Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
OK then, pointed out by me in that case, with things stated in the story.
Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Even after rereading it, I'm just not feeling it.Michsi wrote:OK then, pointed out by me in that case, with things stated in the story.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
If I know, Roshi took 50 years to "Copy" the move from Son Gohan itself.Saiga wrote:The Kamehameha took 50 years to develop as well, copying another person's technique doesn't seem to be as hard as inventing it.Michsi wrote:I don't know. Tenshinhan learning the mafuba in one day(?) a technique that took years to develope after he saw just once seems just as exagerated to me.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
What? Kame Sennin invented this technique, so Gohan most likely learned it from him.012yArthur0 wrote:If I know, Roshi took 50 years to "Copy" the move from Son Gohan itself.
James Teal (Animerica 1996) wrote:When you think about it, there are a number of similarities between the Chinese-inspired Son Goku and that most American of superhero icons, Superman. Both are aliens sent to Earth shortly after birth to escape the destruction of their homeworlds; both possess super-strength, flight, super-speed, heightened senses and the ability to cast energy blasts. But the crucial difference between them lies not only in how they view the world, but in how the world views them.
Superman is, and always has been, a symbol for truth, justice, and upstanding moral fortitude–a role model and leader as much as a fighter. The more down-to-earth Goku has no illusions about being responsible for maintaining social order, or for setting some kind of moral example for the entire world. Goku is simply a martial artist who’s devoted his life toward perfecting his fighting skills and other abilities. Though never shy about risking his life to save either one person or the entire world, he just doesn’t believe that the balance of the world rests in any way on his shoulders, and he has no need to shape any part of it in his image. Goku is an idealist, and believes that there is some good in everyone, but he is unconcerned with the big picture of the world…unless it has to do with some kind of fight. Politics, society, law and order don’t have much bearing on his life, but he’s a man who knows right from wrong.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
It's not farfetched, but there's no real reason to assume that, since the whole "latent power kept on rising" thing was a plot device, designed so that he (and Gohan) could keep up with Freeza and his men (and Vegeta), without the need for massive Zenkais.In Brightest Day wrote:Side note: If Kuririn continued to receive the added boost from Guru during his 3 years of training (and we don't have any reason to believe he didn't), then it isn't really far-fetched to assume he made it into the low-millions by the time Dr. Gero and Android #19 showed up. That'd mean Tenshinhan and Yamcha probably got left in the dust, but even then we don't have a clue as how powerful they became after Kaio's training.
And if you're going to go by the assumption that Kuririn continued to recieve the added boost for the Great Elder, then Gohan must've as well. Yet he wasn't deemed as anything special or remotely close to Piccolo and/or the other Saiyans until after his stint in the RoSaT. I think it's safe to say that it'd stopped once they actually started fighting Freeza, so there's no story-wise reason for them to progress any further (especially Gohan, who gets a Zenkai after he's stomped by Freeza).
Holden Caulfield in [b][i]The Catcher in the Rye[/i][/b] wrote:I hope to hell when I do die somebody has sense enough to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddam cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you're dead? Nobody.
Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
...When was it ever commented that being close to a SSJ gives you insanely higher zenkais? That's just the common fan theory that has ran around for ages. That is never once supported by dialogue in the story.Saiga wrote:And what I went on to say is that one massive power up doesn't justify separate characters getting massive power ups. IIRC those Zenkais were commented on by Vegeta as being unusual and he attributes it to being closer to becoming a Super Saiyan at the time, so the fan theories are more just accepting Vegeta's take on it.Toadster wrote:Saiga, I realize humans don't get zenkais. The point is, Vegeta and Goku received a massive zenkai that made absolutely no sense, especially considering the relative consistency of the zenkais up to that point. That zenkai they received is a far greater stretch and provides more fan theories than the humans surpassing the Ginyu Force in a short amount of time. Is it a stretch they gained that much power? Sure, but it's nothing implausible given the element of large power-jumps throughout the series. To say that is the only instance of BS power jumps is asinine. You want BS filler power? Yamcha destroying Olibu, when Olibu was putting up a good fight against Paikuhan. Now that's BS.
It is implausible, because power level jumps like that don't always just happen without explanation. Just because there are some really large increases in story doesn't make it acceptable to toss in some more for the sake of making the humans out to be better than they actually are.
Yes, Yamcha beating Olibu was BS filler. So was the humans defeating the Ginyu force.
BS power boosts like Vegeta and Goku doesn't justify other large BS power boosts, but at least the filler is not inconsistent with the manga, considering the other large BS power boosts going on. It's just a comic, I don't now why you're taking this so seriously.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Note that the super huge near-death power ups Goku & Vegeta got were their last ones. Just... Saiyan. 

James Teal (Animerica 1996) wrote:When you think about it, there are a number of similarities between the Chinese-inspired Son Goku and that most American of superhero icons, Superman. Both are aliens sent to Earth shortly after birth to escape the destruction of their homeworlds; both possess super-strength, flight, super-speed, heightened senses and the ability to cast energy blasts. But the crucial difference between them lies not only in how they view the world, but in how the world views them.
Superman is, and always has been, a symbol for truth, justice, and upstanding moral fortitude–a role model and leader as much as a fighter. The more down-to-earth Goku has no illusions about being responsible for maintaining social order, or for setting some kind of moral example for the entire world. Goku is simply a martial artist who’s devoted his life toward perfecting his fighting skills and other abilities. Though never shy about risking his life to save either one person or the entire world, he just doesn’t believe that the balance of the world rests in any way on his shoulders, and he has no need to shape any part of it in his image. Goku is an idealist, and believes that there is some good in everyone, but he is unconcerned with the big picture of the world…unless it has to do with some kind of fight. Politics, society, law and order don’t have much bearing on his life, but he’s a man who knows right from wrong.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Well, last that we know of and/or were noticeable/noted within the story. Super Saiyan pretty much eclipsed any Zenkais that the characters may've gotten (or otherwise "used up" the dormant power that they could draw from Zenkais or whatever), and the last Zenkai from anyone we saw in the series was Cell, after he miraculously survived his own self-destruction.DBZGTKOSDH wrote:Note that the super huge near-death power ups Goku & Vegeta got were their last ones. Just... Saiyan.
Holden Caulfield in [b][i]The Catcher in the Rye[/i][/b] wrote:I hope to hell when I do die somebody has sense enough to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddam cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you're dead? Nobody.
Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
This is the line he was talking about:Toadster wrote:...When was it ever commented that being close to a SSJ gives you insanely higher zenkais? That's just the common fan theory that has ran around for ages. That is never once supported by dialogue in the story.
Chapter: 289 (DBZ 95), P6.1-2
Context: after Jheese freaks out over Vegeta's new battle power
Vegeta: “That’s right…I’ve surpassed Saiyan limits, and my strength is still increasing more and more…The truth is that I’ve realized it too…That this extension of my power isn’t merely what you’d call giftedness…In other words…I’m steadily drawing near…to becoming a Super Saiyan!”
When you compare how they're getting those boosts, I'd say it is inconsistent. Goku went from 8,000 to 90,000 in those five days by training in up to 100 times Earth's gravity and abusing the hell out of his race's natural ability, not to mention the magic beans he had at his disposal. You're saying it makes perfect sense for the humans to go from (using Tenshinhan as an example) 1,830 to 60,000 or more in those same days, without the near-death-power-ups and in much less gravity.BS power boosts like Vegeta and Goku doesn't justify other large BS power boosts, but at least the filler is not inconsistent with the manga, considering the other large BS power boosts going on.
Possible? Maybe. Consistent? Not really. So I can easily see why people pause and question it.
You're in this conversation, too. You can't just turn around and accuse your fellow fans of taking something too seriously when you're still replying yourself.It's just a comic, I don't now why you're taking this so seriously.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
What are you using as "base Sayians"?Saiga wrote:I don't see how they could even keep up with the base Saiyans. They got left behind really early on, and this was before they started getting the insane boosts from recovering from near death. Goku went from 90,000 to 3,000,000 in one boost, and the humans have nothing like that available to them. Sure, it's not impossible, but it seems very unlikely.
They certainly got stronger than most Sayians were, throught the series. Even Chaotzu must have went further than someone like Raditz, at the end of the series, when we know he had training done for the androids and did another training bit during the Buu arc when he was shown being the only one, other than Ten dodging and surving Buu`s attack.
If you mean "Super Sayians" I would agree. Gero`s implication that Yamcha was = base Goku of the previous arc, certainly hints to that, but again, it`s also hinted that they had to fight beings (Cell Jrs) that were stronger than Freeza. They didn`t win or anything, but just surviving broken limbs seems a feat on itself for me.
Ten always protected Chautzu too much, even against King Piccolo and the Sayians. This time, Chautzu not coming (and thus agreeing with Ten`s decision) probably says that he actually did believed he would be of no use at all, unlike the other two ocassions.Bussani wrote:I think what he said was, "You don't have to come if you don't want to," but I'd have to check how it's worded in Japanese. It was Tenshinhan who decided Chaozu shouldn't come.Goku told them not to come if they thought themselves too weak, hence Chaozu not coming
Ki Breaker wrote:
Yamcha + Roshi = Yamoshi
Coincidence? I think not
Yamcha + Roshi = Yamoshi
Coincidence? I think not
Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
By base Saiyans I mean the last surviving Saiyans in their untransformed state. Goku, Vegeta et al.Olympian wrote:What are you using as "base Sayians"?Saiga wrote:I don't see how they could even keep up with the base Saiyans. They got left behind really early on, and this was before they started getting the insane boosts from recovering from near death. Goku went from 90,000 to 3,000,000 in one boost, and the humans have nothing like that available to them. Sure, it's not impossible, but it seems very unlikely.
Yes, I believe that they definitely surpassed the average Saiyan battle power level. I meant to say that they couldn't keep up with the Saiyans the story focuses on, who are exceptional by Saiyan standards much like the humans are exceptional by their standards. But I don't think they could ever keep up with Goku, Vegeta et al even without factoring transformations because the battle power of the Saiyans grows too damn high during the Namek arc - and they were already struggling not to fall behind before that point.Olympian wrote: They certainly got stronger than most Sayians were, throught the series. Even Chaotzu must have went further than someone like Raditz, at the end of the series, when we know he had training done for the androids and did another training bit during the Buu arc when he was shown being the only one, other than Ten dodging and surving Buu`s attack.
Not the previous arc, but the arc prior to that. Gero didn't observe them on Namek after all, he merely predicted Goku's growth based on what he observed from the battle with the Saiyans. So Yamcha is likely to be stronger than Saiyan Arc Goku, but that's not really surprising to me. I already had him being higher than that.Olympian wrote: If you mean "Super Sayians" I would agree. Gero`s implication that Yamcha was = base Goku of the previous arc, certainly hints to that, but again, it`s also hinted that they had to fight beings (Cell Jrs) that were stronger than Freeza. They didn`t win or anything, but just surviving broken limbs seems a feat on itself for me.
And the Cell Jr fight doesn't suggest anything about their strengths because they're completely helpless the entire time.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
I think it's because both of them knew that they'd be killed by the Androids in the future, so Tenshinhan told him to stay back, not wanting to lose him a second time. Tenshinhan himself wasn't scared about dying, since he mentioned that he wanted to know just what he could do in battle, and if he died, then it'd be an honourable death. But Chaozu was like his little brother, and I think Tenshinhan would've been harder on him this time, with so much more at stake.Olympian wrote:Ten always protected Chautzu too much, even against King Piccolo and the Sayians. This time, Chautzu not coming (and thus agreeing with Ten`s decision) probably says that he actually did believed he would be of no use at all, unlike the other two ocassions.Bussani wrote:I think what he said was, "You don't have to come if you don't want to," but I'd have to check how it's worded in Japanese. It was Tenshinhan who decided Chaozu shouldn't come.Goku told them not to come if they thought themselves too weak, hence Chaozu not coming
Holden Caulfield in [b][i]The Catcher in the Rye[/i][/b] wrote:I hope to hell when I do die somebody has sense enough to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddam cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you're dead? Nobody.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Logic isn't really a strong point in DB. I thought i pointed out a few example of ridiculous boosts. If the humans need a boost, AT will do it regardless of how little time they have. He did it with Gotenks, Goku, Vegeta, Piccolo, Gohan.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
But after the Freeza arc, the Earthlings don't need a boost, because they don't do anything. Gokuu, Gohan, Gotenks, Piccolo and Vegeta do do things. They fight the primary bad guys, train in the RoSaT, merge with other beings, get transformations...all to get stronger. The Earthlings? Not so much. After Kaiou's training, they just continue training on Earth, in the same conditions that they've already mastered and are just going through the motions. And, aside from anime filler, we don't even know how much they improved from that, since we aren't given anything to go by.Mystic Gohan wrote:If the humans need a boost, AT will do it regardless of how little time they have. He did it with Gotenks, Goku, Vegeta, Piccolo, Gohan.
Holden Caulfield in [b][i]The Catcher in the Rye[/i][/b] wrote:I hope to hell when I do die somebody has sense enough to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddam cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you're dead? Nobody.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Everyone besides Chaotzu thought they could be of some assistance against the androids.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
So? Everyone thought they could be of assistance against fucking Cell at the Cell Games, despite the fact that they believed only Gokuu stood a chance against him. They didn't count on Cell popping out a bunch of his children for them to go up against, and subsequently get wrecked. And the only reason Chaozu stayed behind is because Tenshinhan, his guardian, made him, since they both trained and Tenshinhan apparently only decided last minute that Chaozu shouldn't come along. This is like the situation with the Saiyans, with the significant difference being that Tenshinhan knew he'd die in the future and he didn't want to risk losing him a second time. There's no guarantee they could just pop to Namek and use their DBs again, especially considering how hard it was for Gokuu to find the planet in the first place.Mystic Gohan wrote:Everyone besides Chaotzu thought they could be of some assistance against the androids.
Just because the Earthlings went along for the ride doesn't mean that they're suddenly stronger than Freeza or the Androids now, considering they don't do anything to suggest that. I think Piccolo and other characters even say that they can't handle the Androids or Cell, and Tenshinhan himself declines a trip in the RoSaT because he can't fight Cell.
Yamcha gets his energy absorbed by #20 and is later defeated by a Cell Junior. Kuririn is knocked out in one hit by Perfect Cell, who doesn't even flinch at his attacks, and is later defeated by a Cell Junior. Tenshinhan gets choked unconscious by #17 and is later defeated by a Cell Junior.
Holden Caulfield in [b][i]The Catcher in the Rye[/i][/b] wrote:I hope to hell when I do die somebody has sense enough to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddam cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you're dead? Nobody.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Gero called Yamcha's energy amazing. He implied that the humans + Piccolo(b4 he got his ass kicked) + his own power > Vegeta. That implies that the humans got pretty strong imo.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Again, so? I don't see how "amazing" automatically means "stronger than so-and-so". They all presumably surpassed the doctor's calculations, which supposedly is why Yamcha was mistaken for Gokuu (assumedly, this means Yamcha's stronger than Saiyan arc Gokuu at the least) and Gero (yes, before he realized that Piccolo too was much stronger than he'd expected) believed that his power added to Piccolo and the Earthlings would surpass Vegeta.Mystic Gohan wrote:Gero called Yamcha's energy amazing. He implied that the humans + Piccolo(b4 he got his ass kicked) + his own power > Vegeta. That implies that the humans got pretty strong imo.
But Gero's an arrogant villain (suffering from Villain Stupidity Disorder) who trusted far too much in his meaningless calculations that meant nothing to the heroes that had gone through tremendous power increases since the battle with the Saiyans, on Namek and training for the Androids. He goofed up with Gokuu (even after he transformed into a Super Saiyan, he still trusted in his stubborn data that #19 could defeat him, even if that was by somehow managing to absorb his energy).
And just because Gero may think that isn't conclusive evidence. We don't know if it's a "1 + 1" thing like that anyway, and battle powers aren't even a thing in this arc. Nothing we've been shown thus far has "proved" anything in favour of the Earthlings getting some miraculous, plot-independent boost that we didn't see them do anything with. They were either completely passive, not fighting anyone, or easily beaten in every fight after Freeza. And their uselessness is made a point of numerous times, since Piccolo and the (Super) Saiyans are the only things that matter and can do anything worth a damn anymore.
Last edited by Piccolo Daimao on Thu Jun 14, 2012 1:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Holden Caulfield in [b][i]The Catcher in the Rye[/i][/b] wrote:I hope to hell when I do die somebody has sense enough to just dump me in the river or something. Anything except sticking me in a goddam cemetery. People coming and putting a bunch of flowers on your stomach on Sunday, and all that crap. Who wants flowers when you're dead? Nobody.
Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Well, Kuririn at least surpassed all members but Capn' Ginyu (who was second only to Freeza), so that counts for something right?Saiga wrote: @Godo
You mean they surpassed them in filler.
But either way, for an Earthling to even reach levels higher than, say, Dodoria and Zarbon's is a pretty huge feat (for an Earthling, that is).
Remember that everyone clearly underestimated the humans on Namek, whilst they took caution with Vegeta.
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Re: Why do people 'cap out' the humans? A long rant/essay
Did he?Godo wrote:Well, Kuririn at least surpassed all members but Capn' Ginyu (who was second only to Freeza)
James Teal (Animerica 1996) wrote:When you think about it, there are a number of similarities between the Chinese-inspired Son Goku and that most American of superhero icons, Superman. Both are aliens sent to Earth shortly after birth to escape the destruction of their homeworlds; both possess super-strength, flight, super-speed, heightened senses and the ability to cast energy blasts. But the crucial difference between them lies not only in how they view the world, but in how the world views them.
Superman is, and always has been, a symbol for truth, justice, and upstanding moral fortitude–a role model and leader as much as a fighter. The more down-to-earth Goku has no illusions about being responsible for maintaining social order, or for setting some kind of moral example for the entire world. Goku is simply a martial artist who’s devoted his life toward perfecting his fighting skills and other abilities. Though never shy about risking his life to save either one person or the entire world, he just doesn’t believe that the balance of the world rests in any way on his shoulders, and he has no need to shape any part of it in his image. Goku is an idealist, and believes that there is some good in everyone, but he is unconcerned with the big picture of the world…unless it has to do with some kind of fight. Politics, society, law and order don’t have much bearing on his life, but he’s a man who knows right from wrong.