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Dragon Ball
Dragon Ball Universe
Will we see a main character loss in the future?
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<blockquote data-quote="India Actual" data-source="post: 1460" data-attributes="member: 80"><p>Ok here goes. </p><p></p><p>[SPOILER="HUGE spoilers"]If you decide to read past here and haven’t read Part 5 of my fanfic be warned. So in the story there exists the same duality that we’ve been discussing here. Mira keeps coming back and while he isn’t being wished back but more correctly from his first “death” he was just reconstructed by Towa. Death shows little to no consequence in that instance. </p><p></p><p>However, since Sorrel met her brutal demise at his hands at the end of the story I am attempting to instill some real world effect into the narrative. She can’t be resurrected under normal conditions because she was killed by a demon. Will regular dragon balls work? We don’t know that. Only thing we know for sure that will work to revive her and anyone else they killed are the super dragon balls. Which getting them should be a very difficult if not nigh impossible task that Korian and Shihori have to undertake. </p><p></p><p>In regards to them specifically there’s consequences for her death. They’re hurt and if I dare say damaged from the experience. Korian lost the only woman he has ever loved that he has known almost his entire life. The mother of his daughter, his teammate in combat, his everything. He’s emotionally shattered and he doesn’t know how to cope. The mantra at the end of “Whatever it takes” is not only a positive but telling in the regard of what lengths will he go to get her back? What won’t he do? Now think of Shihori, she’s a 13 year old girl who is very close knit to her family. He mother was a huge part of her world and she was taken away from her by someone she had a chance to stop but couldn’t. Could she feel a little responsible for her weakness and not being able to kill Mira before he inflicted such lasting damage? I would venture to say that her putting on a happy face at the end and visualizing her mother is nothing but a coping mechanism to hide some very deep rooted trauma. She’s a damaged person now and who knows how that will manifest in the future? </p><p></p><p>I wrote it all this way with the attempt to give Dragon Ball some consequence and remove the trope of it’s always going to be a happy ending. Maybe in this case it’s not. Even I don’t know and they’re my creation. Korian and Shihori will be leaning on one another for support going forward but ask yourselves this, is that the best course of action? Can someone just as messed emotionally as you truly be of any help to your own inner demons?</p><p></p><p>Thank you and I hope you enjoy this insight.[/SPOILER]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="India Actual, post: 1460, member: 80"] Ok here goes. [SPOILER="HUGE spoilers"]If you decide to read past here and haven’t read Part 5 of my fanfic be warned. So in the story there exists the same duality that we’ve been discussing here. Mira keeps coming back and while he isn’t being wished back but more correctly from his first “death” he was just reconstructed by Towa. Death shows little to no consequence in that instance. However, since Sorrel met her brutal demise at his hands at the end of the story I am attempting to instill some real world effect into the narrative. She can’t be resurrected under normal conditions because she was killed by a demon. Will regular dragon balls work? We don’t know that. Only thing we know for sure that will work to revive her and anyone else they killed are the super dragon balls. Which getting them should be a very difficult if not nigh impossible task that Korian and Shihori have to undertake. In regards to them specifically there’s consequences for her death. They’re hurt and if I dare say damaged from the experience. Korian lost the only woman he has ever loved that he has known almost his entire life. The mother of his daughter, his teammate in combat, his everything. He’s emotionally shattered and he doesn’t know how to cope. The mantra at the end of “Whatever it takes” is not only a positive but telling in the regard of what lengths will he go to get her back? What won’t he do? Now think of Shihori, she’s a 13 year old girl who is very close knit to her family. He mother was a huge part of her world and she was taken away from her by someone she had a chance to stop but couldn’t. Could she feel a little responsible for her weakness and not being able to kill Mira before he inflicted such lasting damage? I would venture to say that her putting on a happy face at the end and visualizing her mother is nothing but a coping mechanism to hide some very deep rooted trauma. She’s a damaged person now and who knows how that will manifest in the future? I wrote it all this way with the attempt to give Dragon Ball some consequence and remove the trope of it’s always going to be a happy ending. Maybe in this case it’s not. Even I don’t know and they’re my creation. Korian and Shihori will be leaning on one another for support going forward but ask yourselves this, is that the best course of action? Can someone just as messed emotionally as you truly be of any help to your own inner demons? Thank you and I hope you enjoy this insight.[/SPOILER] [/QUOTE]
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Will we see a main character loss in the future?
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