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Quite the stellar DB addition

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Basically Namek has 3 suns, and it’s shown to dwarf it in size, as a result I’ve made this calculation that has been approved.
Potential arguments: Why is it assumed that the sun we see there is in the same plane as Namek? Since we can see all 3 suns, one of them must be parallel to Namek, or in the foreground, because of how Namek’s day-night cycle works. The suns cast a light on namek at all angles in a way that makes it so it’s never night-time. Therefore, we know that one of the suns must be on the same plane or in-front of Namek, but we don’t know which, which is why the calc takes the measure of the biggest visible sun, and uses that to pixel scale. As opposed to the sun being farther in the background than Namek is? If the sun were truly that close to Namek the resulting climate on Namek would be inhospitable for humans. Which clearly isn’t the case given Bulma can live on Namek. Bulma being able to live on Namek, does not debunk the fact that the sun has to be close to Namek. This isn’t really a counter-argument that addresses the size of Namek, since this would always be the case, since the distance and size have a direct correlation (Not to mention this is the same Bulma, who could survive in the first demon world despite the hot temperatures, and handled MFTL+ travel through space).

Namek would be upgraded to 4-C+, Namek would have an updated diameter of 29,246,700 km (but the GBE wouldn’t be accepted since it’s too contradictory), any changes that would be affected by this need to be dealt in their own threads. This is merely a CRT to change the size. Huge thanks to Chariot190 for this thread, most of the stuff in this thread basically comes from him.

Votes

Agree (4): @LephyrTheRevanchist Agrees with the thread here. @LordGriffin1000 , @Reiner04 (Likely), @DarkDragonMedeus (Same as Reiner)

Neutral (0):

Disagree (1): @Damage3245
 
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It looks good on paper, but execution kind of makes me have some doubts. For example, the planet has often been described as "Small" by various visitors; then again. So have the Super Dragon Balls simple been described as "Almost as big as a planet". But a volume that dwarfs the sun but still only the same gravity as Earth would make it a very shallow gas giant.

Likewise, it's common knowledge that Namek would actually have to be a durable planet in order to be in the middle of a three star system. GBE isn't necessarily the end all be all of durability given the existence of how fictional alloys work, but if anything. It be more realistic if Namek was the type of planet that has high density relative to lower volume; which would also be weird given Bulma can still walk around it just fine.

It looks good mathematically, but I just am not sure. I guess neutral for now.
 
It looks good on paper, but execution kind of makes me have some doubts. For example, the planet has often been described as "Small" by various visitors; then again. So have the Super Dragon Balls simple been described as "Almost as big as a planet". But a volume that dwarfs the sun but still only the same gravity as Earth would make it a very shallow gas giant.

Likewise, it's common knowledge that Namek would actually have to be a durable planet in order to be in the middle of a three star system. GBE isn't necessarily the end all be all of durability given the existence of how fictional alloys work, but if anything. It be more realistic if Namek was the type of planet that has high density relative to lower volume; which would also be weird given Bulma can still walk around it just fine.

It looks good mathematically, but I just am not sure. I guess neutral for now.
I don’t think that the planet being described as small by Dodoria should be an issue, since he’s been around lots of planets and it could just be common that he’s seen planets bigger than Namek. Yeah it would be realistically be a gas planet at the size, and we also have planets like the Megath planet that should be a gas planet with its gravity and size, but they’re still solid and Bulma can live on it similarly to Namek.

And yeah, the main argument here would have to be that the GBE would have to be that big for it not to be torn away from the gravity of those 3 suns.
 
(Also Chariot helped with this thread and everything that man does it solid, so extra points there)
Did I?
I remember brining this up to start with but idk if i actually did anything.

For the record, I agree. But calcing GBE is impossible for the most part given how scientifically ****** Namek is. Density, size, gravity, etc all contradict each other.

Inversely, use it to calc the big stuff like Goku's Spirit Bomb, Recoome's and other namek warping blasts, etc that don't need GBE but can be calced via knowing the size of it instead tho. Will lead to some calcs that help flesh out ratings so everyone isnt scaling off one ******* feat.
 
Did I?
I remember brining this up to start with but idk if i actually did anything.

For the record, I agree. But calcing GBE is impossible for the most part given how scientifically ****** Namek is. Density, size, gravity, etc all contradict each other.

Inversely, use it to calc the big stuff like Goku's Spirit Bomb, Recoome's and other namek warping blasts, etc that don't need GBE but can be calced via knowing the size of it instead tho. Will lead to some calcs that help flesh out ratings so everyone isnt scaling off one ******* feat.
Yeah, I remember I asked you on your wall how to calculate the planet, but if it’s impossible to calc the GBE then this thread is cooked

Edit: if that’s the case I guess I’ll just leave the GBE unknown and just push for diameter size based on the pixel scaling, unless that’s contradictory too.
 
Yeah, I remember I asked you on your wall how to calculate the planet, but if it’s impossible to calc the GBE then this thread is cooked

Edit: if that’s the case I guess I’ll just leave the GBE unknown and just push for diameter size based on the pixel scaling, unless that’s contradictory too.
Nah go wild with the diameter.

It's scientifically ******, but it is that big. Using it to calc stuff like big explosions seen from space and what not should be fine. It's just GBE is impossible to get as the values that are needed to obtain the GBE can not co-exist simultaneously.

Obviously the size doesnt change because of that, nor does the fact it's a very rocky planet, or the standard gravity. It HAS all those things, it's just combining them leads to impossible values, separately though? Nobody gives a shit if you use 1g to calc a feat on Namek, or use basic rock frag for Goku yeeting Freeza into a mountain, the size is the same. As a standalone value it is what it is.
 
Nah go wild with the diameter.

It's scientifically ******, but it is that big. Using it to calc stuff like big explosions seen from space and what not should be fine. It's just GBE is impossible to get as the values that are needed to obtain the GBE can not co-exist simultaneously.

Obviously the size doesnt change because of that, nor does the fact it's a very rocky planet, or the standard gravity. It HAS all those things, it's just combining them leads to impossible values, separately though? Nobody gives a shit if you use 1g to calc a feat on Namek, or use basic rock frag for Goku yeeting Freeza into a mountain, the size is the same. As a standalone value it is what it is.
Alright thanks, I’ll update my op accordingly.
 
Firstly, Namek "isn’t a particularly big planet"; an average planet is slightly larger than a Super Dragon Ball, which is 37,196.2204 km across. Like, dear God, the planet's curvature; Frieza's Death Wave splits Namek's horizon, the explosion of Vegeta's Final Crash visibly extends beyond the horizon, and Recoome's Eraser Cannon "warped" the planet's terrain. Secondly, the way Toriyama's illustrates Namek's suns always changes, even considering the passage of time. At times, the space around Namek is completely devoid of celestial bodies, implying they are either too far away to be visible; at times, the suns are depicted with slightly less detail than Namek, implying proximity; at times, the suns are depicted with significantly less detail, implying great distance; at times, the red and orange stars are never where they should be, unless they travel at different speeds, which further complicates things.

The closest one of the suns ever gets to Namek is here, as indicated by the details the orange sun is given.

But, like, why are they even assumed to be as big as Earth's sun? Our sun is an average star but, evidently, Namek is anything but average; for Pete's sake, Namek has three suns. Why is anything of Namek's being compared to the standard, to the average, to the norm?
 
But, like, why are they even assumed to be as big as Earth's sun? Our sun is an average star but, evidently, Namek is anything but average; for Pete's sake, Namek has three suns. Why is anything of Namek's being compared to the standard, to the average, to the norm?
Because Namek's light would dictate it's the same type of star that we have, which can only be so small.
If it was a different type of star, the spectrum of light would be different or be skewed toward a vastly different color.

also dbz is well known for ***** planets, but ***** stars? I can't think of a single time before or after.

As for the rest, yeah the details of the suns can vary, but what matters is that one is always on the same depth, or in front of it. Been awhile, I'm sure someone can find it, but I posted every panel from the og manga back in the super thread where each sun is shown next to it. It's happened a handful of times.
 
Based on Null's post, I disagree with the thread.
 
If the sun were truly that close to Namek the resulting climate on Namek would be inhospitable for humans. Which clearly isn’t the case given Bulma can live on Namek. Bulma being able to live on Namek, does not debunk the fact that the sun has to be close to Namek. This isn’t really a counter-argument that addresses the size of Namek, since this would always be the case, since the distance and size have a direct correlation (Not to mention this is the same Bulma, who could survive in the first demon world despite the hot temperatures, and handled MFTL+ travel through space).
Love the genuine disregard for logic here, hehe. If we are to assume Namek's suns,—which not only do not look like Earth's sun or any average sun for that matter, instead appearing more like planets than stars, but also do not behave like Earth's sun; for example, the three suns hover around one planet and makes the sky green,—share properties with Earth's sun like their size, then we also have to assume that Namek's suns generate similiar amounts of energy to that of Earth's sun. With that, if we are to argue that Namek's sun is close enough to the surface of Namek to have their sizes compared, then we'd also have to argue over whether or not Namek's atmosphere is properly equipped for protecting its inhabitants from 5,500°C heat three times over and giant balls of flames obliterating everything on the planet, possibly even including the planet.

If any of Namek's suns shared properties with Earth's suns, then even being within proximity of Planet Namek would be cataclysmic.
 
I’ll reply in a bit, I was seeing some stuff from other people. I can’t really make a reply until like 6-7 hours in the future.
 
This statement just shows that namek isn’t small, or even average. It just says that it’s not particularly big which implies that it’s still decently sized, but just not super large, or average & smaller either. There’s no concrete statement that caps the size of what a huge planet has to be, so in the context of Namek this doesn’t really break the argument. Also, I should mention the fact that the super dragon balls are considered almost the size of planet, so it probably even wouldn’t compare to a smaller-end planet either way. We have no cap of how a planet can be and that statement just serves as a bare minimum for how big it should be, since it’s considered “almost” as big as a planet.
The horizon dip or bulge is something that actually exists that makes the horizon look like it curves at the edges of your peripheral, due to the different perspectives. This is a pretty normal thing and it’s common to see in media as a whole, and we see stuff like on Earth where the horizon is drawn with a curvature. Like you do realize that if we took every single scan you sent it would make Namek tens of kms right? If we were to ignore what it actually is and work under the assumption that it’s the planet curvature being shown. Unless you want to downgrade Namek in size to that minuscule length, due to the horizon curvature, which is what it is, this isn’t really a rebuttal.
Yeah, the horizon which at Goku’s elevation would be around 40km give or take.
the explosion of Vegeta's Final Crash visibly extends beyond the horizon,
Again, yeah?
Recoome's Eraser Cannon "warped" the
This one’s kinda fair, but not really since you’d be arguing that those islands are hundreds of km thick they’d be clearly visible in every shot of Namek’s surface ever.
Secondly, the way Toriyama's illustrates Namek's suns always changes, even considering the passage of time.
The colored manga isn’t even done by Toriyama. It’s done by Shueisha, they’re technically not even canon so they really shouldn’t be used as any evidence. The black and white panels, they either always look the same or aren’t even the suns that we’re talking about. Besides, “always changes,” they’re always zipping across the planet, time does in fact flow, and half of these might not even be the actual suns, etc. and expecting that level of consistency is asinine. The fact that they’re even drawn 90% in a way that a normal viewer wouldn’t pick up on the discrepancies is good enough.
So a cropped shot in which Frieza takes up like half the panel?

I’m not sure what the second one is, but given how thin it is, why are we assuming that to be any sort of shot in which it’s even a focus?
implying they are either too far away to be visible;
That or that half the panel is covered up and the latter isn’t meant to be focusing on the planet’s orbital systems? You really cannot make anything out in the second shot, is it even far enough from where the planet is meant to be to show them? And if it is, why would we take that over 14 panels showing otherwise?
at times, the suns are depicted with slightly less detail than Namek, implying proximity; at times, the suns are depicted with significantly less detail, implying great distance; at times, the red and orange stars are never where they should be, unless they travel at different speeds, which further complicates things.
As said above, the colored manga is Shuiesha just guessing, what sun is what is something we have no idea canonically.
And yeah, tiny panels sometimes will be drawn with less detail? Sometimes they won’t? Literally none of this means “yeah none of the suns are even remotely close to Namek.” You yourself go on to prove atleast 1 is close, and none of this tackles the fact that 1 has to be in the foreground.
The closest one of the suns ever gets to Namek is here, as indicated by the details the orange sun is given.
Or it could be even further back. We don’t know, nor should we actually care.
And stop cropping panels. Just post the whole page. Posting tiny cropped panels is misleading when your argument involve level of detail ffs, because half of the time that’s why.

Panels that take up 1/15th of the page aren’t gonna be extremely detailed. Even if they were, or were not, level of detail doesn’t rebuke any of the actual points. The crux of the argument is merely presumptions, presuming why they aren’t all drawn in a certain way, all while ignoring the actual proposal in that one sun must be in the foreground. It’s a non-argument.
But, like, why are they even assumed to be as big as Earth's sun?
As mentioned above, we know what type of light Namek has, they have to be the same type as our sun, otherwise Namek’s lighting would be completely different. Also, like DB having messed up planets is one thing whether it’s the minuscule size of King Kai’s planet, or super sized planets like in the Demon Realm or even Heaven. When have we ever seen stars and suns in DB with unrealistic insane sizes? (Its rhetorical we haven’t)
We assume because it’s any standard assumption, that is the case with any verse. It is only when we are given ample reason to believe otherwise, that we do not do so. And in DBZ, especially during that point in time, we haven’t gotten any.
Our sun is an average star but, evidently, Namek is anything but average; for Pete's sake, Namek has three suns. Why is anything of Namek's being compared to the standard, to the average, to the norm?
Non-average planet, is not a non-average star.

The only reason Namek is “anything but average” is due to the very idea that it’s bigger than a sun. If we ignore that, then nothing about it is really odd, and it goes back to square one to assume why the sun is different? It’s a self-fulfilling argument, that isn’t how it works.
But none of the scans say that “Namek isn’t that big.” They’re either all non-canon scans which relies on the non canon coloring for things that may, or may not be the suns in question to begin with. That even if we do go with them, don’t actually rebuke the OP (it’s confusing to see what the point of 90% of them are). None of them actually confirm “yes, none of them, ever, are on the same plane or in front of Namek.” They’re just varying panels where it’s impossible to tell the depth between the suns. You argued based on detail, but ignore that a handful of those panels are tiny, of course the sun wouldn’t be detailed in small drawings, the same way most things aren’t. But of course the panels that are big, they tend to be given a tad more detail. You assume it’s a spatial distance thing, that the further back they are, means they’re drawn with less detail, but why? That doesn’t actually matter, Akira could have drawn them with the same detail if he wanted, given their general size to Namek on panel isn’t usually different? No, it’s almost certainly a panel spacing thing, drawing little details like that is a pain in the ass at times, whether he didn’t feel like it, or the panel was small so he didn’t need to be that detailed, whatever it may be this is all guesswork and not confirmation (Except for a few exceptions, I believe there is one where there is no detail, but said panel is also one of the most blatant cases of their relation to Namek so eh). In the end, it doesn’t really matter because the argument doesn’t tackle the very crux of the argument, in that due to Namek’s constant day cycle, that no matter the case, one of those suns must be at an angle as to cast light on Namek’s forefront. You at no point gave evidence for that to not be the case, if you can’t explain, without headcanon mind you, how Namek’s front is getting light, if all 3 suns are like a 100 million km behind it (in which case the front of Namek should be dark as hell), you aren’t actually rebutting the OP. You’re nitpicking trivial inconsistencies that may or may not even be that.
In fact, in Kakarot, only one sun is ever depicted as being within the proximity of Namek (and, yes, in Kakarot, "[there's] no night on [Namek]", as with the original manga); yet, at a great enough distance as to be unaffected by its explosion.
Uh, this doesn’t help your case like at all?

Bro you just quite literally confirmed the sun is within proximity of Namek, so everything above just gets discredited, throw it all out, you’ve conceded one of the suns is in its proximity.

We don’t need all 3 suns, we only need to know that 1 is close enough, which you just confirmed, especially if you angsize it, the sun is huge despite them being on ground level, it’s pretty darn close to their PoV, which corroborates Namek being huge.

There is two shots within that game that show said sun clearly on the same depth of the plane? You even posted it, you can tell blatantly that it’s not 1m km back, you could literally draw a line to it even, which gives the distance we see it, supports how big it is from the ground pov actually, it’s pretty accurate if you were to angsize.

And yes, it wasn’t affected by the blast, so? The blast in Kakarot is tiny, it’s barely larger than Namek itself. It didn’t affect it, not because the sun is some huge distance away, but because the blast doesn’t extend that far.



The blast in game is barely 2x as big as Namek. You’re acting like the explosion eclipsed the screen and the sun was still fine impyling it was much further back. Yet the blast didn’t hit it explicitly. But how does that contradict the size of Namek being proposed? If anything it’s supported.

If there was any doubt beforehand, posting the Kakarot scan basically confirmed the OP, at least 1 sun is on the same plane/in front of Namek. We literally see it.

The other two suns be damned, the argument was never that all 3 were, in fact the other 2 can’t be close at the same time the other is close, otherwise the other angles of Namek’s surface wouldn’t have day too.

The only argument that kinda has merit is that sometimes the suns aren’t drawn. Which is true, but that’s a minority, in panels where it usually doesn’t matter too. If 80% of the panels have suns, that’s evidently more consistent. Given how it’s always day-time, that forces one of the suns to always be in the foreground in the shots where it is, and Kakarot basically confirms it. Well that isn’t enough to outweigh the blatant issue with acting like all 3 suns are always millions of kms behind it, it simply isn’t actually possible.
Love the genuine disregard for logic here, hehe. If we are to assume Namek's suns,—which not only do not look like Earth's sun or any average sun for that matter, instead appearing more like planets than stars,
Ngl, you really gotta stop. You keep posting scans that don’t even show what you’re arguing. Half of those scans show white empty circles. You know, like how suns and stars are often drawing in manga, let alone DBZ? You’re actively demonstrating to me you’re cherry picking in the very albums that you use as proof. But what’s the argument now? “These very explicit suns aren’t actually suns actually.” Why? We know they are? Are you gonna argue they’re planets now? Like what is your goal here. This isn’t really something up for debate to begin with, argue it all you want but it’s not a case of subjectivity, we know what they are.



The game shows it too, yet we can tell that it’s still a sun because of the photosphere. It’s drawn weirdly sometimes, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s literally a sun? It’s just an attempt to give it detail, making it look like clouds when it’s supposed to signify color changes.
but also do not behave like Earth's sun; for example, the three suns hover around one planet and makes the sky green,—share properties with Earth's sun like their size, then we also have to assume that Namek's suns generate similiar amounts of energy to that of Earth's sun. With that, if we are to argue that Namek's sun is close enough to the surface of Namek to have their sizes compared, then we'd also have to argue over whether or not Namek's atmosphere is properly equipped for protecting its inhabitants from 5,500°C heat three times over and giant balls of flames obliterating everything on the planet, possibly even including the planet.
If Namek as big as being proposed, it’d only be small chunks of the planet actually that would be scorched if you took it at face value like that.
The color of the sky has more to do with the atmosphere, not the suns. The reason Earth’s sky looks blue is because of our atmosphere, due to Rayleigh scattering, where shorter wavelengths of light (blue) scatter more than longer wavelengths (red) and whatnot. If Namek’s sky is green, that has little to do with the actual suns, but Namek’s own atmosphere scattering green light more effectively, as opposed to blue. Why is that the case? It could be anything from various gases in the atmosphere, to even just an exorbitant amount of vegetation and algae filled oceans scattering some green light into the sky. Heck, even sulfur content, various dust, aerosols, or chlorophyll heavy ecosystems, can all lead toward having a more green hue. This is just a non-argument, and one that doesn’t even tackle the crux of the argument at hand either way.

Anyways, remember how I mentioned the size of suns get drawn from Namek’s surface corroborate the argument? Well, if you take the game example when Vegeta flies by, and angsizing the distance it is from the PoV, you get only a few million KMs away from Namek for the sun that’s closest (orange one), assuming it’s 1.39m KM wide. This, ironically, is supported by the fact that the game shows it only a few million km to the left too.
If any of Namek's suns shared properties with Earth's suns, then even being within proximity of Planet Namek would be cataclysmic.
This is relative. If Namek is as large as the panels suggest, the sun “being close” isn’t actually that close, it’s still ten fucktrillion miles away, it just doesn’t look as much because Namek itself would be huge.
This doesn’t really matter, since you, yourself have actively proven that it’s pretty darn close, by showing multiple panels, allegedly, and the game, in which the sun takes up a portion of the sky. You can argue it makes no sense, and that the planet would be messed up by it, which yep sure, assume that it’s true no matter the case. This doesn’t change the fact that they are that close. You’ve proven it even, if you angsize the distance the sun is away, you get like 100x less distance compared to our own in the vast majority of panels and even less in the aforementioned game. You rebuked your own point unintentionally. This shouldn’t be up for contention.

Quite literally not one of the argument tackles the issue you need to tackle. You keep bringing up “contradictions,” but none of them actually rebut the point needed and instead are like “they look like planets” even though we know they’re suns so that isn’t up for debate or other trivial or irrelevant points. Vague panels that don’t actually mean or prove anything both for or against the CRT so they’re useless. Stuff that actively contradicts you like panels showing the suns taking up a large portion of the sky, confirming close proximity to such a degree that it’s identical to the distance shown in the panels with them around the planet if sácale at face value, etc. A game that flat out shows us that the sun is up Namek so that argument is pretty much over. Or just going “this doesn’t make sense,” which is true, it doesn’t make sense, but it not making sense doesn’t change the fact Namek has 3 suns, one having to be in front of the planet, and we see that in both game, various shots, they’re undeniably super close and so forth. Mentioning logic, realistically Toriyama clearly didn’t think too hard on it, but him not thinking hard on it, or Namek being some impossible planet that shouldn’t exist, doesn’t change the fact that a Sun is hovering next to it or in front of it and the size of Namek eclipses that sun.
 
Ngl, you really gotta stop. You keep posting scans that don’t even show what you’re arguing. Half of those scans show white empty circles. You know, like how suns and stars are often drawing in manga, let alone DBZ? You’re actively demonstrating to me you’re cherry picking in the very albums that you use as proof. But what’s the argument now? “These very explicit suns aren’t actually suns actually.” Why? We know they are? Are you gonna argue they’re planets now? Like what is your goal here. This isn’t really something up for debate to begin with, argue it all you want but it’s not a case of subjectivity, we know what they are.
I am under the impression you completely misunderstood the sentences you read, which isn't unexpected.
The point is not "The suns could actually be planets", the point is "The suns look nothing like average suns. Why are they being compared to them?"
 
I am under the impression you completely misunderstood the sentences you read, which isn't unexpected.
Knock it off with the thinly veiled insults.
The point is not "The suns could actually be planets", the point is "The suns look nothing like average suns. Why are they being compared to them?"
The suns, are literal suns. Cut that out. They're just drawn with a texture to give them some semblance of detail. The burden of proof is on you to prove they aren't, not just guess they aren't actual suns, a notion that is unprecedented in like all of DBZ, let alone at the time of Namek's inception, all because Akira Toriyama used a gradient technique to give them detail, and only SOMETIMES at that, at other times drew them as one would expect.


Like here, one of many examples. They're drawn without it. Are they suddenly not the same thing? Or do they suddenly become "real stars" now that they're drawn this way as opposed to with the weird technique? That's rhetorical, they do not. They're still the same, how and why Akira Toriyama decided not to sometimes and did at others, doesn't rebuke the end result of them being stars explicitly.

Suns also have a minimum size they can be, assuming they're naturally occuring, and given the color of the prominent sun displayed, we know what class of star it is too. Couple that with Namek's light being the same as what a sun like ours would give, the fact that one of the sun has to be on the same plane or in front of it for the very explicit day-night cycle to function, the numerous on planet shots you yourself gave that confirm the sun's close-proximity with Namek (angsizing that orange one puts it only a few million km away, about the exact same distance it's drawn spatially away from it in almost every panel). Unless DBZ has a precedent for impossible sized suns, it is what it is. And as said above, atmosphere being green has nothing to do with the suns, even our sun technically gives off ample light like that, it's just how the light is scattered through the atmosphere that gives it a hue.

Every single argument you've presented is either "it doesn't make sense" which while true, yeah Namek itself is ****** up as a planet, but that doesn't change the fact it's there, a sun is drawn next to it, in close proximity, and it eclipses it in size. Or is stuff that has absolutely nothing to do with the topic at hand and wouldn't change the CRT whether it was true or false.

The existence of DBZ Kakarot, if we actually use that, hard confirms that the orange one is up on Namek's ass. If that game is deemed canon, there's no longer a debate to be even had, we can see the sun merely a few million km away at most, it is shown directly next to Namek in a 3D space. Thinking on it, a handful of the panels you gave also show it a few million km away too.

Given your arguments for some reason involve climate(?), rectify that too, given no matter the case Namek "should" be dangerously hot given how close the sun is regardless. And as an fyi, if you're arguing the sun is actually small, that would lead to a colder climate instead, it goes both ways. Your argument of it not being a "real sun" or it being far back due to LoD (which may, or may not, have zero to do with distance in almost every instance and instead be panel sizes, or just him not feeling like it, we legitimately do not know but other evidence implicates it can't be proximity-related or whatnot), etc can't co-exist, which should be a flag that this is more presumptuous throwing stuff at a wall rather than legitimate proof it's the case.

For you to have any real argument here you need to.

1. Prove the suns aren't actually sun-sized. Headcanon, presumptions, etc is not evidence. Non-standardized planets or Toriyama not realizing the implications this would have on Namek itself isn't a rebuttal. Much like how King Kai's planet, Heaven, World of the Kai's, and more make zero sense scientifically and shouldn't exist in the way they're presented (Toriyama evidently didn't understand the exact science behind a lot of this, like King Kai's planet would be thousands of times denser than even uranium despite being just rock, and Heaven or the World of the Kai's should collapse into a black hole given their size yet having rock-like density, and that's just for density issues, which is fine, not like anyone but us really thinks about it), has no bearing on if the lad draws a planet with a sun next to it. What is needed is actual proof they're not legitimate suns.

2. The fact Namek has both 3 suns, and never night are very evidently tied to the orbit of them being capable of shining light on it. Explain how, why, if the suns are all secretly far back in the background and none of them are next to, or in front of it, why they're scattering light on Namek's front somehow?

3. Why the suns are drawn, from a ground perspective, at ridiculously close proximity to it as to where angsizing the relevant sun, gets it at distances spookily close to the distance it would be at in the panels and games where they just shove it right next to Namek (I.e, a few million km, aka a few suns' widths away).

All 3 need to be accounted for, explicitly. Not with guesswork, not with assumptions, not with vague "well maybe?". Either it is, or isn't. We don't need a 50 page back and forth over the dumbest shit because we're arguing impossible to actually verify vague notions.
 
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I disagree, the colored manga scans you sent clearly depicts PLANETS, not suns. Likewise happened in Chapter 244. Jupiter literally looks like the orange PLANET in the colored scans. The anime depiction is irrelevant, it literally differs from the manga, so it's not usable. Kakarot also depicts the suns differently than what you're suggesting, as Null already pointed out. Plus, how convenient that you're not using the colored panel for the actual pixelscaling, they're clearly planets there as well. We can't see the three suns in any shots, because if the temperature is anything like Earth's the sun would be several billion kilometers away.
THIS is how Toriyama depicts stars, there is no shading like the ones in the panel you used. I disagree completely.

The planets have SHADING, what kind of a light source is shaded? That's NON-SENSE, they're clearly depicted as solid objects being illuminated by a light source, not light sources themselves. Plus, one of the suns could simply be behind the shot to explain how illuminating the front of Namek.

To answer Chariot, no, the panel you used, ARE NOT STARS EITHER, THEY'RE BLUE AND YELLOW PLANETS WITH SHADING, EVEN THE ONE FAR AWAY HAS IT.

Also, we have Goku literally confirming that Namek has neighbouring planets, but we're gonna assume the celestial bodies in the shots are stars? For what?
Basically, you really need a good argument to consider that the colored spheres full of shading are stars when we have confirmation that there are many planets near Namek
 
Also, we have Goku literally confirming that Namek has neighbouring planets, but we're gonna assume the celestial bodies in the shots are stars? For what?
Basically, you really need a good argument to consider that the colored spheres full of shading are stars when we have confirmation that there are many planets near Namek
This is a fair point. We can't be absolutely sure that every celestial object seen near Namek has to be a star.
 
I disagree, the colored manga scans you sent clearly depicts PLANETS, not suns. Likewise happened in Chapter 244. Jupiter literally looks like the orange PLANET in the colored scans. The anime depiction is irrelevant, it literally differs from the manga, so it's not usable. Kakarot also depicts the suns differently than what you're suggesting, as Null already pointed out. Plus, how convenient that you're not using the colored panel for the actual pixelscaling, they're clearly planets there as well. We can't see the three suns in any shots, because if the temperature is anything like Earth's the sun would be several billion kilometers away.
THIS is how Toriyama depicts stars, there is no shading like the ones in the panel you used. I disagree completely.

The planets have SHADING, what kind of a light source is shaded? That's NON-SENSE, they're clearly depicted as solid objects being illuminated by a light source, not light sources themselves. Plus, one of the suns could simply be behind the shot to explain how illuminating the front of Namek.

To answer Chariot, no, the panel you used, ARE NOT STARS EITHER, THEY'RE BLUE AND YELLOW PLANETS WITH SHADING, EVEN THE ONE FAR AWAY HAS IT.

Also, we have Goku literally confirming that Namek has neighbouring planets, but we're gonna assume the celestial bodies in the shots are stars? For what?
Basically, you really need a good argument to consider that the colored spheres full of shading are stars when we have confirmation that there are many planets near Namek
You basically just rehashed nulls arguments lmao. Again, we KNOW those are stars that surround namek for chariots reasoning's, what we see in kakarot that null himself provided as "proof" against us btw, still shows us that it indeed is a sun, along with the literal statement that namek has three suns. The toriyama giving the suns any type of detail does not mean they are planets. Goku confirming there are planets near namek has literally NOTHING to do with anything. Goku's statement can STILL be true without contradicting anything else, we don't know how far those neighboring planets even are. This is just a case of you ignoring everything presented to you just because you "feel" that it isn't right. They are clearly suns, depicted consistently in a LOT of panels that we ever see of namek. Also you used the colored panel from shueisha which isn't even actually done by toriyama. In toriyama's official colors, the suns do not appear as if they are blue or whatever. You're trying to disprove them being stars just based on how toriyama draws them SOMETIMES, these arguments do not hold up at all, yet you ask US to prove they are real stars when you yourself haven't actually disproved the statement we have in the manga. Also I hope you know by using the colored manga to justify your reasoning, you actually contradicted yourself because in one panel they appear yellow or orange, and another time they appeared purple and blue?? Is that your reasoning for saying "they're clearly planets"? If not, you're basing that on nothing. There isn't even any shading in the first panel you posted, which you literally tried to use as an argument for it NOT being a star, so which is it? Your argument completely falls apart.
 
I disagree, the colored manga scans you sent clearly depicts PLANETS, not suns.
They're not canon, hinging the majority of your argument off those ain't doing you any favor.

Now that isn't to say they don't look nice, or can't be useful, but things like "they shaded or drew these completely black/white or blank things odd colors", isn't an argument, as they have no say for canonicity. That goes for every Shueisha colored manga btw, even ones like JoJo (it's way worse over there, people to this day still get confused or mad when media has character colors differ, like pink Giorno in the anime, even though blue Giorno was never canon, and in an old ******* interview dude even says he imagined him with soft pink pastel colors).
Likewise happened in Chapter 244. Jupiter literally looks like the orange PLANET in the colored scans.
Your argument is "it looks like jupiter"? Yeah, well, I think it looks like a sun half the time.

Not a very good argument now is it? Subjectivity isn't objectivity.
The anime depiction is irrelevant, it literally differs from the manga, so it's not usable.
Nobody brought up the anime (I think?). But ok, nobody will use the anime in regards to Namek and it's orbital system, in particular. Happy?

But manga?


The black and white manga very clearly shows the suns, as suns, at multiple points. Above is a few examples.
Kakarot also depicts the suns differently than what you're suggesting, as Null already pointed out.
Null scans actively shoot down his argument, every time a sun is shown, it's always at ridiculously close distances. Basic angsizing can confirm that, and yes, even the non-shaded examples.
Plus, how convenient that you're not using the colored panel for the actual pixelscaling, they're clearly planets there as well.
Because they're non-canon? Why would we EVER use them for pixel scaling? And no, I did. I angsized legit like 8 different ones just to check if it was consistent, they all hover within the millions of km, usually 3m on average.


Double posting....

"They're sometimes given extra detail and color gradients", doesn't mean "ignore the fact we know they're suns, they're secretly planets, and also ignore the times they don't get drawn like that when they're undeniably stars, just so we can say they're planets even though we know they're the same thing".

And before this gets hit with the "no u", the difference is we know Namek has 3 suns that grant it it's eternal daytime. 3 orbiting planets around it has never been mentioned ever. Occam's Razor and whatnot.
We can't see the three suns in any shots, because if the temperature is anything like Earth's the sun would be several billion kilometers away.
Except we already went through this.

Climate is impossible either way you go about it. The fact it has three suns is already a issue if you want to go that route, if earth had 3 suns at the same distance as our sun from 3 different angles, well earth would be destroyed, from being torn apart by gravity, to being cooked alive due to the extra heat sources.

The very fact its orbit is to the point it's always day, would absolutely ravage the planet's climate, there'd be no night, which, is pretty damn important all things considered.

So, again, what's the argument? That Namek is scientifically impossible? You're right, it is. But that's the case whether Namek is a normal sized planet and each sun is perfectly placed at sun-earth distances too, in fact I'd wager that's worse actually.

If Namek is huge and the suns orbit it that would save it from being torn apart by the 3 different sun's gravitational pull, as it would have the larger pull. It'd be no different from how some planets can have multiple moons orbiting it. But if Namek orbited the suns? Which one? It'd be ripped apart. Unless it is stationary? But for it to be stationary it'd have to be so far away from the suns in question as to not get moved around that Namek should be an ice planet instead. Or what about the suns being a different class? Not possible, Namek's lighting all but confirms the class of star, so we know the minimum and maximum sizes for them, gravitational pull, and so forth, which we can then calculate the distances Namek is from them by angsizing, and the suns still get tens of millions of km closer to the planet compared to earth, which would still lead to asinine temperatures. And that's just the tip. Namek is ****** no matter how you go about it. Thus arguing "climate would be mess" isn't an argument, it should already be one, it isn't. But alas, even if it should be, doesn't change the information and facts we know to be the case regardless.
THIS is how Toriyama depicts stars, there is no shading like the ones in the panel you used. I disagree completely.


Triple posting.... I'm not making a new album.

At multiple points in the manga the stars, because that's what they are, I'm not humoring this "actually planets lmao" argument much further, are drawn exactly like that?

Don't you find it odd at numerous points in the manga, Namek just so happens to have 3 very blatantly stars, by your own admission at this point if the argument is legit "they're drawn this way, not THAT way", hovering around it, at a much larger scale compared to the surrounding stars in the background?

Why is there 3 stars around planet Namek in a triangular formation at numerous points drawn much larger than the background stars, in shots focusing on Namek and the surrounding space at multiple points?

Also Toriyama has depicted stars numerous ways, **** if I'm gonna skim the manga for all of them, but you've read it, you should know there's been times a star has been drawn in ways beyond "white circle".
The planets have SHADING, what kind of a light source is shaded?
A lot actually if it's meant to represent color gradients, which isn't exactly an uncommon technique when drawing the literal sun, to denote the "orange" and "red/yellow" "blotches" along it. Now given this argument is less about Namek and art as a whole, I'm going to be using some various examples of DBZ media as a whole.


Notice how every sun here is drawn with shading? This is all from various DBZ media, yet in EACH one, it's drawn/portrayed differently, and all have shading/gradients.
To show what I mean, I even made them black and white. Would you say those aren't the sun because it has some black & white shading? Or that they're all different because they're drawn differently at times?
No, of course not. A sun can be drawn in many different ways. The cooler one for example wouldn't even look like a sun in black or white if we didn't have that knowledge ahead of time tbh, someone could easily mistake those "bubbles" as something else like land formations, or even impact zones or who knows This is just a few examples, but throughout not only anime, movies, but even the manga, there is dozens of cases where it's drawn oddly, or not even oddly but just different from other times. There's examples in the manga too where our literal sun has been drawn differently, I was gonna grab them but I'm not skimming the whole ass manga for that as said, so make do, it get the point across all the same anyway and not like you goons haven't read the manga (I pray), you know they exist, don't waste my time for something you already know to be true. Regardless, no, this isn't an argument, ever, not just for DBZ but quite literally any medium of art.
So to answer the question, what kind of light source has shading? Any depending on the artist's mood.

It can be odd and misleading, but, we know they're suns, and they're even drawn without that at multiple points anyway. So what's there to argue? This isn't up for debate, we know what they are in the context of the manga. And "suns can't have shading" is an objectively wrong argument that doesn't even tackle the proposal or whether or not the CRT is true or not,.
That's NON-SENSE, they're clearly depicted as solid objects being illuminated by a light source, not light sources themselves. Plus, one of the suns could simply be behind the shot to explain how illuminating the front of Namek.
"Planet Namek very explicitly has 3 suns around it, illuminating it from all sides. We are shown many times, 3 celestial objects around Namek, in which they're even drawn at times like any normal star, including the very stars on panel at the same time".

Vs.

"Planet Namek secretly has 3 planets orbiting it that are never mentioned at any point, in literally any media ever, while the 3 suns are actually never seen at any point, including the times we can blatantly tell they're intended to be stars, they're just suspiciously drawn and coincidentally accurate stars just so happened to be placed in the exact same configurations, at no less than 10 different points".

Remember when I said no headcanon, assumptions, and whatnot? Yeah I meant this.

"They're clearly depicted as-", says who, you? I want statements, not "arguing impossible to actually verify vague notions.", otherwise this will become the usual bog-standard cesspool of a DBZ thread because we circle back into "nuh uh" presumptuous interpretations and conjecture that go back and forth because nobody wants to concede because the arguments in question aren't based in objective factual info. To be blunt, I don't want your opinion, I want hard stated factual information.

Also the sun is always drawn in front of the pov so we just can't see it argument.... Including the shots with the 3 suspiciously placed suns. Does that mean Namek's solar system has a secret 4th sun, and the other 2 are to be expected and then there's a 3rd, or ig 4th in this case, that's also in the solar system but just doesn't count toward Namek's "3 suns"? This doesn't work as an argument. And yes, 4, they're drawn to disproportionately large to not be within the solar system, angsize go brrr.
To answer Chariot, no, the panel you used, ARE NOT STARS EITHER, THEY'RE BLUE AND YELLOW PLANETS WITH SHADING, EVEN THE ONE FAR AWAY HAS IT.
The non-canon colored manga... Shaded by a literal nobody at Shueisha....
Whereas Akira Toriyama left them as completely blank circles in that specific instance...


Where's the shading? If you're going to answer me, actually answer me, not the thing we evidently aren't going to accept as some sort of irrebuttable counter.
Also, we have Goku literally confirming that Namek has neighbouring planets, but we're gonna assume the celestial bodies in the shots are stars? For what?
Yeah I'm sure the solar system has other planets.

But are we going to assume the consistently three celestial objects orbiting the planet are the three celestial objects, that being suns, we know the planet has, instead of assuming and creating entirely new logistics that Namek just so happens to ALSO have 3, specifically 3 planets orbiting it just because, especially when we know damn well half the time said 3 objects are drawn identical to stars anyway?
The other half be damned, bro wanted to give them detail, or maybe he didn't, we don't know why it's like that exactly, so guessing and arguing over literal presumptions, because that's what this is, presumptions, not the actual info we have as fact, is just a waste of everyone's time.
Basically, you really need a good argument to consider that the colored spheres full of shading are stars when we have confirmation that there are many planets near Namek
Here's an argument.
"Shuiesha colored scans are non-canon, a chunk of the scans in the manga also don't have any shading at all as well. The existence of shading doesn't detract from the information we know to be true even if that was the case".

The fact some do, doesn't detract from the actual knowledge we have, that being we know they're stars, and half the time they're drawn in the exact way that you want them to be anyway. You don't like when they're shaded, drawn with detail, or look funny? That's cool, we have big empty white dots too drawn the same way other stars on those very panel are drawn, so you're in luck.

Imperative word, want, not need. They don't need to be drawn a specific way. They can be drawn however he wanted them to be drawn. From blank circles, to even having wispy flames coming off it, or any amount of shading possible, how they're portrayed, doesn't change what they are, doubly so when they have been portrayed the way you want too.

Also no, Goku saying "hey, planets of the solar system, give me some energy" is not saying "Namek has multiple planets orbiting it within extremely close proximity, as such the 3 celestial objects we constantly see around Namek, are these specific planets", which is what it would need to say for this to work. Goku, even before that point, had solar system level range with the Spirit Bomb.
"The Genki-Dama is a technique that gathers the energy held by grass and trees, humans and animals, objects and the atmosphere, and then fires it. A Genki-Dama gathered from only Kaio Planet had the destructive power to smash a super-speed brick. From this, in the case of a Genki-Dama made on Earth, if you consider the Earth’s size plus the ability to make energy from the sun your ally, it would certainly have the force to destroy a planet. However, it has the weakness that it makes you defenseless until fired."

You're conflating Namek's solar system having multiple planets, as most solar systems often do, with those 3 specific objects that orbit Namek as being planets.
That is not what that line entails in the manga (idk it might in other stuff, but we're talking manga canon here), nor can it be extrapolated to mean such without delving into complete conjecture.

But for argument's sake. Let's just assume, for some reason, Namek secretly has 3 suspiciously placed planets around it that aren't mentioned in manga, daizenshuu, etc (which would still make it an impossible planet if the goal is for this to somehow make it scientifically fine?). This would, unironically, mean nothing, because if the shading denotes it's a planet, that still means there's 3 suns around Namek because we see said 3 suns, without shading, gradients, or whatever you want to call it, multiple times.
Or would one say that doesn't count and they're actually the planets too? Why? If the mere drawing method is what effects what they are in face of all confirmed knowledge within that canon, why is it suddenly ok to pretend the blatantly drawn stars, are planets? Yet the inverse surely can't be the case?
Now I'm not saying that's what you think, but if someone made such an argument, that would in fact be hypocritical, contradictory, and disingenuous, it simply doesn't work, it's double standards without the factual backing of the opposed side.

Your rebuttal has no concrete proof or evidence. It is just arguing drawing depictions, interpreting it in a very specific way to be planets as opposed to it being confirmed as such in the manga or manga guides to have 3 orbiting planets, ignoring the contradictory examples that corroborate the actual stated and confirmed info (3 blatantly drawn stars, in a generally consistent configuration, for a planet that explicitly has 3 suns as stated with its ecology and behaviour having an eternal day due to that being a notable fact), and creating essentially new lore to go along with it....

We still haven't got past square one. Prove they're not normal stars without assumptions. Post a statement saying Namek has specifically 3 orbiting planets because I'm not particularly a fan of guesswork. Explain why Toriyama randomly decided to draw said "planets" as "stars" at points if we're taking art as gospel and assuming authorial intent, because surely them being drawn like stars must also have implications if shading confirms them as planets apparently? Like you can't have your cake and eat it too.
And if you want to argue climate or "Namek can't be like this because this impossible thing", explain away all the impossibilities that come packaged with your proposal because it goes both ways (You're not gonna use that as an argument, yet be fine with it when the alternatives you're arguing for are just as scientifically impossible), Namek absolutely shouldn't exist the way it does.
To top it off, angsizing still condemns the former argument, like it's actually just not up for debate, every time a sun is drawn, and I'm not talking about the shaded examples given your issues with that, I mean the "this has to be a sun" examples, the stars are well within "cooking the planet" range, tens of times above ours, both on planet shots, and even the space shots (really though, those stars extremely close, they're drawn disproportionately large).

As a extra to the above earlier in the thread, Daizenshuu 7 confirms the Freeza split is the horizon curvature, not planet curvature.
"This technique’s destructive force is tremendous, creating a deep fissure that extends far off into Planet Namek’s horizon.", so that's fun.

Knowing my luck I've condemned myself to arguing this shit but I've been busy so idk see you goons whenever I'm done writing the inevitable reply to the inevitable reply where we go back and forth for 1-2 weeks.
We love DBZ CRT....
 
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