What exactly is the confusion here?
If a 10 foot Broly has the same amount of Ki as a 5 foot Krillin then Broly is going to be way stronger physically because he's a 10 foot guy using the same level of Ki as the 5 foot guy.
Yeah? This translates to speed how? Burter is bigger and heavier than Jeice... he is still faster
The real problem is the lack of any actual statement proving the "rule" to begin with, one would need that to even start arguing about it
So far, we have a description for a specific technique, and a description of another technique that halves all stats strenghs by 4 via literally dividing yourself by 4
Dyspo and Burter having higher speed values is simply because their training
so training does not always increase speed and strenght the same ammount of times... so how can we prove the times said in the OP are the times it supposedly does?
and/or physiques built them for speed and not power. Similar argument applies to someone like Captain Ginyu having significantly higher LS than Goku.
1 ginyu has literally nothing on his LS description
And
2 Once again, you are saying the stats grow differently depending on the training and natural build of the characters... aka, we can't assume it all grows the same for everyone as it naturally varies on a bunch of factors
Also
3 can you give statements about these suppose "physique and training" advantages? Where are you getting this from?
Speed is part of the UES like anything else.
being a UES doesn't really prove much, the Kamehameha is part of the Ki UES but it is >>>>>>>> the User's physicals, that is not how UES works... hence why you said yourself ways the increase varies between characters
Splitting your Ki splits your speed. Multiplying your Ki multiplies your speed.
PRove this? Tien in that scene split his body, thus spliting all his stats, at least, according to what i can make of the raws... that no one is trying to translate for some reason?
If I'm missing some sort of context here for why people are mysteriously confused then please elucidate it.
MOst of all the lack of clear statements on this mechanic everyone is treating as if it is an accepted rule of the verse, and example that even yourself gave that ignore this "rule"
Why are we talking about this exactly? Isn't this already accepted?
Not as far as i can see? At least, i can't find any thread where this mechanic was accepted as people are arguing for it
This is being unnecessarily pedantic IMO. We've given many examples of Ki offering proportional increases in speed as well
when? Kaioken is specific about the technique... and that's only 1 example, the Tien one needs translation, the spanish one given is very different from the english ome given, so like...
AND offered examples of specifically when that does NOT happen.
Without citing what specifically make those examples any different... you can't have your cake and eat it too
heck, Cryo gave arguments that suggest things contrary to the supposed "rule" in question
The series makes these two things very clear and establishes a clear precedent about what the normal mechanism is
it really doesn't tho? At least, not from what was shown so far imo
, to debate and question that because the "numbers are too high" is just a classic argument out of incredulity when one sees stats that doesn't match their exact headcanon, so yes that is disingenuous.
The argument was never "numbers too high" tho? Could you stop lying about the arguments given? That is what is truly desingenuous
What's also disingenuous is to expect the series to say "the speed with this power up has increased 2X/3X/5X just like his strength" every time a character powers up even slightly. I'd be more inclined to agree with this line of reasoning if it were applied universally across the wiki for every single verse, but it isn't, and for good reason because it's terrible (and if you do apply it universally, please stop), so there's no reason to argue it here.
What aboutism? If you feel other series fall unders the same lack of statements as here... make a thread for them?
I don't expect the series to say that all the time... i expect it to even say it to begin with, which is the affirmation being made here
Also... saying "this is terrible so stop" is not an argument
So to sum is up, the series goes out of its way to tell us when speed =/= proportional
for Burter and Dyspo there's literally nothing saying they are out of the norm
there is also nothing that THERE IS A NORM to begin with, that's the problem
, to assume that this applies universally is also no better in my opinion.
... so you disagree with it applying universally? But... you confuse me