>>122998109>It’s something they did so yeah, take that into accountThe problem is that writers have no idea what they're actually implying half of the time, and half of the feats are contradicted by showcased limits in other comics.
Take Worldbreaker Hulk's planet-busting in #634. He literally depended on the Waters of the Wishing Fountain to do this, implying that Hulk normally can't destroy planets...or at the very least that it's some kind of limit to what the Hulk is capable of.
"Destroying a universe" is a weird concept, because technically you have all of these limitations with the speed of light and whatever. But ignoring that to simply get a number for a comparison point it takes about 10^52 times more energy to create a fireball (energy) large enough to engulf the Universe and snuff out all stars, than it does to destroy a planet like the Earth.
Let me type out that number for you...
100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 times more energy to destroy the Universe than it does to destroy the Earth.
And for some reason no one sees a problem with this.
Not only that, they push out the "120 times universal," from some scaling shenanigans as if such a small number is anything other than marginal on these scales.
Unless a character has destroyed a universe there's absolutely no reason to assume they can, regardless of what's said.