A solid demonstration of inner will. That type of theme was present on some level in each arc. With how important power and grit is within the series as a collective, you kinda become accustomed to the toughness we see time and time again.
A case can be made either way as far as strength is concerned, but that's still just one aspect of battle. Going with Frieza due to how opportunistic he is as a combatant. He's not limited by morality and is willing to destroy entire structures when things don't go his way.
Well he was titled as a God of Destruction. There's also two parts to what Omega could do with that energy.
- The passive effect: spreading it across the cosmos to rid of everything.
Note: Remember how some of Cell's absorption victims would seem depleted and then just disappear? Seems that...
I get what you're saying, but it's usually the end of GT that people focus on to make their case.
In terms of earlier stuff, I've seen people bring up Goku collapsing Sugoroku Space as a key feat of power, but the size of that area wasn't expressed; we just know that it's part of the Universe...
To be fair, the Buuhan thing is a non-issue. His manga self didn't have the same rage that caused that phenomenon, and it was later pointed out that it's not a feat he could just recreate. On top of that, the threat he posed was more of a domino effect than direct destruction.
The gripe you...
Analysing the DC & AP of a character acts as a good baseline for what they can do. While you may interpret that as nerd stuff, this type of thinking is quite natural among average fans as well, e.g. "wow he just blew up 'X' or "of course he can beat 'Y', he destroyed a 'Z'.
Sure, works of...
Gauging precise gaps like these often isn't an ideal endeavour or worth dwelling on.
They really went the extra mile to demonstrate how powerless Cell was though. Not that that confirms anything, but it does stand out.
1-4 would all be useful assets within the Tournament of Power, handling skirmishes with average fighters and providing good back up for the top dogs.
5-8 ought to gain some props and intrigue from the likes of Beerus, and arouse attention from the elite of the ToP.
9-10 may potentially be able...
Difficult to say since Buu Arc Gogeta never materialised, and GT Gogeta was busy flexing rather than going all out.
If there is a difference, I'd probably lean to GT's gap being the bigger one.
It's better for people to post actual quotes instead of paraphrasing.
@SIAD Tiering-wise, we know what range he falls into at bare minimum, and can deduce the possible heights of his power. That ought to give you a good idea of a ballpark estimate.
Given that Gogeta's presense was brief and...
The first chain is possible. One way to think about it is the meta analysis of Godly ki compared to normal ki; particularly Beerus' perspective of the latter being inferior. Then of course there's the matter of looking at feats. In both of these areas, it brings God Goku (BoG Saga) into the...
An interesting narrative element that isn't often discussed is Beerus' view of: Godly ki > normal ki.
It poses the question: is this due to the vessel carrying normal ki not being expected to have as much potential as a God (i.e. relatively speaking as opposed to a hard rule), or that normal...
It appears the main subject was resolved. Just want to chime in regarding Omega:
His minus energy posed the urgent threat of laying waste to the Universe (i.e. all of the celestial bodies within this structure). Then additionally, he could focus this energy into a single point via the Negative...
@Natasha Romanoff
It's abundantly clear that you're not down for a proper debate anymore. Your response demonstrates a blatant attempt at pivoting, relying on strawman, immature comebacks, and inaccurate observations. You got ragdolled and have nothing left in the tank, so your coping...
Yet again, you're unable to actually counter. No sense of coherency either.
This doesn't weaken my argument. If anything, it reinforces it.
Vegeta is capable of reading a situation and conversating before physical exertion comes into play. Great, I knew that from the start.
The point flew...
None of this addresses my argument. You're essentially a walking fallacy at this point.
Bulma's comparison was between Beerus and Vegeta. Since she was operating under the idea that Vegeta could take Beerus, the by-product of that line of thought is that Vegeta ought to be able to do better...