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i've seen some profiles adress similar damages as fragmentation, and i've seen others listed as pulverization, despite both not showing the requirments to do so.
what kind of damage is this Frieza 1st Form Vs Vegeta (Original) - YouTube, the rocks flying up aren't the damages they are causing, we see this because it does not do damage at the start, it is their aura doing this, so fragmentation won't be justified due to that, the ring of dust is also the same, as well as the dust cloud after they fly away, as it's been shown that they cause enough environmental damage to do so, such as in the manga, goku flies towards frieza hard enough for a dust cloud to appear, also, it might be non canon, but that's A not the point, and B it happens in the manga as well. so what kind of damage is involved in basically deleting rock (aside from atomization). What kind of damage is weight sinking into a surface - video - Dailymotio, and this Bb8HY8Z.jpg (870×1250) those are clearly shockwaves btw, dust is more detailed in the series Smashes up a cliff - Album on Imgur.
what kind of damage is this Frieza 1st Form Vs Vegeta (Original) - YouTube, the rocks flying up aren't the damages they are causing, we see this because it does not do damage at the start, it is their aura doing this, so fragmentation won't be justified due to that, the ring of dust is also the same, as well as the dust cloud after they fly away, as it's been shown that they cause enough environmental damage to do so, such as in the manga, goku flies towards frieza hard enough for a dust cloud to appear, also, it might be non canon, but that's A not the point, and B it happens in the manga as well. so what kind of damage is involved in basically deleting rock (aside from atomization). What kind of damage is weight sinking into a surface - video - Dailymotio, and this Bb8HY8Z.jpg (870×1250) those are clearly shockwaves btw, dust is more detailed in the series Smashes up a cliff - Album on Imgur.