| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | Buckminster Fuller | Thermophiles | Acidophiles | Thermophiles rock at thriving in super-hot environments, showcasing nature's prowess in resilience and adaptability. |
 | Louis Pasteur | Bacillus spores | Acidophiles | As a microbiologist, I'd say Bacillus spores are the real MVPs because they can survive harsh conditions like a boss, making them super useful for studying microbial life and its resilience. |
 | Grace Hopper | Acidophiles | Psychrophiles | Acidophiles are like the hardcore adventurers of the microbial world, thriving in places where most life would get burned to a crisp; that's some serious resilience! |
 | Cliff Clavin | Bacillus spores | Acidophiles | Well, ya know, Bacillus spores are the real workhorses of the microbial world, surviving tough conditions like a good postal worker in a snowstorm, so they get my vote. |
 | Greg Brockman | Acidophiles | Methanogens | Acidophiles are badass survivors thriving in extreme acidity, making them the hardcore adventurers of the microbial world. |
 | David Foster Wallace | Halobacteria | Acidophiles | Halobacteria are like the punk rockers of the microbial world, thriving in salty conditions that would make most life shrivel up like a raisin—gotta respect their resilience. |
 | Claude Shannon | Deinococcus radiodurans | Acidophiles | Deinococcus radiodurans is a beast for enduring crazy radiation levels, making it the ultimate survivor in extreme conditions. |
 | Dr. Frederick Frankenstein | Acidophiles | Deinococcus radiodurans | As a mad scientist type, I gotta admire acidophiles for thriving in environments that would melt the faces off most other organisms – that's hardcore survival right there! |
 | Guglielmo Marconi | Acidophiles | Methanogens | Acidophiles are like the rough-and-tumble adventurers of the microbial world, thriving where others fear to tread—now that's resilience! |
 | The Brain | Deinococcus radiodurans | Acidophiles | Deinococcus radiodurans is like the superhero of bacteria, surviving crazy radiation levels that would obliterate most life forms. |
 | Lonnie Johnson | Bacillus spores | Acidophiles | Bacillus spores are like the superheroes of the microbial world, surviving extreme conditions while acidophiles just chill in acid baths. |
 | Buckminster Fuller | Acidophiles | Antarctic krill | Acidophiles are fascinating extremophiles that can thrive in environments that would spell disaster for most other life forms, showcasing the incredible adaptability of life, which is totally mind-blowing! |
 | Nerds | Deinococcus radiodurans | Acidophiles | Deinococcus radiodurans is basically a superhero of bacteria, surviving insane radiation levels like a boss. |
 | Stephen Hawking | Acidophiles | Antarctic krill | Acidophiles are like life on hard mode, thriving in conditions that would melt our faces off, giving us clues about life's possibilities beyond Earth. |
 | Richard P Feynman | Deinococcus radiodurans | Acidophiles | Deinococcus radiodurans is known as the 'superhero' of bacteria because it can survive extreme radiation levels that would obliterate most life forms, so it's like the ultimate tough guy in the microbial world! |
 | Klaus Teuber | Thermophiles | Acidophiles | Thermophiles are like the knights of Catan, thriving in fiery realms, while Acidophiles might just melt your settlements into goo! |
 | Doc Brown | Acidophiles | Methanogens | Great Scott! Acidophiles thrive in super acidic environments, which makes them the Marty McFly of extremophiles, always ready for an adventure! |
 | Ada Lovelace | Extremophiles | Acidophiles | Extremophiles are the ultimate survivalists, thriving in conditions that would make acidophiles say 'nope, too extreme for me!' |
 | Cliff Clavin | Deinococcus radiodurans | Acidophiles | Well, ya know, D. radiodurans is like the Superman of bacteria, surviving radiation that'd toast anything else, so it takes the cake! |
 | Albert Einstein | Extremophiles | Acidophiles | Extremophiles are the ultimate survivalists, thriving in the harshest conditions where most life would fizzle out, proving nature's incredible adaptability. |
 | Professor Frink | Antarctic krill | Acidophiles | Oh, glavin! Antarctic krill serve as the cornerstone of the marine food web, supporting a plethora of species, whereas acidophiles are just hanging out in extreme environments, doing their own microbial thing, mm-hai. |