- Joined
- Jun 10, 2024
- Messages
- 55
All the time I see praise leveled at these forms for their contributions to Goku and Vegeta as characters, but I just don't get it. On the surface, sure, Ultra Instinct and Ultra Ego are cool, but they feel like they are fundamentally in opposition to who Goku and Vegeta are as characters, or rather who they should be by this point.
Now, maybe I'm missing something with Ultra Instinct in particular, but I just don't get how Goku can stand to use a form that takes agency away from him. Goku loves to immersed in battle, yet Ultra Instinct forces him to take a passive role, relying on maintaining the right state of mind so his body reacts optimally for him. Now this sorta "drawback" could be used to great effect to comment on Goku's character, but it never is. Goku is just content using this form and tries his best to maximize its efficiency without considering its opposition Goku's nature as a martial artist.
The same problem applies to Ultra Ego. Sure, if you're a passive enjoyer of Dragon Ball or someone who grew up with it and have this idea of Vegeta as a prideful, arrogant, sadist that never really grew beyond that, sure, Ultra Ego makes perfect sense for his character, but that's the thing. You have to ignore all the development he's undergone for this form to work. This idea that Vegeta would be willing to sacrifice that development for a power up is ridiculous to me, especially considering his attempt to gain power through Bobbidi. I just don't buy he'd be willing to sacrifice aspects of himself to get stronger at this point in his life.
Both of these forms just feel like the writers wanted a new power up that was different than what had come before without considering how the mechanics of these forms would apply to these characters. Like, I don't think Ultra Instinct and Ultra Ego are bad transformations in and of themselves, they just don't feel appropriate for Goku and Vegeta.
Now, maybe I'm missing something with Ultra Instinct in particular, but I just don't get how Goku can stand to use a form that takes agency away from him. Goku loves to immersed in battle, yet Ultra Instinct forces him to take a passive role, relying on maintaining the right state of mind so his body reacts optimally for him. Now this sorta "drawback" could be used to great effect to comment on Goku's character, but it never is. Goku is just content using this form and tries his best to maximize its efficiency without considering its opposition Goku's nature as a martial artist.
The same problem applies to Ultra Ego. Sure, if you're a passive enjoyer of Dragon Ball or someone who grew up with it and have this idea of Vegeta as a prideful, arrogant, sadist that never really grew beyond that, sure, Ultra Ego makes perfect sense for his character, but that's the thing. You have to ignore all the development he's undergone for this form to work. This idea that Vegeta would be willing to sacrifice that development for a power up is ridiculous to me, especially considering his attempt to gain power through Bobbidi. I just don't buy he'd be willing to sacrifice aspects of himself to get stronger at this point in his life.
Both of these forms just feel like the writers wanted a new power up that was different than what had come before without considering how the mechanics of these forms would apply to these characters. Like, I don't think Ultra Instinct and Ultra Ego are bad transformations in and of themselves, they just don't feel appropriate for Goku and Vegeta.