Board Thread:Off Topic/@comment-27082610-20170624011641/@comment-25936766-20170708213222

RayStrikeAbius wrote: On that note, I've always been confused by how intangibility works in regards to solid ground. Logically, if something is completely intangible, it should just fall through the ground below it until it reaches the strongest point of central gravity; in this case, the planet's core. But of course, no one ever accounts for this. That's another problem.

Though I wonder if an intangible object would be affected by gravity at all. Gravity consists of every body with mass gravitating towards one another, and the same goes for every body of energy because of mass/energy equivalency.

Would their mass be taken into account if they're not tangible? Unless the effect places them in some sort of special energy bubble or something, which would itself gravitate (hypothetically).