Board Thread:Questions and Answers/@comment-35973148-20180624090727/@comment-35973148-20180716061218

TonySansNom wrote: Alternatedimension wrote: TonySansNom wrote: Miseng is much older than you think.

Yiwha is probably the one who entered the youngest we know of. How is she much older? If she were older than 10 than she would have started puberty already. Otherwise, she is a VERY late bloomer. Because it wasn't until after the 2 year time skip that her chest starting to bud. After another two years, she started looking more like a woman.

I'm referring to her debut. You know. Physical age is meaningless in the tower by the word of god.

Anaak and Ran are both over 300 years old. In fact, Anaak is older than Endorsi. Why do they look like little childs?

Miseng is old from our "real" perspective. She isn't a child just because she looks like one. Tony, you say that, but physical age being meaningless only accounts for those who've stopped aging, pretty much? Miseng still ages according to a normal girl over the timeline as you'd expect. Her body matures at the speed we'd expect it to as well. Besides, it's said that time moves faster in the tower than it does in real life, as word of god stated that the 7-year time skip was similar to two or even one year for our world. Miseng probably is as old as her appearance implies. She's a young girl who still is just in her teens in the current arc.

The reason that Ran and Anak resemble children is that they most likely began actively using Shinsoo at a rather young age and became stuck like that. Word of God said they mostly stop aging because of the effect that using Shinsoo has on their body. Miseng probably didn't practice with Shinsoo as often, therefore she's not feeling the effects quite yet. It's not as clear, but Miseng probably lacks talent in the Shinsoo field which is why she probably doesn't bother with it and acts more like support.

Again, that sort of thing only applies to those who've actively used shinsoo and stopped aging, right? You're comparing people stuck in a form as a side effect against a person who's actively aging.