Commission for @salty-kira !!! 💖🌷 Absolutely loved working on this one and very happy with the result!🔥
Thank you for commissioning me!🍕
El BESO que le clavo a Dante en este dibujo tienes que cerrar el estadio.
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@mazznthings
Commission for @salty-kira !!! 💖🌷 Absolutely loved working on this one and very happy with the result!🔥
Thank you for commissioning me!🍕
El BESO que le clavo a Dante en este dibujo tienes que cerrar el estadio.
Finally, I drew one of my favorite cutscenes from DMC3 in my own style!💕✨️+ a little bonus~
Ugh, I love them so much💀
Vegeta’s Identity Recognition and the Nature of His Self-Chosen Path
⚠️⚠️⚠️ [Subjective Analysis Warning – Proceed with Awareness]
Last time I wrote a short essay on the shift in Vegeta’s body language, which focused more on how that shift reflects his evolving self-identity and personal growth. This time, I’m going deeper — writing a comprehensive analysis from my own perspective, centering on how I understand Vegeta as a character.
To me, every stage of Vegeta’s development isn’t simply triggered by external events or emotional shocks, but is more often the result of his own introspection and choice. This intentionality — this mix of pride and hesitance — is vividly reflected in both his personality and his behavior. That’s why every time I read other analyses that boil down to things like “Toriyama just didn’t think that much” or “Vegeta’s just the arrogant foil to Goku”, I honestly can’t help but find them reductive or even laughable.
Also, it’s unfortunate that many people only accept the “cool and aloof” version of Vegeta, leading to an overwhelming amount of Western commentary that sees him as being tamed or softened, with little acknowledgment of the nuances in his domestic life. In my view, descriptions of Vegeta as “aimless” or “drifting” are completely off the mark.
I personally believe the moment Toriyama decided to keep Vegeta alive post-Namek was when his real character development began. That was the point when Vegeta was no longer just a temporary plot device. So I don’t subscribe to the whole “Bulma domesticated him” narrative — nor do I agree with interpretations like “Vegeta is tied down by deep emotional bonds with Goku” or “family life made him boring.” These takes don’t sit right with me, because they completely ignore how Vegeta’s choices are built on conscious self-awareness.
In my eyes, he’s a deeply self-driven character. Everything he does, whether it’s retreating into solitude or building a family, stems from a kind of inner reasoning and personal decision-making. And to dismiss his family as unimportant is, frankly, to miss what I see as the emotional core of his arc.
📘 What This Essay Contains
This whole piece will be divided into two main parts:
Chapters 1–5 will focus on understanding Vegeta’s inner journey and psychological makeup as originally portrayed.
The later chapters will discuss his family life and how his self-awareness affects his relationships, especially with Bulma.
(I’m analyzing mostly from a psychological and behavioral perspective. I’m not a professional, just an over-invested fan with too many thoughts. Let me know if I mess something up!)
Chapter One: The Lonely Prince and Warrior — Vegeta’s Early Self-Perception
1.1 Early Conflicts: Racial Traits vs. Inner Self
The Saiyans are a race that worships strength to an extreme, lacks emotional education, and values hierarchy and conquest. Raised within this cultural framework, Vegeta, as a royal at the pinnacle of this system, was indoctrinated from an early age with the elitist belief that “the prince is the strongest.” In this sense, Vegeta appears to embody the very essence of Saiyan traits — a quintessential Saiyan.
However, the issue lies in the fact that Vegeta’s inherent nature seems to carry an innate inclination toward self-awareness and emotional potential that transcends this rigid framework. From this emerges a series of internal conflicts that run counter to the characteristics of his race.
Does this suggest that Vegeta is not a Saiyan in the purest sense, but rather an “outlier raised within Saiyan culture”?
The traits he exhibits later — sensitivity, pride, aloofness, a strong need for control, and difficulty expressing himself — are, in fact, lingering traces of this internal deviation. As he grows into early childhood and begins to develop cognitive awareness, this internalized conflict gradually begins to surface:
Within his identity as a prince, he is told by his father, King Vegeta, that “as a prince, you are the strongest warrior,” and yet, both he and his entire race remain subjugated under the far more powerful Frieza.
Deep down, he may sense that this further layer of domination is unjust, but he has no outlet to express such doubts. Thus forms an early psychological structure in which suppressed emotion coexists with extreme competitiveness. This structure is both a submission to Saiyan cultural norms and a repression of his own “true nature.”
This early internal contradiction lays the groundwork for the emotional “fractures” that appear later when he encounters Goku, Earth’s culture, and Bulma. These relationships do not change him — they awaken the “atypical Saiyan nature” he had been suppressing all along. This also explains why he displays a more complex and conflicted emotional structure earlier than most other Saiyans: because from the very beginning, he was distorting a more complete self.
1.2 The Formation of Emotional and Cold Detachment as a Defense Mechanism
(1) The Saiyan Social Structure:
The Saiyan society is not a fully developed civilization in the traditional sense, but rather resembles a militarized, predatory tribal group. Its fundamental characteristics can be summarized as follows:
For Vegeta, growing up as “royalty” did not mean a life of tenderness or privilege. Instead, he was raised as a “functional child,” surrounded by coldness and immense expectations — not nurtured, but conditioned.
(2) The Formation of Cognitive and Defensive Patterns
a. The Development of Cognitive Structure
1.A Formal Family Relationship
Although Saiyan royalty is said to possess a stronger conceptual understanding of family, this understanding is still shaped by Saiyan cultural norms. King Vegeta played the role of a father in name only — he never offered Vegeta any emotional care or warmth. He treated his son as a “future elite warrior,” not as someone to be bonded with as a father. In this kind of “expected but not understood” relationship, Vegeta developed a starting point of selfhood marked by unreasonably high internal standards and emotional suppression.
2.Absence of a Maternal Figure
The original work makes almost no mention of Vegeta’s mother. The absence of a maternal presence likely deprived him of early emotional regulation models, making it difficult for him to form a foundational psychological association like “being cared for = safety.”
3.The Destruction of Planet Vegeta
This event marks not only the end of his race but also the total severance of any stable emotional connections. It’s a psychological turning point that intensifies his solitude and triggers the full activation of his defense mechanisms: He shifts from being a prince with a legacy and a people to an orphan entirely stripped of culture and kin. All that remains is his title — “Prince of the Saiyans” — a symbolic but hollow anchor that becomes his sole way of responding to feelings of helplessness.
He never mourns his people, nor does he ever speak of the pain of destruction.
This isn’t cold-heartedness — it’s a survival strategy based on completely shutting down emotional input and output.
Frieza becomes the only remaining authority in his reality — but one rooted in humiliation and oppression. Under Frieza, he never experiences trust or the free flow of emotion.
These factors together form an extremely defensive cognitive structure in Vegeta’s personality:
Emotion equals danger
Dependency equals shame
Violence and arrogance become the camouflage for security
b. The Formation of Defense Mechanisms
Detachment ≠ Cold-bloodedness: Vegeta’s emotional detachment does not stem from inherent cruelty. Rather, it is the result of growing up in an environment where emotional expression was never encouraged. To him, expressing emotion = exposing vulnerability = danger.
1. The Illusion of Control Built on Emotional Closure
He maintains the illusion of “I can control everything” by avoiding empathy, denying intimacy, and embracing extreme emotional isolation. This serves as a counter-defense against the helplessness he endured under Frieza’s oppression.
In Vegeta’s eyes, standing permanently in a position of refusal is the only way to avoid re-experiencing the shame of abandonment.
2. The Hollowing of the “Hero Identity” in Childhood
From a young age, he was labeled as a “genius,” “prince,” and “strongest warrior.” But all of this was a projection of external expectations.
He never truly experienced a foundational human dynamic like “I am loved and understood.”
His “strength” was not the result of internal growth, but rather a symbolic self-defense shell constructed from emotional deprivation.
3. The Alienation of the Prince Identity
After the destruction of Planet Vegeta, the title of “prince” was no longer a framework for growth, but a psychological compensation mechanism.
His repeated emphasis on “I am a prince,” “I am the strongest,” does not come from arrogance — it is his only means to suppress the uncontainable loneliness and shame within.
This identity becomes the hardest shell of his personality:
Strength becomes his only way of being.
Emotion is fully absorbed into his defense system.
Within this cognitive framework and defensive mechanism, Vegeta gradually shapes a “strongman” persona that appears unbreakable but is, in fact, extremely fragile.
His rejection of connection, denial of emotion, and obsession with control are not signs of inherent cruelty — they stem from never having the experience of expressing vulnerability without being punished.
Every outburst of rage, every battle he engages in — though seemingly about victory and conquest — is in truth a harsh self-validation of his worth and identity.
Thus, Vegeta’s “extreme personality” upon his initial appearance is not a flat characterization, but rather a behavioral projection of a deep and well-armored defense system —
He translates suppressed emotion into aggression, and turns the possibility of communication into hostility.
1.3 Vegeta’s Initial Portrayal: Arrogance, Extremity, and Violence
(1) External Behavior as the “Defensive Shell” of the Inner Structure
Vegeta’s initial appearance presents him as the archetypal “proud antagonist.” Cold, extreme, and violent — everything seems to orbit around the assertion “I am the strongest.”
However, this exaggerated external behavior is in fact a defensive performance, triggered by the collapse of his early identity structure.
This period can be understood as the most tightly wound phase of his psychological architecture — when his internal tension reaches its peak.
(2) Language and Dialogue as a Form of Identity Defense
As Goku arrives and repeatedly defeats him in battle, Vegeta’s dialogue becomes a window into his fragile inner world. Many of his lines carry defensive psychological traits, reflecting his shaky self-structure and the anxiety of maintaining legitimacy:
Saying to Goku: “You low-class warrior dare…!” On the surface, this is disdain — but beneath it is deep destabilization. Goku’s power challenges Vegeta’s foundational belief that “the prince must be the strongest.” So, Vegeta compensates with demeaning language to preserve his identity.
Repeated claims: “I’m the strongest!”, “I’m an elite warrior!” These repetitive self-labelings are a form of self-hypnosis in the face of internal doubt. The more anxious he feels, the more he needs to reinforce who he is.
Roaring in defeat: “I can’t lose!”, “This is impossible!” This reveals how deeply he ties victory to self-worth. Losing doesn’t just mean defeat in battle — it symbolizes the collapse of his entire emotional system.
These statements leak his inner truth: the more desperately he asserts identity, the more it proves how unstable that identity truly is.
(3) Violence as Distorted Language, Not Pure Aggression
At this stage, Vegeta’s violence functions as a substitute for communication.
He cannot ask for help, show vulnerability, or cooperate — so he resorts to controlling and destroying others as a way to affirm: “I still exist”, “I’m still powerful.”
For example, when Nappa treats the Saibamen’s brutality as a “game,” Vegeta allows it. Later, when he kills Nappa, it’s not just tactical coldness, but also a projected rejection of weakness.
He cannot tolerate softness — even in others — because it reflects the weakness he suppresses in himself.
This reveals a highly repressive emotional regulation model:
Conquest replaces communication
Domination replaces connection
To Vegeta, violence becomes a method of existential verification — a way to feel in control, to feel real.
This is why he repeatedly fights Goku even after losing. Not because of hatred alone, but because “losing to Goku = collapse of identity.”
Thus, the emotional formula becomes:
Identity Crisis + Emotional Deficit → Behavioral Extremes + Emotional Suppression → Early Vegeta = Pride + Violence + Isolation
At this point, Vegeta is not a simple bloodthirsty villain. His behavior is the concrete embodiment of early psychological structure and identity anxiety under extreme stress.
As discussed earlier, he was molded by elitist ideals as a “warrior prince,” but lacked real emotional bonding or identity affirmation.
Therefore, he leans on authority and power to compensate for his psychological void.
The arrogance, cruelty, and extreme violence he displays are not personality flatness, but rather defensive recoil under immense external pressure.
In other words, Vegeta is not emotionless — he has simply lost the capacity to express and trust emotion.
His aggression is a mask for vulnerability — an emotional armor forged for survival.
Chapter 2: Fractured Pride — Psychological Cracks During the Namek Arc
2.1 Identity Shaken Under Frieza’s Oppression: The Beginning of Rebellion
In the Namek arc, Vegeta faces not only his enemies, but also the haunting shadows of his past. The arrival of Frieza reawakens the shame and helplessness he endured in childhood—only this time, the existence of the Dragon Balls gives him a potential way to fight back. Upon arriving on Namek, he immediately sets his rebellion into motion.
During this period, Vegeta’s behavioral patterns begin to shift dramatically: from the formerly prideful and violent lone wolf to a more strategic, goal-oriented individual capable of temporary alliances. He is no longer fighting for the thrill of conquest, but for revenge and survival.
(a) The Ghost of Frieza’s Control Returns: Identity Crisis
Frieza is the original symbol of power-based oppression in Vegeta’s life. On Namek, when Vegeta learns the truth of Planet Vegeta’s destruction—that it too was wiped out by Frieza—it intensifies the painful realization that no matter how powerful he becomes, he remains under Frieza’s heel.
This knowledge deeply undermines the illusion of being “the strongest warrior,” which had long been the core of his identity. In response, he begins to revise his strategy to regain a sense of control. It is a psychological collapse and reconstruction: being a “Prince” is no longer a fact to be taken for granted, but a dignity that must be reclaimed.
(b) From Conqueror to Tactical Rebel: Evolution of His Battle Conduct
In the earlier Earth saga, Vegeta fought through brute force and domination. On Namek, however, amid the complex conflict between Frieza’s army and the Earth warriors, he demonstrates unprecedented cunning:
He begins actively gathering the Dragon Balls, hoping to use them to gain immortality—showing that his concept of victory now includes strategy, not just strength.
He engages in deceit, killing, and stealth to stay ahead—evidence of his grasp over information warfare and psychological manipulation.
He exploits rifts between enemies, even teaming up briefly with Gohan and Krillin to create leverage—an act that reveals his potential as a rebel, not merely a ruler.
Through this shift, Toriyama reveals that Vegeta isn’t just a warrior who fights by virtue of his status. He is capable of rebuilding his power base according to changing circumstances—even if by extreme means. This is where his complexity truly begins to unfold.
(c) Redefining the “Prince”: Revenge, Shame, and Stubborn Dignity
One of Vegeta’s most important lines on Namek is said to Goku: “Please… you must defeat Frieza.”
It’s the first time he openly acknowledges his inability to fulfill his mission alone. It’s also the first time he entrusts his supreme goal—revenge—to another person.
Emotionally: This signals his first step toward accepting vulnerability. Though he does not cry or show pain, his request is already a breakthrough of his former self.
Identity-wise: By entrusting the truth of the Saiyans’ extinction to Goku, he begins to let go of the obsession with being “the strongest,” and instead seeks to reclaim the prince’s dignity through the idea of “I must not die in vain.”
This moment marks the beginning of his psychological rebellion—not only against Frieza, but against his own past persona of emotional suppression.
2.2 Emotional Experience Brought by Cooperation
At this critical juncture on Namek, Vegeta’s first experience of “cooperation” marks a fracture in his emotional system. Although this alliance is highly utilitarian and manipulative, its deeper motivation is no longer simple self-interest—it is his unconscious first step toward forming a human connection, even if he himself doesn’t yet realize it.
(a) Alliance Formed: Hesitation and Choice After Cost-Benefit Evaluation
In his early characterization, Vegeta refused to rely on anyone. Saiyan culture glorifies solitary combat, and he treated others as burdens or threats. Yet, when faced with a common enemy—the Ginyu Force—he chooses to ally with Krillin and Gohan:
On the surface, he views them as tools for his own ends, manipulating them strategically, even threatening them to achieve his tactical goals.
The key is that he compromises and chooses collaboration, implying a subtle emotional concession at a subconscious level.
This shift reveals a crack in his emotional defenses: after weighing the benefits, he momentarily abandons the posture of a lone, invincible warrior.
(b) Dual Psychology: “Using Others” and “Wanting Connection”
Vegeta’s behavior seems cold, but hidden beneath the veneer of manipulating others lies another motive: he needs collaboration. Ostensibly for survival, but essentially a hidden attempt to rebuild a sense of community. In these non-hostile partnerships, his behavior becomes ambiguous:
No longer employing extreme language to suppress Krillin and Gohan.
He abandons the “strong lone wolf” principle, and shows willingness to negotiate.
His tone evolves into a mix of irony, command, and warning—e.g., threatening then later seeking Goku’s help to defeat Frieza.
This atypical “violent expression” becomes a primitive form of communication. Vegeta doesn’t lack gentle words—he simply has no idea how else to express himself.
(c) From Orders to Interaction: Emerging Language Fragments
Language reveals emotion and thought. On Namek, Vegeta’s speech changes subtly:
He begins saying things that hint at emotional modulation—such as reminding Gohan to flee in episode #298.
Though still aggressive, his tone shows an expectation of response—e.g., in episode #283 he begins real exchanges.
He no longer speaks like an absolute master, but offers guidance or seeks understanding from others.
These linguistic shifts indicate that Vegeta is transitioning from a closed self to an interactive personality. This is not a conscious decision, but an instinctive response from his emotional system triggered by external stimuli.
(d) Krillin and Gohan: Emotional Mediators
As Vegeta’s most frequent collaborators on Namek, Krillin and Gohan spark emotional growth in him:
Krillin remains wary, yet trusts Vegeta in pivotal moments (e.g., Vegeta promises not to kill them if he gains power in episode #271).
Gohan, though fearful, shows trust and saves Vegeta in episode #277.
Their gentle but resolute interactions begin to shake Vegeta’s emotional armor. He experiences, for the first time, the possibility of non-violent connection. They become not only catalysts for his momentary trust but also training objects for emotional sharing—forcing him to learn, subconsciously, how to be with others.
This may explain why, later, Vegeta suggests reviving Goku’s soul on Earth—a sign of his emergent need for emotional connection.
2.3 Crying Before Death:这 The First Break in Self-Isolation
Toward the end of the Namek saga, in his final clash with Frieza, Vegeta cries before Goku for the first time. This moment represents the first collapse of his emotional defense system: he drops pride and aggression, openly exposing his vulnerability, regret, and existential suffering.
(a) Multilayered Emotions Behind the Tears: Anger, Shame, Grief, and a Cry for Help
Vegeta’s tears are not a single emotion—they are an emotional meltdown:
1.Extreme hatred for Frieza :
After watching Frieza crush his comrades and being unable to respond, the tears stem from facing his ultimate oppressor—betraying his childhood wounds.
2.Self-shame as the “Prince” :
As Saiyan royalty, he is powerless to avenge or protect—his unfulfilled honor leaves him in deep self-doubt.
3.Delayed trauma of childhood oppression:
He never truly processed the death of his father or his race. At that moment, all that buried sorrow resurfaces.
(b) Entrusting Before Death: A Turning Point
For the first time, Vegeta entrusts his emotions, hopes, and dignity to another. He doesn’t hold on to arrogance—even at death’s door. This is a rare departure from his old emotional code.
His plea for Goku to defeat Frieza is not prideful, but a surrender of the self’s burden to another.
He shifts from carrying everything himself to relying on someone else to continue his will.
This gesture includes: sharing his tribal pain and hatred; initiating a communal emotional experience; delegating vengeance to others; moving from elite warrior to emotional individual capable of trust and vulnerability.
This is the first genuine step Vegeta takes toward emotional integration and trust, building on his earlier cooperative experiences with Earth’s fighters.
(c) Projection onto Goku: Idealization and Compensation
Goku—a lower-class warrior—stands up to Frieza, which shatters Vegeta’s worldview. He projects onto Goku: idealizing him as the one who can finish Vegeta’s incomplete mission. In Goku, he sees the emotional freedom and battle dignity he himself couldn’t attain. So his tears are for both himself and the suppressed potential of his identity. Goku stands as both entrusted ally and Vegeta’s unfulfilled self-ideal.
(d) From “Proud Prince” to “Vague Individual”
Vegeta’s “death” is not bodily, but a relinquishing of his old self:
He cries in front of others, admits vulnerability.
He steps down from the “Prince” and “Warrior” roles, manifesting as a desolate individual baring his pain.
This act is a first step toward emotional expression and self-integration, marking the dawn of his human awakening.
Chapter 3: The Intervention of the Other — Earth Civilization and the Fracture of the Self
3.1 The “De-militarized” Challenge of Earth Culture
(1) “Instinctual Displacement” under Cultural Shock
Vegeta, coming from a Saiyan society that worships strength and treats war as daily life, was suddenly thrust into an Earth civilization centered on peace, family, and entertainment. To him, this was nothing short of a “forced study abroad” — not a voluntary contact with Earth culture, but an outcome of failure, wounds, and exile that threw him into an alien environment.
This led to instinctual displacements and cognitive clashes on multiple levels. It was not a mere matter of “inadaptability,” but a reflexive defense triggered when his core cultural value system began to be restructured. His irritable, distant, and proud behavior in this period was, in fact, an anxious response to the intrusion of a new order upon his personal boundaries.
(2) The Loss of “Non-Combat Value” and Self-Alienation
In Saiyan culture, value equals combat power. However, in Earth society, one’s value is not determined by battle ability, but rather by contributions to society and care for loved ones. This entire value system was foreign to Vegeta — even untrustworthy.
Psychologically, this represents an adaptive pressure caused by cognitive dissonance. He used to equate “the strong” with absolute power, yet on Earth, figures like Gohan, Krillin, and Bulma held value not based on combat, but emotional bonds and social behavior.
Though he never voiced it explicitly, Vegeta faced these challenges to non-combat values repeatedly in daily life. He was not unaware — but caught in a constant swing between comprehension and rejection. This state shows he was on the verge of cognitive disintegration: the old evaluation system was loosening, yet a new framework had not been built.
(3) The Beginning of Identity Cuonflict
Although Vegeta had settled on Earth and held the outline of a family, he still could not truly “place” himself within it. He participated in group battles, yet rejected group belonging; he had familial relationships, but struggled to internalize the identity of a father or partner. He existed in the margins between being a “resident of Earth” and a “pure Saiyan.”
At this stage, Vegeta exhibited signs of identity blurring:
He could not fully articulate his position and sense of belonging in his current environment.
He could not completely abandon his former self-labels.
He kept a distance from Earth’s family structures, yet sometimes appeared within them.
This psychological structure is not contradictory, but rather a typical cross-cultural identity tension. It reflects the pain and drift that occur when the individual’s old role framework loosens, and a new one has yet to be constructed. This is a classic conflict stage in identity development — a tension between individual value recognition and the environmental value system.
3.2 Goku as a Counter-Identity: A Projection of Self-Anxiety
Goku’s presence has never been just that of a combat rival to Vegeta. Rather, he acts as a persistent psychological coordinate—an “Other” whom Vegeta cannot ignore, yet struggles to accept. The rise of this low-class warrior shook the very foundations of the Saiyan class hierarchy that Vegeta relied on to define himself, thereby introducing cracks in his elite-based identity.
Vegeta sees Goku as a mirror—not out of admiration, imitation, or envy, but as a psychological defense mechanism through projection. His repeated emphasis on “Saiyan pride” and “princely dignity” actually externalizes the traits in Goku that he finds incomprehensible: ease, warmth, the ability to grow stronger without relying on authority. These qualities evoke not longing, but a deep-rooted anxiety, as they highlight what Vegeta has suppressed within himself.
This is thus a projection that does not arise from identification. Goku becomes the referential “Other” against whom Vegeta delineates his own boundaries. By defeating this Other, he seeks to affirm the validity of his own path.
This dynamic sustained itself for some time and remained a hidden line of internal conflict for Vegeta. Before his family and emotional life entered the picture, Goku existed as a form of mirror-reflection—helping Vegeta maintain a primitive structural stability within his wavering sense of self.
3.3 Encountering Bulma: The First Infiltration of Daily Life into the Battlefield
If Goku represents a mirrored Other through whom Vegeta projects his identity anxieties, then Bulma becomes the real-life conduit through which emotional softening first occurs. Goku stirs in
Vegeta an imaginary notion of “alternative growth”; Bulma, on the other hand, embodies that possibility as a tangible relational experience. This shift lacks dramatic narrative upheaval but quietly initiates the first internal reconfiguration of Vegeta’s psychological structure. It is through her that the sphere of daily life first enters his war-dominated world.
(a) The Seed of a Non-Combat Relationship: An Exception within Restraint
Bulma does not define relationships through strength or confrontation. Her mode of interaction is rooted in the ordinary, in emotions and language. In both the manga and supplemental works, Bulma is often seen encouraging Vegeta through provocative yet affirming comments. She creates a form of interaction entirely foreign to Vegeta’s known world—yet one he finds strangely tolerable. With her, Vegeta shows both avoidance and coldness, but also a rare, low-key tendency to maintain the bond.
This posture can be seen as a form of “selective intimacy avoidance.” Lacking a secure early attachment system, Vegeta distrusts close bonds. Yet Bulma’s stability and non-intrusiveness offer him the first chance to explore a “non-combatant attachment” model.
(b) Passive Emotional Activation: From Defensive Independence to Functional Connection
Bulma never forces Vegeta to change, nor does she use emotional coercion to pull him into a relationship. Her unconditional presence gradually awakens emotional responses in Vegeta’s long-dormant affective system. He begins to respond to her emotional cues through behavioral details—mostly nonverbal. These reactions, though subtle and restrained, mark his first step from “self-seclusion” to “acknowledging others.”
Psychologically, this marks a shift from defensive autonomy to functional connection. Vegeta still upholds his personal boundaries, but now quietly allows the presence of others in his life.
(c) Softening of Identity Boundaries: Acknowledging the Role of Daily Life
In the past, Vegeta derived his identity solely from being a warrior. Strength and victory were his only metrics for self-worth. Bulma’s presence introduces a new value system—one not measured by power. Gradually, he begins to accept non-combat labels like “husband,” “father,” and “companion.” Though he never actively claims these titles, he no longer rejects them either.
This stage signifies a move from a single-dimensional identity toward a multifaceted role structure. Psychologically, it reflects a loosening of his rigid narcissistic defenses and an opening to a more relational, complex self.
(d) Bulma as an “Accepting Other”: An Anchor in His Emotional System
Functionally, Bulma is not a “changer” but a “container.” She does not deconstruct Vegeta, nor does she seek to tame him. Instead, through consistent presence and unwavering care, she steadily absorbs every hesitant approach or retreat he makes. She becomes the first “accepting Other” in his emotional world—not an idealized figure or a rival, but someone who allows him to remain imperfect and guarded, while still being part of a relationship.
At this stage, Vegeta has not yet fully abandoned his warrior-centric identity or his dependence on strength. Yet he has initiated a micro-restructuring toward becoming a “domesticated individual.” He is no longer solely defined by battle, nor does he rely entirely on solitude to assert his existence.
Chapter 4: The Return of Pride – Identity Regression and the Prelude to Softening
4.1 Temporary Identity Regression and Value Anxiety
(1) Anxious Self-Validation under Forced Breakthrough
At the start of the Cell arc, Androids 19 and 20 had overpowered the warriors, pushing the situation into a moment of crisis. At that point, Vegeta’s sudden appearance, effortlessly defeating Android 20 with overwhelming power, became the key turning point. His golden-haired form, cold tone, and dominant posture exuded a long-lost sense of superiority. This battle was not only a physical victory, but also a psychological attempt at “identity reconstruction.”
Vegeta’s display of his new form masks a deep need to compensate for prolonged self-doubt. His arrogant speech and scornful expression function as a self-affirmation ritual: “I’ve finally caught up and surpassed you.” After repeated failures and humiliation on Namek, and then personally witnessing the Super Saiyan transformation upon Trunks’ arrival, Vegeta now finally seizes the opportunity to lead the situation before everyone. Through this victory, he seeks to confirm a singular truth: “I am still the strongest Saiyan prince.”
However, this sense of superiority does not stem from stable internal self-recognition, but rather from a reliance on external validation. This so-called “victory” becomes a facade, a cover for insecurity—once stronger enemies or unpredictable changes emerge, Vegeta’s psychological foundation will once again begin to crumble.
(2) An Identity Structure Built on Others
After defeating Android 20, what Vegeta mentions most frequently is not the power gain itself, but “I have finally surpassed Kakarot and restored the dignity of the Saiyan prince.” On the surface, this line boasts of surpassing his rival, but in truth, it reveals the fragility of his identity structure: Vegeta is unable to form an independent understanding of who he is. He continuously defines his value in relation to Kakarot—his so-called “restoration” is built on that comparison.
His strong obsession is not purely a thirst for battle, but a “false self” constructed by projecting Goku as a mirror image—a distorted form of “hero projection.” Vegeta denies Kakarot, attempting to erase his presence, yet remains dependent on the value he derives from this rival. This dependency fuels his anxious rivalry with Goku and also acts as the very source of the intense pressure he imposes on himself.
This explains why Vegeta’s self-realization during this period is always accompanied by a sense of heaviness and isolation—he desires to be powerful, but can only construct his identity through the negation of others, a path that is inherently unsustainable.
(3) The Limits of Destructive Growth
In the latter part of the Android arc, Piccolo chooses to fuse with Kami in the face of an escalating threat, drastically increasing his power and becoming one of the strongest warriors at the time. Upon learning of this, Vegeta outwardly maintains his arrogance, but is clearly agitated inside. When Piccolo warns him “Don’t underestimate your opponent,” Vegeta reacts with visible anger: “Don’t lecture me!” This response is not merely a flare-up of pride, but a manifestation of boundary-based anxiety triggered by being surpassed by someone outside his usual field of projection. He cannot accept that someone like Piccolo—who is not a “rival target”—could disrupt the coordinate system of his identity, thus provoking resistance.
This moment exposes the fragility of Vegeta’s identity structure: at this stage, his self-construction is heavily dependent on a mirror-like projection centered around Goku. What he is pursuing is not an absolute measure of strength, but a relative psychological position. Once someone outside that axis surpasses him, it instinctively induces discomfort and rejection.
With this disturbed psychological state, Vegeta chooses to train in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber with Trunks, as suggested by Goku. In contrast to Goku and Gohan’s collaborative and harmonious training, Vegeta’s regimen is isolated and sealed-off. He pushes himself to the limit, squeezing out every ounce of potential through rage, shame, and obsession. This represents a typical path of destructive growth: it is not for inner integration or self-acceptance, but to convert the shame of being surpassed into fuel for evolution—lacking any sense of cooperation or shared development.
Although he declares he has surpassed the normal Super Saiyan state, Vegeta at this point has already come to use power as the sole means to affirm his existence. He has not truly gained confidence; he merely cloaks deeper anxiety in stronger armor.
(4) The Collapse of Confidence and the Return of Shame
After leaving the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, Vegeta calls himself “Super Vegeta,” trying to emphasize his new level beyond Super Saiyan. At first, he indeed overwhelms Semi-Perfect Cell with a devastating offensive. However, at this crucial moment, he commits the most fatal mistake in the arc—he allows Cell to absorb Android 18, enabling his evolution into Perfect Cell.
This decision stems from his blind faith in his “invincible power,” but also reflects his inner desire to face a truly powerful opponent. In essence, it is a desperate attempt to reaffirm his self-worth—he would rather face a stronger enemy than accept the unstable state of an unfinished fight.
When Cell reaches his Perfect form, Vegeta is utterly defeated. His confidence shatters instantly, giving rise to rage and a deep sense of shame. These emotions are further amplified as Goku and Gohan’s powers grow (this is clearly shown in Chapter 391). Once again, Vegeta channels these feelings to return to the Time Chamber for further training.
(5) The Silent Collapse of His Identity Structure
By the time of the final battle against Cell, Vegeta appears silent and distant. Unlike before, he no longer tries to control the situation or assert his presence as a dominant force. Although his strength has improved, his internal convictions have begun to waver.
On the surface, Vegeta still upholds the posture of a warrior, but psychologically, the “prince” role is already beginning to unravel. He starts to sense that he can no longer exist on this stage as the “strongest.” Rather than insisting “I must surpass Kakarot,” he begins to accept, “I may not be the center, but I still exist.”
This shift in identity is not yet explicit, but it lays the psychological groundwork for his later rage when Trunks is killed—and even more significantly—for the character transformation and emotional realignment during the Buu arc, when he ultimately sacrifices himself.
4.2 The Mirrored Bloodline That Was Never Embraced: Conflict Triggered by Paternal Anxiety
In the Cell Saga, Vegeta confronts the identity of “father” for the first time in earnest. Rather than learning how to become a father, he is trying to understand what the concept of “father” even means. Due to the timeline’s setup, the first version of Trunks he meets is not the young child he helped conceive, but a fully formed future version of his son. This arrangement imbues their initial encounter with a deep sense of dislocation and detachment, turning their relationship into a mirror that reflects the fragmentation of Vegeta’s own identity.
(1) A Fatherhood That Never Had a Beginning
Future Trunks’s upbringing occurred almost entirely without Vegeta’s involvement. He took no part in raising or shaping the boy. In fact, Vegeta didn’t even realize that the young man before him was his son until Piccolo accidentally let Trunks’s name slip. In other words, beyond Vegeta’s general disregard for others, he was forced to engage with Trunks as a “father” only after the boy’s developmental journey had already been completed. This created a powerful sense of overstepping, or psychological displacement. He had no foothold for emotional connection and no transitional period in which to gradually “become” a father.
As a result, Vegeta found himself in a passive and somewhat sluggish role within the family dynamic. He didn’t know how to respond to this figure who was simultaneously a stranger and his blood relative. In contrast to the natural emotional expressiveness and attachment between mother and son, Vegeta appeared hesitant, distant, and even lost in this three-way relationship.
(2) A Rejected Attempt at Replication
When confronted with Trunks’s personality and ideals—gentle, restrained, rational, and cooperative—Vegeta experiences a deep sense of mismatch. These qualities sharply contrast with his own perception of what it means to be a Saiyan, and by extension, himself. His instinctive reaction is a mix of disappointment and shame: this child is not “like me.” As described in previous sections, Vegeta had constructed an identity for himself rooted in a specific warrior ideal. Yet at the same time, he doesn’t outright reject Trunks. Rather, he subconsciously attempts to replicate a “proper” father-son dynamic based on his own prior experiences.
This manifests as a broken version of Saiyan-style education:
He negates emotional expression in the face of combat;
He criticizes Trunks for his “weakness”;
He emphasizes Saiyan identity and the superiority of strength;
He tries to establish authority through battle, not words or care.
In doing so, the “prince’s spirit,” or the pride of the Saiyan, resurfaces. He tries to bridge the gap of fatherhood through these means, believing that by re-enacting the “education of the strong,” Trunks will naturally come to understand and respect him.
But the issue lies in the foundation: this education is based on a model that never truly raised Vegeta himself. His memories hold no image of a warm father figure—only a destroyed homeland and a brutal upbringing.
As a result, this form of “education” was doomed from the start. Vegeta cannot be sure whether Trunks accepts his method, nor whether “becoming someone like me” is even something worth aspiring to. His criticism and aggression are mingled with his own defense mechanisms against failure and internal denial. The more he insists “I (as a Saiyan) am the standard,” the more his anxiety is laid bare.
This version of Vegeta is a crumbling symbolic father figure—attempting to reconstruct the Saiyan value system of the past while gradually realizing he cannot even persuade his own son. He clings to authority and distance but has never truly understood what emotional closeness entails.
(3) A Blurred Emotion Behind Harshness: The Unspoken Bond
Although Vegeta verbally denies Trunks’ perceived weakness and strives to maintain a cold and arrogant demeanor, his actions consistently betray a different message. The original manga depicts scattered scenes of him spending time with his family, and notably, he and Trunks spend a full year together inside the Hyperbolic Time Chamber (though the father-son interactions are explored more fully in the game’s DLCs and will not be discussed here). During the battle with Cell, Vegeta unleashes a powerful outburst of rage upon witnessing Trunks’ death.
These behaviors indicate that Vegeta had already, somewhere deep within, tacitly accepted the existence of a father-son relationship. Yet, having never experienced intimacy, trust, or emotional reliance, his expressions of affection appear especially clumsy and fragmented. He neither knows how to express care nor how to anchor his self-worth within close relationships.
Rather than “teaching” Trunks, it may be more accurate to say he was attempting to teach himself how to become a father. Along this uncompleted journey, he felt ashamed to admit his concern, and equally ashamed to admit his need for acceptance. In the end, this father-son dynamic becomes one of the most silent yet profound elements of his identity development—a source of challenge, and also a potential starting point for redemption.
4.3 The Illusion of Strength: The Cost of Pride and Emotional Disconnection
After finishing their training in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, Vegeta and Trunks acquire unprecedented power. Yet, upon facing Perfect Cell on the battlefield, Vegeta’s internalized “illusion of superiority” resurfaces with full intensity.
(1) Allowing Cell’s Perfect Form: A Compulsion for Self-Validation
When Cell tempts him with the offer to reach his perfect form by absorbing Android 18, Vegeta unhesitatingly allows it. He is convinced that his current strength is enough to overcome any opponent. However, this decision reveals not only a flawed assessment, but also a deep-seated psychological projection rooted in his anxiety:
He must defeat the “strongest enemy” to affirm his own power.
He cannot endure another predestined failure in comparison to others.
He mistakenly believes that this victory will once and for all end his long-standing identity crisis.
His obsession with the “strongest” identity may appear to be a manifestation of his royal pride, but it is in fact a compensatory response to his past loss of dignity and the constant pressure of being surpassed. This misjudgment disregards the larger tactical situation and also ignores Trunks’ repeated warnings—another instance of how he represses the father-son connection and avoids emotional vulnerability.
(2) The Uncooperative Father: Emotional Closure Before Parental Awakening
At this stage, Trunks has clearly shown both combat ability and sound judgment, and he repeatedly attempts to communicate and collaborate with his father. Yet Vegeta still refuses to acknowledge him either as a “comrade” or a “son,” instead regarding him only as an immature “young Saiyan warrior.” This refusal conceals a deeper implication: recognizing Trunks’ maturity would mean admitting that Vegeta is no longer the sole possessor of strength and authority.
Vegeta’s mode of “education” is entirely based on replicating his own path as a Saiyan prince—loneliness, pressure, and combat-absolutism. When Trunks displays emotion and independent thought, Vegeta selectively ignores or even belittles him. These “softer qualities” are, to Vegeta at this point, too unfamiliar and too threatening.
(3) The Contrast Between Goku and His Son: The Emotional Path Vegeta Avoids
The training between Goku and Gohan in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber presents a parent-child relationship built on trust, emotional communication, and collaborative action. Rather than imposing his authority, Goku guides his son through equality and trust. This model of “cooperative growth” is both unfamiliar and deeply provocative to Vegeta.
In contrast, the lack of open interaction between Vegeta and Trunks causes Trunks to remain unaware of the flaws in his new transformation. This avoidant form of parenting is actually a suppression of emotional instinct—a defensive mechanism shaped by Vegeta’s years of solitude and repeated failure.
Goku’s self-destruction to save Earth becomes a tremendous psychological shock for Vegeta. For the first time, he clearly witnesses a version of Goku who fights not for power, but for others—directly confronting the emotional core that Vegeta has long evaded.
At this stage, Vegeta does not undergo an immediate transformation, but a shift has begun. Though unwilling to admit the value of emotions, he can no longer deny their existence.
(4) The Death of Trunks: The Complete Tearing of an Emotional Rift
It is only when Trunks is killed by Cell that Vegeta awakens from his “illusion of invincibility” in an instant. He not only erupts emotionally but also momentarily loses all battle rationality. This reaction reveals:
Emotionally, Vegeta had long regarded Trunks as a true family member.
However, on a conscious level, he had never been prepared to acknowledge this emotional bond.
Trunks’ death is not merely the loss of a comrade—it is a forced revelation of his identity as a father.
This moment marks the rupture of his illusion of strength, but also the activation of his emotional connection. It shatters Vegeta’s self-image that centers around isolation and combat prowess, yet places him at the origin point of emotion for the first time, allowing him to realize that “being there” and “protecting” may hold more meaning than defeating all opponents.
When Gohan loses an arm to save him, Vegeta apologizes—a moment containing both shame for his tactical failure and genuine remorse for his prior coldness and obstinacy.
This is the first time he sets aside his “prince” posture and begins to accept himself as a “father” and “comrade.” The preceding events—Goku’s sacrifice, Gohan’s rise, and Trunks’ death—are what ultimately push him to take this step.
4.4 A Silent Farewell and the Awakening of Fatherhood
With Cell completely destroyed by Gohan, the battle comes to an end. In this final confrontation, Vegeta did not fulfill his earlier wish to become the one who would decide the outcome. Instead, he played a supporting role, while Gohan, having ascended to Super Saiyan 2, took on the burden of saving the world. For Vegeta, this conclusion was not merely a loss in battle—it marked a devastating blow to his self-identity.
Yet it was precisely within this moment of defeat and disillusionment that Vegeta began to relinquish his sole reliance on the identity of a “Saiyan Prince,” and quietly accepted the seed of a new role—that of a father.
(1) A Temporary Halt to the Identity of the Warrior
After the battle with Cell, Vegeta made a brief but unexpected declaration: “I will never fight again.” This was not a definitive end to his fighting career, but a conscious moment of release from his absolute dependence on “battle as selfhood.” In the chaos of his fractured identity, he sought a space to breathe. This statement reflects several crucial aspects:
He came to realize that the dignity of being a “prince” could no longer sustain a complete self-concept.
In the face of Gohan’s victory, he acknowledged that “surpassing” was no longer an eternal path.
His obsession with power began to give way to a deeper sense of guilt and emotional introspection.
This marked a rare moment where Vegeta distanced himself from his core identification as a “fighter,” silently gestating the transformation of his role.
(2) The Subtle Establishment of the Father Role: Foundations of Internalized Fatherhood and Nonverbal Connection
As everyone bid farewell to Trunks, Vegeta, sitting under a tree, made a silent farewell gesture. This act, consistent with his long-standing “emotional defense mechanism,” also signaled a significant internal shift in his emotional structure. Throughout his consistent resistance to acknowledging “parent-child relationships,” this nonverbal gesture served as a unique projection of fatherhood—feelings left unspoken, yet conveyed through action.
In this restrained yet honest gesture, he transitioned from a “passive recipient of emotion” to an “active transmitter of emotion.”
Thus, Vegeta’s emotional trajectory formed a coherent path from emotional numbness to emotional recognition:
In Section 2.3, his fierce unwillingness to die reflected the shattering of his previous projections.
In 3.2, his rivalry with Goku as a projected other self illustrated his struggle with anxious identification.
In 3.3, Bulma, introduced as an “emotional container” and “non-combative other,” offered him a glimpse of the possibility of being accepted—a precursor to emotional loosening.
And in this section, for the first time, he proactively communicated his feelings in his own way—a behavioral sign of integrative identity.
From this point on, Vegeta begins to understand the value of “protection” and “connection.” The “silence” after the Cell Games was not a void, but a prelude to an internal shift in identity. Though he never explicitly claimed to become a “good father” during this arc, through shame, guilt, and the failure of self-identification, he finally began to see his child and his family—and attempted to find belonging in a non-combative world.
This process of “Earth-ification” was quietly incubated within the silence of the Cell arc.
Chapter 5: Identity Reconstruction and the Acceptance of Innate Nature — The Transformation from a Blurred Self to an Independent Individual
5.1 From “Prince” to “Father” — The Earthly Identity in the Early Buu Arc
At the beginning of the Buu arc, Vegeta’s character undergoes a marked transformation. Compared to his earlier image as a “solitary warrior” whose only value lay in battle, he now finds himself in a transitional state—caught somewhere between “family member” and “fighter.” His behavioral patterns, emotional expressions, and self-perception all begin to show signs of “Earthification.”
(1) The De-militarization of His Public Identity
In this arc, Vegeta no longer consistently appears in battle attire. Instead, he begins to wear casual clothes, speaks without aggression, and even willingly sits in the passenger seat beside Bulma when traveling with the group. These seemingly mundane moments represent significant shifts in his identity construction. For a Saiyan who had long lived by combat and taken pride in solitude, simply “wearing casual clothes” suggests not only an acceptance of Earth’s lifestyle but also a willingness to exist in a “non-combat mode.” He is transitioning from a purely “Saiyan Prince” to an “everyday individual”—one who no longer needs to remain constantly on alert, but can now seek his place in ordinary life.
(2) A Desire to Spar Rather Than to Conquer
When he joins the Tenkaichi Budokai, Vegeta’s motivation is no longer to assert overwhelming dominance or solidify his rank. Rather, he seeks an opportunity to spar with Goku and Gohan, and this desire is no longer based on the premise of negating the other, but stems from a personal longing for pure competition.
In this phase, Vegeta begins to dismantle his inner structure of “strength = solitude,” stepping into a battle culture that allows for coexistence and interaction.
(3) Oscillating Between Saiyan Tradition and Paternal Role
While training Trunks, Vegeta tells him, “Land one hit on me and I’ll take you to the amusement park.” This kind of reward-based communication is completely at odds with his previously rigid training logic. It reveals both an experimental step into fatherhood and his clumsiness in emotional expression. When he sees tears well up in Trunks’ eyes, he even appears flustered.
This moment highlights his first breakthrough in understanding “non-combat value.”
However, it’s important to note that he still hasn’t fully mastered the language of paternal love. In the original manga, we often see him try to connect with his son through combat-related behaviors (such as his protective actions during Trunks and Goten’s match). In a way, these responses underscore his inner conflict between Earth’s values and Saiyan parenting norms. This tension lies at the heart of his identity reconfiguration.
(4) The Psychological Shift from “Warrior” to “Family”
By this point, Vegeta’s self-conception has undergone a qualitative change. He no longer defines himself solely as a “warrior” or “prince,” but is gradually integrating roles such as “husband,” “father,” and “Earth resident” into his self-image. This reflects a process of “multi-dimensional identity integration.”
Such a phase is commonly referred to as a “role-interweaving period,” where an individual begins to simultaneously take on and try to reconcile multiple social roles.
This also implies that Vegeta is attempting to break free from the old Saiyan framework in which “a single role equals total worth,” moving toward a more open and pluralistic model of identity construction.
From “not knowing how to respond to kindness” to “learning to maintain relationships in an awkward but tender way,” this is a deeply pivotal stage in his transformation.
5.2 Not a Battle for Battle’s Sake – The Reappearance of Goku as a Projected Other
(1) The Loosening of Projection: A Clinging to the Self
By the time of the Buu arc, Vegeta has already come a long way in his life on Earth. He wears civilian clothes, sits in the passenger seat beside Bulma, participates in family life, and displays moments of panic and vulnerability in front of his son. His gradual acceptance of the roles of “father” and “husband” leads him into an unprecedented loosening of self. But this softening does not come without a cost—he begins to question whether he still possesses the sharpness and pride of the Saiyan prince, or whether the warmth of daily life has eroded what he once saw as his essential self.
Thus, he proposes a fight with Goku and states explicitly that this battle is “everything to me.” Yet this is not simply a desire to defeat Goku. It is precisely because Goku, as a warrior, carries the weight of Vegeta’s projected self-definition at this moment.
Vegeta does not want to become Goku; he wants to affirm through this fight that he is still himself.
(2) A Shift in Projection: A Second Return?
In the earlier arcs—especially during Namek and Cell—Vegeta’s projection onto Goku was more characterized by oppositional idealization. Goku’s freedom, ease, and strength triggered Vegeta’s self-denial, defensiveness, and inner conflict. But by the time of the Buu arc, this projection loses its antagonistic edge and becomes something akin to looking into a mirror: through clashing with Goku, can I still see the Vegeta I once was?
This is a shift from an “idealized other” to a “self-verifying other.” Vegeta’s obsession with Goku is not as extreme as his words suggest; it is closer to an obsession with an unfinished ritual. Having never fought Goku in a fair, unrestricted battle, that unresolved knot has become a necessary step before he can redefine himself. He does not seek to defeat Goku, but to affirm himself through combat.
(3) In Battle, Gazing into the “Self After Change”
It is precisely for this reason that Vegeta chose the Saiyan’s most familiar mode of communication—battle. He never truly longed to kill his opponent, nor did he fantasize about an overwhelming victory. Rather, this fight resembled a private psychological ritual: at the brink of losing his identity as a warrior, he sought to awaken an inner sense of certainty through combat.
Through the dialogue between Vegeta and Goku, we also come to understand that this battle was not waged for glory or hatred, but to resist the self that was gradually becoming gentler and more like an Earthling—a self that felt both unfamiliar and unsettling to him.
Through battle, he sought once again to affirm: “I am still a warrior,” “I am still worthy of pride,” “I have not lost everything.”
(4) Boundary Affirmation: Asymmetric Projection and Denial
This battle with Goku was Vegeta’s final act of boundary confirmation amid his evolving identity. He had no desire to become Goku’s counterpart, yet the value system that Goku represented—gentleness, freedom, and acceptance—posed a challenge to Vegeta’s long-held sense of self. The proud warrior identity he once depended on began to falter within Earth’s familial and cultural context, leading to an evident dissonance in self-recognition.
Goku became a psychologically asymmetric projection: not a possibility Vegeta aspired to become, but an “other” he needed to distinguish and reject. Through battle, Vegeta sought defensively to reaffirm that his core essence remained unchanged. Even his acceptance of Babidi’s control can be understood as a strategy of projective attribution—externalizing his internal conflict to avoid facing the real cause of his “softening,” reflecting a critical process of self-differentiation: not founded on identification, but on separation and boundary redefinition.
However, when faced with the threat Majin Buu posed to Bulma and Trunks, he ultimately relinquished his internal resistance and agreed to let Goku face Buu first—even if it meant bearing the consequences of his own choices alone. This moment symbolized an inner shift: an acceptance of Goku’s identity and a value judgment rooted in Vegeta’s present sense of self—he could no longer ignore the place his family held in his heart. And in doing so, he brought an end to his projection onto Goku.
5.3 Self-Destruction: An Extreme Form of Emotional Expression
In this arc, Vegeta’s voluntary acceptance of Babidi’s magic marks a pivotal moment in his process of identity formation. Though on the surface it appears to be a strategy to regain power and reclaim his dignity, the choice conceals a complex set of underlying motives, reflecting deep internal conflict and a critical turning point in his self-perception.
(1) Voluntary Possession: Self-Confrontation Through Nostalgic Regression
As his family life on Earth gradually took shape, his lifestyle underwent a fundamental shift away from his identity as a “pure warrior.” Accompanying his wife, raising his son, attending social gatherings—all these behaviors steadily distanced him from the Saiyan warrior ethos, which prized isolation and stoicism. He began to question: Am I still the warrior worthy of being called the strongest?
Thus, when Goku reappeared and the threat of Buu loomed near, he chose to forcibly regress to his earlier self—an emotionally detached prince who lived solely for battle—through “Majinization.” This act of regression was not merely a tactical maneuver, but a nostalgic and self-confrontational response to identity crisis.
(2) Deeper Motives Behind the Behavior: Anxiety, Self-Punishment, and Power Insecurity
Although this decision seems to be about gaining strength, at its core, it functions as an act of self-punishment for his perceived emotional weakness. He believed that he had become soft—domesticated by Earth’s culture, and his will to fight dulled by the comforts of family life.
His anxiety stemmed from a split between two conflicting identities: the rising “human” side as a father and husband, and the declining “cold warrior” side as a Saiyan prince. He believed that only by renouncing emotion and severing bonds could he return to being a “true warrior” and once again compete with Goku on equal footing.
This is a reversal driven by power anxiety, and simultaneously a form of delayed emotional compensation.
(3) Self-Destruction: The Breaking Point from Emotional Suppression to Emotional Release
The most pivotal transformation occurs at the moment of self-destruction. After becoming Majin, Vegeta maintains his cold and aloof demeanor, but when faced with the hopeless reality of Majin Buu’s overwhelming power, he makes a choice that completely diverges from his former self: he chooses to sacrifice himself to protect Bulma and Trunks. In that moment, he openly admits his love for his son—“Since you were born, I’ve never once held you in my arms. Let me do it just this once…” This confession marks the first time the structure of his emotional suppression shatters. It is the first instance where he verbally affirms his paternal affection and presents a self that prioritizes family over strength.
(4) The Symbolic Meaning of the Self-Destruction: A Rite of Passage in Identity Reconstruction
Vegeta’s self-destruction is not merely a tactical act of self-sacrifice; it is a symbolic rupture with the old belief that “strength equals detachment.” No longer does he define his worth through combat—he now finds meaning in protecting those he loves. He redefines what it means to be strong: to bear burdens for the sake of others. This self-destruction serves as a threshold ritual in his identity reconstruction—he discards the royal logic that once required him to suppress emotion and accepts the new logic of identity that comes with being a husband and father.
5.4 The End of the Other – The Dissolution of Projective Identification
In the latter half of the Buu arc, the relationship between Vegeta and Goku undergoes a fundamental transformation. It no longer revolves around opposition or psychological projection, but gradually shifts toward understanding and coexistence. This change is not merely a relational update, but symbolizes the breakdown of the “Other mechanism” in Vegeta’s inner structure, marking a loosening and reconstruction of self-identity.
(1) The Collapse of Projective Identification: From Denial to Dissolution
Throughout their prolonged interactions, Goku served not only as a rival to Vegeta, but also as a sustained vessel of “otherness”—a being marked as “not me,” used to maintain Vegeta’s psychological boundaries and sense of wholeness. Vegeta externalized the parts of himself he could not accept (such as softness, attachment, and unburdened spontaneity) onto Goku, and preserved the purity of his identity as a warrior by denigrating, denying, or challenging these traits. This structure is a classic example of projective identification, and forms a vital part of his psychological defense system.
However, after returning from the afterlife and facing the impending crisis on Earth, the psychological utility of maintaining an “oppositional Other” begins to collapse. Though Vegeta initially refuses Goku’s suggestion to fuse, his hesitation reveals that his internal boundaries had not fully loosened—he was still not ready to confront the long-repressed aspects of himself. Yet, once he fully registers the danger posed to Bulma and Trunks, the defensive structure built on hostility, shame, and self-preservation finally shatters. His decision shifts toward emotional responsibility and an active merging driven by care.
(2) Acceptance of Difference and the Emergence of Self-Differentiation
The crux of this transformation lies not in Vegeta abandoning competition, but in his relinquishment of the compulsive need to deny difference. When he utters the words “You’re number one,” it may appear to be a statement about power, but in truth, it is an act of emotional release—a stance that finally permits others to be different from himself, and to coexist as such. He no longer feels threatened by Goku’s “otherness,” nor does he need to defeat him to validate his own existence.
This shift reflects an increased capacity for self-differentiation. Vegeta begins to move away from relationship dynamics based on control and confrontation, and toward interactions grounded in emotion, autonomy, and grounded responsibility. In other words, his identity is no longer built on reflections or negations of the Other, but is instead grounded in a stable sense of self that coexists with acknowledged difference. This enables a more mature relationship with Goku, and for the first time, allows Vegeta to enter cooperation without defensiveness.
(3) The End of the “Other Myth”: Toward the Integration of the Self
Before the Majin Buu arc, Vegeta’s path of growth had long been constrained by a psychological mechanism centered on the “Other.” By constructing Goku as an external figure that must be overthrown and dismantled, Vegeta maintained his image as a pure Saiyan warrior. However, at a moment of true crisis, he finally relinquished this structure. Whether it was accepting the fusion, fighting side by side, or abandoning his posture of dominance in the face of the world, Vegeta’s actions clearly indicated that he no longer needed to define himself through defeating or surpassing someone else.
This transformation is not the abandonment of pride, but a dimensional evolution of his identity structure. He no longer operates from the anxiety of “becoming someone,” but gradually moves toward the internal affirmation of “who I am.” Combat power is no longer the sole standard of value; instead, the integration of emotion, relationship, and self-coherence becomes his new axis of stability. In this sense, Goku ceases to be an object of oppositional projection, and becomes someone with whom he can coexist and co-create a sense of meaning in survival. At last, Vegeta emerges from the struggle against the Other and enters a process of reconciliation with himself.
5.5 The End of Flight — Establishing Family as the Core of Psychological Stability
In his early years, Vegeta regarded emotional bonds as burdens and obstacles—a belief deeply rooted in his upbringing under Frieza’s regime. For much of his life, he was never allowed to rely on others, and emotions were equated with weakness. Saiyan culture also treated close relationships as distractions from combat efficiency. As a result, Vegeta initially resisted and avoided the concept of “family” on Earth, despite fathering Trunks with Bulma. Rarely did we see him take on the role of a father within the family structure. However, this hostility toward family was not intrinsic to his nature, but rather a defensive cognitive framework formed through long-term isolation.
Over time, the consistent presence and emotional responsiveness of Bulma and Trunks began to gently erode this framework. Family ceased to represent the “weak” side of him that his old mindset had demonized. Instead, he began to actively adapt to his familial role and engage in it—taking responsibility for care and protection. This involvement was no longer driven by shame or social pressure, but emerged as a self-initiated and genuine choice.
From a psychological perspective, this shift marks a reconstruction of Vegeta’s emotional attachment system. The enduring presence of Bulma and Trunks offered him a real and sustainable emotional anchor, allowing him to reestablish a sense of self and rediscover meaning in his existence. Through this long-term emotional interaction, his core human needs—intimacy, affirmation, acceptance—were reawakened. Family became the safe outlet through which these needs could finally be expressed.
From defining his existence through combat power to affirming his identity through relationships, Vegeta’s path of selfhood enters a period of stability during this stage.
He no longer avoids love or resists vulnerability; instead, he internalizes the family as part of his self-system and views emotions as a continuation and integration of his strength. His understanding of happiness, responsibility, and sacrifice also undergoes a fundamental transformation through this process.
The Vegeta presented at the end of the Buu arc by Akira Toriyama is a calmer, more stable figure.
Yet he has not ceased his pursuit of self-betterment. His final statement—“Someday, I’ll beat you”—is no longer an extension of anxiety and projection, but rather a form of healthy competition pursued by someone who has learned to be at peace in his relationships and to find a home within his family.
After enduring the struggles of identity, dissolving projections, and reconstructing his emotional framework, Vegeta has completed his transformation from a solitary warrior to a relational individual.
His growth is reflected not only in the increase of power but in the restructuring of his inner psychological architecture. Family is no longer a peripheral element outside of combat, but the core anchor sustaining his sense of existence. When combat ceases to be his sole means of self-validation, Vegeta finally begins to dwell within relationships as a human being.
His dedication to his family and his acceptance of emotion are not signs of softening, but proof of maturity. The gentleness he once rejected has now become an inseparable part of his self-identification.
Because of this, the emotionally expressive and psychologically stable Vegeta seen in later works is not a jarring transformation, but the natural outcome of a long evolutionary process.
The following chapter will focus on the key axis of this transformation—Bulma, and the emotional safety and attachment she embodies.
Chapter 6: Bulma and the Formation of Attachment — The Bidirectional Shaping of Emotional Bonds
6.1 The Starting Point of Emotional Reorganization: From Identity Transition to Familial Integration
In Section 3.3, we observed how Vegeta, through his emotional interactions with Bulma, gradually began to soften his early self-defensive structures and accept the presence of the other within his own framework. Building on this idea, this section further analyzes how, by the beginning of the Buu Arc, Vegeta’s “earthification” process had quietly begun. His identity was no longer solely tethered to the labels of “Saiyan Prince” or “proud warrior,” but gradually integrated into social roles such as “father,” “husband,” and “family member.” This transformation not only signals a reconfiguration of his psychological structure, but also lays the foundation for the softer, more emotionally nuanced Vegeta seen in later series installments. The so-called “family-loving Vegeta” is not an abrupt character reversal, but rather a natural extension of the underlying logic developed since the Buu Arc.
The following aspects demonstrate how Vegeta’s identity began to shift during this phase:
(1) Participation in Daily Family Life: Physical Embedding and Behavioral Adaptation
In the early Buu Arc, Vegeta’s everyday behavior reveals his preliminary recognition of the “family domain.” He no longer wears his battle armor at all times and begins to engage in shared activities with others, even choosing to sit in the passenger seat. He willingly offers playful conditions to motivate Trunks during training. While these acts may appear trivial, they are clear manifestations of his emotional integration—his physical placement and behavioral patterns within the family space begin to respond to the demands of emotional connection.
This kind of physical embedding can be viewed as a form of “behavioral identification,” where the individual repetitively participates in family affairs, silently acknowledging their position within intimate relationships. This form of identification does not necessarily stem from active emotional expression, but often arises from an implicit, not yet fully conscious, longing for attachment.
(2) Establishing the Father–Son Relationship: Emotional Projection and Reparative Compensation
In his approach to raising young Trunks, Vegeta displays a fathering style that balances sternness with attentiveness. He actively arranges training sessions and provides Trunks with direct feedback on his performance. This differs from the earlier, more instrumental or emotionally detached model of fatherhood he once exhibited, indicating a shift toward a reparative parenting intention.
From a psychological standpoint, individuals often reenact or attempt to heal the ruptures of their early family experiences through their own parenting. While Vegeta still struggles to express emotions verbally, his acts of care and companionship serve as symbolic compensation for the paternal absence he himself endured. During this stage, he relies more heavily on “behavioral investment” as a substitute for emotional articulation. His journey of “becoming a father” initiates an early mechanism of self-repair. Rather than an opening of true emotional intimacy, this can be seen as a functional substitution—responding to past unmet attachment needs through the enactment of fatherhood.
(3) Persistence in Power Advancement: Differentiating Self-Drive from Familial Protection
It is important to note that Vegeta’s relentless pursuit of strength during this period does not stem entirely from a sense of familial responsibility; it remains rooted in his long-standing individualistic drive. This “will to power” forms the core engine of his personal continuity—it is his way of preserving the cohesion of self. However, compared to earlier, more conquest-driven forms of improvement (e.g., the Namek Arc), his progress during the Buu Arc begins to diverge from a path of domination, turning instead toward more internalized, self-fulfillment-oriented training.
At the same time, his protective impulse toward his family clearly bears an emotional dimension. When Earth faces a crisis, his intervention is not purely instinctual but arises with the explicit awareness that Bulma and Trunks are under threat. This behavioral shift marks the first time he incorporates emotional attachments into his combat-related decision-making process, signaling the activation of an “emotional function” within his identity structure.
(4) Emergence of Emotional Identification: From Subordinate Fusion to Independent Participation
In the earlier stages of integration—as well as from the audience’s perspective—Vegeta appears more as someone who is “being accepted”: Bulma offers him refuge, and he finds a place to reside on Earth. However, by the Buu Arc, he begins to consciously take on familial responsibilities, transitioning from a “passive observer” to an “active participant” in family life. This shift serves as an early indicator of emotional identification, suggesting that he no longer views Earth and its family life as merely temporary shelter, but as an integral part of his own existence.
This gradual transition from “passive attachment” to “active embedding” lays the groundwork for his later emotional outbursts in Battle of Gods—such as his furious response to Beerus hitting Bulma. The authenticity of this reaction lies in the fact that it does not emerge out of nowhere; rather, it is the natural outcome of the emotional restructuring that quietly unfolded during the Buu Arc.
In summary, the Vegeta of the Buu Arc is not a cold, emotionless figure as he may superficially appear. Quite the contrary—his behavioral patterns have already initiated a prelude to identity transformation, a quiet yet substantial emotional reorganization. While his pursuit of strength remains a key mode of sustaining his subjectivity, his willingness to protect his family signifies a new dimension within his emotional structure. It is in this process that Vegeta begins to build psychological bonds and a sense of responsibility toward his “family.” This moment marks the origin and foundation for the softer, more emotionally resonant version of Vegeta depicted in subsequent storylines.
In the next section, we will examine Bulma’s perspective to further explore her pivotal role in this transformation—how she, through an attitude of acceptance and understanding, gradually intervenes in Vegeta’s emotional blind spots and facilitates the possibility of his integrated identity, in a stable rather than invasive manner.
6.2 Tension and Attraction in Complementary Personalities
(1) Tension-Based Complementarity and Emotional Compensation Attachment
The relationship between Vegeta and Bulma exhibits a high level of tension-based personality complementarity. Vegeta’s character is marked by an intense desire for control, pride, and a deep-rooted combat instinct—all traits shaped by his upbringing and royal status. In contrast, Bulma is autonomous, emotionally expressive, and grounded in practical reality. Interestingly, these stark differences do not distance them, but rather form a dynamic equilibrium imbued with a kind of conflict-based attraction.
Unlike others who fear Vegeta’s volatility and aloofness, Bulma not only dares to confront him but often displays an impressive ability to “decode” his behavioral patterns—perceiving the frustration, repression, and emotional awkwardness beneath his arrogance. In turn, Vegeta’s attitude toward Bulma gradually shifts from initial indifference and disdain to a kind of “silent accommodation,” such as choosing to stay at home, listening to her complaints, or participating in group activities. Though these behaviors lack overt emotional expression, they represent his active compromise in establishing emotional connection.
Psychologically, this phenomenon is referred to as emotional compensation attachment, where an individual lacking certain early-life experiences develops attachment to someone who embodies those missing traits. In Vegeta’s case, he had never encountered a relationship that was emotional, bounded, and not dominated by power. Bulma represents exactly this type of relationship—she asserts her will without being suppressed, while simultaneously offering a kind of acceptance Vegeta had never known before.
(2) Nonverbal Emotional Contracts and Behavioral Connection
In their daily interactions—such as arguments, banter, or simply appearing side-by-side in public—Vegeta and Bulma construct an implicit “nonverbal emotional contract.” Vegeta does not say “I love you,” and Bulma does not demand verbal confirmation. Instead, their mutual trust is built through actions: Bulma manages the household, and Vegeta responds through protection; Bulma nags, and Vegeta chooses to stay silent rather than retaliate. This “mutual defiance yet mutual concession” dynamic demonstrates not only their ongoing personality clashes, but also their emotional capacity to sustain balance within conflict.
The core of this tension-based attraction lies in Bulma’s continual pushing against Vegeta’s emotional boundaries, which in turn forces him to respond and gradually learn to express and tolerate emotions. Their bond is not founded on similarity or mutual understanding, but rather on the challenge and integration between two intense personality types—laying the emotional groundwork for Vegeta’s subsequent identity transformation.
6.3 Prototype Substitution: Emotional Reprojection of Childhood Deficits
(1) The Absence of Paternal Authority and the Break in Emotional Modeling
Vegeta’s childhood, shaped by Frieza’s oppression and the traditional Saiyan system, offered him the title of “Prince” but denied him a genuine childhood characterized by guidance and protection. His father, King Vegeta, functioned more as a symbolic model of strength than an emotional anchor. This absence of paternal care deprived Vegeta not only of an attachment figure but also of a model for emotional imitation. To him, “power” was the only legacy worth inheriting.
(2) Bulma as a Surrogate Prototype
Yet this repression did not erase Vegeta’s emotional needs—it merely buried them, only to resurface as projections onto key figures later in life. Bulma became the vessel and surrogate prototype for this projection. She embodies maternal traits—nurturing, acceptance, emotional presence—while also standing as a capable, assertive partner unafraid of confronting Vegeta’s sharp edges. To Vegeta, Bulma unknowingly provides the relationship model he should have experienced but never did—becoming the unconscious source of emotional fulfillment.
(3) Dual Functions: Emotional Regulation and Normative Structuring
This substitution process unfolds on two levels:
First, Bulma assumes the role of emotional regulator. When Vegeta expresses rage, anxiety, or frustration, Bulma typically avoids direct confrontation. Instead, she stabilizes the emotional tension through language, behavior, or even silence. While others fail to comprehend Vegeta’s actions, Bulma often offers non-judgmental support—fulfilling a maternal function he never received.
Second, she acts as a norm-setting partner. Rather than enabling Vegeta’s coldness or combative nature, Bulma introduces relational boundaries through domestic routines, parenting responsibilities, and social expectations. These norms are not imposed through top-down commands, but through emotionally participative guidance, helping Vegeta slowly adopt new social roles—husband, father, and citizen.
(4) Emotional Repair within the Paternal Role
A pivotal moment in this prototype substitution occurs through Vegeta’s evolving relationship with Trunks. Initially reluctant to leave a legacy on Earth, and perceiving offspring as potential threats, Vegeta gradually grows into his paternal identity. In the Buu Saga, he actively trains with Trunks, embraces him tightly in a moment of crisis, and utters the deeply emotional plea: “Take care of your mother.”
These actions go beyond imitating fatherhood—they represent genuine emotional growth. Through bonding with his son, Vegeta transitions from functional compensation to emotional restoration—he not only provides the warmth and support he lacked, but also begins to mend his own emotional wounds through generational care. Bulma’s steady companionship becomes the emotional fulcrum of this healing process, offering Vegeta a non-hostile emotional container in which he can explore vulnerability, connection, and ultimately break free from the defensive system built in his childhood.
6.4 Spiritual Symbiosis and Emotional Affirmation
(1) Emotional Compensation Mechanism: The Transition from Non-Attachment to Attachment
In the early stages of his relationship with his family—especially Bulma—Vegeta did not exhibit direct emotional attachment. Instead, he suppressed and transformed his complex emotions into more indirect behavioral patterns. His emotional expressions often took on “substitutive” forms, in which seemingly unrelated actions carried internal emotional projections and compensatory intentions.
This process clearly demonstrates Vegeta’s “emotional functional compensation mechanism,” marking a transitional phase from a non-attached individual to someone with attachment-oriented tendencies.
While not overtly affectionate at first, Vegeta began to gradually adapt to intimate relationships through interactions. For instance, during the Cell arc, he no longer insisted on acting alone but could calmly discuss Dr. Gero’s lab with Bulma. After training in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, he even responded—albeit awkwardly—to Bulma’s question about Saiyan hair. These seemingly minor moments reveal his shift away from a purely battle-driven logic, as he attempts to engage in family life through “non-combat-oriented” behavior.
(2) The Construction of a Spiritually Symbiotic Structure: The Nonverbal Path of Mutual Understanding
As Vegeta and Bulma’s relationship matured, it developed into a unique form of “spiritual symbiosis”—a relational pattern that affirms emotional connection not through language, but through actions, responses, and continued presence.
For Vegeta, this form of emotional affirmation was more aligned with his internal tendencies: hesitant to verbalize, yet longing to be acknowledged. Bulma, in turn, intuitively understood this expressive style and took on the role of an “emotional mediator.” Rather than pushing him to transform immediately, she offered a stable emotional container at critical moments.
For example, she never harshly criticized Vegeta’s coldness; instead, she stabilized the relationship through routine, day-to-day gestures—creating a nonjudgmental environment that enabled emotional attachment. This patient and understanding approach allowed Vegeta to gradually shift from “substitutive behavior” to genuine emotional expression.
Their mutual understanding did not rely on ritualistic displays but was built upon long-term interaction and growing trust.
One of the clearest expressions of this symbiosis appears during high-stakes situations. When Vegeta prepared to self-destruct in order to protect his family, Bulma—though unaware—sensed a sudden wave of anxiety and unease from afar. This spontaneous emotional resonance transcends rational communication and reveals a profound emotional tether.
Another subtle example lies in Vegeta’s strategic discussion about how to use the Dragon Balls during the final battle with Buu. He specifically noted that if they made certain wishes, the people he killed at the tournament would not be revived. This demonstrates not only his meticulous planning but also his intention to minimize the moral and emotional burden Bulma and others would bear in the aftermath.
Indeed, in the narrative, Bulma promptly sets out to gather the Dragon Balls to revive those killed by Vegeta—not out of blame, but as an instinctive act of understanding and complementarity. She does not question his actions or react with fear or anger, but instead quietly considers, “What must Vegeta have gone through?” and responds with a compensatory gesture.
This behavioral attunement forms the foundation of their “spiritual symbiosis”—nonverbal, implicit, yet deeply resonant. Their mutual understanding is rooted in a deep familiarity with each other’s nature and motivations, forming a stable mechanism of “You don’t need to say it; I already know.”
It is precisely this structure that allows Vegeta to sacrifice himself without a word—and for Bulma to silently catch both the emotional and real-world consequences that follow.
(3) Embodied Expressions of Emotional Confirmation: From Presence to Coexistence
Beyond high-stakes situations, Vegeta’s responses in more mundane, everyday settings—such as Bulma’s birthday party or family vacations—also reveal how he is learning to express love in more grounded and human ways. Though he remains quiet and stoic, his willingness to participate stands out. He chooses to be present in non-combat environments, which marks a significant transformation for someone who once equated survival with solitude and power. His emotional confirmation doesn’t come through verbal declarations or explicit promises, but through subtle acts of companionship, continued presence, tolerance, and return. These gestures form an implicit emotional bond—one built not on words, but on enduring participation.
(4) Emotional Mirror and Complementarity: From Expressive Dissonance to Deep Understanding
Bulma’s role in this relationship is crucial. She does not try to forcibly change Vegeta’s personality. Instead, she offers a space of consistent emotional expression, light teasing, and patient companionship. Through this, she creates a relational experience in which Vegeta feels “understood rather than judged”—a rare experience in his life that gradually allows him to let down his guard and build trust.
In the end, their relationship settles into a stable mode of action-based emotional expression. Vegeta will never say “I love you,” but he stays by Bulma’s side when she needs him and makes her position in his life clear to others. Bulma, in turn, does not demand overt emotional dialogues, but remains present after every conflict, and offers quiet support when Vegeta is at his lowest.
This mode of emotional exchange is best described as a mature form of emotional mirror complementarity: when one partner is reticent, the other fills the silence with empathy and interpretation; when one expresses clumsily through action, the other holds the space with humor and understanding.
In this symbiotic bond, Vegeta ultimately receives the emotional validation he never had, while Bulma witnesses the possibility of influencing and softening a deeply isolated soul. Their love is not only a process of mutual construction but a mutual practice of healing and emotional growth.
6.5 The Seen Self: Vegeta’s Identity Integration through Bulma’s Perspective
Vegeta’s growth is not only a journey of self-discovery, but also a process of “being seen” by others. From Bulma’s point of view, we witness how a once closed-off, rigid warrior—nearly incapable of emotional connection—gradually becomes someone understood and accepted within an intimate relationship, eventually achieving identity integration. Bulma is not merely a one-sided transformer; through her interactions with Vegeta, she becomes an irreplaceable “mirroring other” in his development—someone who reflects his truest self while also serving as an external anchor for the reconstruction of a new self.
(1) Emotional Recognition and Behavioral Decoding: Bulma’s Mechanism of Understanding
In her relationship with Vegeta, Bulma demonstrates a remarkable ability to recognize and interpret emotion. She does not retreat in the face of his coldness or volatility. On the contrary, she is able to discern the anxiety, inner struggle, and hesitation beneath his exterior. She offers support in her own way—for example, in Chapter 375, when Vegeta claims he can defeat Cell alone after donning his new battle armor, Bulma comments, “Sigh… still so stubborn.” This reflects her deep understanding of his behavioral patterns—she recognizes this as his unique “emotional language.”
This kind of understanding establishes a silent rapport and a posture of acceptance. Bulma does not attempt to directly “change” Vegeta, but instead, gradually decodes and embraces his emotional expressions. In doing so, she allows him to lower his defenses and begin trusting that he can be understood. This marks a significant transformation: in power-based relationships, Vegeta never learned to express emotions—but through intimacy with Bulma, he learns that emotions can be accepted.
(2) Affirmation through Action: A Shared Logic of Alternative Expression
Vegeta rarely articulates his emotions verbally; instead, he expresses them through actions—protecting his family, accompanying Bulma on trips, stepping forward in critical moments. Bulma quickly learned to understand this language of action and willingly established a relationship on that foundation. She does not demand romantic words, but responds and affirms his repeated demonstrations of devotion.
This forms a kind of “alternative emotional confirmation mechanism.” In conventional relationships, emotional expression is often dependent on words and explicit commitments. But between Bulma and Vegeta, their trust is built upon long-term behavioral interaction. He doesn’t say “I love you,” yet she knows he would risk everything for her. The stability of this bond is not reliant on rituals or formality, but on mutual understanding and acknowledgment of each other’s expressive modes.
(3) Boundary Setting and Identity Training: Bulma’s Guiding Role
Bulma’s assertiveness in family life serves as a form of “socialization training” for Vegeta. Rather than simply tolerating his behavior, she clearly establishes boundaries: he must take care of their child, participate in family activities, and take responsibility for Trunks’ development. These life expectations are far from easy, but they become essential avenues for Vegeta to re-learn what “responsibility” and “relationship” mean.
Raised in a rigid, utilitarian, and emotionally barren environment, Vegeta lacked awareness of others’ needs and had no experience in caregiving or emotional reciprocity. Through these domestic routines, Bulma gradually guides him into a world where being a warrior is not the answer to everything—a world where strength is no longer the sole measure of worth, and where gentleness, stability, responsibility, and return are the keys to meaningful life.
She helps him build a new identity structure—not just as a prince or a fighter, but also as a father, a husband, and a partner. These roles don’t diminish his strength; instead, they become deeper extensions of his selfhood.
(4) Emotional Mirroring in a Stable Relationship: Mutual Acceptance and Projection
The relationship between Bulma and Vegeta exemplifies a “mirrored-growth relationship,” where both continuously see the other more clearly, and in doing so, come to better understand themselves. Bulma’s traits—her defiance of authority, emotional expressiveness, and trust in relational bonds—are exactly what Vegeta lacks but unconsciously yearns for. Meanwhile, Vegeta’s pride, discipline, and intensity provide Bulma with the fulfillment of “influencing someone powerful.”
Within this mirroring dynamic, Bulma becomes the emotional projection of something Vegeta never had—a mother figure who encourages and understands him. She partially replaces that absence, offering warmth, boundaries, and steady emotional support. At the same time, she doesn’t fall into the savior role; she remains a mature individual maintaining healthy tension and balance in their interaction.
This two-way mirroring allows Vegeta to not only “be seen,” but to learn how to “see others”—especially Bulma and Trunks. When he ultimately says, “Take care of Mom,” it is not only a gesture of affection toward Bulma, but also the result of an integrated sense of self. He finally understands that being understood and emotionally responsive does not undermine his pride, but instead reflects a mature way of loving and existing.
(5) From Independence to Symbiosis: The Completion of Identity Integration
Bulma’s role is not limited to being a wife; she acts as a “bridge”—connecting Vegeta’s past and present, his self and others, his isolation and his belonging. Through her continued understanding, tolerance, and guidance, Vegeta completes the transition from a solitary fighter to someone capable of multiple social roles.
This identity integration is a process of “allowing oneself to be needed.” In the past, Vegeta believed strength was the only proof of his existence, but now he finds value in everyday family life. He once believed only in power, but now he cherishes connection. With Bulma’s companionship, he undergoes a life transformation—from living to fight, to becoming strong in order to protect.
And Bulma’s acceptance of him proves one thing: true change in a person often doesn’t come from external force, but from the internal willingness to take that first step—once they are seen, trusted, and embraced.
Chapter 7: Mutual Evolution of Love and Self-Exploration
7.1 Love as a Catalyst for Self-Acceptance
(1) From Defense to Openness: Love Awakens the Repressed True Self
Vegeta’s true nature has never been as cold and ruthless as his outward demeanor suggests. Although Saiyan culture glorifies strength and devalues emotion, his choices and behaviors have repeatedly revealed a latent yearning for intimacy, acceptance, and belonging. Bulma’s arrival marked the first turning point in his life when he was forced to confront the “true self” he had long repressed.
In front of Bulma, Vegeta gradually lowered the defenses imposed by his royal identity. Initially ashamed to express his feelings, he acted aloof, masking his concern with feigned indifference and impatience. However, this repressive way of managing his emotions was quietly dismantled by Bulma’s persistent understanding and acceptance. Whenever Bulma was injured or in danger, Vegeta would erupt in uncontrollable rage time and again. These outbursts were not signs of a loss of rationality, but rather the clash between his underdeveloped emotional expression and the genuine, powerful emotions within him.
(2) From Duty to Desire: Relationship Becomes Part of the Self
The most profound impact of love on Vegeta was not found in romantic declarations, but in his gradual acceptance of emotional experiences he had once vehemently denied—fear of loss, longing for companionship, and the need to be understood. These emotions, once deemed “weaknesses” in his original value system, were legitimized by Bulma’s presence and redefined through repeated interaction.
His care for Bulma was never born from her being a “partner” or “family member” in a functional sense. Rather, it was because she was Bulma—a unique, courageous individual who truly understood him. His feelings were not initially anchored in relational roles but rooted in her very being. This deep connection meant that even when he denied it verbally or distanced himself behaviorally, he could never truly disregard her.
Over time, he moved from “denying his concern” to “acknowledging her importance.” Protecting Bulma ceased to be a matter of obligation dictated by social roles and became a sincere emotional wish: “I want to protect her.” This shift in motivation marked not a burden of responsibility but an embrace of emotion—a willingness, for the first time, to respond to his own feelings without suppression or avoidance.
Ultimately, Bulma provided him with an emotionally safe and stable space where he could gradually explore, affirm, and integrate the true self that had long been repressed under Saiyan cultural expectations. This relationship did not weaken his warrior instincts—instead, it allowed him to integrate the roles of “fighter,” “father,” and “lover” into a more authentic and complete self.
7.2 The Trajectory of Emotional Integration: Balancing Control and Belonging in Intimate Bonds
In Dragon Ball, Vegeta and Bulma’s relationship is never depicted through conventional romance tropes, but rather through shared presence and everyday interactions. Their bond evolves subtly—from an ambiguous beginning to a natural assimilation into family roles—marking a shift in Vegeta’s possessiveness from defensive dependency to a more secure, intimate connection. This transformation isn’t a sudden shift, but the cumulative result of long-term interaction, where emotions are gradually activated, absorbed, and internalized.
(1) Latent Dependency: The Defensive Psychology at the Outset of the Relationship
When Vegeta first meets Bulma, he shows no obvious signs of emotional attachment. On the contrary, he exhibits traits of a personality type marked by high self-esteem and low interpersonal trust. Even when Bulma offers him support and acceptance, he often responds with aloofness, stubbornness, or avoidance.
At this stage, his possessiveness functions more as a subconscious emotional self-preservation mechanism—he doesn’t want to lose the chance to be understood, but at the same time, he fears the pain and loss of control that emotional dependence might bring.
For example, in the Android Saga, when Bulma’s aircraft is attacked by Android 20, Vegeta does not immediately rush to protect her and their unborn child. This isn’t merely a sign of indifference, but rather a reflection of his mindset still being firmly anchored in his identity as a warrior. He has not yet learned how to redirect his instinct to protect toward an intimate partner. His emotional defenses remain intact, and his possessiveness is still repressed, manifesting instead through cold detachment and avoidance.(While some later official materials—told from Trunks’ point of view—suggest that Vegeta already knew the baby was his and would certainly save them, this text focuses on the original manga, so we will not elaborate on that here.)
Another symbolic moment occurs after they return from the Hyperbolic Time Chamber. When Bulma asks why his hair hasn’t changed, Vegeta initially replies seriously: “A pure-blooded Saiyan’s hair hardly changes from birth.” But suddenly, his tone sharpens, and he shouts, seemingly flustered: “Now’s not the time to be talking about pointless things! Why did you even come here, Bulma?!”
This uncharacteristic outburst reveals a rare emotional lapse in his interaction with her. Normally composed and commanding, he is rattled by her casual, light-hearted question. On the surface, he answers earnestly, but once he realizes the emotional intimacy embedded in the exchange, he hastens to reassert emotional distance through irritation and dismissal.
This sense of “anxiety about being seen through” illustrates his unstable attachment tendency at the time—he doesn’t want to admit he cares, yet he cannot disregard her presence. His possessiveness at this stage appears most vividly through acts of denial: a contradictory posture of “I won’t say it, but I care.” These moments leave subtle gaps between his words and actions, revealing an inner emotional conflict that has yet to resolve.
(2) Emotional Awakening: Projection and Awareness in the Role of a Parent
With Trunks’ birth, Vegeta’s emotional pattern began to shift quietly. Though still unaccustomed to directly expressing his feelings, he gradually revealed a sense of self that extended beyond his warrior identity through his interactions with his family. He started to pay silent attention to Trunks’ growth, channeling his concern for Bulma and their son into guiding actions. His training no longer served battle alone, but became driven by a new motivation—to become stronger for the sake of protecting someone. This shift indicates a redefinition of what “being relied upon” truly means to him.
The emotional tone of this period no longer aligns with the defensive rejection seen earlier, nor is it simply about fear of loss. Rather, it reflects a subtle and continuous inner transformation—he comes to realize that Bulma holds a far more significant place in his life than he had initially imagined. Yet, he does not rush to offer emotional validation; instead, he chooses to communicate through steadfast action.
The emotional tone of this period no longer aligns with the defensive rejection seen earlier, nor is it simply about fear of loss. Rather, it reflects a subtle and continuous inner transformation—he comes to realize that Bulma holds a far more significant place in his life than he had initially imagined. Yet, he does not rush to offer emotional validation; instead, he chooses to communicate through steadfast action.
As a result, his possessiveness gradually shifts from being rooted in hidden anxiety to becoming a form of stable affirmation. It is no longer driven by fear of loss, but by the hope of becoming someone “worthy of her choice.”
(3) Emotional Sublimation: The Self-Detonation and Farewell in the Majin Buu Arc
The true emotional transformation culminates in the Majin Buu arc. At this stage, Vegeta not only confronts an overwhelmingly powerful enemy but also, for the first time, faces the significance of love and attachment in his life.
When Vegeta realizes that he cannot defeat Majin Buu on his own and is incapable of ensuring Bulma and Trunks’ safety, he chooses to self-destruct. This decision is not merely a practical one; it represents a direct refutation of his former belief in personal power supremacy and serves as his first open acknowledgment of emotional bonds.
In the line, “Bulma, Trunks… farewell,” Vegeta releases the emotional weight he had long kept buried. He speaks not out of pride or wounded dignity, but from a profound awareness of what those words mean. It marks the first time he clearly articulates his emotional ties, transforming them into a sense of responsibility.
His sacrifice is not made to prove anything, nor to win others’ understanding, but because it is the choice he makes from the depths of his heart—without hesitation.
His “possessiveness” is no longer entangled with insecurity or defensiveness. It becomes a conscious and stable emotional affiliation—not a fearful confirmation of love, but a calm, internal acknowledgment of it.
In that moment, he is not seeking love—he is responding to it. He is not afraid of loss—he is shouldering responsibility. No longer connecting out of a lonely identity, he integrates that identity through love itself.
7.3 The Reverse Construction of Belonging: Emotional Reshaping Through Acceptance
In Vegeta’s emotional growth, Bulma’s role goes far beyond that of a mere “trigger.” She acts as an emotional anchor and point of belonging, providing steady acceptance and resonance throughout his ongoing self-reconstruction. This support is not based on emotional demands, but rather on a “reverse construction”: she responds to coldness with acceptance, meets delayed emotions with patience, and builds trust through freedom.
(1) Non-Forcing Maintenance: The Implicit Warmth of a Stable Relationship
Bulma never forces Vegeta to express his emotions, nor does she distance herself because of his cold demeanor. On the contrary, she maintains the emotional warmth of their intimacy with a tenacity that is resilient but never oppressive. She does not constantly expect emotional responses from him, but persistently sends signals like “I’m here” and “You can be yourself.”
For Vegeta, this was an entirely new emotional experience. Never before had he been allowed to maintain a defensive posture in an intimate relationship, nor had anyone ever told him that not expressing emotion could still count as existing within one. Bulma’s stable presence silently built the safety net of relational security in his understanding.
(2) Feedback Through Acceptance: Voluntary Closeness in the Relationship
In the Dragon Ball Super anime, Bulma rarely complains about Vegeta’s emotional detachment during her pregnancy, yet when she goes into labor, Vegeta immediately abandons his training to be by her side.
This decision was not an impulsive act driven by a surge of affection, but a conscious response—he knew that his presence was both welcomed and needed. Bulma did not verbally acknowledge his transformation, but accepted his companionship in a natural, matter-of-fact way. It signaled to Vegeta that he no longer needed to neglect life for the sake of battle, and that his emotional shortcomings would not exempt him from responsibility. He chose to stay—not because he had to, but because he finally understood that with Bulma, his “choices” would never be coerced nor devalued.
(3) Trust Through Freedom: Non-Controlling Support as the Foundation of Security
Vegeta is used to being in control of everything, but Bulma has never tried to control him. What she offers is freedom—to fight, to train, to be himself. And this very freedom, paradoxically, becomes the deepest form of trust between them. She not only supports his continued pursuit of strength, but also silently allows him to participate in high-risk battles. Regardless of the outcome, she always waits for him to come home. This unquestioning trust is what enables Vegeta to maintain balance between his roles as a “warrior” and a “father.” It also allows him to believe—for the first time—that he can be whole, without being torn between being a strong fighter and a devoted husband.
(4) A Sign of Emotional Softening: The Rebound of His Attachment System
At its core, what Bulma gives Vegeta is a space where he can exist in his entirety. He doesn’t need to suppress his feelings, pretend to be hard, or give up on combat and personal growth. Her understanding, support, and tolerance provide him with an anchor of identity and a place of emotional grounding.
And yet, Vegeta’s emotional expression still tends to be delayed and restrained—he continues to rely on actions more than words to respond to love. This pattern has become a kind of “fixed mechanism” in his emotional structure.
It is not until Dragon Ball DAIMA, with the introduction of the “de-aging” setting, that this mechanism finally begins to loosen. Stripped of the framework of adulthood, those deeply suppressed impulses for attachment, expression, and protection begin to surface. He no longer avoids emotion, nor does he conceal his affection.
This transformation is not merely a result of narrative setup, but also marks a form of “attachment system repair” and a deeper emotional reboot within his structure. The next chapter will provide a detailed analysis of this emotional renovation process.
Chapter 8:Attachment Mechanisms and Emotional Repair—— The Process of Psychological Reconstruction in Dragon Ball DAIMA
8.1 Return to Childhood and the Symbolism of Psychological Regression
In Dragon Ball DAIMA, Vegeta and the other characters are transformed into children—a narrative twist that is not only playful but also psychologically significant. For Vegeta, this “return to childhood” is far from a mere physical transformation; it marks a loosening and reconstruction of deep-seated psychological structures, revealing a need to unbind long-suppressed emotions and revisit unfinished phases of personality development.
(1) Miniature Form as a Visualization of Psychological Regression
Psychological regression refers to a phenomenon where, under pressure or internal conflict, individuals revert to earlier stages of emotional or behavioral development. Although the “shrinking” in DAIMA is a fictional plot device, it carries deep symbolic weight. It strips away the multiple “role shells” that Vegeta has carried over the years—prince, warrior, father, husband—and allows his core self, or id, to re-emerge.
This state does not erase his intellect or emotional memory. Rather, it allows him to experience, react, and express in ways aligned with a child’s emotional logic, while retaining his adult consciousness. He no longer suppresses feelings or delays emotional responses. Instead, he exhibits more direct and primal reactions—such as anger, anxiety, possessiveness, and a protective instinct.
This means that through the mechanism of regression, Vegeta begins to reengage with the parts of himself that had been buried by social roles and personal pride. It is a re-initiation of self-expression from the inside out, enabling a partial repair of emotional development stages previously stunted or left unresolved.
(2) Exposure of the “Archetypal Personality” after the Removal of Identity Symbols
The adult Vegeta’s ego structure has long been constructed upon the logic of power and the value of battle. His personality is heavily wrapped in layers of identity symbols such as “Saiyan pride,” “power competition,” and “paternal responsibility.” This structure has shaped a typical externalized self—proud, composed, and unshakable.
However, in his miniature form, he loses the support of these socially constructed power symbols. His behavior becomes more aligned with an unfiltered archetypal personality—emotional, direct, and instinctual. This shift highlights developmental gaps in his early emotional life, such as unmet attachment needs and underdeveloped emotional expression.
For example, he shows a greater willingness to approach Bulma proactively and express his concern; in interacting with others, he becomes more open and engaged, rather than aggressively guarded.
This state of de-identification reveals a personality driven more by the id, allowing long-suppressed but never extinguished emotional drives to surface—such as the longing to be needed, understood, and accepted.
(3) Rebooting the Emotional Mechanism and the Softening of Defensive Structures
Over the years, Vegeta has shown a highly restrained emotional mechanism in his relationships, with a psychological defense system characterized primarily by “aggression + denial + delayed expression.” In DAIMA, these defenses are temporarily suspended, allowing his emotional expressions to become more instinctual and his emotional motives more transparent.
In the narrative, Vegeta does not conceal his protective and possessive instincts toward Bulma. He even stops hiding that he needs her more than he needs battle. No longer does he use silence or avoidance to cover it up. This immediate emotional response is a clear indicator of weakened defense mechanisms.
His concern for Bulma is no longer filtered through the lens of a “warrior identity” or masked behind a constructed self-image. It originates directly from his authentic emotional needs.
These emotions no longer require justification through the language of “honor” or “duty,” but are expressed naturally and straightforwardly.
(4) Potential Psychological Repair and Developmental Compensation
In psychology, it is often observed that when emotional needs are unmet in early life, individuals tend to seek compensatory mechanisms later. The setting in DAIMA arguably grants Vegeta an opportunity for psychological restoration.
By returning to a child-like state, he enters a space where he no longer needs to maintain the facade of a strongman, nor bear the burden of identity-based expectations. This provides the psychological conditions for low defense and high emotional expression.
This process can be seen as a form of developmental repair—not a literal regression, but a symbolic return combined with emotional re-engagement, aimed at bridging gaps left in his earlier emotional growth.
As a result, Vegeta begins to exhibit healthier and more spontaneous emotional responses. This is not merely a stylistic shift in character portrayal—it signifies a genuine internal reconstruction at the psychological level.
8.2 De-defensiveness of Emotional Expression: From “Behavioral Compensation” to “Emotional Directness”
Vegeta’s emotional expression has long been characterized by its indirectness. In Dragon Ball Z and Super, his concern for his family and partner was often disguised beneath coldness, silence, or extreme behaviors (such as self-destruction or furious outbursts). This mode of expression functioned as a form of behavioral compensation: when he was unable to articulate emotions verbally, he would instead “express” them through actions.
However, in DAIMA, this compensatory mechanism appears to have notably loosened. His emotions begin to surface without pretense or mediation. This shift reflects a psychological transformation in which emotional expression moves from defensiveness to spontaneity—that is, emotions no longer need to bypass the cognitive system to be converted, but instead emerge as more primal and directly felt. This transformation is visible on several levels:
(1) Enhanced Synchrony Between Emotion and Action: The Disappearance of “Rationalization”
In past narratives, Vegeta’s emotional reactions typically lagged behind the triggering events. For instance, his rage after Bulma is harmed, or his grief after Trunks’ death, represent classic cases of delayed emotional release. This is due to his internal code of strength, which does not permit him to reveal emotions immediately.
But in DAIMA, this “rationalized delay” is significantly weakened. He now rushes to protect Bulma the moment she’s in danger; the gap between emotion and action has narrowed. This indicates a softening of his internal emotional suppression mechanism, trending toward a low-defense emotional expression structure.
(2) A Shift in Expressive Form: From Action-Based Substitution to the Emotion Itself
Earlier in the series, Vegeta’s emotional expression often relied on action as a proxy for speech. He used anger to carry concern, distance to mask attachment, and combat to replace emotional articulation. These were not deliberate acts of concealment, but rather the result of his lack of an expressive pathway. Actions became his adaptive strategy under a high-defense emotional structure.
In DAIMA, however, as his psychological defenses loosen, his expressive mode shifts dramatically. No longer does he need to translate emotion into complex behavior; instead, he expresses himself directly and naturally. He can now clearly show anger, irritation, care—even dependence—without needing to cloak them in silence or extremity.
This transition—from emotion-substituting behavior to the direct presentation of the emotional core—signals a new stage of expressive maturity. It is not merely a change in emotional content, but a restructuring of the mode of expression itself. His emotions no longer require concealment or symbolic packaging, and instead emerge in a de-role-ified, self-centered form. This shift is one of the central achievements of his emotional repair process.
(3) Elevated Internal Recognition of Emotional Value
In DAIMA, Vegeta does not exhibit shame or repression as a result of his emotional openness. He neither makes excuses for his worry, anger, or restlessness, nor denies the fact that he is expressing such feelings. Compared to his earlier tendency to avoid or feel awkward after revealing his emotions, here he displays a significantly greater sense of emotional coherence.
This shift reflects a cognitive transformation in how he perceives emotional value: no longer as a “weakness” or “source of shame,” but rather as an integrated part of his self-structure. It marks a rise in his level of self-acceptance and symbolizes the ongoing integration between his “warrior identity” and his “emotional identity.”
(4) A Shift Toward More Equal and Natural Interaction Patterns
Alongside this change in emotional expression, Vegeta’s interpersonal interactions also become more equal and instinctive. He no longer seeks intimacy through “opposition,” nor does he attempt to earn understanding through “domination.” Especially in his interactions with Goku, the competitive undertone is reduced, replaced by a mode of companionship more akin to that between everyday friends or brothers. This suggests that his emotional activation is no longer dependent on conflict.
Such a transformation in interaction style is indicative of an evolution from an oppositional attachment pattern to a secure attachment pattern—that is, he no longer needs struggle to validate his sense of existence, but can instead accept stable and equal forms of relationality. He no longer requires confrontation to affirm his value or to elicit an emotional response.
Vegeta’s emotional expression in DAIMA departs from the previous “repression–explosion” structure, moving toward a mode of “immediate–natural” expression. This marks not only an improvement in his emotional regulation ability but also a loosening of his psychological defense mechanisms and a reconstruction of his emotional personality. Where once he needed sacrifice or anger to demonstrate that he cared, he can now express love through low-intensity actions like showing up and staying close—clear indicators of emotional maturity and an increased sense of psychological security.
8.3 Reconstruction of Possessiveness and Attachment: Emotional Needs No Longer Bring Shame
If the previous section revealed how Vegeta gradually lowered his emotional defenses to express feelings more naturally, this part delves into the core emotional force behind that change—how attachment and possessiveness transitioned from repression to acknowledgment.
In his miniature form, Vegeta frequently displays a strong urge to protect and possess Bulma. However, this time it doesn’t come across as defensive hostility, but rather as a straightforward, childlike “I want you to be only mine.”
This sharply contrasts with his adult self, who often manages such emotions with “tough words and silent acts”—saying one thing but showing another through his actions. As an adult, he often feigns detachment to mask his emotional dependency. Yet in this youthful form, he no longer shies away from expressing his need to be cared for, even openly showing his desire for Bulma’s presence.
This unfiltered display of emotion symbolizes that his need for emotional connection is no longer bound by shame—it begins to return to its most fundamental, human form.
(1) From Repression to Acceptance: The Return of Attachment as an Emotional Foundation
At the heart of this change lies one essential shift: he starts allowing himself to “need” others.
In early Saiyan culture, dependence was regarded as a symbol of weakness, and emotions were considered unnecessary burdens. To survive within that framework, Vegeta built a nearly indestructible illusion of independence—denying emotional needs in order to maintain his pride and sense of control.
This defense mechanism forced him to suppress his attachment needs for a long time, redirecting them into obsessions with achievement or power.
However, Bulma’s persistent presence serves as a kind of “containing other.” She neither tries to change him nor judges his emotions, but always responds to his emotional fluctuations in a steady, gentle, and non-threatening way.This unconditional tolerance gradually fosters in Vegeta an internal belief that “it’s okay to rely on someone,” planting the psychological groundwork for the legitimacy of his attachment needs.
The childlike setting in DAIMA pushes this previously hidden attachment into overt expression. Without the regulating framework of his adult identity, these long-repressed emotional patterns naturally emerge.He no longer feels ashamed of saying “I need you.” On the contrary, he actively shows his reliance on Bulma.This is an emotional system reboot—a transformation where attachment shifts from being a defense mechanism to becoming a channel for genuine connection.
(2) The Return of Emotional Exclusivity: Possessiveness as an Expression of Intimacy
Notably, the intense possessiveness that miniaturized Vegeta displays toward Bulma does not stem from insecurity, but rather reflects a simple expression of emotional exclusivity—a desire to affirm the unique emotional bond between them. In childhood, possessiveness is often the most straightforward way of confirming closeness; it is not necessarily about control, but about the hope for emotional exclusivity. Behind such behavior lies a yearning for relational continuity—essentially, “I trust that you won’t leave me (because I can’t leave you).”
This return to a more rudimentary emotional structure marks a shift in Vegeta’s relational dynamics: from adult self-protection to childlike emotional seeking. Yet it is precisely this regression that enables the possibility of psychological reconstruction: a reframing of attachment not as vulnerability, but as connection.
(3) The Possibility of Reconstruction: From Emotional Unblocking to Relational Repair
What makes Vegeta’s attachment behaviors in DAIMA restorative is not simply the fact that he has “become small,” but rather that he is finally able to admit—without shame—that he desires to be needed, and also wants to be someone others need.
From a developmental psychology perspective, this represents a validation of emotional needs. It is not regression per se, but a reintegration of previously repressed emotional logics into conscious identity—transforming attachment from a defensive mechanism into a relational one.
This reconstruction is facilitated by the reduced cognitive pressure of the childlike state, but it also fundamentally relies on the long-term trust built in his relationship with Bulma. Without Bulma’s enduring presence as a “consistently responsive other,” the safe resurgence of this attachment would likely have been impossible.
8.4 Continuity of Identity Integration: The Fusion of Emotional Reconstruction and Self-Recognition
Vegeta’s regression to childhood in DAIMA may appear at first glance to represent an emotional backslide, but on a deeper level, it reveals a process of reconstructing and reintegrating his identity. In this process, emotional expression and identity transformation become mutually reinforcing—each one affecting and reshaping the other. As Vegeta gradually opens himself to emotional exposure, he simultaneously embarks on a redefinition of his sense of self, particularly through a renewed acknowledgment of his attachment needs.
(1) Recognizing Emotional Needs and Reconstructing the Adult Identity
Vegeta’s emotional needs are no longer seen purely as weaknesses or liabilities, but gradually redefined as legitimate parts of his self-expression. He begins to accept his desire for emotional dependency, especially in the presence of a partner like Bulma. In this dynamic, his need to rely on others is no longer something he feels ashamed of; rather, it becomes a central component of his identity integration.
In the adult world, dependency is often perceived to be in conflict with a person’s sense of autonomy or self-worth. However, within the narrative structure of DAIMA, Vegeta comes to understand that dependence and independence are not necessarily mutually exclusive. His relationship with Bulma serves as a bridge through which he learns to reconcile these seemingly contradictory aspects. He no longer needs to perform independence as a defense mechanism; instead, he becomes emotionally more open and authentic, gradually realizing that true strength lies in the ability to share emotional weight with others.
(2) Emotional Reconstruction and the Balance of Defensive Mechanisms
Though DAIMA presents Vegeta as increasingly open to attachment needs, this does not imply a total abandonment of his former defensiveness or individual strength. Rather, his acceptance of emotional dependence allows for a more integrated balance between his internal defenses and relational vulnerability.
Early Vegeta operated from a place of hyper-defensiveness. His desires and emotions were frequently repressed and veiled beneath a hardened shell of self-protection. In DAIMA, however, these defenses are not eliminated—they are transformed. He no longer expresses dependency through distancing or denial but finds healthier outlets for his emotional needs. By interacting more openly and sincerely with Bulma, he establishes a new, more constructive mode of attachment—one that allows space for vulnerability, while also acknowledging and accepting the care and support offered by others.
(3) The Synergistic Effect of Emotional Connection and Identity Reconstruction
Bulma plays an indispensable role in Vegeta’s emotional integration process. She is not only the object of his emotional dependence but also a critical catalyst in the reconstruction of his identity. Her presence allows Vegeta to accept and affirm his emotional needs from within, rather than seeing them as a sign of personal weakness as he did in the past. Through Bulma’s unconditional acceptance and support, Vegeta gradually lowers his emotional defenses and comes to terms with the fact that he is a person with emotional needs. This process is closely intertwined with the evolution of his self-identity.
The establishment of this emotional connection propels Vegeta’s identity transformation in Dragon Ball DAIMA. In the early arcs of Dragon Ball, Vegeta was a solitary and hardened prince, whose identity was heavily reliant on the image of the “Saiyan warrior,” with emotional expression nearly entirely suppressed. Under the setting of DAIMA, however, the disclosure of his emotional dependence not only redefines his inner world but also gradually guides him toward a more complete and authentic self.
(4) The Fusion of Dependence and Self-Identity: Possibilities for the Future
The integration of Vegeta’s emotional needs is not merely a psychological “regression to childhood,” but rather a significant stage in the evolution of his self-identity. His emotional dependence signifies that he no longer solely anchors his self-recognition in his role as the “Saiyan Prince,” but instead begins to incorporate more complex layers of identity: a father, a husband, an individual who is both loved and capable of love.
In future developments, Vegeta may continue to seek balance within the entanglement of emotion and identity. His growth is not limited to increases in strength or improvements in combat skills but lies even more in the continual renewal and sublimation of his self-understanding. Through his relationships with Bulma and with his family, he gradually comes to realize that dependence and intimacy do not weaken his pride—they make him a more complete person.
Chapter 9: A Shift in Responsibility — Vegeta’s Conscious Embrace of the Father Role
9.1 From Passive Observer to Active Participant — Three Stages of Paternal Evolution
Vegeta’s construction of a paternal identity evolves from a passive bystander to an active participant, undergoing a complex psychological transformation across three stages. Unlike the linear development of his “warrior” identity, the awakening of his role as a father involves intricate emotional projections, internal adjustments, and identity integration. This trajectory vividly reflects his redefinition of the relationship between responsibility and emotional expression.
(1) First Paternal Experience: Future Trunks — A Delayed Cognitive Projection of Fatherhood
Vegeta’s first encounter with fatherhood comes through Future Trunks. From the outset, this relationship is marked by a profound sense of temporal and spatial dislocation: what he faces is neither a son he raised from infancy, nor an extension of his own influence or personality—but rather a fully-formed, independently thinking warrior.
As a result, Vegeta responds to Future Trunks with emotional detachment and restraint. He tends to view Trunks more as a “potential fighter” or “strategic variable” than as an object of affection. Within the Saiyan value system, which centers on power, Vegeta has not yet internalized the “father” identity as part of his own self-concept. At this stage, fatherhood feels more like an externally imposed label than a psychologically integrated role.
(2) Second Paternal Experience: Young Trunks — Emotional Testing from Rejection to Participation
The original work offers limited direct depictions of Vegeta’s parental behavior during this period. Instead, it is through Trunks’ own words and actions that the emotional texture of their relationship is revealed. Young Trunks is mischievous and cheerful, presenting a sharp contrast to the calm, reserved Future Trunks. His choice of the affectionate term “Papa” (パパ) signals a deep familiarity and dependency on Vegeta’s presence.
When Vegeta offers to take him to an amusement park if he can land a hit, Trunks’ excited response—“Really? With Papa?”—reveals a childlike yet sincere longing. It implies that Vegeta, despite his stoic nature, has provided enough presence and care to be perceived as a reliable and emotionally significant parent.
This suggests that even as Vegeta maintains his typically Saiyan restraint, he has already been engaging in the actual work of parenting over the years. His form of fatherhood is largely non-verbal, expressed not through softness but through consistent companionship, training, and shared everyday life. This marks a transitional phase in his role: from emotional avoidance to tentative participation.
During this time, Vegeta begins exploring the parent-child bond beyond combat, slowly loosening the rigid structure of his identity. His willingness to respond to Trunks’ emotional needs through action—if not words—represents the early breach in his long-standing emotional defenses. His self-sacrificial act in the Buu Saga, detonating himself to protect his family, serves as a pivotal moment. Though the action still operates within a warrior’s logic, it unmistakably contains a father’s love. From that point onward, Vegeta becomes increasingly involved in family life, transitioning from a peripheral paternal figure to one who has begun to internalize the role.
(3) Third Paternal Experience: The Birth of Bulla — Voluntary and Joyful Fatherhood
The true turning point comes with the birth of Bulla. In Dragon Ball Super, when Bulma is about to give birth, Vegeta refuses Goku’s invitation to train elsewhere and chooses to remain on Earth to accompany her. This decision marks a profound shift in his paternal identity—it is the first time he places family responsibility above his warrior mission.
More importantly, what he displays is not just a sense of duty, but genuine joy and anticipation at the arrival of new life. Family companionship is no longer a reluctant concession during peacetime, as it was during the Android Saga, but rather something he actively chooses. Vegeta now faces his yearning for affection and emotional connection without shame. He no longer resists the gentler components of identity, but embraces fatherhood naturally and proudly.
This stage thus completes a deep transformation in his emotional identity. Future Trunks provided the “image” of fatherhood, young Trunks brought the “challenge” of fatherhood, and Bulla’s birth achieves the integration of fatherhood. At this point, Vegeta is no longer an outsider to the role of father. He views it as a vital part of his selfhood. Freed from shame and defensiveness, he now responds with softness and emotional continuity, revealing a long-lasting, stable affection that had long been hidden beneath his warrior’s pride.
9.2 The Remaking of the Warrior Identity Within a Family Structure
In Dragon Ball Super and DAIMA, Vegeta’s character gradually shifts away from the central theme of “warrior supremacy” and moves toward integration into a more complex family structure. This transition is not due to a decrease in external combat, but rather stems from a reconstruction of his internal identity: combat is no longer his sole defining core, and family is no longer just a narrative backdrop—it becomes the primary arena for his emotional development and self-integration.
(1) From the Logic of Power to the Logic of Family: A Shift in Value Coordinates
Within Saiyan culture and his early self-construction, Vegeta viewed “combat strength” as the standard by which all things were measured. From seeking recognition from Future Trunks to constantly comparing himself with Goku, he relied on power to maintain his self-respect and to dominate interpersonal relationships. In the beginning, he saw family as a secondary option—a mere by-product of a life centered around battle.
However, with the birth of Bulla and the deepening of his relationship with Bulma, Vegeta’s value system visibly shifted. He no longer felt the need to prove himself as “the strongest,” and instead showed a willingness to be vulnerable in front of Bulma and emotionally expressive in front of his children. This indicates his growing acceptance of the legitimacy of emotion, and his willingness to treat family ties as real, worthy components of life—not obstacles to his identity as a strong warrior.
(2) Structural Reconstruction: From an Outsider to an Emotional Anchor
During the Dragon Ball Z period, Vegeta often appeared as an “outsider” to family life: he didn’t engage in parenting, avoided emotional expression, and rarely initiated communication. He resembled a “part-time warrior who occasionally returned home,” lingering at the margins of the family structure.
However, in Dragon Ball Super and DAIMA, this structure undergoes a clear transformation. Vegeta actively accompanies Bulma during childbirth, appears frequently in parenting scenes, and even takes on the role of mediator and protector in family conflicts. He evolves into an emotional anchor of the household—a central figure who connects and sustains the emotional bonds among family members. This change is not merely behavioral participation, but a shift in cognitive belonging.
(3) Voluntary Withdrawal and Role Awareness: No Longer Resisting the “Gentler Self”
In his earlier years, Vegeta refused to admit that he needed a family. His emotional distance from Trunks and his conflicted, evasive attitude toward Bulma were all efforts to safeguard the integrity of his self-image as a “pure warrior.” To him, gentleness, dependence, and emotional expression were potential threats—forces that could unravel the armor of strength he had so carefully built.
Yet in later installments, particularly after Bulla’s birth, he begins to show a posture of “voluntary withdrawal.” He no longer regards battle as his sole arena, nor does he resist gentleness. He’s willing to pause training at Bulma’s request, to show anxiety, joy, and patience for the sake of his children. He starts to allow identities and emotions beyond the battlefield to enter and define who he is.
Behind this transformation lies a profound shift in self-perception: he now genuinely embraces the role of “father”—not as a reluctant duty, but as a chosen identity, rich with intimacy, warmth, and groundedness. No longer defending against these emotions, he begins to inhabit them with pride.
In Vegeta’s life trajectory, fatherhood is not merely an extension of the family structure, but a key pivot in the evolution and stabilization of his self-identity. From the hesitant evasion of early fatherhood, through his gradual adjustment during Trunks’ upbringing, to the joyful anticipation of Bulla’s birth, his acceptance and enactment of this role undergo a clear arc—from defensive detachment to conscious, voluntary identification.
Vegeta’s threefold experience of fatherhood—through Trunks (both future and present) and Bulla—not only deepens his relationships with his children, but also marks a significant milestone in his process of identity integration. Through these familial bonds, he is able to re-narrate his own unfulfilled attachment needs and, in the act of emotional giving, achieve self-repair and inner peace.
So then, for a Vegeta who has undergone numerous trials of identity, emotional reconstruction, and the reestablishment of attachment—how does he ultimately achieve the integration of his real self and his ideal self?
Chapter 10: Identity Integration — The Fusion of the Real and Ideal Self
10.1 Vegeta’s Process of Personality Integration
Vegeta’s journey of identity exploration has always revolved around a central question: Who am I? The answer to this question has undergone a long and conflicted evolution—from the externally imposed role of the “Saiyan Prince” to the later gradual emergence of multiple identities such as “father,” “husband,” and “warrior.”
However, after his life on Earth, the development of his relationship with Bulma, and his assumption of the father role, Vegeta’s personality slowly began to break free from being shaped by others. This was not a process of abandoning the past, but rather a conscious reinterpretation of it. He began to shift from “I must be strong and ruthless” to “What kind of person do I want to be,” transforming externally imposed attributes into values he internally accepts. This marks the key phase of personality integration—no longer fragmented between “Prince” and “Husband,” or “Warrior” and “Father,” but allowing these identities to coexist within a unified self.
This integration is also reflected in his changing attitude toward Goku. From early rivalry and confrontation to later fighting alongside him multiple times—even being willing to let Goku take the lead in battle—Vegeta exhibits a kind of recognition not based on winning or losing. He begins to accept Goku as a coexistent other. He no longer needs to defeat this “other” to affirm himself, but instead views growth as a shared path and victory as a by-product of training.
This marks a significant turning point in Vegeta’s identity, shifting from “external validation” to “internal motivation.” His personality evolves from a singular focus on power to a multidimensional, balanced existence: he still desires strength, but no longer to prove his bloodline—rather, to protect and choose; he still maintains his pride, but no longer rejects gentleness—instead, he incorporates responsibility, emotion, and value, forming a truly integrated self.
10.2 The Ultimate Integration of Relationships with Others: No Longer Defining the Self through the Other
Throughout Vegeta’s long path of growth, his relationships with others—especially with Goku—have served as key reference points in shaping his identity. Initially characterized by hostility and competition, these relationships gradually transformed into coexistence and equality, ultimately becoming catalysts for his self-integration. More crucially, in these relationships, Vegeta gradually broke free from the pattern of constructing his self-image through the lens of the other, and began to establish a self-directed path that neither depends on nor opposes others.
(1) Breaking the Mirror Structure: A Non-Projective Rivalry
Vegeta’s relationship with Goku was once a classic example of a “mirror enemy” pattern. He perceived in Goku a power path completely different from his own—something he did not aspire to become but that silently challenged his core belief that “coldness equals strength.” Goku’s existence evoked doubt in Vegeta’s old creed rather than inspiring pursuit of an ideal self. Through their rivalry and coexistence, Vegeta gradually realized that the real obstacle to his growth was not the difference between himself and others, but the rigid, repressive self-image within him, built on false beliefs.
(2) Breaking Free from Comparison: Independent Construction of Self-Worth
He began to face the differences between himself and others and used these differences as opportunities to explore his own unique path. In relationships with family, he learned softness; with enemies, he learned restraint; with others, he learned respect. These relationships formed a new identity system, no longer based on rejection or opposition but centered on internal consistency and a sense of boundaries.
(3) Internalization of Relationships: Transition from Opposition to Coexistence
At this stage, Vegeta no longer fixates on becoming a predetermined image but focuses more on affirming who he truly is. He gradually shifts from a projective identity to an intrinsic one, no longer relying on others’ perspectives to construct himself, but confirming his emotions, choices, and sense of worth through genuine interactions with others. This integration of relationships means he has finally broken free from passively reacting to the world and has actively engaged in shaping his life and identity.
10.3 Return of Meaning — Affirmation of Existence in Self-Choice
After a long process of conflict, struggle, and transformation, Vegeta’s identity gradually shifts from an externally driven “becoming the strongest” to an internal choice of “why he fights.” His actions are no longer responses to others’ evaluations or threats but stem from affirmation of his own values and consolidation of emotional relationships. This change manifests in three levels of development:
(1) From Will to Power to Value-Driven: Fundamental Shift in Behavioral Motivation
Early on, Vegeta’s fights were to prove his worth, maintain royal dignity, and respond to feelings of inferiority and anxiety. The core drive was “I must be stronger than you.” Later in the series, his battles are less about defeating others and more about responsibility, protection, and empathy. This marks a shift from “narcissistic validation” to “expression of value identification,” reflecting maturation in his psychological motivation.
(2) Internalization of Responsibility: From Role Identity to Subjective Will
Vegeta gradually transforms family responsibility from an external “add-on” role into part of his inner will. He no longer sees “fighting for family” as a weakness but as “something I willingly do.” This “internalization of identification” means accepting coexistence of multiple identities—warrior, father, husband—without seeing them as conflicting burdens. His joy and active involvement at Bulla’s birth exemplify responsibility no longer experienced as oppression but chosen freely.
(3) Reconstruction of Sense of Existence: The Path to Identity Integration
With the depersonalization of his relationship with Goku and transformation of family bonds from dependence to connection, Vegeta is no longer trapped by identity issues. He ultimately constructs an integrated rather than fragmented self: even without surpassing others, he affirms “I can be seen” and “I can be accepted.” He no longer attempts to build self-esteem through hatred or suppressing weakness but achieves self-worth through being loved, loving, and freely choosing.
Vegeta’s growth journey thus completes a profoundly meaningful identity integration. He no longer measures himself by a singular standard of strength nor uses others as reference points for his existence. He learns to accept himself imperfectly, affirm value in relationships, and realize freedom through choice.
This process reveals how an individual once torn apart by roles and expectations gradually aligns and overlaps “real self” and “ideal self” through ongoing relational restructuring and value clarification, ultimately transforming into an integrated personality with stable boundaries and inner recognition.
He no longer obsessively clings to the “lonely prince” but finds authentic meaning in becoming “himself.”
Conclusion: From the Lone Warrior to the One Who Chooses the Self
Vegeta, a character who initially identified himself as a “prince” and “warrior,” follows a growth trajectory that is far from linear. Instead, it is a continuous struggle of identity and psychological reconstruction. He barely survived Frieza’s oppression, wavered in his beliefs amid the failures and shame on Namek, and wandered on the margins of life on Earth, trying to preserve the remnants of his pride. Later, in the Buu saga, he experienced moments at the brink of self-betrayal and redemption, and gradually established attachment and sensed warmth through his relationship with Bulma, finally moving toward a genuine transformation in emotion and identity. Each of his “changes” was not a simple upgrade in power, but a rupture and rebuilding of identity, a dismantling and reconstruction of psychological defenses.
Through these ten chapters, we have witnessed Vegeta’s journey from an initial solitary defense mechanism toward a relational self and an integrated subject. His identity recognition shifted fundamentally from “battle as value” to “relationship as identity”; his emotional expression evolved from initial “suppression and denial” to “acceptance and expression.” Throughout this process, the multiple relationships he formed—with Bulma, his children, Goku, and comrades—became indispensable mirrors, challenges, and anchors in his identity construction.
It is worth repeatedly emphasizing that Vegeta never wanted to become Goku, nor did he truly see “surpassing Goku” as the ultimate goal. The long-standing rivalry was never about others or winning and losing, but about confronting and breaking free from inner illusions. What he truly transcended was the “false self” trapped in battle worship and fabricated dignity; what he genuinely achieved was a transformation from self-doubt to active choice, a redefinition of his nature and desires.
This is a psychological journey of self-acceptance and a story about free will and authentic choice. Vegeta is imperfect, often stubborn, obsessive, and quick-tempered, but it is precisely these genuine emotions and struggles that make him a fully human character undergoing transformation. He is not an idealized hero, yet he completes a true “growth” in terms of personality.
The “pride of the Saiyan”—once an obstinate creed he clung to as a symbol of strength and dignity—has gradually acquired new meaning through this internal transformation. It no longer solely represents lineage or an obsession with battle, but has become another expression of his sense of responsibility, emotion, and self-choice. It is at the moment of completing his personality integration that this pride truly belongs to him.
Vegeta’s Identity Recognition and the Nature of His Self-Chosen Path
⚠️⚠️⚠️ [Subjective Analysis Warning – Proceed with Awareness]
Last time I wrote a short essay on the shift in Vegeta’s body language, which focused more on how that shift reflects his evolving self-identity and personal growth. This time, I’m going deeper — writing a comprehensive analysis from my own perspective, centering on how I understand Vegeta as a character.
To me, every stage of Vegeta’s development isn’t simply triggered by external events or emotional shocks, but is more often the result of his own introspection and choice. This intentionality — this mix of pride and hesitance — is vividly reflected in both his personality and his behavior. That’s why every time I read other analyses that boil down to things like “Toriyama just didn’t think that much” or “Vegeta’s just the arrogant foil to Goku”, I honestly can’t help but find them reductive or even laughable.
Also, it’s unfortunate that many people only accept the “cool and aloof” version of Vegeta, leading to an overwhelming amount of Western commentary that sees him as being tamed or softened, with little acknowledgment of the nuances in his domestic life. In my view, descriptions of Vegeta as “aimless” or “drifting” are completely off the mark.
I personally believe the moment Toriyama decided to keep Vegeta alive post-Namek was when his real character development began. That was the point when Vegeta was no longer just a temporary plot device. So I don’t subscribe to the whole “Bulma domesticated him” narrative — nor do I agree with interpretations like “Vegeta is tied down by deep emotional bonds with Goku” or “family life made him boring.” These takes don’t sit right with me, because they completely ignore how Vegeta’s choices are built on conscious self-awareness.
In my eyes, he’s a deeply self-driven character. Everything he does, whether it’s retreating into solitude or building a family, stems from a kind of inner reasoning and personal decision-making. And to dismiss his family as unimportant is, frankly, to miss what I see as the emotional core of his arc.
📘 What This Essay Contains
This whole piece will be divided into two main parts:
Chapters 1–5 will focus on understanding Vegeta’s inner journey and psychological makeup as originally portrayed.
The later chapters will discuss his family life and how his self-awareness affects his relationships, especially with Bulma.
(I’m analyzing mostly from a psychological and behavioral perspective. I’m not a professional, just an over-invested fan with too many thoughts. Let me know if I mess something up!)
Chapter One: The Lonely Prince and Warrior — Vegeta’s Early Self-Perception
1.1 Early Conflicts: Racial Traits vs. Inner Self
The Saiyans are a race that worships strength to an extreme, lacks emotional education, and values hierarchy and conquest. Raised within this cultural framework, Vegeta, as a royal at the pinnacle of this system, was indoctrinated from an early age with the elitist belief that “the prince is the strongest.” In this sense, Vegeta appears to embody the very essence of Saiyan traits — a quintessential Saiyan.
However, the issue lies in the fact that Vegeta’s inherent nature seems to carry an innate inclination toward self-awareness and emotional potential that transcends this rigid framework. From this emerges a series of internal conflicts that run counter to the characteristics of his race.
Does this suggest that Vegeta is not a Saiyan in the purest sense, but rather an “outlier raised within Saiyan culture”?
The traits he exhibits later — sensitivity, pride, aloofness, a strong need for control, and difficulty expressing himself — are, in fact, lingering traces of this internal deviation. As he grows into early childhood and begins to develop cognitive awareness, this internalized conflict gradually begins to surface:
Within his identity as a prince, he is told by his father, King Vegeta, that “as a prince, you are the strongest warrior,” and yet, both he and his entire race remain subjugated under the far more powerful Frieza.
Deep down, he may sense that this further layer of domination is unjust, but he has no outlet to express such doubts. Thus forms an early psychological structure in which suppressed emotion coexists with extreme competitiveness. This structure is both a submission to Saiyan cultural norms and a repression of his own “true nature.”
This early internal contradiction lays the groundwork for the emotional “fractures” that appear later when he encounters Goku, Earth’s culture, and Bulma. These relationships do not change him — they awaken the “atypical Saiyan nature” he had been suppressing all along. This also explains why he displays a more complex and conflicted emotional structure earlier than most other Saiyans: because from the very beginning, he was distorting a more complete self.
1.2 The Formation of Emotional and Cold Detachment as a Defense Mechanism
(1) The Saiyan Social Structure:
The Saiyan society is not a fully developed civilization in the traditional sense, but rather resembles a militarized, predatory tribal group. Its fundamental characteristics can be summarized as follows:
For Vegeta, growing up as “royalty” did not mean a life of tenderness or privilege. Instead, he was raised as a “functional child,” surrounded by coldness and immense expectations — not nurtured, but conditioned.
(2) The Formation of Cognitive and Defensive Patterns
a. The Development of Cognitive Structure
1.A Formal Family Relationship
Although Saiyan royalty is said to possess a stronger conceptual understanding of family, this understanding is still shaped by Saiyan cultural norms. King Vegeta played the role of a father in name only — he never offered Vegeta any emotional care or warmth. He treated his son as a “future elite warrior,” not as someone to be bonded with as a father. In this kind of “expected but not understood” relationship, Vegeta developed a starting point of selfhood marked by unreasonably high internal standards and emotional suppression.
2.Absence of a Maternal Figure
The original work makes almost no mention of Vegeta’s mother. The absence of a maternal presence likely deprived him of early emotional regulation models, making it difficult for him to form a foundational psychological association like “being cared for = safety.”
3.The Destruction of Planet Vegeta
This event marks not only the end of his race but also the total severance of any stable emotional connections. It’s a psychological turning point that intensifies his solitude and triggers the full activation of his defense mechanisms: He shifts from being a prince with a legacy and a people to an orphan entirely stripped of culture and kin. All that remains is his title — “Prince of the Saiyans” — a symbolic but hollow anchor that becomes his sole way of responding to feelings of helplessness.
He never mourns his people, nor does he ever speak of the pain of destruction.
This isn’t cold-heartedness — it’s a survival strategy based on completely shutting down emotional input and output.
Frieza becomes the only remaining authority in his reality — but one rooted in humiliation and oppression. Under Frieza, he never experiences trust or the free flow of emotion.
These factors together form an extremely defensive cognitive structure in Vegeta’s personality:
Emotion equals danger
Dependency equals shame
Violence and arrogance become the camouflage for security
b. The Formation of Defense Mechanisms
Detachment ≠ Cold-bloodedness: Vegeta’s emotional detachment does not stem from inherent cruelty. Rather, it is the result of growing up in an environment where emotional expression was never encouraged. To him, expressing emotion = exposing vulnerability = danger.
1. The Illusion of Control Built on Emotional Closure
He maintains the illusion of “I can control everything” by avoiding empathy, denying intimacy, and embracing extreme emotional isolation. This serves as a counter-defense against the helplessness he endured under Frieza’s oppression.
In Vegeta’s eyes, standing permanently in a position of refusal is the only way to avoid re-experiencing the shame of abandonment.
2. The Hollowing of the “Hero Identity” in Childhood
From a young age, he was labeled as a “genius,” “prince,” and “strongest warrior.” But all of this was a projection of external expectations.
He never truly experienced a foundational human dynamic like “I am loved and understood.”
His “strength” was not the result of internal growth, but rather a symbolic self-defense shell constructed from emotional deprivation.
3. The Alienation of the Prince Identity
After the destruction of Planet Vegeta, the title of “prince” was no longer a framework for growth, but a psychological compensation mechanism.
His repeated emphasis on “I am a prince,” “I am the strongest,” does not come from arrogance — it is his only means to suppress the uncontainable loneliness and shame within.
This identity becomes the hardest shell of his personality:
Strength becomes his only way of being.
Emotion is fully absorbed into his defense system.
Within this cognitive framework and defensive mechanism, Vegeta gradually shapes a “strongman” persona that appears unbreakable but is, in fact, extremely fragile.
His rejection of connection, denial of emotion, and obsession with control are not signs of inherent cruelty — they stem from never having the experience of expressing vulnerability without being punished.
Every outburst of rage, every battle he engages in — though seemingly about victory and conquest — is in truth a harsh self-validation of his worth and identity.
Thus, Vegeta’s “extreme personality” upon his initial appearance is not a flat characterization, but rather a behavioral projection of a deep and well-armored defense system —
He translates suppressed emotion into aggression, and turns the possibility of communication into hostility.
1.3 Vegeta’s Initial Portrayal: Arrogance, Extremity, and Violence
(1) External Behavior as the “Defensive Shell” of the Inner Structure
Vegeta’s initial appearance presents him as the archetypal “proud antagonist.” Cold, extreme, and violent — everything seems to orbit around the assertion “I am the strongest.”
However, this exaggerated external behavior is in fact a defensive performance, triggered by the collapse of his early identity structure.
This period can be understood as the most tightly wound phase of his psychological architecture — when his internal tension reaches its peak.
(2) Language and Dialogue as a Form of Identity Defense
As Goku arrives and repeatedly defeats him in battle, Vegeta’s dialogue becomes a window into his fragile inner world. Many of his lines carry defensive psychological traits, reflecting his shaky self-structure and the anxiety of maintaining legitimacy:
Saying to Goku: “You low-class warrior dare…!” On the surface, this is disdain — but beneath it is deep destabilization. Goku’s power challenges Vegeta’s foundational belief that “the prince must be the strongest.” So, Vegeta compensates with demeaning language to preserve his identity.
Repeated claims: “I’m the strongest!”, “I’m an elite warrior!” These repetitive self-labelings are a form of self-hypnosis in the face of internal doubt. The more anxious he feels, the more he needs to reinforce who he is.
Roaring in defeat: “I can’t lose!”, “This is impossible!” This reveals how deeply he ties victory to self-worth. Losing doesn’t just mean defeat in battle — it symbolizes the collapse of his entire emotional system.
These statements leak his inner truth: the more desperately he asserts identity, the more it proves how unstable that identity truly is.
(3) Violence as Distorted Language, Not Pure Aggression
At this stage, Vegeta’s violence functions as a substitute for communication.
He cannot ask for help, show vulnerability, or cooperate — so he resorts to controlling and destroying others as a way to affirm: “I still exist”, “I’m still powerful.”
For example, when Nappa treats the Saibamen’s brutality as a “game,” Vegeta allows it. Later, when he kills Nappa, it’s not just tactical coldness, but also a projected rejection of weakness.
He cannot tolerate softness — even in others — because it reflects the weakness he suppresses in himself.
This reveals a highly repressive emotional regulation model:
Conquest replaces communication
Domination replaces connection
To Vegeta, violence becomes a method of existential verification — a way to feel in control, to feel real.
This is why he repeatedly fights Goku even after losing. Not because of hatred alone, but because “losing to Goku = collapse of identity.”
Thus, the emotional formula becomes:
Identity Crisis + Emotional Deficit → Behavioral Extremes + Emotional Suppression → Early Vegeta = Pride + Violence + Isolation
At this point, Vegeta is not a simple bloodthirsty villain. His behavior is the concrete embodiment of early psychological structure and identity anxiety under extreme stress.
As discussed earlier, he was molded by elitist ideals as a “warrior prince,” but lacked real emotional bonding or identity affirmation.
Therefore, he leans on authority and power to compensate for his psychological void.
The arrogance, cruelty, and extreme violence he displays are not personality flatness, but rather defensive recoil under immense external pressure.
In other words, Vegeta is not emotionless — he has simply lost the capacity to express and trust emotion.
His aggression is a mask for vulnerability — an emotional armor forged for survival.
Chapter 2: Fractured Pride — Psychological Cracks During the Namek Arc
2.1 Identity Shaken Under Frieza’s Oppression: The Beginning of Rebellion
In the Namek arc, Vegeta faces not only his enemies, but also the haunting shadows of his past. The arrival of Frieza reawakens the shame and helplessness he endured in childhood—only this time, the existence of the Dragon Balls gives him a potential way to fight back. Upon arriving on Namek, he immediately sets his rebellion into motion.
During this period, Vegeta’s behavioral patterns begin to shift dramatically: from the formerly prideful and violent lone wolf to a more strategic, goal-oriented individual capable of temporary alliances. He is no longer fighting for the thrill of conquest, but for revenge and survival.
(a) The Ghost of Frieza’s Control Returns: Identity Crisis
Frieza is the original symbol of power-based oppression in Vegeta’s life. On Namek, when Vegeta learns the truth of Planet Vegeta’s destruction—that it too was wiped out by Frieza—it intensifies the painful realization that no matter how powerful he becomes, he remains under Frieza’s heel.
This knowledge deeply undermines the illusion of being “the strongest warrior,” which had long been the core of his identity. In response, he begins to revise his strategy to regain a sense of control. It is a psychological collapse and reconstruction: being a “Prince” is no longer a fact to be taken for granted, but a dignity that must be reclaimed.
(b) From Conqueror to Tactical Rebel: Evolution of His Battle Conduct
In the earlier Earth saga, Vegeta fought through brute force and domination. On Namek, however, amid the complex conflict between Frieza’s army and the Earth warriors, he demonstrates unprecedented cunning:
He begins actively gathering the Dragon Balls, hoping to use them to gain immortality—showing that his concept of victory now includes strategy, not just strength.
He engages in deceit, killing, and stealth to stay ahead—evidence of his grasp over information warfare and psychological manipulation.
He exploits rifts between enemies, even teaming up briefly with Gohan and Krillin to create leverage—an act that reveals his potential as a rebel, not merely a ruler.
Through this shift, Toriyama reveals that Vegeta isn’t just a warrior who fights by virtue of his status. He is capable of rebuilding his power base according to changing circumstances—even if by extreme means. This is where his complexity truly begins to unfold.
(c) Redefining the “Prince”: Revenge, Shame, and Stubborn Dignity
One of Vegeta’s most important lines on Namek is said to Goku: “Please… you must defeat Frieza.”
It’s the first time he openly acknowledges his inability to fulfill his mission alone. It’s also the first time he entrusts his supreme goal—revenge—to another person.
Emotionally: This signals his first step toward accepting vulnerability. Though he does not cry or show pain, his request is already a breakthrough of his former self.
Identity-wise: By entrusting the truth of the Saiyans’ extinction to Goku, he begins to let go of the obsession with being “the strongest,” and instead seeks to reclaim the prince’s dignity through the idea of “I must not die in vain.”
This moment marks the beginning of his psychological rebellion—not only against Frieza, but against his own past persona of emotional suppression.
2.2 Emotional Experience Brought by Cooperation
At this critical juncture on Namek, Vegeta’s first experience of “cooperation” marks a fracture in his emotional system. Although this alliance is highly utilitarian and manipulative, its deeper motivation is no longer simple self-interest—it is his unconscious first step toward forming a human connection, even if he himself doesn’t yet realize it.
(a) Alliance Formed: Hesitation and Choice After Cost-Benefit Evaluation
In his early characterization, Vegeta refused to rely on anyone. Saiyan culture glorifies solitary combat, and he treated others as burdens or threats. Yet, when faced with a common enemy—the Ginyu Force—he chooses to ally with Krillin and Gohan:
On the surface, he views them as tools for his own ends, manipulating them strategically, even threatening them to achieve his tactical goals.
The key is that he compromises and chooses collaboration, implying a subtle emotional concession at a subconscious level.
This shift reveals a crack in his emotional defenses: after weighing the benefits, he momentarily abandons the posture of a lone, invincible warrior.
(b) Dual Psychology: “Using Others” and “Wanting Connection”
Vegeta’s behavior seems cold, but hidden beneath the veneer of manipulating others lies another motive: he needs collaboration. Ostensibly for survival, but essentially a hidden attempt to rebuild a sense of community. In these non-hostile partnerships, his behavior becomes ambiguous:
No longer employing extreme language to suppress Krillin and Gohan.
He abandons the “strong lone wolf” principle, and shows willingness to negotiate.
His tone evolves into a mix of irony, command, and warning—e.g., threatening then later seeking Goku’s help to defeat Frieza.
This atypical “violent expression” becomes a primitive form of communication. Vegeta doesn’t lack gentle words—he simply has no idea how else to express himself.
(c) From Orders to Interaction: Emerging Language Fragments
Language reveals emotion and thought. On Namek, Vegeta’s speech changes subtly:
He begins saying things that hint at emotional modulation—such as reminding Gohan to flee in episode #298.
Though still aggressive, his tone shows an expectation of response—e.g., in episode #283 he begins real exchanges.
He no longer speaks like an absolute master, but offers guidance or seeks understanding from others.
These linguistic shifts indicate that Vegeta is transitioning from a closed self to an interactive personality. This is not a conscious decision, but an instinctive response from his emotional system triggered by external stimuli.
(d) Krillin and Gohan: Emotional Mediators
As Vegeta’s most frequent collaborators on Namek, Krillin and Gohan spark emotional growth in him:
Krillin remains wary, yet trusts Vegeta in pivotal moments (e.g., Vegeta promises not to kill them if he gains power in episode #271).
Gohan, though fearful, shows trust and saves Vegeta in episode #277.
Their gentle but resolute interactions begin to shake Vegeta’s emotional armor. He experiences, for the first time, the possibility of non-violent connection. They become not only catalysts for his momentary trust but also training objects for emotional sharing—forcing him to learn, subconsciously, how to be with others.
This may explain why, later, Vegeta suggests reviving Goku’s soul on Earth—a sign of his emergent need for emotional connection.
2.3 Crying Before Death:这 The First Break in Self-Isolation
Toward the end of the Namek saga, in his final clash with Frieza, Vegeta cries before Goku for the first time. This moment represents the first collapse of his emotional defense system: he drops pride and aggression, openly exposing his vulnerability, regret, and existential suffering.
(a) Multilayered Emotions Behind the Tears: Anger, Shame, Grief, and a Cry for Help
Vegeta’s tears are not a single emotion—they are an emotional meltdown:
1.Extreme hatred for Frieza :
After watching Frieza crush his comrades and being unable to respond, the tears stem from facing his ultimate oppressor—betraying his childhood wounds.
2.Self-shame as the “Prince” :
As Saiyan royalty, he is powerless to avenge or protect—his unfulfilled honor leaves him in deep self-doubt.
3.Delayed trauma of childhood oppression:
He never truly processed the death of his father or his race. At that moment, all that buried sorrow resurfaces.
(b) Entrusting Before Death: A Turning Point
For the first time, Vegeta entrusts his emotions, hopes, and dignity to another. He doesn’t hold on to arrogance—even at death’s door. This is a rare departure from his old emotional code.
His plea for Goku to defeat Frieza is not prideful, but a surrender of the self’s burden to another.
He shifts from carrying everything himself to relying on someone else to continue his will.
This gesture includes: sharing his tribal pain and hatred; initiating a communal emotional experience; delegating vengeance to others; moving from elite warrior to emotional individual capable of trust and vulnerability.
This is the first genuine step Vegeta takes toward emotional integration and trust, building on his earlier cooperative experiences with Earth’s fighters.
(c) Projection onto Goku: Idealization and Compensation
Goku—a lower-class warrior—stands up to Frieza, which shatters Vegeta’s worldview. He projects onto Goku: idealizing him as the one who can finish Vegeta’s incomplete mission. In Goku, he sees the emotional freedom and battle dignity he himself couldn’t attain. So his tears are for both himself and the suppressed potential of his identity. Goku stands as both entrusted ally and Vegeta’s unfulfilled self-ideal.
(d) From “Proud Prince” to “Vague Individual”
Vegeta’s “death” is not bodily, but a relinquishing of his old self:
He cries in front of others, admits vulnerability.
He steps down from the “Prince” and “Warrior” roles, manifesting as a desolate individual baring his pain.
This act is a first step toward emotional expression and self-integration, marking the dawn of his human awakening.
Chapter 3: The Intervention of the Other — Earth Civilization and the Fracture of the Self
3.1 The “De-militarized” Challenge of Earth Culture
(1) “Instinctual Displacement” under Cultural Shock
Vegeta, coming from a Saiyan society that worships strength and treats war as daily life, was suddenly thrust into an Earth civilization centered on peace, family, and entertainment. To him, this was nothing short of a “forced study abroad” — not a voluntary contact with Earth culture, but an outcome of failure, wounds, and exile that threw him into an alien environment.
This led to instinctual displacements and cognitive clashes on multiple levels. It was not a mere matter of “inadaptability,” but a reflexive defense triggered when his core cultural value system began to be restructured. His irritable, distant, and proud behavior in this period was, in fact, an anxious response to the intrusion of a new order upon his personal boundaries.
(2) The Loss of “Non-Combat Value” and Self-Alienation
In Saiyan culture, value equals combat power. However, in Earth society, one’s value is not determined by battle ability, but rather by contributions to society and care for loved ones. This entire value system was foreign to Vegeta — even untrustworthy.
Psychologically, this represents an adaptive pressure caused by cognitive dissonance. He used to equate “the strong” with absolute power, yet on Earth, figures like Gohan, Krillin, and Bulma held value not based on combat, but emotional bonds and social behavior.
Though he never voiced it explicitly, Vegeta faced these challenges to non-combat values repeatedly in daily life. He was not unaware — but caught in a constant swing between comprehension and rejection. This state shows he was on the verge of cognitive disintegration: the old evaluation system was loosening, yet a new framework had not been built.
(3) The Beginning of Identity Cuonflict
Although Vegeta had settled on Earth and held the outline of a family, he still could not truly “place” himself within it. He participated in group battles, yet rejected group belonging; he had familial relationships, but struggled to internalize the identity of a father or partner. He existed in the margins between being a “resident of Earth” and a “pure Saiyan.”
At this stage, Vegeta exhibited signs of identity blurring:
He could not fully articulate his position and sense of belonging in his current environment.
He could not completely abandon his former self-labels.
He kept a distance from Earth’s family structures, yet sometimes appeared within them.
This psychological structure is not contradictory, but rather a typical cross-cultural identity tension. It reflects the pain and drift that occur when the individual’s old role framework loosens, and a new one has yet to be constructed. This is a classic conflict stage in identity development — a tension between individual value recognition and the environmental value system.
3.2 Goku as a Counter-Identity: A Projection of Self-Anxiety
Goku’s presence has never been just that of a combat rival to Vegeta. Rather, he acts as a persistent psychological coordinate—an “Other” whom Vegeta cannot ignore, yet struggles to accept. The rise of this low-class warrior shook the very foundations of the Saiyan class hierarchy that Vegeta relied on to define himself, thereby introducing cracks in his elite-based identity.
Vegeta sees Goku as a mirror—not out of admiration, imitation, or envy, but as a psychological defense mechanism through projection. His repeated emphasis on “Saiyan pride” and “princely dignity” actually externalizes the traits in Goku that he finds incomprehensible: ease, warmth, the ability to grow stronger without relying on authority. These qualities evoke not longing, but a deep-rooted anxiety, as they highlight what Vegeta has suppressed within himself.
This is thus a projection that does not arise from identification. Goku becomes the referential “Other” against whom Vegeta delineates his own boundaries. By defeating this Other, he seeks to affirm the validity of his own path.
This dynamic sustained itself for some time and remained a hidden line of internal conflict for Vegeta. Before his family and emotional life entered the picture, Goku existed as a form of mirror-reflection—helping Vegeta maintain a primitive structural stability within his wavering sense of self.
3.3 Encountering Bulma: The First Infiltration of Daily Life into the Battlefield
If Goku represents a mirrored Other through whom Vegeta projects his identity anxieties, then Bulma becomes the real-life conduit through which emotional softening first occurs. Goku stirs in
Vegeta an imaginary notion of “alternative growth”; Bulma, on the other hand, embodies that possibility as a tangible relational experience. This shift lacks dramatic narrative upheaval but quietly initiates the first internal reconfiguration of Vegeta’s psychological structure. It is through her that the sphere of daily life first enters his war-dominated world.
(a) The Seed of a Non-Combat Relationship: An Exception within Restraint
Bulma does not define relationships through strength or confrontation. Her mode of interaction is rooted in the ordinary, in emotions and language. In both the manga and supplemental works, Bulma is often seen encouraging Vegeta through provocative yet affirming comments. She creates a form of interaction entirely foreign to Vegeta’s known world—yet one he finds strangely tolerable. With her, Vegeta shows both avoidance and coldness, but also a rare, low-key tendency to maintain the bond.
This posture can be seen as a form of “selective intimacy avoidance.” Lacking a secure early attachment system, Vegeta distrusts close bonds. Yet Bulma’s stability and non-intrusiveness offer him the first chance to explore a “non-combatant attachment” model.
(b) Passive Emotional Activation: From Defensive Independence to Functional Connection
Bulma never forces Vegeta to change, nor does she use emotional coercion to pull him into a relationship. Her unconditional presence gradually awakens emotional responses in Vegeta’s long-dormant affective system. He begins to respond to her emotional cues through behavioral details—mostly nonverbal. These reactions, though subtle and restrained, mark his first step from “self-seclusion” to “acknowledging others.”
Psychologically, this marks a shift from defensive autonomy to functional connection. Vegeta still upholds his personal boundaries, but now quietly allows the presence of others in his life.
(c) Softening of Identity Boundaries: Acknowledging the Role of Daily Life
In the past, Vegeta derived his identity solely from being a warrior. Strength and victory were his only metrics for self-worth. Bulma’s presence introduces a new value system—one not measured by power. Gradually, he begins to accept non-combat labels like “husband,” “father,” and “companion.” Though he never actively claims these titles, he no longer rejects them either.
This stage signifies a move from a single-dimensional identity toward a multifaceted role structure. Psychologically, it reflects a loosening of his rigid narcissistic defenses and an opening to a more relational, complex self.
(d) Bulma as an “Accepting Other”: An Anchor in His Emotional System
Functionally, Bulma is not a “changer” but a “container.” She does not deconstruct Vegeta, nor does she seek to tame him. Instead, through consistent presence and unwavering care, she steadily absorbs every hesitant approach or retreat he makes. She becomes the first “accepting Other” in his emotional world—not an idealized figure or a rival, but someone who allows him to remain imperfect and guarded, while still being part of a relationship.
At this stage, Vegeta has not yet fully abandoned his warrior-centric identity or his dependence on strength. Yet he has initiated a micro-restructuring toward becoming a “domesticated individual.” He is no longer solely defined by battle, nor does he rely entirely on solitude to assert his existence.
Chapter 4: The Return of Pride – Identity Regression and the Prelude to Softening
4.1 Temporary Identity Regression and Value Anxiety
(1) Anxious Self-Validation under Forced Breakthrough
At the start of the Cell arc, Androids 19 and 20 had overpowered the warriors, pushing the situation into a moment of crisis. At that point, Vegeta’s sudden appearance, effortlessly defeating Android 20 with overwhelming power, became the key turning point. His golden-haired form, cold tone, and dominant posture exuded a long-lost sense of superiority. This battle was not only a physical victory, but also a psychological attempt at “identity reconstruction.”
Vegeta’s display of his new form masks a deep need to compensate for prolonged self-doubt. His arrogant speech and scornful expression function as a self-affirmation ritual: “I’ve finally caught up and surpassed you.” After repeated failures and humiliation on Namek, and then personally witnessing the Super Saiyan transformation upon Trunks’ arrival, Vegeta now finally seizes the opportunity to lead the situation before everyone. Through this victory, he seeks to confirm a singular truth: “I am still the strongest Saiyan prince.”
However, this sense of superiority does not stem from stable internal self-recognition, but rather from a reliance on external validation. This so-called “victory” becomes a facade, a cover for insecurity—once stronger enemies or unpredictable changes emerge, Vegeta’s psychological foundation will once again begin to crumble.
(2) An Identity Structure Built on Others
After defeating Android 20, what Vegeta mentions most frequently is not the power gain itself, but “I have finally surpassed Kakarot and restored the dignity of the Saiyan prince.” On the surface, this line boasts of surpassing his rival, but in truth, it reveals the fragility of his identity structure: Vegeta is unable to form an independent understanding of who he is. He continuously defines his value in relation to Kakarot—his so-called “restoration” is built on that comparison.
His strong obsession is not purely a thirst for battle, but a “false self” constructed by projecting Goku as a mirror image—a distorted form of “hero projection.” Vegeta denies Kakarot, attempting to erase his presence, yet remains dependent on the value he derives from this rival. This dependency fuels his anxious rivalry with Goku and also acts as the very source of the intense pressure he imposes on himself.
This explains why Vegeta’s self-realization during this period is always accompanied by a sense of heaviness and isolation—he desires to be powerful, but can only construct his identity through the negation of others, a path that is inherently unsustainable.
(3) The Limits of Destructive Growth
In the latter part of the Android arc, Piccolo chooses to fuse with Kami in the face of an escalating threat, drastically increasing his power and becoming one of the strongest warriors at the time. Upon learning of this, Vegeta outwardly maintains his arrogance, but is clearly agitated inside. When Piccolo warns him “Don’t underestimate your opponent,” Vegeta reacts with visible anger: “Don’t lecture me!” This response is not merely a flare-up of pride, but a manifestation of boundary-based anxiety triggered by being surpassed by someone outside his usual field of projection. He cannot accept that someone like Piccolo—who is not a “rival target”—could disrupt the coordinate system of his identity, thus provoking resistance.
This moment exposes the fragility of Vegeta’s identity structure: at this stage, his self-construction is heavily dependent on a mirror-like projection centered around Goku. What he is pursuing is not an absolute measure of strength, but a relative psychological position. Once someone outside that axis surpasses him, it instinctively induces discomfort and rejection.
With this disturbed psychological state, Vegeta chooses to train in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber with Trunks, as suggested by Goku. In contrast to Goku and Gohan’s collaborative and harmonious training, Vegeta’s regimen is isolated and sealed-off. He pushes himself to the limit, squeezing out every ounce of potential through rage, shame, and obsession. This represents a typical path of destructive growth: it is not for inner integration or self-acceptance, but to convert the shame of being surpassed into fuel for evolution—lacking any sense of cooperation or shared development.
Although he declares he has surpassed the normal Super Saiyan state, Vegeta at this point has already come to use power as the sole means to affirm his existence. He has not truly gained confidence; he merely cloaks deeper anxiety in stronger armor.
(4) The Collapse of Confidence and the Return of Shame
After leaving the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, Vegeta calls himself “Super Vegeta,” trying to emphasize his new level beyond Super Saiyan. At first, he indeed overwhelms Semi-Perfect Cell with a devastating offensive. However, at this crucial moment, he commits the most fatal mistake in the arc—he allows Cell to absorb Android 18, enabling his evolution into Perfect Cell.
This decision stems from his blind faith in his “invincible power,” but also reflects his inner desire to face a truly powerful opponent. In essence, it is a desperate attempt to reaffirm his self-worth—he would rather face a stronger enemy than accept the unstable state of an unfinished fight.
When Cell reaches his Perfect form, Vegeta is utterly defeated. His confidence shatters instantly, giving rise to rage and a deep sense of shame. These emotions are further amplified as Goku and Gohan’s powers grow (this is clearly shown in Chapter 391). Once again, Vegeta channels these feelings to return to the Time Chamber for further training.
(5) The Silent Collapse of His Identity Structure
By the time of the final battle against Cell, Vegeta appears silent and distant. Unlike before, he no longer tries to control the situation or assert his presence as a dominant force. Although his strength has improved, his internal convictions have begun to waver.
On the surface, Vegeta still upholds the posture of a warrior, but psychologically, the “prince” role is already beginning to unravel. He starts to sense that he can no longer exist on this stage as the “strongest.” Rather than insisting “I must surpass Kakarot,” he begins to accept, “I may not be the center, but I still exist.”
This shift in identity is not yet explicit, but it lays the psychological groundwork for his later rage when Trunks is killed—and even more significantly—for the character transformation and emotional realignment during the Buu arc, when he ultimately sacrifices himself.
4.2 The Mirrored Bloodline That Was Never Embraced: Conflict Triggered by Paternal Anxiety
In the Cell Saga, Vegeta confronts the identity of “father” for the first time in earnest. Rather than learning how to become a father, he is trying to understand what the concept of “father” even means. Due to the timeline’s setup, the first version of Trunks he meets is not the young child he helped conceive, but a fully formed future version of his son. This arrangement imbues their initial encounter with a deep sense of dislocation and detachment, turning their relationship into a mirror that reflects the fragmentation of Vegeta’s own identity.
(1) A Fatherhood That Never Had a Beginning
Future Trunks’s upbringing occurred almost entirely without Vegeta’s involvement. He took no part in raising or shaping the boy. In fact, Vegeta didn’t even realize that the young man before him was his son until Piccolo accidentally let Trunks’s name slip. In other words, beyond Vegeta’s general disregard for others, he was forced to engage with Trunks as a “father” only after the boy’s developmental journey had already been completed. This created a powerful sense of overstepping, or psychological displacement. He had no foothold for emotional connection and no transitional period in which to gradually “become” a father.
As a result, Vegeta found himself in a passive and somewhat sluggish role within the family dynamic. He didn’t know how to respond to this figure who was simultaneously a stranger and his blood relative. In contrast to the natural emotional expressiveness and attachment between mother and son, Vegeta appeared hesitant, distant, and even lost in this three-way relationship.
(2) A Rejected Attempt at Replication
When confronted with Trunks’s personality and ideals—gentle, restrained, rational, and cooperative—Vegeta experiences a deep sense of mismatch. These qualities sharply contrast with his own perception of what it means to be a Saiyan, and by extension, himself. His instinctive reaction is a mix of disappointment and shame: this child is not “like me.” As described in previous sections, Vegeta had constructed an identity for himself rooted in a specific warrior ideal. Yet at the same time, he doesn’t outright reject Trunks. Rather, he subconsciously attempts to replicate a “proper” father-son dynamic based on his own prior experiences.
This manifests as a broken version of Saiyan-style education:
He negates emotional expression in the face of combat;
He criticizes Trunks for his “weakness”;
He emphasizes Saiyan identity and the superiority of strength;
He tries to establish authority through battle, not words or care.
In doing so, the “prince’s spirit,” or the pride of the Saiyan, resurfaces. He tries to bridge the gap of fatherhood through these means, believing that by re-enacting the “education of the strong,” Trunks will naturally come to understand and respect him.
But the issue lies in the foundation: this education is based on a model that never truly raised Vegeta himself. His memories hold no image of a warm father figure—only a destroyed homeland and a brutal upbringing.
As a result, this form of “education” was doomed from the start. Vegeta cannot be sure whether Trunks accepts his method, nor whether “becoming someone like me” is even something worth aspiring to. His criticism and aggression are mingled with his own defense mechanisms against failure and internal denial. The more he insists “I (as a Saiyan) am the standard,” the more his anxiety is laid bare.
This version of Vegeta is a crumbling symbolic father figure—attempting to reconstruct the Saiyan value system of the past while gradually realizing he cannot even persuade his own son. He clings to authority and distance but has never truly understood what emotional closeness entails.
(3) A Blurred Emotion Behind Harshness: The Unspoken Bond
Although Vegeta verbally denies Trunks’ perceived weakness and strives to maintain a cold and arrogant demeanor, his actions consistently betray a different message. The original manga depicts scattered scenes of him spending time with his family, and notably, he and Trunks spend a full year together inside the Hyperbolic Time Chamber (though the father-son interactions are explored more fully in the game’s DLCs and will not be discussed here). During the battle with Cell, Vegeta unleashes a powerful outburst of rage upon witnessing Trunks’ death.
These behaviors indicate that Vegeta had already, somewhere deep within, tacitly accepted the existence of a father-son relationship. Yet, having never experienced intimacy, trust, or emotional reliance, his expressions of affection appear especially clumsy and fragmented. He neither knows how to express care nor how to anchor his self-worth within close relationships.
Rather than “teaching” Trunks, it may be more accurate to say he was attempting to teach himself how to become a father. Along this uncompleted journey, he felt ashamed to admit his concern, and equally ashamed to admit his need for acceptance. In the end, this father-son dynamic becomes one of the most silent yet profound elements of his identity development—a source of challenge, and also a potential starting point for redemption.
4.3 The Illusion of Strength: The Cost of Pride and Emotional Disconnection
After finishing their training in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, Vegeta and Trunks acquire unprecedented power. Yet, upon facing Perfect Cell on the battlefield, Vegeta’s internalized “illusion of superiority” resurfaces with full intensity.
(1) Allowing Cell’s Perfect Form: A Compulsion for Self-Validation
When Cell tempts him with the offer to reach his perfect form by absorbing Android 18, Vegeta unhesitatingly allows it. He is convinced that his current strength is enough to overcome any opponent. However, this decision reveals not only a flawed assessment, but also a deep-seated psychological projection rooted in his anxiety:
He must defeat the “strongest enemy” to affirm his own power.
He cannot endure another predestined failure in comparison to others.
He mistakenly believes that this victory will once and for all end his long-standing identity crisis.
His obsession with the “strongest” identity may appear to be a manifestation of his royal pride, but it is in fact a compensatory response to his past loss of dignity and the constant pressure of being surpassed. This misjudgment disregards the larger tactical situation and also ignores Trunks’ repeated warnings—another instance of how he represses the father-son connection and avoids emotional vulnerability.
(2) The Uncooperative Father: Emotional Closure Before Parental Awakening
At this stage, Trunks has clearly shown both combat ability and sound judgment, and he repeatedly attempts to communicate and collaborate with his father. Yet Vegeta still refuses to acknowledge him either as a “comrade” or a “son,” instead regarding him only as an immature “young Saiyan warrior.” This refusal conceals a deeper implication: recognizing Trunks’ maturity would mean admitting that Vegeta is no longer the sole possessor of strength and authority.
Vegeta’s mode of “education” is entirely based on replicating his own path as a Saiyan prince—loneliness, pressure, and combat-absolutism. When Trunks displays emotion and independent thought, Vegeta selectively ignores or even belittles him. These “softer qualities” are, to Vegeta at this point, too unfamiliar and too threatening.
(3) The Contrast Between Goku and His Son: The Emotional Path Vegeta Avoids
The training between Goku and Gohan in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber presents a parent-child relationship built on trust, emotional communication, and collaborative action. Rather than imposing his authority, Goku guides his son through equality and trust. This model of “cooperative growth” is both unfamiliar and deeply provocative to Vegeta.
In contrast, the lack of open interaction between Vegeta and Trunks causes Trunks to remain unaware of the flaws in his new transformation. This avoidant form of parenting is actually a suppression of emotional instinct—a defensive mechanism shaped by Vegeta’s years of solitude and repeated failure.
Goku’s self-destruction to save Earth becomes a tremendous psychological shock for Vegeta. For the first time, he clearly witnesses a version of Goku who fights not for power, but for others—directly confronting the emotional core that Vegeta has long evaded.
At this stage, Vegeta does not undergo an immediate transformation, but a shift has begun. Though unwilling to admit the value of emotions, he can no longer deny their existence.
(4) The Death of Trunks: The Complete Tearing of an Emotional Rift
It is only when Trunks is killed by Cell that Vegeta awakens from his “illusion of invincibility” in an instant. He not only erupts emotionally but also momentarily loses all battle rationality. This reaction reveals:
Emotionally, Vegeta had long regarded Trunks as a true family member.
However, on a conscious level, he had never been prepared to acknowledge this emotional bond.
Trunks’ death is not merely the loss of a comrade—it is a forced revelation of his identity as a father.
This moment marks the rupture of his illusion of strength, but also the activation of his emotional connection. It shatters Vegeta’s self-image that centers around isolation and combat prowess, yet places him at the origin point of emotion for the first time, allowing him to realize that “being there” and “protecting” may hold more meaning than defeating all opponents.
When Gohan loses an arm to save him, Vegeta apologizes—a moment containing both shame for his tactical failure and genuine remorse for his prior coldness and obstinacy.
This is the first time he sets aside his “prince” posture and begins to accept himself as a “father” and “comrade.” The preceding events—Goku’s sacrifice, Gohan’s rise, and Trunks’ death—are what ultimately push him to take this step.
4.4 A Silent Farewell and the Awakening of Fatherhood
With Cell completely destroyed by Gohan, the battle comes to an end. In this final confrontation, Vegeta did not fulfill his earlier wish to become the one who would decide the outcome. Instead, he played a supporting role, while Gohan, having ascended to Super Saiyan 2, took on the burden of saving the world. For Vegeta, this conclusion was not merely a loss in battle—it marked a devastating blow to his self-identity.
Yet it was precisely within this moment of defeat and disillusionment that Vegeta began to relinquish his sole reliance on the identity of a “Saiyan Prince,” and quietly accepted the seed of a new role—that of a father.
(1) A Temporary Halt to the Identity of the Warrior
After the battle with Cell, Vegeta made a brief but unexpected declaration: “I will never fight again.” This was not a definitive end to his fighting career, but a conscious moment of release from his absolute dependence on “battle as selfhood.” In the chaos of his fractured identity, he sought a space to breathe. This statement reflects several crucial aspects:
He came to realize that the dignity of being a “prince” could no longer sustain a complete self-concept.
In the face of Gohan’s victory, he acknowledged that “surpassing” was no longer an eternal path.
His obsession with power began to give way to a deeper sense of guilt and emotional introspection.
This marked a rare moment where Vegeta distanced himself from his core identification as a “fighter,” silently gestating the transformation of his role.
(2) The Subtle Establishment of the Father Role: Foundations of Internalized Fatherhood and Nonverbal Connection
As everyone bid farewell to Trunks, Vegeta, sitting under a tree, made a silent farewell gesture. This act, consistent with his long-standing “emotional defense mechanism,” also signaled a significant internal shift in his emotional structure. Throughout his consistent resistance to acknowledging “parent-child relationships,” this nonverbal gesture served as a unique projection of fatherhood—feelings left unspoken, yet conveyed through action.
In this restrained yet honest gesture, he transitioned from a “passive recipient of emotion” to an “active transmitter of emotion.”
Thus, Vegeta’s emotional trajectory formed a coherent path from emotional numbness to emotional recognition:
In Section 2.3, his fierce unwillingness to die reflected the shattering of his previous projections.
In 3.2, his rivalry with Goku as a projected other self illustrated his struggle with anxious identification.
In 3.3, Bulma, introduced as an “emotional container” and “non-combative other,” offered him a glimpse of the possibility of being accepted—a precursor to emotional loosening.
And in this section, for the first time, he proactively communicated his feelings in his own way—a behavioral sign of integrative identity.
From this point on, Vegeta begins to understand the value of “protection” and “connection.” The “silence” after the Cell Games was not a void, but a prelude to an internal shift in identity. Though he never explicitly claimed to become a “good father” during this arc, through shame, guilt, and the failure of self-identification, he finally began to see his child and his family—and attempted to find belonging in a non-combative world.
This process of “Earth-ification” was quietly incubated within the silence of the Cell arc.
Chapter 5: Identity Reconstruction and the Acceptance of Innate Nature — The Transformation from a Blurred Self to an Independent Individual
5.1 From “Prince” to “Father” — The Earthly Identity in the Early Buu Arc
At the beginning of the Buu arc, Vegeta’s character undergoes a marked transformation. Compared to his earlier image as a “solitary warrior” whose only value lay in battle, he now finds himself in a transitional state—caught somewhere between “family member” and “fighter.” His behavioral patterns, emotional expressions, and self-perception all begin to show signs of “Earthification.”
(1) The De-militarization of His Public Identity
In this arc, Vegeta no longer consistently appears in battle attire. Instead, he begins to wear casual clothes, speaks without aggression, and even willingly sits in the passenger seat beside Bulma when traveling with the group. These seemingly mundane moments represent significant shifts in his identity construction. For a Saiyan who had long lived by combat and taken pride in solitude, simply “wearing casual clothes” suggests not only an acceptance of Earth’s lifestyle but also a willingness to exist in a “non-combat mode.” He is transitioning from a purely “Saiyan Prince” to an “everyday individual”—one who no longer needs to remain constantly on alert, but can now seek his place in ordinary life.
(2) A Desire to Spar Rather Than to Conquer
When he joins the Tenkaichi Budokai, Vegeta’s motivation is no longer to assert overwhelming dominance or solidify his rank. Rather, he seeks an opportunity to spar with Goku and Gohan, and this desire is no longer based on the premise of negating the other, but stems from a personal longing for pure competition.
In this phase, Vegeta begins to dismantle his inner structure of “strength = solitude,” stepping into a battle culture that allows for coexistence and interaction.
(3) Oscillating Between Saiyan Tradition and Paternal Role
While training Trunks, Vegeta tells him, “Land one hit on me and I’ll take you to the amusement park.” This kind of reward-based communication is completely at odds with his previously rigid training logic. It reveals both an experimental step into fatherhood and his clumsiness in emotional expression. When he sees tears well up in Trunks’ eyes, he even appears flustered.
This moment highlights his first breakthrough in understanding “non-combat value.”
However, it’s important to note that he still hasn’t fully mastered the language of paternal love. In the original manga, we often see him try to connect with his son through combat-related behaviors (such as his protective actions during Trunks and Goten’s match). In a way, these responses underscore his inner conflict between Earth’s values and Saiyan parenting norms. This tension lies at the heart of his identity reconfiguration.
(4) The Psychological Shift from “Warrior” to “Family”
By this point, Vegeta’s self-conception has undergone a qualitative change. He no longer defines himself solely as a “warrior” or “prince,” but is gradually integrating roles such as “husband,” “father,” and “Earth resident” into his self-image. This reflects a process of “multi-dimensional identity integration.”
Such a phase is commonly referred to as a “role-interweaving period,” where an individual begins to simultaneously take on and try to reconcile multiple social roles.
This also implies that Vegeta is attempting to break free from the old Saiyan framework in which “a single role equals total worth,” moving toward a more open and pluralistic model of identity construction.
From “not knowing how to respond to kindness” to “learning to maintain relationships in an awkward but tender way,” this is a deeply pivotal stage in his transformation.
5.2 Not a Battle for Battle’s Sake – The Reappearance of Goku as a Projected Other
(1) The Loosening of Projection: A Clinging to the Self
By the time of the Buu arc, Vegeta has already come a long way in his life on Earth. He wears civilian clothes, sits in the passenger seat beside Bulma, participates in family life, and displays moments of panic and vulnerability in front of his son. His gradual acceptance of the roles of “father” and “husband” leads him into an unprecedented loosening of self. But this softening does not come without a cost—he begins to question whether he still possesses the sharpness and pride of the Saiyan prince, or whether the warmth of daily life has eroded what he once saw as his essential self.
Thus, he proposes a fight with Goku and states explicitly that this battle is “everything to me.” Yet this is not simply a desire to defeat Goku. It is precisely because Goku, as a warrior, carries the weight of Vegeta’s projected self-definition at this moment.
Vegeta does not want to become Goku; he wants to affirm through this fight that he is still himself.
(2) A Shift in Projection: A Second Return?
In the earlier arcs—especially during Namek and Cell—Vegeta’s projection onto Goku was more characterized by oppositional idealization. Goku’s freedom, ease, and strength triggered Vegeta’s self-denial, defensiveness, and inner conflict. But by the time of the Buu arc, this projection loses its antagonistic edge and becomes something akin to looking into a mirror: through clashing with Goku, can I still see the Vegeta I once was?
This is a shift from an “idealized other” to a “self-verifying other.” Vegeta’s obsession with Goku is not as extreme as his words suggest; it is closer to an obsession with an unfinished ritual. Having never fought Goku in a fair, unrestricted battle, that unresolved knot has become a necessary step before he can redefine himself. He does not seek to defeat Goku, but to affirm himself through combat.
(3) In Battle, Gazing into the “Self After Change”
It is precisely for this reason that Vegeta chose the Saiyan’s most familiar mode of communication—battle. He never truly longed to kill his opponent, nor did he fantasize about an overwhelming victory. Rather, this fight resembled a private psychological ritual: at the brink of losing his identity as a warrior, he sought to awaken an inner sense of certainty through combat.
Through the dialogue between Vegeta and Goku, we also come to understand that this battle was not waged for glory or hatred, but to resist the self that was gradually becoming gentler and more like an Earthling—a self that felt both unfamiliar and unsettling to him.
Through battle, he sought once again to affirm: “I am still a warrior,” “I am still worthy of pride,” “I have not lost everything.”
(4) Boundary Affirmation: Asymmetric Projection and Denial
This battle with Goku was Vegeta’s final act of boundary confirmation amid his evolving identity. He had no desire to become Goku’s counterpart, yet the value system that Goku represented—gentleness, freedom, and acceptance—posed a challenge to Vegeta’s long-held sense of self. The proud warrior identity he once depended on began to falter within Earth’s familial and cultural context, leading to an evident dissonance in self-recognition.
Goku became a psychologically asymmetric projection: not a possibility Vegeta aspired to become, but an “other” he needed to distinguish and reject. Through battle, Vegeta sought defensively to reaffirm that his core essence remained unchanged. Even his acceptance of Babidi’s control can be understood as a strategy of projective attribution—externalizing his internal conflict to avoid facing the real cause of his “softening,” reflecting a critical process of self-differentiation: not founded on identification, but on separation and boundary redefinition.
However, when faced with the threat Majin Buu posed to Bulma and Trunks, he ultimately relinquished his internal resistance and agreed to let Goku face Buu first—even if it meant bearing the consequences of his own choices alone. This moment symbolized an inner shift: an acceptance of Goku’s identity and a value judgment rooted in Vegeta’s present sense of self—he could no longer ignore the place his family held in his heart. And in doing so, he brought an end to his projection onto Goku.
5.3 Self-Destruction: An Extreme Form of Emotional Expression
In this arc, Vegeta’s voluntary acceptance of Babidi’s magic marks a pivotal moment in his process of identity formation. Though on the surface it appears to be a strategy to regain power and reclaim his dignity, the choice conceals a complex set of underlying motives, reflecting deep internal conflict and a critical turning point in his self-perception.
(1) Voluntary Possession: Self-Confrontation Through Nostalgic Regression
As his family life on Earth gradually took shape, his lifestyle underwent a fundamental shift away from his identity as a “pure warrior.” Accompanying his wife, raising his son, attending social gatherings—all these behaviors steadily distanced him from the Saiyan warrior ethos, which prized isolation and stoicism. He began to question: Am I still the warrior worthy of being called the strongest?
Thus, when Goku reappeared and the threat of Buu loomed near, he chose to forcibly regress to his earlier self—an emotionally detached prince who lived solely for battle—through “Majinization.” This act of regression was not merely a tactical maneuver, but a nostalgic and self-confrontational response to identity crisis.
(2) Deeper Motives Behind the Behavior: Anxiety, Self-Punishment, and Power Insecurity
Although this decision seems to be about gaining strength, at its core, it functions as an act of self-punishment for his perceived emotional weakness. He believed that he had become soft—domesticated by Earth’s culture, and his will to fight dulled by the comforts of family life.
His anxiety stemmed from a split between two conflicting identities: the rising “human” side as a father and husband, and the declining “cold warrior” side as a Saiyan prince. He believed that only by renouncing emotion and severing bonds could he return to being a “true warrior” and once again compete with Goku on equal footing.
This is a reversal driven by power anxiety, and simultaneously a form of delayed emotional compensation.
(3) Self-Destruction: The Breaking Point from Emotional Suppression to Emotional Release
The most pivotal transformation occurs at the moment of self-destruction. After becoming Majin, Vegeta maintains his cold and aloof demeanor, but when faced with the hopeless reality of Majin Buu’s overwhelming power, he makes a choice that completely diverges from his former self: he chooses to sacrifice himself to protect Bulma and Trunks. In that moment, he openly admits his love for his son—“Since you were born, I’ve never once held you in my arms. Let me do it just this once…” This confession marks the first time the structure of his emotional suppression shatters. It is the first instance where he verbally affirms his paternal affection and presents a self that prioritizes family over strength.
(4) The Symbolic Meaning of the Self-Destruction: A Rite of Passage in Identity Reconstruction
Vegeta’s self-destruction is not merely a tactical act of self-sacrifice; it is a symbolic rupture with the old belief that “strength equals detachment.” No longer does he define his worth through combat—he now finds meaning in protecting those he loves. He redefines what it means to be strong: to bear burdens for the sake of others. This self-destruction serves as a threshold ritual in his identity reconstruction—he discards the royal logic that once required him to suppress emotion and accepts the new logic of identity that comes with being a husband and father.
5.4 The End of the Other – The Dissolution of Projective Identification
In the latter half of the Buu arc, the relationship between Vegeta and Goku undergoes a fundamental transformation. It no longer revolves around opposition or psychological projection, but gradually shifts toward understanding and coexistence. This change is not merely a relational update, but symbolizes the breakdown of the “Other mechanism” in Vegeta’s inner structure, marking a loosening and reconstruction of self-identity.
(1) The Collapse of Projective Identification: From Denial to Dissolution
Throughout their prolonged interactions, Goku served not only as a rival to Vegeta, but also as a sustained vessel of “otherness”—a being marked as “not me,” used to maintain Vegeta’s psychological boundaries and sense of wholeness. Vegeta externalized the parts of himself he could not accept (such as softness, attachment, and unburdened spontaneity) onto Goku, and preserved the purity of his identity as a warrior by denigrating, denying, or challenging these traits. This structure is a classic example of projective identification, and forms a vital part of his psychological defense system.
However, after returning from the afterlife and facing the impending crisis on Earth, the psychological utility of maintaining an “oppositional Other” begins to collapse. Though Vegeta initially refuses Goku’s suggestion to fuse, his hesitation reveals that his internal boundaries had not fully loosened—he was still not ready to confront the long-repressed aspects of himself. Yet, once he fully registers the danger posed to Bulma and Trunks, the defensive structure built on hostility, shame, and self-preservation finally shatters. His decision shifts toward emotional responsibility and an active merging driven by care.
(2) Acceptance of Difference and the Emergence of Self-Differentiation
The crux of this transformation lies not in Vegeta abandoning competition, but in his relinquishment of the compulsive need to deny difference. When he utters the words “You’re number one,” it may appear to be a statement about power, but in truth, it is an act of emotional release—a stance that finally permits others to be different from himself, and to coexist as such. He no longer feels threatened by Goku’s “otherness,” nor does he need to defeat him to validate his own existence.
This shift reflects an increased capacity for self-differentiation. Vegeta begins to move away from relationship dynamics based on control and confrontation, and toward interactions grounded in emotion, autonomy, and grounded responsibility. In other words, his identity is no longer built on reflections or negations of the Other, but is instead grounded in a stable sense of self that coexists with acknowledged difference. This enables a more mature relationship with Goku, and for the first time, allows Vegeta to enter cooperation without defensiveness.
(3) The End of the “Other Myth”: Toward the Integration of the Self
Before the Majin Buu arc, Vegeta’s path of growth had long been constrained by a psychological mechanism centered on the “Other.” By constructing Goku as an external figure that must be overthrown and dismantled, Vegeta maintained his image as a pure Saiyan warrior. However, at a moment of true crisis, he finally relinquished this structure. Whether it was accepting the fusion, fighting side by side, or abandoning his posture of dominance in the face of the world, Vegeta’s actions clearly indicated that he no longer needed to define himself through defeating or surpassing someone else.
This transformation is not the abandonment of pride, but a dimensional evolution of his identity structure. He no longer operates from the anxiety of “becoming someone,” but gradually moves toward the internal affirmation of “who I am.” Combat power is no longer the sole standard of value; instead, the integration of emotion, relationship, and self-coherence becomes his new axis of stability. In this sense, Goku ceases to be an object of oppositional projection, and becomes someone with whom he can coexist and co-create a sense of meaning in survival. At last, Vegeta emerges from the struggle against the Other and enters a process of reconciliation with himself.
5.5 The End of Flight — Establishing Family as the Core of Psychological Stability
In his early years, Vegeta regarded emotional bonds as burdens and obstacles—a belief deeply rooted in his upbringing under Frieza’s regime. For much of his life, he was never allowed to rely on others, and emotions were equated with weakness. Saiyan culture also treated close relationships as distractions from combat efficiency. As a result, Vegeta initially resisted and avoided the concept of “family” on Earth, despite fathering Trunks with Bulma. Rarely did we see him take on the role of a father within the family structure. However, this hostility toward family was not intrinsic to his nature, but rather a defensive cognitive framework formed through long-term isolation.
Over time, the consistent presence and emotional responsiveness of Bulma and Trunks began to gently erode this framework. Family ceased to represent the “weak” side of him that his old mindset had demonized. Instead, he began to actively adapt to his familial role and engage in it—taking responsibility for care and protection. This involvement was no longer driven by shame or social pressure, but emerged as a self-initiated and genuine choice.
From a psychological perspective, this shift marks a reconstruction of Vegeta’s emotional attachment system. The enduring presence of Bulma and Trunks offered him a real and sustainable emotional anchor, allowing him to reestablish a sense of self and rediscover meaning in his existence. Through this long-term emotional interaction, his core human needs—intimacy, affirmation, acceptance—were reawakened. Family became the safe outlet through which these needs could finally be expressed.
From defining his existence through combat power to affirming his identity through relationships, Vegeta’s path of selfhood enters a period of stability during this stage.
He no longer avoids love or resists vulnerability; instead, he internalizes the family as part of his self-system and views emotions as a continuation and integration of his strength. His understanding of happiness, responsibility, and sacrifice also undergoes a fundamental transformation through this process.
The Vegeta presented at the end of the Buu arc by Akira Toriyama is a calmer, more stable figure.
Yet he has not ceased his pursuit of self-betterment. His final statement—“Someday, I’ll beat you”—is no longer an extension of anxiety and projection, but rather a form of healthy competition pursued by someone who has learned to be at peace in his relationships and to find a home within his family.
After enduring the struggles of identity, dissolving projections, and reconstructing his emotional framework, Vegeta has completed his transformation from a solitary warrior to a relational individual.
His growth is reflected not only in the increase of power but in the restructuring of his inner psychological architecture. Family is no longer a peripheral element outside of combat, but the core anchor sustaining his sense of existence. When combat ceases to be his sole means of self-validation, Vegeta finally begins to dwell within relationships as a human being.
His dedication to his family and his acceptance of emotion are not signs of softening, but proof of maturity. The gentleness he once rejected has now become an inseparable part of his self-identification.
Because of this, the emotionally expressive and psychologically stable Vegeta seen in later works is not a jarring transformation, but the natural outcome of a long evolutionary process.
The following chapter will focus on the key axis of this transformation—Bulma, and the emotional safety and attachment she embodies.
Chapter 6: Bulma and the Formation of Attachment — The Bidirectional Shaping of Emotional Bonds
6.1 The Starting Point of Emotional Reorganization: From Identity Transition to Familial Integration
In Section 3.3, we observed how Vegeta, through his emotional interactions with Bulma, gradually began to soften his early self-defensive structures and accept the presence of the other within his own framework. Building on this idea, this section further analyzes how, by the beginning of the Buu Arc, Vegeta’s “earthification” process had quietly begun. His identity was no longer solely tethered to the labels of “Saiyan Prince” or “proud warrior,” but gradually integrated into social roles such as “father,” “husband,” and “family member.” This transformation not only signals a reconfiguration of his psychological structure, but also lays the foundation for the softer, more emotionally nuanced Vegeta seen in later series installments. The so-called “family-loving Vegeta” is not an abrupt character reversal, but rather a natural extension of the underlying logic developed since the Buu Arc.
The following aspects demonstrate how Vegeta’s identity began to shift during this phase:
(1) Participation in Daily Family Life: Physical Embedding and Behavioral Adaptation
In the early Buu Arc, Vegeta’s everyday behavior reveals his preliminary recognition of the “family domain.” He no longer wears his battle armor at all times and begins to engage in shared activities with others, even choosing to sit in the passenger seat. He willingly offers playful conditions to motivate Trunks during training. While these acts may appear trivial, they are clear manifestations of his emotional integration—his physical placement and behavioral patterns within the family space begin to respond to the demands of emotional connection.
This kind of physical embedding can be viewed as a form of “behavioral identification,” where the individual repetitively participates in family affairs, silently acknowledging their position within intimate relationships. This form of identification does not necessarily stem from active emotional expression, but often arises from an implicit, not yet fully conscious, longing for attachment.
(2) Establishing the Father–Son Relationship: Emotional Projection and Reparative Compensation
In his approach to raising young Trunks, Vegeta displays a fathering style that balances sternness with attentiveness. He actively arranges training sessions and provides Trunks with direct feedback on his performance. This differs from the earlier, more instrumental or emotionally detached model of fatherhood he once exhibited, indicating a shift toward a reparative parenting intention.
From a psychological standpoint, individuals often reenact or attempt to heal the ruptures of their early family experiences through their own parenting. While Vegeta still struggles to express emotions verbally, his acts of care and companionship serve as symbolic compensation for the paternal absence he himself endured. During this stage, he relies more heavily on “behavioral investment” as a substitute for emotional articulation. His journey of “becoming a father” initiates an early mechanism of self-repair. Rather than an opening of true emotional intimacy, this can be seen as a functional substitution—responding to past unmet attachment needs through the enactment of fatherhood.
(3) Persistence in Power Advancement: Differentiating Self-Drive from Familial Protection
It is important to note that Vegeta’s relentless pursuit of strength during this period does not stem entirely from a sense of familial responsibility; it remains rooted in his long-standing individualistic drive. This “will to power” forms the core engine of his personal continuity—it is his way of preserving the cohesion of self. However, compared to earlier, more conquest-driven forms of improvement (e.g., the Namek Arc), his progress during the Buu Arc begins to diverge from a path of domination, turning instead toward more internalized, self-fulfillment-oriented training.
At the same time, his protective impulse toward his family clearly bears an emotional dimension. When Earth faces a crisis, his intervention is not purely instinctual but arises with the explicit awareness that Bulma and Trunks are under threat. This behavioral shift marks the first time he incorporates emotional attachments into his combat-related decision-making process, signaling the activation of an “emotional function” within his identity structure.
(4) Emergence of Emotional Identification: From Subordinate Fusion to Independent Participation
In the earlier stages of integration—as well as from the audience’s perspective—Vegeta appears more as someone who is “being accepted”: Bulma offers him refuge, and he finds a place to reside on Earth. However, by the Buu Arc, he begins to consciously take on familial responsibilities, transitioning from a “passive observer” to an “active participant” in family life. This shift serves as an early indicator of emotional identification, suggesting that he no longer views Earth and its family life as merely temporary shelter, but as an integral part of his own existence.
This gradual transition from “passive attachment” to “active embedding” lays the groundwork for his later emotional outbursts in Battle of Gods—such as his furious response to Beerus hitting Bulma. The authenticity of this reaction lies in the fact that it does not emerge out of nowhere; rather, it is the natural outcome of the emotional restructuring that quietly unfolded during the Buu Arc.
In summary, the Vegeta of the Buu Arc is not a cold, emotionless figure as he may superficially appear. Quite the contrary—his behavioral patterns have already initiated a prelude to identity transformation, a quiet yet substantial emotional reorganization. While his pursuit of strength remains a key mode of sustaining his subjectivity, his willingness to protect his family signifies a new dimension within his emotional structure. It is in this process that Vegeta begins to build psychological bonds and a sense of responsibility toward his “family.” This moment marks the origin and foundation for the softer, more emotionally resonant version of Vegeta depicted in subsequent storylines.
In the next section, we will examine Bulma’s perspective to further explore her pivotal role in this transformation—how she, through an attitude of acceptance and understanding, gradually intervenes in Vegeta’s emotional blind spots and facilitates the possibility of his integrated identity, in a stable rather than invasive manner.
6.2 Tension and Attraction in Complementary Personalities
(1) Tension-Based Complementarity and Emotional Compensation Attachment
The relationship between Vegeta and Bulma exhibits a high level of tension-based personality complementarity. Vegeta’s character is marked by an intense desire for control, pride, and a deep-rooted combat instinct—all traits shaped by his upbringing and royal status. In contrast, Bulma is autonomous, emotionally expressive, and grounded in practical reality. Interestingly, these stark differences do not distance them, but rather form a dynamic equilibrium imbued with a kind of conflict-based attraction.
Unlike others who fear Vegeta’s volatility and aloofness, Bulma not only dares to confront him but often displays an impressive ability to “decode” his behavioral patterns—perceiving the frustration, repression, and emotional awkwardness beneath his arrogance. In turn, Vegeta’s attitude toward Bulma gradually shifts from initial indifference and disdain to a kind of “silent accommodation,” such as choosing to stay at home, listening to her complaints, or participating in group activities. Though these behaviors lack overt emotional expression, they represent his active compromise in establishing emotional connection.
Psychologically, this phenomenon is referred to as emotional compensation attachment, where an individual lacking certain early-life experiences develops attachment to someone who embodies those missing traits. In Vegeta’s case, he had never encountered a relationship that was emotional, bounded, and not dominated by power. Bulma represents exactly this type of relationship—she asserts her will without being suppressed, while simultaneously offering a kind of acceptance Vegeta had never known before.
(2) Nonverbal Emotional Contracts and Behavioral Connection
In their daily interactions—such as arguments, banter, or simply appearing side-by-side in public—Vegeta and Bulma construct an implicit “nonverbal emotional contract.” Vegeta does not say “I love you,” and Bulma does not demand verbal confirmation. Instead, their mutual trust is built through actions: Bulma manages the household, and Vegeta responds through protection; Bulma nags, and Vegeta chooses to stay silent rather than retaliate. This “mutual defiance yet mutual concession” dynamic demonstrates not only their ongoing personality clashes, but also their emotional capacity to sustain balance within conflict.
The core of this tension-based attraction lies in Bulma’s continual pushing against Vegeta’s emotional boundaries, which in turn forces him to respond and gradually learn to express and tolerate emotions. Their bond is not founded on similarity or mutual understanding, but rather on the challenge and integration between two intense personality types—laying the emotional groundwork for Vegeta’s subsequent identity transformation.
6.3 Prototype Substitution: Emotional Reprojection of Childhood Deficits
(1) The Absence of Paternal Authority and the Break in Emotional Modeling
Vegeta’s childhood, shaped by Frieza’s oppression and the traditional Saiyan system, offered him the title of “Prince” but denied him a genuine childhood characterized by guidance and protection. His father, King Vegeta, functioned more as a symbolic model of strength than an emotional anchor. This absence of paternal care deprived Vegeta not only of an attachment figure but also of a model for emotional imitation. To him, “power” was the only legacy worth inheriting.
(2) Bulma as a Surrogate Prototype
Yet this repression did not erase Vegeta’s emotional needs—it merely buried them, only to resurface as projections onto key figures later in life. Bulma became the vessel and surrogate prototype for this projection. She embodies maternal traits—nurturing, acceptance, emotional presence—while also standing as a capable, assertive partner unafraid of confronting Vegeta’s sharp edges. To Vegeta, Bulma unknowingly provides the relationship model he should have experienced but never did—becoming the unconscious source of emotional fulfillment.
(3) Dual Functions: Emotional Regulation and Normative Structuring
This substitution process unfolds on two levels:
First, Bulma assumes the role of emotional regulator. When Vegeta expresses rage, anxiety, or frustration, Bulma typically avoids direct confrontation. Instead, she stabilizes the emotional tension through language, behavior, or even silence. While others fail to comprehend Vegeta’s actions, Bulma often offers non-judgmental support—fulfilling a maternal function he never received.
Second, she acts as a norm-setting partner. Rather than enabling Vegeta’s coldness or combative nature, Bulma introduces relational boundaries through domestic routines, parenting responsibilities, and social expectations. These norms are not imposed through top-down commands, but through emotionally participative guidance, helping Vegeta slowly adopt new social roles—husband, father, and citizen.
(4) Emotional Repair within the Paternal Role
A pivotal moment in this prototype substitution occurs through Vegeta’s evolving relationship with Trunks. Initially reluctant to leave a legacy on Earth, and perceiving offspring as potential threats, Vegeta gradually grows into his paternal identity. In the Buu Saga, he actively trains with Trunks, embraces him tightly in a moment of crisis, and utters the deeply emotional plea: “Take care of your mother.”
These actions go beyond imitating fatherhood—they represent genuine emotional growth. Through bonding with his son, Vegeta transitions from functional compensation to emotional restoration—he not only provides the warmth and support he lacked, but also begins to mend his own emotional wounds through generational care. Bulma’s steady companionship becomes the emotional fulcrum of this healing process, offering Vegeta a non-hostile emotional container in which he can explore vulnerability, connection, and ultimately break free from the defensive system built in his childhood.
6.4 Spiritual Symbiosis and Emotional Affirmation
(1) Emotional Compensation Mechanism: The Transition from Non-Attachment to Attachment
In the early stages of his relationship with his family—especially Bulma—Vegeta did not exhibit direct emotional attachment. Instead, he suppressed and transformed his complex emotions into more indirect behavioral patterns. His emotional expressions often took on “substitutive” forms, in which seemingly unrelated actions carried internal emotional projections and compensatory intentions.
This process clearly demonstrates Vegeta’s “emotional functional compensation mechanism,” marking a transitional phase from a non-attached individual to someone with attachment-oriented tendencies.
While not overtly affectionate at first, Vegeta began to gradually adapt to intimate relationships through interactions. For instance, during the Cell arc, he no longer insisted on acting alone but could calmly discuss Dr. Gero’s lab with Bulma. After training in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber, he even responded—albeit awkwardly—to Bulma’s question about Saiyan hair. These seemingly minor moments reveal his shift away from a purely battle-driven logic, as he attempts to engage in family life through “non-combat-oriented” behavior.
(2) The Construction of a Spiritually Symbiotic Structure: The Nonverbal Path of Mutual Understanding
As Vegeta and Bulma’s relationship matured, it developed into a unique form of “spiritual symbiosis”—a relational pattern that affirms emotional connection not through language, but through actions, responses, and continued presence.
For Vegeta, this form of emotional affirmation was more aligned with his internal tendencies: hesitant to verbalize, yet longing to be acknowledged. Bulma, in turn, intuitively understood this expressive style and took on the role of an “emotional mediator.” Rather than pushing him to transform immediately, she offered a stable emotional container at critical moments.
For example, she never harshly criticized Vegeta’s coldness; instead, she stabilized the relationship through routine, day-to-day gestures—creating a nonjudgmental environment that enabled emotional attachment. This patient and understanding approach allowed Vegeta to gradually shift from “substitutive behavior” to genuine emotional expression.
Their mutual understanding did not rely on ritualistic displays but was built upon long-term interaction and growing trust.
One of the clearest expressions of this symbiosis appears during high-stakes situations. When Vegeta prepared to self-destruct in order to protect his family, Bulma—though unaware—sensed a sudden wave of anxiety and unease from afar. This spontaneous emotional resonance transcends rational communication and reveals a profound emotional tether.
Another subtle example lies in Vegeta’s strategic discussion about how to use the Dragon Balls during the final battle with Buu. He specifically noted that if they made certain wishes, the people he killed at the tournament would not be revived. This demonstrates not only his meticulous planning but also his intention to minimize the moral and emotional burden Bulma and others would bear in the aftermath.
Indeed, in the narrative, Bulma promptly sets out to gather the Dragon Balls to revive those killed by Vegeta—not out of blame, but as an instinctive act of understanding and complementarity. She does not question his actions or react with fear or anger, but instead quietly considers, “What must Vegeta have gone through?” and responds with a compensatory gesture.
This behavioral attunement forms the foundation of their “spiritual symbiosis”—nonverbal, implicit, yet deeply resonant. Their mutual understanding is rooted in a deep familiarity with each other’s nature and motivations, forming a stable mechanism of “You don’t need to say it; I already know.”
It is precisely this structure that allows Vegeta to sacrifice himself without a word—and for Bulma to silently catch both the emotional and real-world consequences that follow.
(3) Embodied Expressions of Emotional Confirmation: From Presence to Coexistence
Beyond high-stakes situations, Vegeta’s responses in more mundane, everyday settings—such as Bulma’s birthday party or family vacations—also reveal how he is learning to express love in more grounded and human ways. Though he remains quiet and stoic, his willingness to participate stands out. He chooses to be present in non-combat environments, which marks a significant transformation for someone who once equated survival with solitude and power. His emotional confirmation doesn’t come through verbal declarations or explicit promises, but through subtle acts of companionship, continued presence, tolerance, and return. These gestures form an implicit emotional bond—one built not on words, but on enduring participation.
(4) Emotional Mirror and Complementarity: From Expressive Dissonance to Deep Understanding
Bulma’s role in this relationship is crucial. She does not try to forcibly change Vegeta’s personality. Instead, she offers a space of consistent emotional expression, light teasing, and patient companionship. Through this, she creates a relational experience in which Vegeta feels “understood rather than judged”—a rare experience in his life that gradually allows him to let down his guard and build trust.
In the end, their relationship settles into a stable mode of action-based emotional expression. Vegeta will never say “I love you,” but he stays by Bulma’s side when she needs him and makes her position in his life clear to others. Bulma, in turn, does not demand overt emotional dialogues, but remains present after every conflict, and offers quiet support when Vegeta is at his lowest.
This mode of emotional exchange is best described as a mature form of emotional mirror complementarity: when one partner is reticent, the other fills the silence with empathy and interpretation; when one expresses clumsily through action, the other holds the space with humor and understanding.
In this symbiotic bond, Vegeta ultimately receives the emotional validation he never had, while Bulma witnesses the possibility of influencing and softening a deeply isolated soul. Their love is not only a process of mutual construction but a mutual practice of healing and emotional growth.
6.5 The Seen Self: Vegeta’s Identity Integration through Bulma’s Perspective
Vegeta’s growth is not only a journey of self-discovery, but also a process of “being seen” by others. From Bulma’s point of view, we witness how a once closed-off, rigid warrior—nearly incapable of emotional connection—gradually becomes someone understood and accepted within an intimate relationship, eventually achieving identity integration. Bulma is not merely a one-sided transformer; through her interactions with Vegeta, she becomes an irreplaceable “mirroring other” in his development—someone who reflects his truest self while also serving as an external anchor for the reconstruction of a new self.
(1) Emotional Recognition and Behavioral Decoding: Bulma’s Mechanism of Understanding
In her relationship with Vegeta, Bulma demonstrates a remarkable ability to recognize and interpret emotion. She does not retreat in the face of his coldness or volatility. On the contrary, she is able to discern the anxiety, inner struggle, and hesitation beneath his exterior. She offers support in her own way—for example, in Chapter 375, when Vegeta claims he can defeat Cell alone after donning his new battle armor, Bulma comments, “Sigh… still so stubborn.” This reflects her deep understanding of his behavioral patterns—she recognizes this as his unique “emotional language.”
This kind of understanding establishes a silent rapport and a posture of acceptance. Bulma does not attempt to directly “change” Vegeta, but instead, gradually decodes and embraces his emotional expressions. In doing so, she allows him to lower his defenses and begin trusting that he can be understood. This marks a significant transformation: in power-based relationships, Vegeta never learned to express emotions—but through intimacy with Bulma, he learns that emotions can be accepted.
(2) Affirmation through Action: A Shared Logic of Alternative Expression
Vegeta rarely articulates his emotions verbally; instead, he expresses them through actions—protecting his family, accompanying Bulma on trips, stepping forward in critical moments. Bulma quickly learned to understand this language of action and willingly established a relationship on that foundation. She does not demand romantic words, but responds and affirms his repeated demonstrations of devotion.
This forms a kind of “alternative emotional confirmation mechanism.” In conventional relationships, emotional expression is often dependent on words and explicit commitments. But between Bulma and Vegeta, their trust is built upon long-term behavioral interaction. He doesn’t say “I love you,” yet she knows he would risk everything for her. The stability of this bond is not reliant on rituals or formality, but on mutual understanding and acknowledgment of each other’s expressive modes.
(3) Boundary Setting and Identity Training: Bulma’s Guiding Role
Bulma’s assertiveness in family life serves as a form of “socialization training” for Vegeta. Rather than simply tolerating his behavior, she clearly establishes boundaries: he must take care of their child, participate in family activities, and take responsibility for Trunks’ development. These life expectations are far from easy, but they become essential avenues for Vegeta to re-learn what “responsibility” and “relationship” mean.
Raised in a rigid, utilitarian, and emotionally barren environment, Vegeta lacked awareness of others’ needs and had no experience in caregiving or emotional reciprocity. Through these domestic routines, Bulma gradually guides him into a world where being a warrior is not the answer to everything—a world where strength is no longer the sole measure of worth, and where gentleness, stability, responsibility, and return are the keys to meaningful life.
She helps him build a new identity structure—not just as a prince or a fighter, but also as a father, a husband, and a partner. These roles don’t diminish his strength; instead, they become deeper extensions of his selfhood.
(4) Emotional Mirroring in a Stable Relationship: Mutual Acceptance and Projection
The relationship between Bulma and Vegeta exemplifies a “mirrored-growth relationship,” where both continuously see the other more clearly, and in doing so, come to better understand themselves. Bulma’s traits—her defiance of authority, emotional expressiveness, and trust in relational bonds—are exactly what Vegeta lacks but unconsciously yearns for. Meanwhile, Vegeta’s pride, discipline, and intensity provide Bulma with the fulfillment of “influencing someone powerful.”
Within this mirroring dynamic, Bulma becomes the emotional projection of something Vegeta never had—a mother figure who encourages and understands him. She partially replaces that absence, offering warmth, boundaries, and steady emotional support. At the same time, she doesn’t fall into the savior role; she remains a mature individual maintaining healthy tension and balance in their interaction.
This two-way mirroring allows Vegeta to not only “be seen,” but to learn how to “see others”—especially Bulma and Trunks. When he ultimately says, “Take care of Mom,” it is not only a gesture of affection toward Bulma, but also the result of an integrated sense of self. He finally understands that being understood and emotionally responsive does not undermine his pride, but instead reflects a mature way of loving and existing.
(5) From Independence to Symbiosis: The Completion of Identity Integration
Bulma’s role is not limited to being a wife; she acts as a “bridge”—connecting Vegeta’s past and present, his self and others, his isolation and his belonging. Through her continued understanding, tolerance, and guidance, Vegeta completes the transition from a solitary fighter to someone capable of multiple social roles.
This identity integration is a process of “allowing oneself to be needed.” In the past, Vegeta believed strength was the only proof of his existence, but now he finds value in everyday family life. He once believed only in power, but now he cherishes connection. With Bulma’s companionship, he undergoes a life transformation—from living to fight, to becoming strong in order to protect.
And Bulma’s acceptance of him proves one thing: true change in a person often doesn’t come from external force, but from the internal willingness to take that first step—once they are seen, trusted, and embraced.
Chapter 7: Mutual Evolution of Love and Self-Exploration
7.1 Love as a Catalyst for Self-Acceptance
(1) From Defense to Openness: Love Awakens the Repressed True Self
Vegeta’s true nature has never been as cold and ruthless as his outward demeanor suggests. Although Saiyan culture glorifies strength and devalues emotion, his choices and behaviors have repeatedly revealed a latent yearning for intimacy, acceptance, and belonging. Bulma’s arrival marked the first turning point in his life when he was forced to confront the “true self” he had long repressed.
In front of Bulma, Vegeta gradually lowered the defenses imposed by his royal identity. Initially ashamed to express his feelings, he acted aloof, masking his concern with feigned indifference and impatience. However, this repressive way of managing his emotions was quietly dismantled by Bulma’s persistent understanding and acceptance. Whenever Bulma was injured or in danger, Vegeta would erupt in uncontrollable rage time and again. These outbursts were not signs of a loss of rationality, but rather the clash between his underdeveloped emotional expression and the genuine, powerful emotions within him.
(2) From Duty to Desire: Relationship Becomes Part of the Self
The most profound impact of love on Vegeta was not found in romantic declarations, but in his gradual acceptance of emotional experiences he had once vehemently denied—fear of loss, longing for companionship, and the need to be understood. These emotions, once deemed “weaknesses” in his original value system, were legitimized by Bulma’s presence and redefined through repeated interaction.
His care for Bulma was never born from her being a “partner” or “family member” in a functional sense. Rather, it was because she was Bulma—a unique, courageous individual who truly understood him. His feelings were not initially anchored in relational roles but rooted in her very being. This deep connection meant that even when he denied it verbally or distanced himself behaviorally, he could never truly disregard her.
Over time, he moved from “denying his concern” to “acknowledging her importance.” Protecting Bulma ceased to be a matter of obligation dictated by social roles and became a sincere emotional wish: “I want to protect her.” This shift in motivation marked not a burden of responsibility but an embrace of emotion—a willingness, for the first time, to respond to his own feelings without suppression or avoidance.
Ultimately, Bulma provided him with an emotionally safe and stable space where he could gradually explore, affirm, and integrate the true self that had long been repressed under Saiyan cultural expectations. This relationship did not weaken his warrior instincts—instead, it allowed him to integrate the roles of “fighter,” “father,” and “lover” into a more authentic and complete self.
7.2 The Trajectory of Emotional Integration: Balancing Control and Belonging in Intimate Bonds
In Dragon Ball, Vegeta and Bulma’s relationship is never depicted through conventional romance tropes, but rather through shared presence and everyday interactions. Their bond evolves subtly—from an ambiguous beginning to a natural assimilation into family roles—marking a shift in Vegeta’s possessiveness from defensive dependency to a more secure, intimate connection. This transformation isn’t a sudden shift, but the cumulative result of long-term interaction, where emotions are gradually activated, absorbed, and internalized.
(1) Latent Dependency: The Defensive Psychology at the Outset of the Relationship
When Vegeta first meets Bulma, he shows no obvious signs of emotional attachment. On the contrary, he exhibits traits of a personality type marked by high self-esteem and low interpersonal trust. Even when Bulma offers him support and acceptance, he often responds with aloofness, stubbornness, or avoidance.
At this stage, his possessiveness functions more as a subconscious emotional self-preservation mechanism—he doesn’t want to lose the chance to be understood, but at the same time, he fears the pain and loss of control that emotional dependence might bring.
For example, in the Android Saga, when Bulma’s aircraft is attacked by Android 20, Vegeta does not immediately rush to protect her and their unborn child. This isn’t merely a sign of indifference, but rather a reflection of his mindset still being firmly anchored in his identity as a warrior. He has not yet learned how to redirect his instinct to protect toward an intimate partner. His emotional defenses remain intact, and his possessiveness is still repressed, manifesting instead through cold detachment and avoidance.(While some later official materials—told from Trunks’ point of view—suggest that Vegeta already knew the baby was his and would certainly save them, this text focuses on the original manga, so we will not elaborate on that here.)
Another symbolic moment occurs after they return from the Hyperbolic Time Chamber. When Bulma asks why his hair hasn’t changed, Vegeta initially replies seriously: “A pure-blooded Saiyan’s hair hardly changes from birth.” But suddenly, his tone sharpens, and he shouts, seemingly flustered: “Now’s not the time to be talking about pointless things! Why did you even come here, Bulma?!”
This uncharacteristic outburst reveals a rare emotional lapse in his interaction with her. Normally composed and commanding, he is rattled by her casual, light-hearted question. On the surface, he answers earnestly, but once he realizes the emotional intimacy embedded in the exchange, he hastens to reassert emotional distance through irritation and dismissal.
This sense of “anxiety about being seen through” illustrates his unstable attachment tendency at the time—he doesn’t want to admit he cares, yet he cannot disregard her presence. His possessiveness at this stage appears most vividly through acts of denial: a contradictory posture of “I won’t say it, but I care.” These moments leave subtle gaps between his words and actions, revealing an inner emotional conflict that has yet to resolve.
(2) Emotional Awakening: Projection and Awareness in the Role of a Parent
With Trunks’ birth, Vegeta’s emotional pattern began to shift quietly. Though still unaccustomed to directly expressing his feelings, he gradually revealed a sense of self that extended beyond his warrior identity through his interactions with his family. He started to pay silent attention to Trunks’ growth, channeling his concern for Bulma and their son into guiding actions. His training no longer served battle alone, but became driven by a new motivation—to become stronger for the sake of protecting someone. This shift indicates a redefinition of what “being relied upon” truly means to him.
The emotional tone of this period no longer aligns with the defensive rejection seen earlier, nor is it simply about fear of loss. Rather, it reflects a subtle and continuous inner transformation—he comes to realize that Bulma holds a far more significant place in his life than he had initially imagined. Yet, he does not rush to offer emotional validation; instead, he chooses to communicate through steadfast action.
The emotional tone of this period no longer aligns with the defensive rejection seen earlier, nor is it simply about fear of loss. Rather, it reflects a subtle and continuous inner transformation—he comes to realize that Bulma holds a far more significant place in his life than he had initially imagined. Yet, he does not rush to offer emotional validation; instead, he chooses to communicate through steadfast action.
As a result, his possessiveness gradually shifts from being rooted in hidden anxiety to becoming a form of stable affirmation. It is no longer driven by fear of loss, but by the hope of becoming someone “worthy of her choice.”
(3) Emotional Sublimation: The Self-Detonation and Farewell in the Majin Buu Arc
The true emotional transformation culminates in the Majin Buu arc. At this stage, Vegeta not only confronts an overwhelmingly powerful enemy but also, for the first time, faces the significance of love and attachment in his life.
When Vegeta realizes that he cannot defeat Majin Buu on his own and is incapable of ensuring Bulma and Trunks’ safety, he chooses to self-destruct. This decision is not merely a practical one; it represents a direct refutation of his former belief in personal power supremacy and serves as his first open acknowledgment of emotional bonds.
In the line, “Bulma, Trunks… farewell,” Vegeta releases the emotional weight he had long kept buried. He speaks not out of pride or wounded dignity, but from a profound awareness of what those words mean. It marks the first time he clearly articulates his emotional ties, transforming them into a sense of responsibility.
His sacrifice is not made to prove anything, nor to win others’ understanding, but because it is the choice he makes from the depths of his heart—without hesitation.
His “possessiveness” is no longer entangled with insecurity or defensiveness. It becomes a conscious and stable emotional affiliation—not a fearful confirmation of love, but a calm, internal acknowledgment of it.
In that moment, he is not seeking love—he is responding to it. He is not afraid of loss—he is shouldering responsibility. No longer connecting out of a lonely identity, he integrates that identity through love itself.
7.3 The Reverse Construction of Belonging: Emotional Reshaping Through Acceptance
In Vegeta’s emotional growth, Bulma’s role goes far beyond that of a mere “trigger.” She acts as an emotional anchor and point of belonging, providing steady acceptance and resonance throughout his ongoing self-reconstruction. This support is not based on emotional demands, but rather on a “reverse construction”: she responds to coldness with acceptance, meets delayed emotions with patience, and builds trust through freedom.
(1) Non-Forcing Maintenance: The Implicit Warmth of a Stable Relationship
Bulma never forces Vegeta to express his emotions, nor does she distance herself because of his cold demeanor. On the contrary, she maintains the emotional warmth of their intimacy with a tenacity that is resilient but never oppressive. She does not constantly expect emotional responses from him, but persistently sends signals like “I’m here” and “You can be yourself.”
For Vegeta, this was an entirely new emotional experience. Never before had he been allowed to maintain a defensive posture in an intimate relationship, nor had anyone ever told him that not expressing emotion could still count as existing within one. Bulma’s stable presence silently built the safety net of relational security in his understanding.
(2) Feedback Through Acceptance: Voluntary Closeness in the Relationship
In the Dragon Ball Super anime, Bulma rarely complains about Vegeta’s emotional detachment during her pregnancy, yet when she goes into labor, Vegeta immediately abandons his training to be by her side.
This decision was not an impulsive act driven by a surge of affection, but a conscious response—he knew that his presence was both welcomed and needed. Bulma did not verbally acknowledge his transformation, but accepted his companionship in a natural, matter-of-fact way. It signaled to Vegeta that he no longer needed to neglect life for the sake of battle, and that his emotional shortcomings would not exempt him from responsibility. He chose to stay—not because he had to, but because he finally understood that with Bulma, his “choices” would never be coerced nor devalued.
(3) Trust Through Freedom: Non-Controlling Support as the Foundation of Security
Vegeta is used to being in control of everything, but Bulma has never tried to control him. What she offers is freedom—to fight, to train, to be himself. And this very freedom, paradoxically, becomes the deepest form of trust between them. She not only supports his continued pursuit of strength, but also silently allows him to participate in high-risk battles. Regardless of the outcome, she always waits for him to come home. This unquestioning trust is what enables Vegeta to maintain balance between his roles as a “warrior” and a “father.” It also allows him to believe—for the first time—that he can be whole, without being torn between being a strong fighter and a devoted husband.
(4) A Sign of Emotional Softening: The Rebound of His Attachment System
At its core, what Bulma gives Vegeta is a space where he can exist in his entirety. He doesn’t need to suppress his feelings, pretend to be hard, or give up on combat and personal growth. Her understanding, support, and tolerance provide him with an anchor of identity and a place of emotional grounding.
And yet, Vegeta’s emotional expression still tends to be delayed and restrained—he continues to rely on actions more than words to respond to love. This pattern has become a kind of “fixed mechanism” in his emotional structure.
It is not until Dragon Ball DAIMA, with the introduction of the “de-aging” setting, that this mechanism finally begins to loosen. Stripped of the framework of adulthood, those deeply suppressed impulses for attachment, expression, and protection begin to surface. He no longer avoids emotion, nor does he conceal his affection.
This transformation is not merely a result of narrative setup, but also marks a form of “attachment system repair” and a deeper emotional reboot within his structure. The next chapter will provide a detailed analysis of this emotional renovation process.
Chapter 8:Attachment Mechanisms and Emotional Repair—— The Process of Psychological Reconstruction in Dragon Ball DAIMA
8.1 Return to Childhood and the Symbolism of Psychological Regression
In Dragon Ball DAIMA, Vegeta and the other characters are transformed into children—a narrative twist that is not only playful but also psychologically significant. For Vegeta, this “return to childhood” is far from a mere physical transformation; it marks a loosening and reconstruction of deep-seated psychological structures, revealing a need to unbind long-suppressed emotions and revisit unfinished phases of personality development.
(1) Miniature Form as a Visualization of Psychological Regression
Psychological regression refers to a phenomenon where, under pressure or internal conflict, individuals revert to earlier stages of emotional or behavioral development. Although the “shrinking” in DAIMA is a fictional plot device, it carries deep symbolic weight. It strips away the multiple “role shells” that Vegeta has carried over the years—prince, warrior, father, husband—and allows his core self, or id, to re-emerge.
This state does not erase his intellect or emotional memory. Rather, it allows him to experience, react, and express in ways aligned with a child’s emotional logic, while retaining his adult consciousness. He no longer suppresses feelings or delays emotional responses. Instead, he exhibits more direct and primal reactions—such as anger, anxiety, possessiveness, and a protective instinct.
This means that through the mechanism of regression, Vegeta begins to reengage with the parts of himself that had been buried by social roles and personal pride. It is a re-initiation of self-expression from the inside out, enabling a partial repair of emotional development stages previously stunted or left unresolved.
(2) Exposure of the “Archetypal Personality” after the Removal of Identity Symbols
The adult Vegeta’s ego structure has long been constructed upon the logic of power and the value of battle. His personality is heavily wrapped in layers of identity symbols such as “Saiyan pride,” “power competition,” and “paternal responsibility.” This structure has shaped a typical externalized self—proud, composed, and unshakable.
However, in his miniature form, he loses the support of these socially constructed power symbols. His behavior becomes more aligned with an unfiltered archetypal personality—emotional, direct, and instinctual. This shift highlights developmental gaps in his early emotional life, such as unmet attachment needs and underdeveloped emotional expression.
For example, he shows a greater willingness to approach Bulma proactively and express his concern; in interacting with others, he becomes more open and engaged, rather than aggressively guarded.
This state of de-identification reveals a personality driven more by the id, allowing long-suppressed but never extinguished emotional drives to surface—such as the longing to be needed, understood, and accepted.
(3) Rebooting the Emotional Mechanism and the Softening of Defensive Structures
Over the years, Vegeta has shown a highly restrained emotional mechanism in his relationships, with a psychological defense system characterized primarily by “aggression + denial + delayed expression.” In DAIMA, these defenses are temporarily suspended, allowing his emotional expressions to become more instinctual and his emotional motives more transparent.
In the narrative, Vegeta does not conceal his protective and possessive instincts toward Bulma. He even stops hiding that he needs her more than he needs battle. No longer does he use silence or avoidance to cover it up. This immediate emotional response is a clear indicator of weakened defense mechanisms.
His concern for Bulma is no longer filtered through the lens of a “warrior identity” or masked behind a constructed self-image. It originates directly from his authentic emotional needs.
These emotions no longer require justification through the language of “honor” or “duty,” but are expressed naturally and straightforwardly.
(4) Potential Psychological Repair and Developmental Compensation
In psychology, it is often observed that when emotional needs are unmet in early life, individuals tend to seek compensatory mechanisms later. The setting in DAIMA arguably grants Vegeta an opportunity for psychological restoration.
By returning to a child-like state, he enters a space where he no longer needs to maintain the facade of a strongman, nor bear the burden of identity-based expectations. This provides the psychological conditions for low defense and high emotional expression.
This process can be seen as a form of developmental repair—not a literal regression, but a symbolic return combined with emotional re-engagement, aimed at bridging gaps left in his earlier emotional growth.
As a result, Vegeta begins to exhibit healthier and more spontaneous emotional responses. This is not merely a stylistic shift in character portrayal—it signifies a genuine internal reconstruction at the psychological level.
8.2 De-defensiveness of Emotional Expression: From “Behavioral Compensation” to “Emotional Directness”
Vegeta’s emotional expression has long been characterized by its indirectness. In Dragon Ball Z and Super, his concern for his family and partner was often disguised beneath coldness, silence, or extreme behaviors (such as self-destruction or furious outbursts). This mode of expression functioned as a form of behavioral compensation: when he was unable to articulate emotions verbally, he would instead “express” them through actions.
However, in DAIMA, this compensatory mechanism appears to have notably loosened. His emotions begin to surface without pretense or mediation. This shift reflects a psychological transformation in which emotional expression moves from defensiveness to spontaneity—that is, emotions no longer need to bypass the cognitive system to be converted, but instead emerge as more primal and directly felt. This transformation is visible on several levels:
(1) Enhanced Synchrony Between Emotion and Action: The Disappearance of “Rationalization”
In past narratives, Vegeta’s emotional reactions typically lagged behind the triggering events. For instance, his rage after Bulma is harmed, or his grief after Trunks’ death, represent classic cases of delayed emotional release. This is due to his internal code of strength, which does not permit him to reveal emotions immediately.
But in DAIMA, this “rationalized delay” is significantly weakened. He now rushes to protect Bulma the moment she’s in danger; the gap between emotion and action has narrowed. This indicates a softening of his internal emotional suppression mechanism, trending toward a low-defense emotional expression structure.
(2) A Shift in Expressive Form: From Action-Based Substitution to the Emotion Itself
Earlier in the series, Vegeta’s emotional expression often relied on action as a proxy for speech. He used anger to carry concern, distance to mask attachment, and combat to replace emotional articulation. These were not deliberate acts of concealment, but rather the result of his lack of an expressive pathway. Actions became his adaptive strategy under a high-defense emotional structure.
In DAIMA, however, as his psychological defenses loosen, his expressive mode shifts dramatically. No longer does he need to translate emotion into complex behavior; instead, he expresses himself directly and naturally. He can now clearly show anger, irritation, care—even dependence—without needing to cloak them in silence or extremity.
This transition—from emotion-substituting behavior to the direct presentation of the emotional core—signals a new stage of expressive maturity. It is not merely a change in emotional content, but a restructuring of the mode of expression itself. His emotions no longer require concealment or symbolic packaging, and instead emerge in a de-role-ified, self-centered form. This shift is one of the central achievements of his emotional repair process.
(3) Elevated Internal Recognition of Emotional Value
In DAIMA, Vegeta does not exhibit shame or repression as a result of his emotional openness. He neither makes excuses for his worry, anger, or restlessness, nor denies the fact that he is expressing such feelings. Compared to his earlier tendency to avoid or feel awkward after revealing his emotions, here he displays a significantly greater sense of emotional coherence.
This shift reflects a cognitive transformation in how he perceives emotional value: no longer as a “weakness” or “source of shame,” but rather as an integrated part of his self-structure. It marks a rise in his level of self-acceptance and symbolizes the ongoing integration between his “warrior identity” and his “emotional identity.”
(4) A Shift Toward More Equal and Natural Interaction Patterns
Alongside this change in emotional expression, Vegeta’s interpersonal interactions also become more equal and instinctive. He no longer seeks intimacy through “opposition,” nor does he attempt to earn understanding through “domination.” Especially in his interactions with Goku, the competitive undertone is reduced, replaced by a mode of companionship more akin to that between everyday friends or brothers. This suggests that his emotional activation is no longer dependent on conflict.
Such a transformation in interaction style is indicative of an evolution from an oppositional attachment pattern to a secure attachment pattern—that is, he no longer needs struggle to validate his sense of existence, but can instead accept stable and equal forms of relationality. He no longer requires confrontation to affirm his value or to elicit an emotional response.
Vegeta’s emotional expression in DAIMA departs from the previous “repression–explosion” structure, moving toward a mode of “immediate–natural” expression. This marks not only an improvement in his emotional regulation ability but also a loosening of his psychological defense mechanisms and a reconstruction of his emotional personality. Where once he needed sacrifice or anger to demonstrate that he cared, he can now express love through low-intensity actions like showing up and staying close—clear indicators of emotional maturity and an increased sense of psychological security.
8.3 Reconstruction of Possessiveness and Attachment: Emotional Needs No Longer Bring Shame
If the previous section revealed how Vegeta gradually lowered his emotional defenses to express feelings more naturally, this part delves into the core emotional force behind that change—how attachment and possessiveness transitioned from repression to acknowledgment.
In his miniature form, Vegeta frequently displays a strong urge to protect and possess Bulma. However, this time it doesn’t come across as defensive hostility, but rather as a straightforward, childlike “I want you to be only mine.”
This sharply contrasts with his adult self, who often manages such emotions with “tough words and silent acts”—saying one thing but showing another through his actions. As an adult, he often feigns detachment to mask his emotional dependency. Yet in this youthful form, he no longer shies away from expressing his need to be cared for, even openly showing his desire for Bulma’s presence.
This unfiltered display of emotion symbolizes that his need for emotional connection is no longer bound by shame—it begins to return to its most fundamental, human form.
(1) From Repression to Acceptance: The Return of Attachment as an Emotional Foundation
At the heart of this change lies one essential shift: he starts allowing himself to “need” others.
In early Saiyan culture, dependence was regarded as a symbol of weakness, and emotions were considered unnecessary burdens. To survive within that framework, Vegeta built a nearly indestructible illusion of independence—denying emotional needs in order to maintain his pride and sense of control.
This defense mechanism forced him to suppress his attachment needs for a long time, redirecting them into obsessions with achievement or power.
However, Bulma’s persistent presence serves as a kind of “containing other.” She neither tries to change him nor judges his emotions, but always responds to his emotional fluctuations in a steady, gentle, and non-threatening way.This unconditional tolerance gradually fosters in Vegeta an internal belief that “it’s okay to rely on someone,” planting the psychological groundwork for the legitimacy of his attachment needs.
The childlike setting in DAIMA pushes this previously hidden attachment into overt expression. Without the regulating framework of his adult identity, these long-repressed emotional patterns naturally emerge.He no longer feels ashamed of saying “I need you.” On the contrary, he actively shows his reliance on Bulma.This is an emotional system reboot—a transformation where attachment shifts from being a defense mechanism to becoming a channel for genuine connection.
(2) The Return of Emotional Exclusivity: Possessiveness as an Expression of Intimacy
Notably, the intense possessiveness that miniaturized Vegeta displays toward Bulma does not stem from insecurity, but rather reflects a simple expression of emotional exclusivity—a desire to affirm the unique emotional bond between them. In childhood, possessiveness is often the most straightforward way of confirming closeness; it is not necessarily about control, but about the hope for emotional exclusivity. Behind such behavior lies a yearning for relational continuity—essentially, “I trust that you won’t leave me (because I can’t leave you).”
This return to a more rudimentary emotional structure marks a shift in Vegeta’s relational dynamics: from adult self-protection to childlike emotional seeking. Yet it is precisely this regression that enables the possibility of psychological reconstruction: a reframing of attachment not as vulnerability, but as connection.
(3) The Possibility of Reconstruction: From Emotional Unblocking to Relational Repair
What makes Vegeta’s attachment behaviors in DAIMA restorative is not simply the fact that he has “become small,” but rather that he is finally able to admit—without shame—that he desires to be needed, and also wants to be someone others need.
From a developmental psychology perspective, this represents a validation of emotional needs. It is not regression per se, but a reintegration of previously repressed emotional logics into conscious identity—transforming attachment from a defensive mechanism into a relational one.
This reconstruction is facilitated by the reduced cognitive pressure of the childlike state, but it also fundamentally relies on the long-term trust built in his relationship with Bulma. Without Bulma’s enduring presence as a “consistently responsive other,” the safe resurgence of this attachment would likely have been impossible.
8.4 Continuity of Identity Integration: The Fusion of Emotional Reconstruction and Self-Recognition
Vegeta’s regression to childhood in DAIMA may appear at first glance to represent an emotional backslide, but on a deeper level, it reveals a process of reconstructing and reintegrating his identity. In this process, emotional expression and identity transformation become mutually reinforcing—each one affecting and reshaping the other. As Vegeta gradually opens himself to emotional exposure, he simultaneously embarks on a redefinition of his sense of self, particularly through a renewed acknowledgment of his attachment needs.
(1) Recognizing Emotional Needs and Reconstructing the Adult Identity
Vegeta’s emotional needs are no longer seen purely as weaknesses or liabilities, but gradually redefined as legitimate parts of his self-expression. He begins to accept his desire for emotional dependency, especially in the presence of a partner like Bulma. In this dynamic, his need to rely on others is no longer something he feels ashamed of; rather, it becomes a central component of his identity integration.
In the adult world, dependency is often perceived to be in conflict with a person’s sense of autonomy or self-worth. However, within the narrative structure of DAIMA, Vegeta comes to understand that dependence and independence are not necessarily mutually exclusive. His relationship with Bulma serves as a bridge through which he learns to reconcile these seemingly contradictory aspects. He no longer needs to perform independence as a defense mechanism; instead, he becomes emotionally more open and authentic, gradually realizing that true strength lies in the ability to share emotional weight with others.
(2) Emotional Reconstruction and the Balance of Defensive Mechanisms
Though DAIMA presents Vegeta as increasingly open to attachment needs, this does not imply a total abandonment of his former defensiveness or individual strength. Rather, his acceptance of emotional dependence allows for a more integrated balance between his internal defenses and relational vulnerability.
Early Vegeta operated from a place of hyper-defensiveness. His desires and emotions were frequently repressed and veiled beneath a hardened shell of self-protection. In DAIMA, however, these defenses are not eliminated—they are transformed. He no longer expresses dependency through distancing or denial but finds healthier outlets for his emotional needs. By interacting more openly and sincerely with Bulma, he establishes a new, more constructive mode of attachment—one that allows space for vulnerability, while also acknowledging and accepting the care and support offered by others.
(3) The Synergistic Effect of Emotional Connection and Identity Reconstruction
Bulma plays an indispensable role in Vegeta’s emotional integration process. She is not only the object of his emotional dependence but also a critical catalyst in the reconstruction of his identity. Her presence allows Vegeta to accept and affirm his emotional needs from within, rather than seeing them as a sign of personal weakness as he did in the past. Through Bulma’s unconditional acceptance and support, Vegeta gradually lowers his emotional defenses and comes to terms with the fact that he is a person with emotional needs. This process is closely intertwined with the evolution of his self-identity.
The establishment of this emotional connection propels Vegeta’s identity transformation in Dragon Ball DAIMA. In the early arcs of Dragon Ball, Vegeta was a solitary and hardened prince, whose identity was heavily reliant on the image of the “Saiyan warrior,” with emotional expression nearly entirely suppressed. Under the setting of DAIMA, however, the disclosure of his emotional dependence not only redefines his inner world but also gradually guides him toward a more complete and authentic self.
(4) The Fusion of Dependence and Self-Identity: Possibilities for the Future
The integration of Vegeta’s emotional needs is not merely a psychological “regression to childhood,” but rather a significant stage in the evolution of his self-identity. His emotional dependence signifies that he no longer solely anchors his self-recognition in his role as the “Saiyan Prince,” but instead begins to incorporate more complex layers of identity: a father, a husband, an individual who is both loved and capable of love.
In future developments, Vegeta may continue to seek balance within the entanglement of emotion and identity. His growth is not limited to increases in strength or improvements in combat skills but lies even more in the continual renewal and sublimation of his self-understanding. Through his relationships with Bulma and with his family, he gradually comes to realize that dependence and intimacy do not weaken his pride—they make him a more complete person.
Chapter 9: A Shift in Responsibility — Vegeta’s Conscious Embrace of the Father Role
9.1 From Passive Observer to Active Participant — Three Stages of Paternal Evolution
Vegeta’s construction of a paternal identity evolves from a passive bystander to an active participant, undergoing a complex psychological transformation across three stages. Unlike the linear development of his “warrior” identity, the awakening of his role as a father involves intricate emotional projections, internal adjustments, and identity integration. This trajectory vividly reflects his redefinition of the relationship between responsibility and emotional expression.
(1) First Paternal Experience: Future Trunks — A Delayed Cognitive Projection of Fatherhood
Vegeta’s first encounter with fatherhood comes through Future Trunks. From the outset, this relationship is marked by a profound sense of temporal and spatial dislocation: what he faces is neither a son he raised from infancy, nor an extension of his own influence or personality—but rather a fully-formed, independently thinking warrior.
As a result, Vegeta responds to Future Trunks with emotional detachment and restraint. He tends to view Trunks more as a “potential fighter” or “strategic variable” than as an object of affection. Within the Saiyan value system, which centers on power, Vegeta has not yet internalized the “father” identity as part of his own self-concept. At this stage, fatherhood feels more like an externally imposed label than a psychologically integrated role.
(2) Second Paternal Experience: Young Trunks — Emotional Testing from Rejection to Participation
The original work offers limited direct depictions of Vegeta’s parental behavior during this period. Instead, it is through Trunks’ own words and actions that the emotional texture of their relationship is revealed. Young Trunks is mischievous and cheerful, presenting a sharp contrast to the calm, reserved Future Trunks. His choice of the affectionate term “Papa” (パパ) signals a deep familiarity and dependency on Vegeta’s presence.
When Vegeta offers to take him to an amusement park if he can land a hit, Trunks’ excited response—“Really? With Papa?”—reveals a childlike yet sincere longing. It implies that Vegeta, despite his stoic nature, has provided enough presence and care to be perceived as a reliable and emotionally significant parent.
This suggests that even as Vegeta maintains his typically Saiyan restraint, he has already been engaging in the actual work of parenting over the years. His form of fatherhood is largely non-verbal, expressed not through softness but through consistent companionship, training, and shared everyday life. This marks a transitional phase in his role: from emotional avoidance to tentative participation.
During this time, Vegeta begins exploring the parent-child bond beyond combat, slowly loosening the rigid structure of his identity. His willingness to respond to Trunks’ emotional needs through action—if not words—represents the early breach in his long-standing emotional defenses. His self-sacrificial act in the Buu Saga, detonating himself to protect his family, serves as a pivotal moment. Though the action still operates within a warrior’s logic, it unmistakably contains a father’s love. From that point onward, Vegeta becomes increasingly involved in family life, transitioning from a peripheral paternal figure to one who has begun to internalize the role.
(3) Third Paternal Experience: The Birth of Bulla — Voluntary and Joyful Fatherhood
The true turning point comes with the birth of Bulla. In Dragon Ball Super, when Bulma is about to give birth, Vegeta refuses Goku’s invitation to train elsewhere and chooses to remain on Earth to accompany her. This decision marks a profound shift in his paternal identity—it is the first time he places family responsibility above his warrior mission.
More importantly, what he displays is not just a sense of duty, but genuine joy and anticipation at the arrival of new life. Family companionship is no longer a reluctant concession during peacetime, as it was during the Android Saga, but rather something he actively chooses. Vegeta now faces his yearning for affection and emotional connection without shame. He no longer resists the gentler components of identity, but embraces fatherhood naturally and proudly.
This stage thus completes a deep transformation in his emotional identity. Future Trunks provided the “image” of fatherhood, young Trunks brought the “challenge” of fatherhood, and Bulla’s birth achieves the integration of fatherhood. At this point, Vegeta is no longer an outsider to the role of father. He views it as a vital part of his selfhood. Freed from shame and defensiveness, he now responds with softness and emotional continuity, revealing a long-lasting, stable affection that had long been hidden beneath his warrior’s pride.
9.2 The Remaking of the Warrior Identity Within a Family Structure
In Dragon Ball Super and DAIMA, Vegeta’s character gradually shifts away from the central theme of “warrior supremacy” and moves toward integration into a more complex family structure. This transition is not due to a decrease in external combat, but rather stems from a reconstruction of his internal identity: combat is no longer his sole defining core, and family is no longer just a narrative backdrop—it becomes the primary arena for his emotional development and self-integration.
(1) From the Logic of Power to the Logic of Family: A Shift in Value Coordinates
Within Saiyan culture and his early self-construction, Vegeta viewed “combat strength” as the standard by which all things were measured. From seeking recognition from Future Trunks to constantly comparing himself with Goku, he relied on power to maintain his self-respect and to dominate interpersonal relationships. In the beginning, he saw family as a secondary option—a mere by-product of a life centered around battle.
However, with the birth of Bulla and the deepening of his relationship with Bulma, Vegeta’s value system visibly shifted. He no longer felt the need to prove himself as “the strongest,” and instead showed a willingness to be vulnerable in front of Bulma and emotionally expressive in front of his children. This indicates his growing acceptance of the legitimacy of emotion, and his willingness to treat family ties as real, worthy components of life—not obstacles to his identity as a strong warrior.
(2) Structural Reconstruction: From an Outsider to an Emotional Anchor
During the Dragon Ball Z period, Vegeta often appeared as an “outsider” to family life: he didn’t engage in parenting, avoided emotional expression, and rarely initiated communication. He resembled a “part-time warrior who occasionally returned home,” lingering at the margins of the family structure.
However, in Dragon Ball Super and DAIMA, this structure undergoes a clear transformation. Vegeta actively accompanies Bulma during childbirth, appears frequently in parenting scenes, and even takes on the role of mediator and protector in family conflicts. He evolves into an emotional anchor of the household—a central figure who connects and sustains the emotional bonds among family members. This change is not merely behavioral participation, but a shift in cognitive belonging.
(3) Voluntary Withdrawal and Role Awareness: No Longer Resisting the “Gentler Self”
In his earlier years, Vegeta refused to admit that he needed a family. His emotional distance from Trunks and his conflicted, evasive attitude toward Bulma were all efforts to safeguard the integrity of his self-image as a “pure warrior.” To him, gentleness, dependence, and emotional expression were potential threats—forces that could unravel the armor of strength he had so carefully built.
Yet in later installments, particularly after Bulla’s birth, he begins to show a posture of “voluntary withdrawal.” He no longer regards battle as his sole arena, nor does he resist gentleness. He’s willing to pause training at Bulma’s request, to show anxiety, joy, and patience for the sake of his children. He starts to allow identities and emotions beyond the battlefield to enter and define who he is.
Behind this transformation lies a profound shift in self-perception: he now genuinely embraces the role of “father”—not as a reluctant duty, but as a chosen identity, rich with intimacy, warmth, and groundedness. No longer defending against these emotions, he begins to inhabit them with pride.
In Vegeta’s life trajectory, fatherhood is not merely an extension of the family structure, but a key pivot in the evolution and stabilization of his self-identity. From the hesitant evasion of early fatherhood, through his gradual adjustment during Trunks’ upbringing, to the joyful anticipation of Bulla’s birth, his acceptance and enactment of this role undergo a clear arc—from defensive detachment to conscious, voluntary identification.
Vegeta’s threefold experience of fatherhood—through Trunks (both future and present) and Bulla—not only deepens his relationships with his children, but also marks a significant milestone in his process of identity integration. Through these familial bonds, he is able to re-narrate his own unfulfilled attachment needs and, in the act of emotional giving, achieve self-repair and inner peace.
So then, for a Vegeta who has undergone numerous trials of identity, emotional reconstruction, and the reestablishment of attachment—how does he ultimately achieve the integration of his real self and his ideal self?
Chapter 10: Identity Integration — The Fusion of the Real and Ideal Self
10.1 Vegeta’s Process of Personality Integration
Vegeta’s journey of identity exploration has always revolved around a central question: Who am I? The answer to this question has undergone a long and conflicted evolution—from the externally imposed role of the “Saiyan Prince” to the later gradual emergence of multiple identities such as “father,” “husband,” and “warrior.”
However, after his life on Earth, the development of his relationship with Bulma, and his assumption of the father role, Vegeta’s personality slowly began to break free from being shaped by others. This was not a process of abandoning the past, but rather a conscious reinterpretation of it. He began to shift from “I must be strong and ruthless” to “What kind of person do I want to be,” transforming externally imposed attributes into values he internally accepts. This marks the key phase of personality integration—no longer fragmented between “Prince” and “Husband,” or “Warrior” and “Father,” but allowing these identities to coexist within a unified self.
This integration is also reflected in his changing attitude toward Goku. From early rivalry and confrontation to later fighting alongside him multiple times—even being willing to let Goku take the lead in battle—Vegeta exhibits a kind of recognition not based on winning or losing. He begins to accept Goku as a coexistent other. He no longer needs to defeat this “other” to affirm himself, but instead views growth as a shared path and victory as a by-product of training.
This marks a significant turning point in Vegeta’s identity, shifting from “external validation” to “internal motivation.” His personality evolves from a singular focus on power to a multidimensional, balanced existence: he still desires strength, but no longer to prove his bloodline—rather, to protect and choose; he still maintains his pride, but no longer rejects gentleness—instead, he incorporates responsibility, emotion, and value, forming a truly integrated self.
10.2 The Ultimate Integration of Relationships with Others: No Longer Defining the Self through the Other
Throughout Vegeta’s long path of growth, his relationships with others—especially with Goku—have served as key reference points in shaping his identity. Initially characterized by hostility and competition, these relationships gradually transformed into coexistence and equality, ultimately becoming catalysts for his self-integration. More crucially, in these relationships, Vegeta gradually broke free from the pattern of constructing his self-image through the lens of the other, and began to establish a self-directed path that neither depends on nor opposes others.
(1) Breaking the Mirror Structure: A Non-Projective Rivalry
Vegeta’s relationship with Goku was once a classic example of a “mirror enemy” pattern. He perceived in Goku a power path completely different from his own—something he did not aspire to become but that silently challenged his core belief that “coldness equals strength.” Goku’s existence evoked doubt in Vegeta’s old creed rather than inspiring pursuit of an ideal self. Through their rivalry and coexistence, Vegeta gradually realized that the real obstacle to his growth was not the difference between himself and others, but the rigid, repressive self-image within him, built on false beliefs.
(2) Breaking Free from Comparison: Independent Construction of Self-Worth
He began to face the differences between himself and others and used these differences as opportunities to explore his own unique path. In relationships with family, he learned softness; with enemies, he learned restraint; with others, he learned respect. These relationships formed a new identity system, no longer based on rejection or opposition but centered on internal consistency and a sense of boundaries.
(3) Internalization of Relationships: Transition from Opposition to Coexistence
At this stage, Vegeta no longer fixates on becoming a predetermined image but focuses more on affirming who he truly is. He gradually shifts from a projective identity to an intrinsic one, no longer relying on others’ perspectives to construct himself, but confirming his emotions, choices, and sense of worth through genuine interactions with others. This integration of relationships means he has finally broken free from passively reacting to the world and has actively engaged in shaping his life and identity.
10.3 Return of Meaning — Affirmation of Existence in Self-Choice
After a long process of conflict, struggle, and transformation, Vegeta’s identity gradually shifts from an externally driven “becoming the strongest” to an internal choice of “why he fights.” His actions are no longer responses to others’ evaluations or threats but stem from affirmation of his own values and consolidation of emotional relationships. This change manifests in three levels of development:
(1) From Will to Power to Value-Driven: Fundamental Shift in Behavioral Motivation
Early on, Vegeta’s fights were to prove his worth, maintain royal dignity, and respond to feelings of inferiority and anxiety. The core drive was “I must be stronger than you.” Later in the series, his battles are less about defeating others and more about responsibility, protection, and empathy. This marks a shift from “narcissistic validation” to “expression of value identification,” reflecting maturation in his psychological motivation.
(2) Internalization of Responsibility: From Role Identity to Subjective Will
Vegeta gradually transforms family responsibility from an external “add-on” role into part of his inner will. He no longer sees “fighting for family” as a weakness but as “something I willingly do.” This “internalization of identification” means accepting coexistence of multiple identities—warrior, father, husband—without seeing them as conflicting burdens. His joy and active involvement at Bulla’s birth exemplify responsibility no longer experienced as oppression but chosen freely.
(3) Reconstruction of Sense of Existence: The Path to Identity Integration
With the depersonalization of his relationship with Goku and transformation of family bonds from dependence to connection, Vegeta is no longer trapped by identity issues. He ultimately constructs an integrated rather than fragmented self: even without surpassing others, he affirms “I can be seen” and “I can be accepted.” He no longer attempts to build self-esteem through hatred or suppressing weakness but achieves self-worth through being loved, loving, and freely choosing.
Vegeta’s growth journey thus completes a profoundly meaningful identity integration. He no longer measures himself by a singular standard of strength nor uses others as reference points for his existence. He learns to accept himself imperfectly, affirm value in relationships, and realize freedom through choice.
This process reveals how an individual once torn apart by roles and expectations gradually aligns and overlaps “real self” and “ideal self” through ongoing relational restructuring and value clarification, ultimately transforming into an integrated personality with stable boundaries and inner recognition.
He no longer obsessively clings to the “lonely prince” but finds authentic meaning in becoming “himself.”
Conclusion: From the Lone Warrior to the One Who Chooses the Self
Vegeta, a character who initially identified himself as a “prince” and “warrior,” follows a growth trajectory that is far from linear. Instead, it is a continuous struggle of identity and psychological reconstruction. He barely survived Frieza’s oppression, wavered in his beliefs amid the failures and shame on Namek, and wandered on the margins of life on Earth, trying to preserve the remnants of his pride. Later, in the Buu saga, he experienced moments at the brink of self-betrayal and redemption, and gradually established attachment and sensed warmth through his relationship with Bulma, finally moving toward a genuine transformation in emotion and identity. Each of his “changes” was not a simple upgrade in power, but a rupture and rebuilding of identity, a dismantling and reconstruction of psychological defenses.
Through these ten chapters, we have witnessed Vegeta’s journey from an initial solitary defense mechanism toward a relational self and an integrated subject. His identity recognition shifted fundamentally from “battle as value” to “relationship as identity”; his emotional expression evolved from initial “suppression and denial” to “acceptance and expression.” Throughout this process, the multiple relationships he formed—with Bulma, his children, Goku, and comrades—became indispensable mirrors, challenges, and anchors in his identity construction.
It is worth repeatedly emphasizing that Vegeta never wanted to become Goku, nor did he truly see “surpassing Goku” as the ultimate goal. The long-standing rivalry was never about others or winning and losing, but about confronting and breaking free from inner illusions. What he truly transcended was the “false self” trapped in battle worship and fabricated dignity; what he genuinely achieved was a transformation from self-doubt to active choice, a redefinition of his nature and desires.
This is a psychological journey of self-acceptance and a story about free will and authentic choice. Vegeta is imperfect, often stubborn, obsessive, and quick-tempered, but it is precisely these genuine emotions and struggles that make him a fully human character undergoing transformation. He is not an idealized hero, yet he completes a true “growth” in terms of personality.
The “pride of the Saiyan”—once an obstinate creed he clung to as a symbol of strength and dignity—has gradually acquired new meaning through this internal transformation. It no longer solely represents lineage or an obsession with battle, but has become another expression of his sense of responsibility, emotion, and self-choice. It is at the moment of completing his personality integration that this pride truly belongs to him.
Do you think Vegeta is clingy with bulma when no one is looking? I feel like he craves her touch that’s why it’s so easy for her to withhold bath time
I think he has his moods, like anyone. I don't think it's an automatic thing that he switches into as soon as they're alone, although I do hc that he'll definitely lean into her touch even unconsciously if she instigates contact when they're on their own.
I do definitely agree that he craves it, whether he acts on it or not, but my personal hc for when Vegeta is clingy is when he's either Very Bored, Very Sleepy, or Very Drunk, and I had to wait to answer this until I was feeling well enough to doodle something because I love the idea that your house truly becomes a home once you're comfortable enough to be a little weirdo.
(Static boards for the gif)
To Be Loved is To Be Changed, Or Whatever - Manga Edition
Day 1 vs Day 5,101 (give or take)
Within the bottomless pit of a One Piece pilled brain, always lies a small, yet mighty Vegebul pill…
存下之前画的小动图
This is my primary takeaway from Daima
SHORT VEGETA NATION RISE UP
Sowing stars by Valera Lutfullina
“The Birth of Venus” by Adolph Hirémy Hirschl
To slay the beast that plagues me // The picture of Dorian gray
"hot spring" here I finally feel like I'm getting my fast-painting grip back <з
Mermay day 1! A conventionally attractive Sloane's Viperfish 🌙🌊
"Inhabits deep oceanic waters to more than 1,000 m depth; may migrate to near-surface waters at night..."
Had lots of fun doing this one but I'm afraid I set the bar too high 💀Let's see what happens tomorrow ~
FINALLY I’VE DRAWN SOMETHING OF MY TRIGGERFISH MERMEN COLLECTION! Here you have it: a Balistoides conspicillum merman ~ ♥
Please, don’t use or repost without permission ;-)
Por favor, no lo uses o re-postees sin mi permiso ;-)