Lunatic Fringe wrote:ekrolo2 wrote:
Except the year DID make a difference! The only people who vastly improved over the three years were Vegeta (who probably trained like a maniac) and Piccolo. Goku is virtually the same strength as before and I didn't see Gohan turning Super Saiyan before the ROSAT. Hell, even Piccolo's gain is ultimately worthless until he fuses with Kami and he STILL can only stalemate 17 with 16 being superior to him even after that.
Once Goku went into the ROSAT his power exploded, giving him far superior gains than his three years of relaxed training did on Earth. Same thing for basically everyone who went in there, clearly showing that one year in the ROSATs intense training is worth far more than three relaxed years training on Earth. Vegeta & Trunks also gained significant power after the first ROSAT trip, giving them such a boost they went from being inferior to all the Androids and Piccolo to being able to beat the hell out of Cell with utter ease. The only reason they didn't get much stronger after the second trip is because their bodies were 1) either too tired from doing such intense training so quickly again or 2) their bodies adapted to it so the returns from the ROSAT training were greatly diminished.
If they were really so concerned about preparation as you think they were, then they would've gone into the ROSAT at least once during those three years to train in there and give themselves an extra boost just in-case. They're perfectly willing to basically cheat when the odds are stacked against them as shown when Cell & the Androids leave them in the dust so I really don't see why them deciding a week ahead of Gero's arrival why not to go into the ROSAT. Goku & Gohan would be at the exact same strength levels they were when they entered later on so who cares? What do they lose by going in there for extra preparation time & better training conditions?
Let me try to explain it you like this: in Scenario A, a group of students is required to turn in a project in their Sociology class. The professor gives them a rubric that defines precisely what the teacher expects from them in order to get an A. It also includes the parameters that would earn them a lower mark. In Scenario B, the exact same scenario takes place except that the students get no rubric. Now, which group do you think will most likely get the higher mark, the one with the rubric or the one WITHOUT one?
Obviously, it'd be the one with the rubric because they know EXACTLY how to approach the project. That's essentially what takes place when the RoSAT training happens. They have a good idea on what sort of boundaries they need to ascend because of their power being put to the test directly against the threat they want to get rid of. It all boils down to getting stronger than a Super Saiyan and with that in mind, Trunk, Vegeta, Gohan, and Goku are able to gain similar gains with Goku and Gohan taking it a step further. Meanwhile, they had little to no information to base their training off of to defeat the Androids and thus, we see characters making much more significant gains because most likely, they just went at it in radically different approaches that saw great results for one person(Vegeta for instance) and not so much for another(Goku in this instance). No one's on the same page because there's no central idea of what HAS to be done. It's not the RoSAT that makes them stronger, it's knowing what to do with that time that makes the difference. That's why Goku made such gains and why Vegeta, the second time he went in, didn't gain much because he approached his training the same way, which is likely what would've happened if they went in the RoSAT before the Androids showed up in their timeline. Sure, they could've tried a different approach but in their ignorance and lack of foresight, they wouldn't know that what they were doing was "wrong".
I can see the reasoning behind that theory but the series does kind of conflict with it at certain points. He didn't know the exact parameters of how strong Nappa or Vegeta were either, all he knew is they were lots stronger than Raditz, King Kai and basically everyone we've met up until that point. That doesn't magically hinder his training to fight them external issues caused that like needing to spend months on end just getting to King Kai's in the first place, if he got there in a matter of days or weeks he'd have most likely have been able to stalemate Vegeta without any Kaio-Ken boost. However, his vagueness on their exact powers doesn't hinder his ability, it probably motivates him to train harder just in-case.
Then we have him training during his trip to Namek, once more, Goku only has a really vague idea of Freeza's strength and he trains like mad there as well, probably boosting his power by over ten times depending on how much of a boost he got from his post Vegeta fight zenkai. Regardless of not having a defined bar to get himself over (except maybe Vegeta) he utilizes his training time well and ends up far superior to most of the Ginyu force without even knowing it.
But to work in conjunction with your theory for a moment, Trunks actually does have a good framework for the strength of the Androids by comparing them to Freeza. He's able to defeat both Freeza and Cold with utter easer where as even the weaker Androids from the future whoop his ass just as easily. He also can draw comparisons thanks to Future Gohan who's power he's probably well aware of and if we're working of the manga version of the Future Trunks special, Gohan's maximum not even amount to half the Androids strength should give him a good range for their maximum power. His primary objective in that time-line, along with saving it, is to either become strong enough to kill his own murder bots or at the very least find a way to shut them off.
Really, if there's anyone who should be jumping into the ROSAT first and foremost, its Future Trunks. Him going back in there with say Goku or even alone, getting the practice in then returning to his own timeline to check the results and report back to the others would fit with your theory of them requiring a certain bar to help improve their training gains over. That way, even if Goku's fight with 19 goes south like it did in the regular time-line, a ROSAT enhanced Piccolo (perhaps even Kamicolo), Gohan and Future Trunks would be there to compensate for it.
Ultimately, I can see your point and there's definitely evidence to support it, but I think there are just as many instances where the people training don't have a clear idea of how strong they need to be to overcome their enemies during training.
When someone tells you, "Don't present your opinion as fact," what they're actually saying is, "Don't present your opinion with any conviction. Because I don't like your opinion, and I want to be able to dismiss it as easily as possible." Don't fall for it.
How the Black Arc Should End (by Lightbing!):