Couldn't perfection be seen, or perceived, by Cell, as not losing to anyone no matter what, rather than having huge feats of doing anything destructive - wise ?The concept of a perfect being is something that could go every which way. But given the nature of the series, his trajectory could be seen coming.
The perfection narrative is meh in retrospect, because -- regardless of him being bested -- he only ended up being Solar System level.
It appears Cell thought himself Perfect full stop.Couldn't perfection be seen, or perceived, by Cell, as not losing to anyone no matter what, rather than having huge feats of doing anything destructive - wise ?
Yeah, but would you say, for example, that the perception of perfection should be have validity being viewed in the level of Zeno, or Thanos? Or not necessarily? Would that be more omnipotence? Because if perfection involved basically no flaws, shouldn't he know he could finish someone with moving his fingers, basically?It appears Cell thought himself Perfect full stop.
I think it's possible for him to think that, while -- us, as the audience -- can look back and recognise that his claim was a hard sell given where he caps at + how far we know scaling can go.
Yeah, but would you say, for example, that the perception of perfection should be have validity being viewed in the level of Zeno, or Thanos? Or not necessarily? Would that be more omnipotence? Because if perfection involved basically no flaws, shouldn't he know he could finish someone with moving his fingers, basically?
Yeah, I agree with you there, specially your last paragraph. I think the story plays with the illusion of perfection in a way that perfection is always a thing when you're imperfect and striving to become better. I think I misinterpreted your initial response, my bad.When a character claims to be perfect, and places value on the ability to destroy, you'd think they'd at least have power that covers all spaces as a rough starting point. That way, they're not limited (as far as they know), but the possibility remains for them to be overcome especially if they're an antagonist. They do not necessarily have to be 4D level if timeline alteration is not a theme of the plot - the idea of every celestial object going *poof* is enough of a scare for the protagonist. Nor do they need to be multiversal since the existence of another verse could be unbeknownst to them.
Although Cell's boast was lame and he's severely limited in the grand scheme of it all, the natural conclusion to his philosophy is that his opponent scales below him by default, no matter what tier they're in. So however crazy he appears, it's irrelevant to him since he ought to walk out the victor of any encounter.
A supposedly perfect being suffering a loss is typically embedded into storylines, with the theme of arrogance tying into their downfall. I wouldn't say the plot is invalidated as a result of these tropes since the theme of perfection is strongly accompanied by hyperbole to prove a larger, moral point.