You're right. Got mixed up there.Piccolo Daimao wrote:No, it's the other way round. After being defeated by the present Androids, Trunks says that his Androids "weren't that terribly strong...I could put up a fight, at least...", then later clarifies his statement when he says that the present Androids are even stronger than the ones in his time.
I feel that is the other way around. The androids of Trunks' timeline started off killing right from the start, plunged the world into turmoil, then out of boredom started making a game out it. Which is why they don't use full power against Gohan and Trunks later on.Piccolo Daimao wrote:The future Androids aren't any more evil than the present ones. The future Androids saw destroying Earth as a game; the present Androids saw killing Goku as a game. Both sets purposely played with their opponents. We don't know exactly when the Androids killed the Z-Warriors (as in, whether it was in their first battle with them or they had more battles before being killed), but remember #17 revealed that he wasn't even using half his power in their last fight. And Trunks barely survived the Androids' attack, and before #18 says "He's getting annoying. Can I kill him?", #17 says "That'll make one less toy for us".
As for their power difference, since the androids from Trunks' time may have been holding back, it could be possible they were acutally stronger the the manga version IMO. Also since a pattern (at least to me) seems to be that the more power an opponent has, the more likely they are to give into their blood lust or murderous intent (even SSJ Goku and SSJ2 Gohan showed signs of this), maybe that factored into how the androids of each time reacted.
The History of Trunks' movie suggests that all the Z warriors were killed on the day three years after Goku returned to Earth. Also, Trunks has a flashback when he faces off against Cell in which (apparently told to him by Gohan) that the androids appeared, hunted down, and killed all of them upon their appearance. I know that is anime only evidence but I think it could have happened like that though.
IMO in the original time line, Dr. Gero was not forced to activate #17 & #18 as a result of the Z warriors chasing him. Since that element doesn't play a factor, I feel that he was killed shortly after activating them for the first time. As for the manga time line I see #17 killing Gero out of self preservation because if he left him alive, he would just build another controller. It would be the same as a person holding a gun on you and saying if you don't listen to me I'll shoot you. Even if you get the gun away from him, if you leave that person alive they'll only find another way to kill you. So out of self preservation you would kill them so that you may live.Piccolo Daimao wrote:And about the present Androids killing for self-preservation and the future ones doing it (it wasn't said it was as soon as they were activated in the manga, btw)...IMO, that's wrong. In the present, #17 killed Dr. Gero because he was telling #18 to not activate #16. They were not at harm or risk, because #17 had the control and the two of them were far stronger than Dr. Gero anyway. #17 just did it because he was pissed off with Gero, and it could've easily happened in the same way in the future. #17 takes Gero's remote control, so Gero starts shouting at him and #17 kills him to shut him up.







