While the concept existed in some capacity back in the original manga, I feel like it's become tasteless and uninspiring by this point -- like whenever we see this Saiyan or that Saiyan breaking through their limits by gaining a new transformation or whatever, I just feel like rolling my eyes because it's devolved into a cliche.SaiyanGod117 wrote:This "Saiyan has no limits thing" was never a thing until Super and in my eyes the concept sucks.zarmack wrote:Wrong. Saiyans (and some others) by nature have infinite potential and no limits. There essentially isn't a threshold that can't eventually be broken. Making one would contradict the entire nature of the franchise and Goku's character in particular.SupremeKai25 wrote:
A grievance that I had with the old Dragon Ball, and I still have with the modern Dragon Ball. There must be a threshold that cannot be broken, there must be a point when a certain villain has reached the apex and cannot be surpassed anymore. The writers can't go on like this. I thought that Infinite Zamasu would be the greatest villain that Goku and friends would ever face, seeing as he was literally one with the universe. But I guess I was wrong, since apparently Jiren and Broly trash all over Infinite Zamasu.
Besides, these characters can easily blow up universes, so there's no way they intended Infinite Zamasu to be the strongest threat ever.
If I were to say that Piccolo's imagination -- thus the applicability of his materialisation magic becomes multivarious and complex -- had no limitations thanks to Kami's "wisdom", would that be rooted in established fact? No. Given what it is, such a premise doesn't seem plausible. It speaks to the grievance that I personally have with the oversaturation of Saiyan centrism. Sadly, continual layer building of their transformational and power gaining lore is easier. Ultra Instinct was admittedly a step in the right direction, but I wish others could benefit from these opportunities besides just Goku.