12-06-2016, 10:23 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-07-2016, 05:45 PM by Mageziya. Edited 1 time in total.)
In real-life, our body is adapted to detect CO2. Walking into a room with CO2 above safe-limits would feel horrible. Something akin to feeling like your lungs are on fire, so debilitatingly painful that you're be nearly unable to move if you didn't run away after immediately feeling it.
Inert gases, such as N2 and the noble gases, we normally don't detect. They would actually function as an instant kill-gas without any indication of what's going on. You might notice that something is off, but our bodies can't sense these gases, so we'd quickly pass out from a lack of oxygen, asphyxiate, and die.
Inert gases, such as N2 and the noble gases, we normally don't detect. They would actually function as an instant kill-gas without any indication of what's going on. You might notice that something is off, but our bodies can't sense these gases, so we'd quickly pass out from a lack of oxygen, asphyxiate, and die.