And while Colossus is naturally strong, when he is in this armored form, he is impossibly strong with a class 100 strength, meaning that he could lift more than 100 tons. There's no certain limit to his strength, and like most heroes, it is augmented by his willpower.
X-Men Vs.
While Colossus tends to be the strongest member on any X-Men roster, the Hulk's a bit out of his league. Colossus knew this before he threw his first steel-coated punch, but still entered into a fight with the Hulk anyway. He got in a few good blows, but none of them phased the Hulk.
His strength level was roughly 70 tons. Superhuman Durability: In his armored form, Colossus is completely bulletproof and invulnerable to most forms of bodily harm. He can survive extremes of temperature.
Superhuman Strength: After transforming into his armored state, Colossus possesses vast superhuman strength. As a teenager, he was sufficiently strong enough to be listed as a class 70. (This scale is only for comparisons between characters, and should not remotely be taken literally).
UNLIMITED STRENGTH
The answer; there isn't one. The amazing thing about the Hulk is that unlike nearly every other superhero ever created, the Hulk's strength has absolutely no upper limit. He can lift a commercial airplane – which weighs around 100 tons – when he is at his calmest; that's no problem for him.
Superhuman Strength: Loki, without the aid of anything, through his own biology, possesses superhuman strength that is substantially superior to that of an average Asgardian male. He possesses sufficient physical strength to lift up to 50 tons.
This difference in gravity allows Superman to lift objects that measure in the tons. In fact, the comics have put Superman's strength at a point where he's able to lift around 2 billion tons! To put that into perspective, the Empire State Building is only 365,000 tons!
His physical strength is currently greater than when he first joined the X-Men due to the realignment of his cells by Magneto following an injury during the Mutant Massacre. While in his armored form, Colossus requires no food, water or even oxygen to sustain himself and is extremely resistant to injury.
Since comic book Colossus is twice as heavy as the heaviest boxers in the study, he might be able to strike with 8,700 Newtons of force. Imagine an alligator snapping shut on your head, but worse.
In his metal form, Colossus bleeds pure energy when injured, and he has no organs that can be damaged.
Wolverine's claws are so deadly, that they once managed to cut straight through colossus, whose body is made up of impenetrable organic metal. Wolverine's adamantium claws are capable of cutting through practically anything.
In the X-Men comics, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin AKA Colossus, has no healing factor. When he is injured, he remains injured and heals at a human pace. Fortunately, his organic-steel form almost always protects him from injury.
It is regularly shown that Colossus normaly performs at a higher level than Luke Cage- no, not a level Luke Cage cant fairly combat, but still a higher level. Are you suggesting that Colossus physiology is not also superhumanly durable? Between the two Colossus has shown greater durability and invulnerability feats.
Eventually, the Juggernaut had managed to reclaim what had originally been his, leading to one more battle — which Colossus won by, essentially, destroying the ground under the Juggernaut's feet and causing him to fall into the void. (Don't worry, he climbed out again by story's end.)
Why is Colossus so weak? Colossus does have a huge weakness in the form of Vibranium. Any sort of physical contact with Vibranium will force Colossus to revert to his original form. This forced reversion doesn't last for long and he can return back to his armored form once he is away from the Vibranium.
X-Men veteran Colossus is a speculated Alpha-level mutant, which means writers have yet to give him the title of Alpha but he exhibits some traits that make us believe he deserves it. He's had a lot of opportunities over the years to show off his organic steel form, which gives him superhuman strength and durability.
Colossus' impenetrable skin is not a unique superpower in the superhero universe. By being referred to as “organic steel” skin, the reader is led to believe that his mutant skin is made up of steel, an alloy with iron as the primary element. Roughly 96% of the human body is carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
And while Colossus is naturally strong, when he is in this armored form, he is impossibly strong with a class 100 strength, meaning that he could lift more than 100 tons. There's no certain limit to his strength, and like most heroes, it is augmented by his willpower.
But in UNCANNY X-MEN (1963) #194, Rogue was forced to absorb the powers of Nightcrawler and Colossus simultaneously in order to protect her teammates from Nimrod. It was an alarming change, but it was also a hint that her abilities could be pushed even further than she might've known.
After Colossus was killed by a cosmic-powered Doom, Zsaji gave her life to resurrect him. A heartbroken Colossus returned to Earth, ending his relationship with Kitty, though they remained friends. Colossus was later forced to take another life when the Marauders attacked the subterranean Morlocks.
Adamantium is a metallic alloy that, once the elements are brought together, cannot be broken. That makes adamantium really powerful in the Marvel world, used for the outer shell of the robot Ultron, but mainly for its use in the claws and skeletons of Wolverine and his various enemies and allies.
As a matter of course, Colossus is physically stronger than Rogue. Colossus' mutant ability allows him to transform his skin from flesh to steel. This provides him with enormous durability, not to mention incredible strength.
Hafthor Björnsson, also known as Thor or The Mountain or that incredibly strong man from Game of Thrones, just broke the world record for deadlifting more than any human in history. The strongman and actor was able to deadlift 501 kilograms, or an astonishing 1,104 pounds.
However, with advances in development of exoskeleton, human wearing such a machine might eventually be able to lift 1 ton weight. “Strongman Eddie Hall became the first person in the world to ever dead-lift half a ton - but then passed out when blood vessels in his head burst from the pressure.
Thor: 3,500 lb.
Assessing Thor's strength might be even harder than the Hulk.