I'm curious what is going on with the spike at 50. Maybe related to lots of alcohol at big birthday celebrations?
48 0 ReplyAt 50 your hands finally heal from that injury at 45, so you can start punching walls at full strength again.
75 0 ReplyCould be rounding errors. At 50+, you don’t care about your exact age anymore
30 0 ReplyI assumed this chart is from hospital data, which does care about age
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I think it's a small numbers problem. I'd love to see the data they're basing this from.
15 0 ReplyThe source is at the bottom of the picture. I would just assume its a US study, because its a study about idiots.
The Y axis seems to be absolute numbers with the highest around 75 total. So yeah, small numbers.
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This seems to be a pretty small sample size, so i assume it's just fluctuations that happened by pure chance
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My take away from this graph is that the older you get, the less damage you take from punching walls (except at 50 where the spell temporarily weakens)
29 0 ReplyAm 53. Totally agree.
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That Y axis label is beautiful.
25 0 ReplyThat sounds like a very US problem.
22 0 ReplyAkshyually, the extended use of drywall would say otherwise.
4 0 Reply...what?
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Nice.
14 0 ReplyNice.
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So you have to turn six before you can take hand damage. Got it.
12 0 ReplyThe old dudes would still punch walls if their hands healed like they did when they were young
9 0 ReplyWhy does it go up at 69?
9 0 ReplyI'm not sure that one 69-year-old wall puncher really counts as 'going up,' but bones that old get pretty brittle.
13 0 Replybecause its fake
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And that's just the people who got injured.
8 0 ReplyI was never a wall puncher. I would give that wall a palm strike instead.
3 0 Replyeurope:
1 0 Reply