The Undying wrote: Fri Sep 04, 2020 1:32 pm
My impression of there being a comparison, rather than strict identification, was to draw similarities to the drawbacks of Kaioken while
avoiding having the fans/readers make any specific estimations about multipliers (or, indeed, if his strength was multiplied at all).
I don't think it's possible to argue one way or the other what kind of boost it yielded. Whis describes it as "drawing deep from his reserves for a temporary boost, regardless of what damage it might cause", which I suspect is similar in principle to Vegeta's power-stressed Blue near the end of the Future Trunks arc.
Well, since Whis mentions both the boost
and the damage, then to me it seems logical to conclude from Tenshinhan and Kuririn drawing the comparison that they are comparable in
both respects.
If Toyotarou wanted fans
not to draw boost comparisons, then mentioning that there is a boost in play here, comparing the attempt to Kaio-Ken and then asking whether that would even work seems an odd way of going about avoiding it, to me. If you just mean he probably doesn't have so
specific a boost in mind, I can accept that as a possibility - it wouldn't be the first time that a fan inference from a scene was more specific than authorial intention in Dragon Ball, I guess.
My interpretation is that I tend to think of it as though his strict ki size was multiplied by 2ish, but that he didn't get nearly as much of a practical change in applied power, since as Jiren mentions, he can't wield it properly. Personally, I've tended to read that back as a problem with Kaio-Ken in Goku's previous uses of the
actual technique, thus giving an additional explanation as to why he doesn't beat Vegeta in the short time he uses Kaio-Ken x3, or why his Kamehameha does so little to Freeza when he unleashes Kaio-Ken x20 and technically has an equal Battle Power to Freeza at 50% - he can't use that power properly, so he gets a seriously diminished effect from it compared to strict Battle Power. Just my interpretation, though.