I wanted to discuss this notable Q&A from 2018, namely the part where Toriyama talks about how Saiyans get their power measured at birth and their future roles determined as a result. It seems to lay things out pretty clearly to me... if you're strong enough to be rated as "upper-level" as a baby, then you get fast-tracked into combat duty as a kid. If not, then you're deemed a "lower-level" and either get shipped off as an infiltration baby or are trained for some other, non-combat job. If an infiltration baby beats the odds and gets strong enough to conquer their assigned planet, then they can likewise be considered "upper-level" now and become combatants.
Either way, the bottom line seems to be that "upper-level" means "strong enough for combat," and "lower-level" means "NOT strong enough for combat." Simple enough so far, right?
Then we have this earlier Q&A regarding Episode of Bardock, where Toriyama talks a little more about the Saiyan class system, and specifically where Bardock himself fell within it. He mentions that there were only about 10 mid-class Saiyans, and that you could get promoted to that rank if you got strong enough, but that never happened for Bardock despite him excelling at field combat and being one of the strongest low-classes (and even stronger than most mid-classes, if talking about the real Bardock from the TV special).
So when you put the two sources together, you basically get this. "Lower-level" low-class Saiyans don't get to do field combat duty. "Upper-level" low-class Saiyans DO get to do field combat duty, and if they get strong enough and I guess if King Vegeta likes them enough, they can even be promoted to mid-class. But until that happens, "lower-level" and "upper-level" Saiyans are all still part of the broader "low-class" group just the same.
So all that said... There's been this weird notion going around in certain DB communities (not so much here, at least not recently) where people take the part of that first Q&A mentioning that li'l Raditz was "upper-level," and interpret it to also mean that he was actually "mid-class" rather than being a low-class. This seems pretty preposterous to me, especially considering how the mid-class is laid out as something extraordinary only encompassing top-tier fighters. It isn't something that Raditz of all people would be part of, especially not while still as a little kid. Nothing that I'm aware of has ever outright said "Raditz was mid-class" either, but those who make the claim usually back it with two specific things:
One is the last bit in this Q&A from one of the Full-Color volumes, talking about the "pecking order" between the Saiyan trio and saying that Nappa and Raditz had "equal status" compared to Vegeta. But that's pretty easy to dismiss, since it doesn't make any mention of the low/mid/elite class system in the first place, and only seems to be talking about their group dynamic. Raditz being low-class while Nappa is mid-class wouldn't matter when they both just take orders straight from Vegeta anyway, right?
The second thing is a line from li'l Raditz in the early vomitous Minus-adaptation portions of the nuBroli movie, where he chastises his baby brother for being a "low-class" and still stuck in an incubator. The assumed implication being that Raditz somehow isn't also low-class himself for saying this. But it seems like a stretch, and more like it's meant to be about the "lower-level" versus "upper-level" assignment system described above.
Furthermore, the Bardock Q&A's information would throw the entire "Raditz was mid-class" assumption out of whack all on its own. If only "upper-level" Saiyans get to do field combat, like the first Q&A describes, but "upper-level" means "mid-class" like people are assuming, then would that mean there are only 10 or so Saiyans ever out in space conquering planets? Plus of course, that would require Bardock himself to be a "mid-class" too since he was literally seen out and about slaughtering aliens, even though Toriyama plainly said he never got promoted beyond low-class.
So here's the main points I want to address in this topic.
- What are the different original Japanese terms for "class" versus "level" in the different Q&As here? What's the technical difference and connotations between them? I'd assume they are different in Japanese, since I haven't seen the "level" term get used in anywhere else but the "power measurement at birth" subject of that first Q&A I linked.
- Do each of those terms get used in different contexts anywhere else, in the original story itself or otherwise? Specifically, which term did li'l Raditz use in the nuBroli movie? What else is out there that might help clarify the difference?
- If there is some sort of clash or incompatibility in the terminology at work here, how might this whole system be put together in a way that makes a lick of sense?


