreads, both of them, what causes the first strike's poison to remain in its dormant state without causing any disturbance to its targets, does Suzumebachi produce two different types of poison that, when acting together, cause the instantaneous death or is it that a double dose of it causes it? In the case of the latter, that makes the argument of a first strike being dormant poison moot. And even then, we still come back to the argument of why it wouldn't work differently in every individual, since even if in every case, it spreads throughout the entire bloodstream, and the second one finishes the job, you then have to question why one's body wouldn't have noticed the invasion of a foreign entity via the first strike. Furthermore, what about when she used it on Aizen? She used two strikes, one right after the other, meaning she meant for it to work like that. A matter of waiting for the "poison" to spread seems rather silly when she can just do it right away. If that was the case, then you'd have to correlate the rate at which Suzumebachi kills its targets through Nigeki Kessatsu, with the time separating the first and second strikes, while knowing the rate each of the poison from both strikes spreads and why they move differently, if at all, considering the second strike causes instantaneous death. Adding on to that, if it was poison, reiatsu shouldn't be able to neutralize it. The fact that a stronger reiatsu can neutralize Suzumebachi's Nigeki Kessatsu already proves that the power is spiritual in nature, not dependent on physical phenomena.