Goku didn't marry her because he thought he was going to get food. That's a oversimplification of what happened. It misses the fact that Goku agreed to marry her after he fully understood what it meant and when he could have just refused without any consequences. What happened was that Goku realized that he had, unwillingly, made Chi-chi believe, for several years, that he would indeed marry her, and, after thinking about that, he decided to take responsibility and honor that unwilling promise. Did he do it for food? No. Did he have to? No. Did he want to? Yes. Why? Because he was feeling honor-bound to do so and take responsibility for it (plus, possibly, other reasons that we can't really know).ABED wrote:The reasons you mentioned weren't weird, they were simply archaic and awful. Chich and Goku got married for unrealistic reasons. This was in no way normal as we aren't talking about a marriage of convenience or an arranged marriage. We're talking about two consenting adults entering into marriage because Goku mistakenly thought he was going to get food. None of your examples is even close to that.
The "archaic but not weird" examples were perfectly relevant because they showcased feeling honor-bound as the main factor. You claim that they aren't even close and yet, we just have to replace the "killing her husband in combat" part of the example I gave and replace it with "unknowingly making a girl believe that he will marry her" and it's the same thing.
Call it unrealistic all you want, but it's essentially as realistic as any marriage that has happened due, at least in part, to people feeling honor-bound due to whatever reason. Unrealistic is simply the wrong term to apply to it. We can criticize their decisions and motives on other grounds, not its realism.







