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Banana Peel Car Slip Science Comic

GI2_02783 2026-07-02 x Content Creation
science-comicbanana-experimentinfographic

Created comical science explanatory illustrations. The verification theme is "{argument name="verification theme" default="How many sheets are needed to make a…

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Banana Peel Car Slip Science Comic

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Created comical science explanatory illustrations. The verification theme is "{argument name="verification theme" default="How many sheets are needed to make a car slip with a banana peel?" }」

A tall, A4-sized comic-style infographic that seriously examines ridiculous questions through science and calculation. White background, thick black lines, and accent colors of red, blue, and yellow. A slightly retro educational comic, science reference book, and science column-style design. Doctor characters, astonishing people, speech bubbles, hand-drawn arrows, red pen annotations, and blackboard-style formula frames are used. The overall atmosphere is to "physically verify silly questions with full force," making the pages not too serious, enjoyable, and dynamic.

Composition:

1. 
The thematic situation is depicted in a way that is exaggerated and absurd, and immediately understandable. The characters are serious about the challenge, but their appearance is quite reckless. The doctor chimed in from the side.

2. Think in terms of realistic numbers
Display important values related to the theme, such as speed, time, distance, weight, force, temperature, and energy, in 3 to 4 boxes. By including comparison charts and timelines, it clearly shows the discrepancy between "human sense" and "scale of phenomena."

3. Mathematical Formula Corner
Draw the necessary conditions and comparative formulas prominently on a blackboard-style frame. Examples: "Required ability > human limits" "Reaction time < Time for phenomena to occur" "Required strength, speed, endurance ≫ Normal person" The formulas don't need to be too rigid; make them intuitive and easy to understand.

4. Is it impossible to realize?
Problems are explained in three short panels. Examples: (1) Too fast / Too heavy / Too hot (2) Too precise (3) Even if successful, the body can't hold up / Everyone around gets into trouble Comical failure illustrations, sound effects, speech bubbles.

5. What would happen if it happened?
This is important. To truly succeed, it illustrates what kind of superhuman and imaginative scientific abilities are required. For example, super reflexes, future prediction, abnormal grip strength, ultra-fast vision, physical ability to ignore air resistance, and a skeleton that can withstand impacts. If necessary, scientifically impossible numbers like "reaction time 0.0001 seconds," "grip strength 3000kg," or "dynamic vision dozens of times that of a fighter pilot" are acceptable. Furthermore, it depicts what will happen the moment it is realized. Examples: an impact so intense it could blow off an arm, sinking into the ground, a shockwave around them, or the person remaining calm, etc. It creates an interesting vibe of "if you succeed, you're no longer human."

6. Conclusion
Write a large conclusion in a red highlighted box. "Conclusion: XX is almost impossible for ordinary people!" Or, "Even if it can be realized, it will be at the level of superhumans, cyborgs, or science fiction!" In this text, it is summarized as impossible for real humans, but can be made possible by granting them a science of imagination ability.

Design specifications: Manga panel layout + science illustrations + Doctor's commentary. Heavy use of bold headlines, red circles, emphasized lines, hand-drawn notes, and speech bubbles. Make formulas and numbers large and easy to read, so children can intuitively communicate them. Overall, it's silly yet strangely convincing, like a page from an interesting science reading book.