JazzMazz wrote:
I guess we're going to completely ignore the aspect of the transformation about not being able to efficiently use ones power and being overly draining on stamina, as well as Goku giving up on Super Saiyan 3 for the exact reason that it was a unnecessarily stamina draining form, or how his immediate solution to perfecting Super Saiyan blue...
How many times does Goku need to make the same mistake, and recify that mistake until it gets old?
To be perfectly honest, if you can't see the differences in the scenarios you outlined and last month's chapter, I really don't think I can convince you otherwise. I shouldn't have to explain to you what the differences are, but just so I can say I did if you bring this up in the future, I will:
SS3: Goku realized that it burned up too much energy to be viable in his living body. This has nothing to do with power or speed. The context was fusion is the answer and not merely powering up to a new form.
Grade 3: Goku powered up to it while Trunks was using it. Goku then explained the flaw of the form in that it sacrifices speed for power, while Trunks was slowly losing because he couldn't hit Cell. It was framed this way so that Trunks would demonstrate what Goku was explaining. The answer Goku was looking for, again, was another form.
Super Saiyan Blue: Both Goku and Vegeta came up with different ways to get around Blue's weakness. Vegeta's method of swapping between forms didn't drain stamina or damage his body to the levels Goku's method did. Goku's method, however, granted a big increase in power.
Tournament of Power: We've spent this whole arc with Goku trying to figure out how to ascend past blue. We've seen him gradually become more desperate to unlock that form because it's the only way to triumph over Jiren. He doesn't have the luxury of a year of training in the RoSaT where he can figure out the flaws with his approach, or experiment with different means (because, and let's not forget this, staying in Super Saiyan form permanently was a
theory Goku formulated for him and Gohan); he needs to transform or everyone and everything he knows and cares about is gone.
This prompted him, last chapter, to force out every ounce of power his body could muster. Jiren instantly saw the flaw in this, as did Roshi, who then reminded him to look to his training. Goku then figured out what Roshi meant and then instantly implemented that hint to create a technique far more advanced than what Roshi did.
These cases are alike only in the most shallow, tangential ways, nor are they retreads. That is all.
batistabus wrote:Twitter has had a serious negative effect on Dragon Ball discussion. Talented artists and memers attract followers for what they're good at, and all of a sudden they have a huge platform from which to spew their crappy opinions with authority.
Exactly this. Everyone just wants retweets and likes, so they come up with the hottest of takes. Then, because there's this veneer of irony and memes, you can't engage in a real discussion and point out the flaws in those takes. If you do, then "you missed the joke" and get laughed at. But because nobody challenges these hot takes, they become "fact" to some people. It's an echo chamber of insincere thought.