![]() Goku IT's to Earth, and is able to help for only a few seconds before fading back out into the afterlife. This would happen because he's dead, since dead people can't exist in the living world except under strange conditions(Baba's power, crystalisation of the afterlife, big hole in the fabric of space between the Living World and Hell, etc.).įrom what I've read, Movie 9 does it this way. If Goku were to IT from the afterlife to the living world while dead, he would simply end up back in the afterlife. I don't seem to be able to express my thoughts on the subject succinctly. ![]() Or, if not a corpse, as a ghostly apparition that can't do much, and fades back into the afterlife. If he were to try, I think, he would show up as a corpse, and simply end up back in the other world anyways. However, when he's dead, he cannot go to the living world. It seems to me that Goku can use Instant Transmission to move freely between the living world and the afterlife when he's living. Unfortunately, as I've never seen that particular movie, I can't say for sure. I believe Movie 9 gets into this issue a little bit. Sorry if I rambled, I'm just very curious as to how this works. If there was a "rule" that no one can cross the afterlife to the living world while being dead, wouldn't the same rule applying to the living world to the afterlife? How is it that Goku is allowed to Instant Transmission into essentially a dead state while he's still alive (since he Instant Tranmissions into the after-life) but can't Instant Transmission into a "live" state while being dead? I guess I can see it being a "rule" that you can't pass the seam of life and death while your dead.but I don't feel like this was ever really explained. We all know that during the Cell Games, Goku "saves" the Earth by Instant Transmission-ing Cell to Kaio-Sama's planet, which then proceeds to blow up, Goku dies, etc. I'm not sure if this has been asked or answered before, but I can't find any info on it, so here it goes. now if only he was allowed to finish off a villain for once.So I was watching some Dragon Ball Z the other day and I started to think about a question.kind of an anomaly of Instant Transmission. Seeing Vegeta pull off the Instant Transmission technique was a punch-the-air moment in Dragon Ball Super. ![]() So even though Vegeta hasn't been studying Instant Transmission necessarily, whatever techniques he has been working on at least use the same principles. As explained by the elder of Yardrat, all of their strange techniques come from the same manipulation of energy. ![]() This may seem like a plot hole, but there is a working explanation from a few chapters ago. Only seconds after realizing he would have to teleport himself, Vegeta was able to pull off a long-range journey between planets. Some might argue that Vegeta learning Instant Transmission almost instantly is unrealistic. While this second part of this is debatable (if he did it once, what's stopping him?), it makes sense that Vegeta wouldn't make a habit of borrowing something his sworn rival made famous. After successfully landing on Earth, he claims that using Goku's move was a one-off, and he probably wouldn't be able to repeat the trick again anyway. Vegeta swallowing his pride (an increasingly common occurrence in Dragon Ball) and using Instant Transmission is a mark of how far the character has come but, fortunately, Vegeta hasn't changed too much. Just don't tell him the Galick Gun is a purple Kamehameha. Aside from their Saiyan transformations, Goku and his rival utilize entirely different move sets and such is Vegeta's distaste for Kakarott, he surely wouldn't be caught dead borrowing a technique. This is a major moment of character development for Vegeta. ![]()
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