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sis.bro.
After the recent arguments, would you agree to just using the diameter and not the GBE?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.
Why does this feel like the Sun Disk all over again?
https://media.**********.net/attachments/1340012082602446976/1351228108384108584/images_7.jpg?ex=67dd913d&is=67dc3fbd&hm=0987121fd73b386a369915f00717ad8455333ce0e611391d430b34ff6a9e5935&Snip
I find Damage argument more convincing here.The way I see it, either perspective starts off from the same fundamentals;
1) If you assume that the stars around Namek are Sun-sized, then Namek becomes extremely huge by comparison.
2) If you assume that Namek is Earth-sized, then the stars around Namek become extremely small by comparison.
At face value, either perspective is equally valid as they're arbitrarily based on assuming a size value relative to something in our own world that isn't directly stated in the Dragon Ball series.
However, what tips the balance for me personally, is that we see an ordinary human like Bulma walking around on Namek's surface unprotected and doing just fine. So, this suggests to me that the planet has roughly Earth-like gravity, an Earth-like atmosphere, and she isn't being roasted by Sun-sized stars in close proximity to the planet. For a world that is supposedly many times bigger than our own Sun, it possesses properties that are incredibly Earth-like. This doesn't mean there are no problems with an Earth-like Namek, but there's less problems with that option.
So even if either option leads to results that appear nonsensical, the latter option, of taking the planet to be more Earth-like than the other extreme seems to make the most sense to me.
Bulma is not an issue at all, I'm not sure how that really tips the scales for you. Bulma can literally survive traveling at mftl speeds in a spaceship, and being in the middle of a warzone with the demons while vegeta was flying extremely fast carrying her, she survived in the demon realm which has very hot temperatures without any issues as outlined in the OP. Bulma being the deciding factor for this is just extremely silly. And namek being the size of earth and the suns just being extremely small is backed up by nothing, as we have already went over. Do you really think that toriyama meant for the stars to be smaller than earth? When that's clearly not how its portrayed? Who says namek is earth sized? We know a super dragon ball is ALMOST the size of a planet. Namek has three suns, its not meant to be compared to earth in any way. Both interpretations are NOT equally valid, and one has way more backing than the other based on objective information. Like damage you agreed with null, when null disproved his own arguments and actually made it stronger with the use of kakarot, and other panels he posted. None of what you said changes the diameter of namek and how it's very consistently portrayed as this large giga planet.The way I see it, either perspective starts off from the same fundamentals;
1) If you assume that the stars around Namek are Sun-sized, then Namek becomes extremely huge by comparison.
2) If you assume that Namek is Earth-sized, then the stars around Namek become extremely small by comparison.
At face value, either perspective is equally valid as they're arbitrarily based on assuming a size value relative to something in our own world that isn't directly stated in the Dragon Ball series.
However, what tips the balance for me personally, is that we see an ordinary human like Bulma walking around on Namek's surface unprotected and doing just fine. So, this suggests to me that the planet has roughly Earth-like gravity, an Earth-like atmosphere, and she isn't being roasted by Sun-sized stars in close proximity to the planet. For a world that is supposedly many times bigger than our own Sun, it possesses properties that are incredibly Earth-like. This doesn't mean there are no problems with an Earth-like Namek, but there's less problems with that option.
So even if either option leads to results that appear nonsensical, the latter option, of taking the planet to be more Earth-like than the other extreme seems to make the most sense to me.
It's not even the extreme, its just how the planet is.taking the planet to be more Earth-like than the other extreme seems to make the most sense to me.
They have to be. They're all G2V stars. We know this from their coloration (in like, not made up manga colored scans), to Namek's lighting (if they were different, the light cast upon Namek would be in a different spectrum, the temperature would also be different fyi as color and temperature are directly connected).The way I see it, either perspective starts off from the same fundamentals;
1) If you assume that the stars around Namek are Sun-sized, then Namek becomes extremely huge by comparison.
No it isn't. At all. We literally have standardized values for these things, you're aware of this.2) If you assume that Namek is Earth-sized, then the stars around Namek become extremely small by comparison.
At face value, either perspective is equally valid as they're arbitrarily based on assuming a size value relative to something in our own world that isn't directly stated in the Dragon Ball series.
Lad Namek has 3 suns. If they're normal suns and are at normal sun distances away and Namek is standard (It actually isn't, it's pretty implicitly larger than Earth by some unknown degree, so gravity would be messed up anyway, if it retained earth-like density it'd even have LESS gravity for example), it means the planet gets torn apart by gravity and Bulma should be dead because Namek's atmosphere has been pulled off the planet and everything on it died and it's slowly being cooked due to no ozone and other such protection, let alone keeping it binded as it slowly becomes an asteroid belt due to the opposing forces due to the roche limit.However, what tips the balance for me personally, is that we see an ordinary human like Bulma walking around on Namek's surface unprotected and doing just fine. So, this suggests to me that the planet has roughly Earth-like gravity, an Earth-like atmosphere, and she isn't being roasted by Sun-sized stars in close proximity to the planet.
This isn't even true. An earth-like Namek would have every issue a big one would have (density issues, gravity issues, temperature issues, etc), with the extra benefit of not even existing because it got torn apart by 3 different suns' gravitational field.For a world that is supposedly many times bigger than our own Sun, it possesses properties that are incredibly Earth-like. This doesn't mean there are no problems with an Earth-like Namek, but there's less problems with that option.
And the least of all... This isn't an argument.So even if either option leads to results that appear nonsensical, the latter option, of taking the planet to be more Earth-like than the other extreme seems to make the most sense to me.
Or Bulma is just ******* built diff idk could be that ig toomeme
Damage’s Option 1 makes the most sense to meThe way I see it, either perspective starts off from the same fundamentals;
1) If you assume that the stars around Namek are Sun-sized, then Namek becomes extremely huge by comparison.
2) If you assume that Namek is Earth-sized, then the stars around Namek become extremely small by comparison.
Not just light. Color, radiation, temperature, even gravity, orbit, etc. What we see, is stars mostly like ours. This, well I can't speak for the man, but I'm going to presume that, the things called suns that are "meant" to give Namek a hospitable, earth-like conditions (even though it absolutely shouldn't....), are meant to be suns as we know them.@Chariot190 I don't have time to respond to all that tonight, but I respect the effort you're putting into your responses. All I can say for now before I head off is that it seems you're acknowledging that some things don't make sense about Namek no matter which option we go with, but you're sticking with the insistence that the stars have to be a certain size otherwise the spectrum of light would be different.
Not knowing the logistics of what a triple star system orbiting a planet would do, isn't quite as complex as drawing beeg boy planet next to suns to give the planet an eternal day (which is probably about as far as his thought process went, he wanted it to always be day, so he gave it three suns that face each side of the planet, he even seems to have it at an arched triangle to account for top and bottom lighting too).I don't want to sound facetious when I say this, but couldn't this also just be one of those things that don't make sense because the author didn't put that much thought into it?
No it can't, they'd become brown dwarfs, or become black holes even.Maybe it doesn't make any scientific sense for the stars to be that tiny yet give off that type of light anyway, but that doesn't mean it can't be the case, right?
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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".
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,.
"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.
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.
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.
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....
None of what you typed actually proves they are planets, yet again. If anything, you proved how they are indeed stars even more when you linked that OGDB panel of a sun, and then it shows the exact same thing on namek lmao. Toriyama giving the sun detail doesn't prove its a planet, and it's not even there on other closeups. Nor does goku asking for energy of the planets, it is explicitly not referring to the SUNS that we've seen. We just don't know how far the planets he's gathering energy are, and we don't need to, because it's irrelevant. Also see kakarot, it clearly shows its a sun if you need extra proof for whatever reason despite everything.The part about stars being shaded. This is not shading. In the OFFICIAL KAZENBAN COLORS, which are not Shueisha's, but Toriyama's, this is how a star is how a star is depicted. In colors, from Toriyama himself. What you showed is variation in color due to how a star looks, not a solid shape being shaded with actual shadows from behind like it's receiving less light in it's other side, like a PLANET would.
Fun fact, the one where it looks like Jupiter and it's shaded? It's not Shueisha's colors, this is a rare FULL COLOR PANEL from the Kazenban releases, which are obviously canon.
You are acting like white dots = star is a known fact that's unchangable no matter what we do. This of course, in the black and white manga. Not the case at all.
Planets can also been depicted as white balls if they're far enough. Meaning if they're far enough they lose their details. The contradictory details of the "suns" isn't an inconsistent art decision, it's just they're too far away in certain shots, so they're drawn as a white ball, it's not proof they're star.
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You said "We should trust the 3 suns statement instead of believing there's 3 close planets"
The fact there are planets near is confirmed by Goku. And I recommend you actually look at the scans, he never says Solar System, he says "planets that are near", in some translation, he even mentions the word "neighbour planets".
There is indication that there are planets that are near. There is NO INDICATION that the suns are near.
Also, here is the shading from the official kanzenban colors:
![]()
I reiterate, we cannot clearly state that the white dots in Pixel Scaling are actually suns, we know that Toriyama tends to portray stars in different ways than seen in the images, and judging by the way the panel was colored, it does not appear that the celestial bodies in the image are actually a light source
Toriyama, has, in fact, colored some pages. But between you and Null, the vast majority of the colored scans presented are not that. You lads keep posting Shueisha colored scans.The part about stars being shaded. This is not shading. In the OFFICIAL KAZENBAN COLORS, which are not Shueisha's, but Toriyama's,
Except when it isn't? And funny how the Namek ones are, in fact, depicted like that at times anyway. But we're just repeating shit now.
In colors, from Toriyama himself. What you showed is variation in color due to how a star looks, not a solid shape being shaded with actual shadows from behind like it's receiving less light in it's other side, like a PLANET would.
That is not the scan that has been posted ten dozen times. But fair. And? Did we not already go through with this?Fun fact, the one where it looks like Jupiter and it's shaded? It's not Shueisha's colors, this is a rare FULL COLOR PANEL from the Kazenban releases, which are obviously canon.
Oh, so we are literally whipping out double standards then?You are acting like white dots = star is a known fact that's unchangable no matter what we do. This of course, in the black and white manga. Not the case at all.
That, that isn't a white ball? You just rebuked your own point?Planets can also been depicted as white balls if they're far enough. Meaning if they're far enough they lose their details. The contradictory details of the "suns" isn't an inconsistent art decision, it's just they're too far away in certain shots, so they're drawn as a white ball, it's not proof they're star.
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Yes. I'm sure Namek has numerous planets near it well within Spirit Bomb range which encompasses the solar system.You said "We should trust the 3 suns statement instead of believing there's 3 close planets"
The fact there are planets near is confirmed by Goku.
I did. instead of assuming people didn't read your scans, mayhaps it just isn't good enough of an argument and people disagree?And I recommend you actually look at the scans,
"In some translation", unfortunate, how it is then, that we use strictly the japanese. What's that one say?he never says Solar System, he says "planets that are near", in some translation, he even mentions the word "neighbour planets".
Beyond like 14 manga panals and what little actual info we have about Namek's orbital systems...There is indication that there are planets that are near. There is NO INDICATION that the suns are near.
There is no way.Also, here is the shading from the official kanzenban colors:
Your entire argument is, again, Namek just so happens to have 3 planets orbiting it that were never mentioned. Or are anything but proof and instead is presumptuous, interpretive, conjecture that absolutely shouldn't ever be used as some sort of solid argument and only in a opinionated discussions. Why do you get to decide what the intent was? You don't. It's an opinion, nothing more, nothing less, but we're not here to argue opinions, we have a list of explicit concrete info, and your arguments hinge on the opinionI reiterate, we cannot clearly state that the white dots in Pixel Scaling are actually suns, we know that Toriyama tends to portray stars in different ways than seen in the images, and judging by the way the panel was colored, it does not appear that the celestial bodies in the image are actually a light source
A diagram not made by Akira Toriyama, not supervised by him, for simplicity sake, and yet also somehow, coincidentally in the general formation we see them in the manga? This isn't much different from the things like that one japanese teacher yapping about JoJo slop and what he says and shows not aligning with the actual source material.I don't know if this is of any use, but on the Dragon Ball website they talk about the planet Namek and in a diagram you can see that it is smaller than its suns.
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Not just light. Color, radiation, temperature, even gravity, orbit, etc. What we see, is stars mostly like ours. This, well I can't speak for the man, but I'm going to presume that, the things called suns that are "meant" to give Namek a hospitable, earth-like conditions (even though it absolutely shouldn't....), are meant to be suns as we know them.
Also like, we have wiki rules, the default assumption is the sun is a sun, not that the sun is a mario galaxy sun that can fit in my living room or in a city or something. Kind of going about it backwards, burden of proof is on those saying they aren't standard suns.
Not knowing the logistics of what a triple star system orbiting a planet would do, isn't quite as complex as drawing beeg boy planet next to suns to give the planet an eternal day (which is probably about as far as his thought process went, he wanted it to always be day, so he gave it three suns that face each side of the planet, he even seems to have it at an arched triangle to account for top and bottom lighting too).
No it can't, they'd become brown dwarfs, or become black holes even.
To sustain the fusion that causes suns to do what suns do, that being everything that matters and is relevant for this topic, they need a certain mass. If they're tiny enough relative to Namek (if Namek was as big as our planet), it would collapse into a black hole or get pretty close to it as its mass would still need to be sufficient, let alone sufficient to light up and warm up a planet even at that scope. Temperature, lighting, even their color would be different too best case if we assume it stays functional. Would at the very least be red and give namek a funny dose of the superman.
Now, I wouldn't mind thinking maybe the suns are the non-standard, not the planet. But I legit can't think of a single instance in all of DBZ where a sun is potrayed at impossible values, meanwhile off the top of my head I can think of 3, maybe 4, totally blasphemous planets, including planets that have multiple suns encircling it (Supreme Kai's planet in the manga eclipses stars. The anime, respectfully changed that to be moons, but we know damn well they're suns in the manga because Toriyama has drawn them in color in guides, and drew them as suns and even with light coming off them). And heaven is just lmao.
If I have to pick something with precedence in a manga that blatantly shows disregard for planetary density, and logistics, or assume the suns are what's wrong when there's no cases for that. I'd have to pick the former because the whole sun next to Namek isn't subject for debate, at the very least that part of it is hard fact.
Edit: And just for the **** of it, in case some people are frightened by the implications and potential wank, not saying that's the case but in case that's why a few might be cautious, I just went and calced like the best feat this would lead to, and got barely 5-A. It legitimately doesn't change much beyond throwing a few extra supporting feats in there so the whole verse isn't downscaling off Frieza's exponentially better feat.
You're right. There needs to be precedence, lack of any makes it baseless conjecture, which we do not go with ever. Unless, of course you can think of small naturally occuring suns in DBZ.I see where you're coming from, with the alternative size of the stars being too contradictory and therefore it isn't reasonable for them to be that size.
As said last night, the density and gravity is ****** no matter what you do, in fact it being smaller would need to make it even more dense, as to avoid being literally torn apart by the gravity of 3 suns, and obviously the more dense an object is while retaining the same size leads to an increase in gravity.But if we accept the size of Namek that is being proposed in the OP, then the ground of Namek would be several times less dense than air itself based on it visibly having roughly Earth-like gravity.
As above.If instead we acknowledge that Namek is made of solid ground and likely has a density comparable to Earth's, then it would have a gravitational acceleration 2,300 times Earth's gravity at that size, which we know can't be the case because literally every fighter on the planet would be crushed flat based on how we see Goku & Vegeta reacting to high gravity.
You're doing the exact same thing Damage. Arguably worse given we know for a fact there's planets in DBZ with impossible densities and gravity contrary to what they should be, which sets an established precedence both before and after.If, as it looks like in the OP, that this just be about accepting the large size of the planet alone and ignoring all of the physics-related problems... then that just seems purely like cherry-picking to me personally.
Your very argument applies to them too. Their mere existence is a solid rebuttal.I know that the situation is likely acceptable to you because Dragon Ball has non-standard planets already as you've mentioned like the Supreme Kai's world and King Kai's world, but that alone isn't enough for me which is why I have to vote against the CRT.
Your argument is that Namek doesn't make sense. Again, as we went through just last night, it doesn't make sense no matter what.I think that anymore back-and-forth will just be us repeating ourselves so I'll leave it here and see what other staff say.
You're doing the exact same thing Damage.
I already acknowledged there were problems with either option, but I'm going with the option that makes the most sense to me. I know you disagree and you've laid out your reasons for it very well; I'm not saying you shouldn't have the interpretation that you do; it's just not convincing to me.Like at the very least, if you want to disagree be my guest, but pick something that doesn't apply both ways.
You can't just concede it's wrong either way but pick one anyway.... If it's wrong it's wrong?I already acknowledged there were problems with either option, but I'm going with the option that makes the most sense to me. I know you disagree and you've laid out your reasons for it very well; I'm not saying you shouldn't have the interpretation that you do; it's just not convincing to me.
So you're just gonna ignore the fact that there are already planets like that in dragon ball, yet namek being earth sized still sounds like the best option to you despite it having the same problems regardless? That doesn't make a lick of sense. Instead you choose the option that doesn't even actually exist, instead of the clear cut size of namek thats shown in every panel??I already acknowledged there were problems with either option, but I'm going with the option that makes the most sense to me. I know you disagree and you've laid out your reasons for it very well; I'm not saying you shouldn't have the interpretation that you do; it's just not convincing to me.
It is literally an vague interpretation. It is a Fallacy of Hasty Generalization.You can't just concede it's wrong either way but pick one anyway.... If it's wrong it's wrong?
If it made more sense, like legitimately the lesser between two evils on a subject that's inherently vague and open to interpretation, ok, maybe, but why does it make more sense?
We already know gravity, temperature, and everything else is ****** no matter what we do, using Bulma for example is wrong because the same issues exist both ways, scientifically it still doesn't add up, and there's even extra complications. Personally, I'd think the conclusion with less problems would be what makes more sense. Notwithstanding the lore, straight up visual evidence that exists regardless and established precedence for planets like that, I'm not quite seeing how this is a fair verdict when it goes both ways. But regardless, it's obvious you've reached your own conclusion, so whatever.
I've seen that the appearance of the objects near Namek in Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot has been used as an argument, but I don't think this proves that they are suns. In the game, most planets emit a similar glow, including Namek and Earth, and some even have details similar to the object near Namek. Moreover, suns in the game are depicted as much brighter (as evidenced by the shadow on the ground, which confirms the presence of a sun).
If we analyze other Dragon Ball games to see how the objects near Namek are represented, most seem to suggest that they are moons or planets rather than suns. In fact, in an older game, Namek's sky directly features the design of the real-life Moon (though I can't find it at the moment).
Budokai Tenkaichi, FighterZ, Jump Force:
Why do you say it's a Sun if I already showed that the details it has don't prove it's a Sun but rather a Moon or a planet? Even real Suns are depicted differently, being brighter, and when focused on, they have the "lens flare" effect.Other games besides kakarot are irrelevant, we actually accept using things from kakarot, so that doesn't matter. And what we're looking at is clearly a sun, especially with other context, like lore, statements in the manga saying namek has three suns, and it being backed up in every other panel, along with all the countless other arguments that have already been said. There is simply no proof that they are planets. Judging from the type of sun we know it is, plus it being adapted from the manga, having that same detail on the sun that toriyama drew, it clearly is a sun. Also, it literally does not work for them to be planets at all, nor does it make sense.
Because those planets are not observed up close or from the surface of a planet during the day. Planet Namek has an almost identical glow to the object in the sky, similar to Earth on its daytime side. The true sun is the one that appears smaller, as confirmed by the details of the shadows and the light flare effect. Therefore, relying solely on the appearance of the nearby object here is not a solid argument to claim that they are suns.Literally every planet you showed there has an exponentially more subdued glow compared to the Namekian one, which has a emissive, large, orange glow even from a distance and does in fact have dynamic lighting in game, I will redownload that shit if need be just to get clips![]()
Using this panel, where it is more clearly visible, I got the following results:As an aside, angsizing the sun in the second album gets it about 7m km away so....
So an excuse? That isn't how it works on earth in game, or Kai's, no other object seen from the game behaves like that particular one. If need be I will redownload the game to prove my point, but I'm praying you goons don't force me to waste my time with the self-evident.Because those planets are not observed up close or from the surface of a planet during the day.
No it doesn't? What planets glows orange, cascades light, has dynamic lighting, and at no point is anything even remotely as strong a glow as that. You're conflating an atmosphere with shit glowing my dude.Planet Namek has an almost identical glow to the object in the sky, similar to Earth on its daytime side.
Yep I'm sure that is a sun.The true sun is the one that appears smaller, as confirmed by the details of the shadows and the light flare effect.
That isn't even remotely the argument, the fact you're wasting my time with this like 100 posts in is asinine.Therefore, relying solely on the appearance of the nearby object here is not a solid argument to claim that they are suns.
Then what is the goal here? This essentially boils down to arguing "well in games, the very explicit suns around Kai's world look like moons, so....". I do not care if they're moons or even non-existent in the other mediums. In fact, for the anime, I'd even be against it.I'm not directly questioning your arguments about why they are suns in the manga,
I mean it most certainly does. Dynamic lighting, impossibly close stars.but you should admit that their representation in the game does not constitute irrefutable proof based solely on appearance.
Using this panel, where it is more clearly visible, I got the following results:
- Using the vertical FOV: 1392684 * 714/(50 * 2 * tan(70deg/2)) = 14,201,166 km
- Using the horizontal FOV: 1392684 * 1284/(50 * 2 * tan(70deg/2)) = 25,538,232 km
Also, keep in mind that when we see the Sun in the sky, it is not its actual size.
I want to highlight some details in the manga's artwork that I have previously noticed, which seem to indicate the true sun in Namek’s sky.
We literally already went through this a page ago. Unironically the exact same panel and argument.
- Page 4 | The shadows on the ground suggest that the closest sun is positioned to the right, in front of the spaceship. This aligns with the assumption that it is the small orange sun.
Which contradicts the exact previous panel with a light source is casting shadows from behind the spaceship.
- Page 5 | Once again, the way Toriyama depicts shadows indicates that the light source is coming from the right, in front of the spaceship.
Which actually contradicts page 4 as they're being cast in the opposite direction now, and that isn't even true for page 8 because given the position of the space ship, their shadows are now angled like 70 degrees to the right now from 6 and 7, when it should be directly behind them.
- Pages 6, 7, and 8 | The position of the light source remains consistent throughout.
It actually doesn't. Krillin and Gohan turn around as the pod flies by. The sun drawn there is in a different position, given Namek has three of those bad boys... Plus, given he came in at like a 70 degree angle, the shadows in following panels should be angled more regardless.
- Pages 9 and 10 | Vegeta’s capsule falls on the same side as the light source.
Which is an issue given the angle he came down on.
- Page 12 | The light source is to Vegeta’s left, as evidenced by the shadows on the ground and his body.
This one is consistent with page 4, but not the other pages.
- Page 13 | Vegeta appears to be flying forward, and based on the ground shadows, the light source should be in front of him, on the left. There is a white circle in that direction, which suggests it could be one of Namek’s suns.
Sure. And? There's 3 of the things. It literally can't be the sun in page 4-5 because they're facing away from the ship in that page, yet the other thing you concede to be a sun, was behind the ship.
- Page 15 | The object in the upper-left sky appears to be a sun of Namek, as its position is consistent with the shadows cast on the ground, reinforcing the previous observations.
Therefore, assuming that this celestial body is one of Namek’s suns makes sense and aligns with what is shown in the Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot game.