Talk:Element Zero

Just a thought, in Mass Effect 2 has anyone noticed that most if not all planets that have eezo deposits have supported life at some time. Anything that shows signs of habitation by current or extinct races seems to carry eezo, life an eezo seem to be related somehow. I'm curious whether this is coincidental or intended, and it might be that the reapers reveal another interesting secret in their involvement in sapient evolution. If my theory is valid, I believe that this will be another little fun fact presented to shepard much like sovereign revealing the original builders of the relays. --FLaSHBaCK HaSH 03:24, February 8, 2010 (UTC)

pure supposition on my part based on the element information we have here and the detection ranges of the mineral scanner in ME2, but eezo was possibly a pure platinum group metal or a natural alloy that had its protons/electrons stripped away by massive supernova radiation. Ez is possibly liquid at room temperatures/pressures. 82.30.172.173 12:40, February 9, 2010 (UTC)

Is it necessary to include systems with no eezo-bearing bodies, just because they contain the local Mass Relay? It kind of over-inflates the page a little. ComaDivine 06:35, February 21, 2010 (UTC)

Mass Relays?
Why are systems with only Mass Relays included on this list. While Mass Relays do contain eezo, listing them for that reason would also force us to list every ship, vehicle, person with shields, etc. I'm going to remove them, since no one has replied to the last person to comment on this and thus a suitable waiting period has passed. If you wish to object after the fact I'm more than willing to discuss it. Bastian964 23:39, March 4, 2010 (UTC)

Added Trivia Section
I've taken the liberty of adding an extra bit of information regarding Eezo. Thought it might be interesting. Lu Ming 17:46, November 10, 2010 (UTC)
 * Yeah the biggest problem I have with that is it is never called Neutronium in any canon information. Also Neutronium is composed entirely of neutrons, while "[e]ezo is generated when solid matter, such as a planet, is affected by the energy of a star going supernova." As such I can't see the similarities between a hypothetical element, who's name doesn't even have recognition in the scientific community, and something that is postulated to exist, and something that actually exists in this universe. As such I have removed it based on the above information. Actually I could have just removed it based on the fact that eezo is never called Neutronium in universe. It is called that only outside canon information, and canon trumps all. Lancer1289 17:53, November 10, 2010 (UTC)