"And I killed him!"Super Ghost Kamikaze wrote: OKRADITZISDEADWEAREENEMIESNOWHAHAHAHA OOOOOOOOOOOOOH Goku's dead."

Well, he did that in the anime too.Rocketman wrote:Not in the manga, he didn't. He stayed there and tried attacking Freeza from behind while he was distracted with Gohan.
He accepted his circumstances and new allies much more quickly, though. Even when he killed Goku, he was like "they're just gonna wish the little fucker back anyway." Vegeta wound up on their team in the Freeza Saga, and it took him until the end of the Cell Saga to stop plotting murder. And it took his death during the Buu Saga to convince him of the merits of being a team player after his big-ass ego boost in the RoSaT.Piccolo was the same way, remember? It was supposed to be only an alliance to kill Raditz and afterwards he and Goku would go back to being mortal enemies.
Journey to the West, chapter 26 wrote:The strong man will meet someone stronger still:
Come to naught at last he surely will!
Zephyr wrote:And that's to say nothing of how pretty much impossible it is to capture what made the original run of the series so great. I'm in the generation of fans that started with Toonami, so I totally empathize with the feeling of having "missed the party", experiencing disappointment, and wanting to experience it myself. But I can't, that's how life is. Time is a bitch. The party is over. Kageyama, Kikuchi, and Maeda are off the sauce now; Yanami almost OD'd; Yamamoto got arrested; Toriyama's not going to light trash cans on fire and hang from the chandelier anymore. We can't get the band back together, and even if we could, everyone's either old, in poor health, or calmed way the fuck down. Best we're going to get, and are getting, is a party that's almost entirely devoid of the magic that made the original one so awesome that we even want more.
Kamiccolo9 wrote:It grinds my gears that people get "outraged" over any of this stuff. It's a fucking cartoon. If you are that determined to be angry about something, get off the internet and make a stand for something that actually matters.
Rocketman wrote:"Shonen" basically means "stupid sentimental shit" anyway, so it's ok to be anti-shonen.
Wikipedia defines of pride that coincides with the majority of dictionaries and non Judeo-Christian philosophies or worldviews as:Kunzait_83 wrote:You’re still ignoring the fact that pretty much 99.9% of everything Vegeta supposedly says about the Saiya-jin having “honor” and “warrior codes” during the Cell saga was all COMPLETELY MADE UP for the FUNimation dub. It’s NOWHERE TO BE FOUND in the Japanese version. ANYWHERE. The most notable example that you yourself gave was all his monologuing during Son Goku’s fight with Cell, NONE OF WHICH is in the original version in any way shape or form...
Pride is a lofty view of one's self or one's own. Pride often manifests itself as a high opinion of one's nation (national pride), ethnicity (ethnic pride), or appearance and abilities (vanity). Pride is considered a negative attribute by most major world religions, but some philosophies consider it positive. The opposite of pride is humility.
Dr Gero, in Budokai 2 wrote:Go, my Saiba Rangers!
Akira Toriyama, in Son Goku Densetsu wrote:You really can’t go by rumors (laughs).
You maybe right but I always took that as Broli being sarcastic since he knew Vegeta could not make him bow. However, since Saiyans respect and honor power your point is most likely correct.Onikage725 wrote:@ Professor-
Broli: You're all a waste of Saiyan blood.
He also tells his "prince" that he basically has to earn the right (through force) to make him kneel.
Broli had a level of ethnic pride as well, based on the rule of the strongest. That can't be the sole difference in your argument.
It could be a dub thing, like Kunzait said. I don't know your viewing history, but after thinking about it I realized that I mainly knew that saga from the dub. And I did agree that Vegeta had the warrior code thing going in that saga, but Kunzait says he didn't. I saw bits in pieces of the Cell Saga on fansubs, the whole thing dubbed, and then the whole thing raw (thanks to the International Channel). I never picked up the singles, and I only have up to the third orange brick. So there very well may be extra pride-talk out of dub Vegeta that is just easier to call to memory (at least on my end).Saiyan-Professor wrote:You maybe right but I always took that as Broli being sarcastic since he knew Vegeta could not make him bow. However, since Saiyans respect and honor power your point is most likely correct.
Actually, it is that and more, take Americans for example. They have individual pride in themselves because of their own unique talents and skills but then there is national pride. Americans take pride in how they do things, it is a sort of way of life and how they approach the world. Even though certain actions are not written on some document or in stone per’se. American society still has a certain way they expect each other to act and if someone does not behave in that manner, they are called un-American. It is an unwritten code that I believe the Saiyans hold to that is intrinsically linked with their concept of pride.caejones wrote:Ur... I think it's come down to somantics?
Like, Vegeta's obsession with pride is what is being thought of as a "code" of sorts...
... Which seems really to mean the saiyans do what they can be most proud of.
Um, yeah. It's apparently a popular topic which people have a lot of thought on. Nothing wrong with that.ultimatedbzfan wrote:This topic is still alive. So fucking unbelievable.
Nothing is more surprising than the ease with which the many are governed by the few.SSJ2bardock wrote:I think, therefore I am.Krakabeast wrote:How do you kill which has no life?ultimatedbzfan wrote:This topic is still alive. So fucking unbelievable.
Sorry I had to
I had a feeling that's what you were getting at. (Though nationalistic pride never made any sense to me...Saiyan-Professor wrote: Actually, it is that and more, take Americans for example. They have individual pride in themselves because of their own unique talents and skills but then there is national pride. Americans take pride in how they do things, it is a sort of way of life and how they approach the world. Even though certain actions are not written on some document or in stone per’se. American society still has a certain way they expect each other to act and if someone does not behave in that manner, they are called un-American. It is an unwritten code that I believe the Saiyans hold to that is intrinsically linked with their concept of pride.
Dr Gero, in Budokai 2 wrote:Go, my Saiba Rangers!
Akira Toriyama, in Son Goku Densetsu wrote:You really can’t go by rumors (laughs).
Some have viewed pride as someone expressing to others how wonderful they are whereas dignity is more along the lines of having confidence in oneself. Yet, this is just one interpretation it all depends on your religious and philosophical worldview. Those from a Judeo-Christian background view pride as a negative.caejones wrote:I had a feeling that's what you were getting at. (Though nationalistic pride never made any sense to me...Saiyan-Professor wrote: Actually, it is that and more, take Americans for example. They have individual pride in themselves because of their own unique talents and skills but then there is national pride. Americans take pride in how they do things, it is a sort of way of life and how they approach the world. Even though certain actions are not written on some document or in stone per’se. American society still has a certain way they expect each other to act and if someone does not behave in that manner, they are called un-American. It is an unwritten code that I believe the Saiyans hold to that is intrinsically linked with their concept of pride.).
Thing is, though, it sorta seems like Vegeta only cared about the pride thing when he had room to show it off. Like... Would Vegeta have killed Nappa had Goku not been there? Hmm...
And now I'm confused about the distinction between pride and dignity...