"Reactions"@en . "+"@en . "Reactions are a feature of DashNet Forums, added in the 2.better Update. They are used as a voting system, and are also used to report rule breaking content to the staff. Some reactions can affect a users points, posts with 5 or more points total are be featured in Best Of page."@en . "In fiction, movement over long distances and movement over short distances - which can be dubbed \"combat distances\" - tend to be remarkably different for different characters, resulting in serious discrepancies when considering their overall speed. On this wiki, we therefore differentiate between various types of speed, including reaction speed."@en . "Reactions are a feature of DashNet Forums, added in the 2.better Update. They are used as a voting system, and are also used to report rule breaking content to the staff. Some reactions can affect a users points, posts with 5 or more points total are be featured in Best Of page."@en . . . "-"@en . . . "In fiction, movement over long distances and movement over short distances - which can be dubbed \"combat distances\" - tend to be remarkably different for different characters, resulting in serious discrepancies when considering their overall speed. On this wiki, we therefore differentiate between various types of speed, including reaction speed. Reaction speed is defined as a single movement in a defined timeframe, which a character has been shown capable of. A series of movements in similar timeframes makes this combat speed, so this term should only be applied for a single, quick movement. Examples include ducking backwards to dodge bullets and diving away to dodge extremely fast vehicles. When measured in terms of a single movement of often undefined, small distance, humans have displayed between 300 millisecond (subhuman) to 100 millisecond (peak human) reactions. Autonomous body reactions for humans can also reach as high as 40 milliseconds, but this is oftentimes inapplicable to reaction speed and shouldn't be used."@en . . "Chemistry"@en .