Usually the justification is that the actual gun has a backdoor which feeds from a cache of rope somewhere about the person; a belt, a backpack, something like that. A standalone gun requires some sort of phlebotinum.
it’s not hammer space exactly you see there’s also only one grapple gun used by all heroes and duplicated by excessive timetravel so that all heroes can use it at the same time.
when the very last hero to ever use a grapple gun gets done with it he travels back in time and hands it off to the first hero to have ever used it and the cycle repeats.
the grapple gun is thus a paradox, it comes from nowhere and when not in use returns to the nowhere from which it came as does the rope it uses in turn.
Works for me.
Thus as it is spoken at BestBuy, Radio Shack, et al.
Usually the justification is that the actual gun has a backdoor which feeds from a cache of rope somewhere about the person; a belt, a backpack, something like that. A standalone gun requires some sort of phlebotinum.
one word: “hammerspace”
Invisipack.
I like the first explanation better
Haha! Is the sales assistant being sarcastic in panel 2 or panel 3?
Plus, 20% off. Bargain!
You gotta love the “Shut up and don’t ask questions” logic.
Were is she going to keep that on her persons. Clearly she has no utility belt.
Well, she has a huge “front pocket” to ķeep that.
it’s not hammer space exactly you see there’s also only one grapple gun used by all heroes and duplicated by excessive timetravel so that all heroes can use it at the same time.
when the very last hero to ever use a grapple gun gets done with it he travels back in time and hands it off to the first hero to have ever used it and the cycle repeats.
the grapple gun is thus a paradox, it comes from nowhere and when not in use returns to the nowhere from which it came as does the rope it uses in turn.
Lady, if I knew how it works, you think I’d be working the counter for minimum wage?
I hear Ray from Archer, when the clerk speaks.
Well then how do you know it doesn’t work that way?
Oh. Point.
This sounds dangerously close to reality. Too many people sell things without knowing how they work… like, well, everything?