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Dragon Ball Z series cover art featuring adult Goku in his Super Saiyan transformation mid-power-up roar, golden spiked hair and electric ki aura radiating across a dramatic red and black battlefield sky. Custom artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters.

Take Flight, Videl

EpisodeEp. 207

Gohan teaches Videl and Goten how to fly by explaining ki control. Goten picks it up instantly while Videl struggles before producing her first energy sphere. In Other World, Goku silences South Kai's boasts. At Capsule Corporation, Trunks transforms into a Super Saiyan. Videl returns the next day with short hair, ready to train.

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Learning to Fly

Gohan begins explaining the basics of flight to Videl and Goten near his home. The concept is simple: draw out internal energy and use it to push yourself off the ground. Videl has no frame of reference for ki. Goten demonstrates by firing a blast that obliterates a cluster of rocks, and Videl dismisses it as a trick. Gohan patiently walks her through the process, but she tenses up every time. When tears of frustration begin forming, he calls a lunch break.

Chi-Chi serves the meal, and Videl compliments the food. The conversation shifts when Videl mentions having a personal cook and about fifty rooms in her house. Chi-Chi's eyes light up, and she immediately asks Gohan if he plans to marry Videl. Gohan chokes and sprays rice across the table. After the meal, Videl returns to practice and successfully generates a small sphere of energy before nearly collapsing. She is thrilled and demands harder training.

In Other World, South Kai brags that his fighter could destroy Goku. King Kai calls the bluff by adding eight tons to Goku's training weights. Goku nearly buckles, then transforms into a Super Saiyan and handles the load effortlessly. South Kai quietly withdraws his fighter from the tournament. Back on Earth, Goten accidentally begins hovering and soars around laughing, while Videl manages to float briefly. Before leaving, Gohan suggests she cut her hair for easier combat movement. Videl blushes, assuming romantic intent, then storms off when he clarifies. At Capsule Corporation, Trunks transforms into a Super Saiyan during training, shocking Vegeta. The next morning, Videl returns with a fresh short haircut, ready to continue.

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Two Boys, Two Transformations, One Generation

Both Goten and Trunks are confirmed as Super Saiyans in back-to-back episodes, and the parallel is deliberate. These are children who achieved what nearly destroyed their fathers. Trunks transforms during a sparring session in the Gravity Chamber; Goten did it during a playful fight with Chi-Chi. Neither child experienced the rage or grief that traditionally triggers the form. The implication is clear: the half-Saiyan generation has a fundamentally different relationship with power. Vegeta's reaction to Trunks' transformation is telling. He does not celebrate. He tests it immediately with a punch to the face, because in Vegeta's world, power that has not been tested is not real.

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The Romance Nobody Will Admit To

This is the first episode where the series openly acknowledges romantic tension between Gohan and Videl. Chi-Chi's marriage question makes both of them blush. Videl interprets Gohan's haircut suggestion as a statement about his preferences rather than a combat tip. Goten innocently asks if Videl will become his sister. Every character in the scene can see what is happening except the two people it involves. The manga chapter "Videl Learns to Fly" handles the same beats, though the anime expands the lunch scene and Videl's emotional reactions considerably.

Kara Edwards, the English voice actress for Videl, has stated that this is her favorite episode of the entire series, particularly the scenes between Goten and Videl.

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This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the Dragon Ball anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.

Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:

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  • Game pages: official box art, credited to Bandai Namco, Atari, and other publishers.
  • Manga chapter pages: Jump Comics volume covers, credited to Shueisha and Akira Toriyama.

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