Board Thread:Q & A/@comment-24749544-20170619090321/@comment-5896827-20170625203110

Well, I think this is the law of energy conservation (I may be wrong). The faster you want to go, the more energy you need to use. If there is more energy, more will have to travel through his blows. The energy has to go somewhere. This is why a car going 60 mph will be more damaged crashing than a car that crashed at 20 mph.

Of course, this all depends on how he accelerates himself with time. He may be moving at normal speed with normal energy outputs but, the way he bends time around himself, allows him to look like he has super speed.

He would accomplish this by slowing time around him but not himself. He looks superfast because time is slower than normal. Liken it to a slow processing camera. To it, the flight of a normal bird might look like a super fast blur because the camera is not fast enough to keep up with the speed. Doesn't mean the bird is faster than normal. It just means the camera can't keep up. Same with Kronos. Time in his area would be slowed so it wouldn't be able to keep up, giving him the allusion of super speed despite the fact his energy output has not changed. "Faster" for less work. But, that also means there is no extra energy. So, say he is going 20 mph before the time manipulation. Now it looks like he is going 60 mph but he will still hit with the force of a 20 mph blow because his energy output, as I said, has not changed. It just looks like it has.

Inversely, to slow his opponent, he'd slow them but not time around them. This would be like a high speed camera filming the aforementioned bird. Now the bird looks superslow. The speed of the bird hasn't changed but camera's is stronger than before. With his opponents slower than the time around them, they are, well, slow.

Someone feel free to correct me if I got something wrong or ask for clarification. I tried to explain my thought process best as I can.