Kong was stated in the film set in the 1970s to be a "teenager" and "still growing". The thing is he is 300 feet now, but only 100 feet in Kong: Skull Island, which is barely waist-high and more the height of a toddler. Which also brings up another issue: if an adult Kong is THAT big, how did the Skull Devil/Ramarak/The Big One manage to kill both Kong's parents if it was just barely bigger than 1973 Kong and far smaller than 2021 Kong #10 skullcrawler was almost as big to Mechagodzilla as Ramarak was to teen-Kong. Evidently, skullcrawlers can get MUCH larger than we first thought. Ramarak had other Skullcrawlers to assist him during that time. Kong's parents were basically the only giant apes left and Kong was literally born in the middle of the carnage. His parents deaths fueled the hatred within Kong, giving him the aggressive urge to actually kill any other Skullcrawler in his sights. Since Kong was still growing as an adolescent and grew more and more active. If there was no Skullcrawler that isn't Ramarak, it was easy pickings for him, and it would just leave him and Kong to duke it out even if Ramarak gave him a difficult fight. It's heavily implied that Skullcrawlers seem to go through the same Stronger with Age thing just like what Kong went through. It's also implied Kong is abnormally huge for a Kong, as neither of his parents skeletons are nearly that big. Actually it seems that this is true only in recent times since there's evidence that members of Kong's species have faced off against Godzilla's species in the distant past. Also, who says Kong isn't also affected by nuclear radiation That's assuming there's even nuclear radiation for Kong to feed off on in Skull Island. From what we know there isn't and that Kong just grew naturally. Considering how big he is compared to his parents and that cave paintings indicate that another Kong fought against a Godzilla before, Kong is very likely to be the first of his kind to actually reach full adulthood in years.
Scritto da il
05-03-2025 alle ore 08:24