Schrödinger's cat
Sim, mas acredito que o diferencial dele é que ele sabe quando repickar no ponto cego do inimigo, no momento que as pessoas perdem um pouco atenção no angulo, ele vai e da um fast peek absurdo e sai de jett ( mesmo em momentos que ele n deveria pickar). Mas ultimamente o aspas ta mt fraco, ele n tem mais impactado como antes, sinto que o Saadhak ta prendendo mt ele, antigamente ele saia rushando e dando bala na cara de todo mundo,
Antigamente ele sempre salvava o time, vulgo final do champions. Agr ele sempre ta morrendo cedo por conta do novo plano de jogo do Sadhaak. Se vc botasse o aspas do ano passado contra o derke, eu teria dó do que ele iria fazer com o derke. O YAY é 1000 vezes melhor que o Derke, e o aspas disputou com ele pra ver quem era o melhor jogador do mundo no ano passado
The Schrödinger's cat theory is a thought experiment that was developed by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1935. It was designed to illustrate the paradoxical nature of quantum mechanics, which is the branch of physics that deals with very small particles, such as atoms and subatomic particles.
The experiment involves placing a cat inside a sealed box along with a vial of poison gas, a radioactive substance, and a Geiger counter. The radioactive substance has a 50% chance of decaying within a certain amount of time, which would trigger the Geiger counter and release the poison gas, killing the cat. However, until the box is opened and the cat is observed, the cat's state is considered to be both alive and dead at the same time, in a state of quantum superposition.
This is because, according to quantum mechanics, particles can exist in multiple states simultaneously until they are observed or measured. This is known as the "observer effect." In the case of the Schrödinger's cat experiment, the act of observing the cat would collapse its wave function, meaning the cat would be in only one state (either alive or dead), and not in a superposition of both.
The purpose of the thought experiment was to highlight the counterintuitive nature of quantum mechanics, where particles can exist in multiple states at the same time, and only collapse into a single state when they are observed. The experiment is not meant to be taken literally, as it is highly unlikely that a cat would actually exist in such a superposition in the real world.