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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.

Energy Drain

EpisodeEp. 219

Gohan powers up to Super Saiyan 2 at Kibito's request, but Spopovich and Yamu ambush him in the ring and drain his energy. The Z Fighters abandon the tournament to pursue the thieves, and the Supreme Kai reveals the terrifying legend of Majin Buu.

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A Conspiracy Unfolds in Broad Daylight

Kibito presses Gohan to transform, and Gohan obliges by ascending past Super Saiyan into Super Saiyan 2. The golden aura crackles with lightning, and the entire stadium watches in shock. Spectators begin connecting the dots: the Great Saiyaman, the Gold Fighter, and the mysterious child from the Cell Games are all the same person. Years of secrets dissolve in a single blinding flash.

But the transformation is bait. The Supreme Kai reveals to Goku and the others that Spopovich and Yamu will strike the moment Gohan powers up. He instructs everyone not to intervene, explaining that these two only want Gohan's energy. True to his warning, the pair rushes the ring. The Supreme Kai uses telekinesis to hold Gohan in place while Spopovich and Yamu jam a strange device into his body, vacuuming out his ki. Once satisfied, they bolt from the arena.

The Supreme Kai takes off after them, and Goku knows he must follow. The chain reaction is immediate. Krillin volunteers to join but needs to inform Android 18 first. Vegeta, furious at the prospect of losing his long-awaited fight against Goku, reluctantly agrees to come along only after Goku suggests he might be needed. Kibito restores Gohan's energy, and together with Videl, they follow the others. The 25th World Martial Arts Tournament is effectively over.

During the pursuit, the Supreme Kai lays out the full scope of the threat. Long ago, an evil wizard named Bibidi created a creature called Majin Buu, a being of pure destruction who wiped out four of the five Supreme Kais. Bibidi sealed Buu inside a ball and brought it to Earth. Now his son, Babidi, has come to finish what his father started. The energy stolen from Gohan is fuel for Buu's resurrection.

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From Sport to Survival

The tonal shift in this episode is remarkable. Minutes ago, our heroes were competing for prize money and bragging rights. Now they are chasing a pair of energy thieves across the countryside while learning about an ancient cosmic horror. The World Tournament Saga ends not with a champion crowned but with the arena abandoned.

Vegeta's reluctance to leave deserves attention. His entire motivation for entering the tournament was to fight Goku, and watching that opportunity slip away plants a seed of frustration that will bear devastating fruit later in the saga. His agreement to follow is not cooperation; it is barely contained resentment.

The Supreme Kai's exposition about Majin Buu also reframes everything the audience thought they knew about power levels. Four Supreme Kais, each a thousand times stronger than Frieza, were eliminated by a single creature. That context makes Buu feel like a threat on an entirely different scale from anything that came before.

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A Villain Introduced by Reputation Alone

Majin Buu does not appear in this episode, does not speak, and does not fight. Yet through the Supreme Kai's testimony, Buu becomes the most intimidating presence in the series. This is storytelling through fear: when a god trembles describing a monster, the audience takes notice. It marks the first mention of the third and final major villain of Dragon Ball Z.

The episode also contains a fun bit of trivia for dub watchers. In the Ocean English version, this is the first time the word "kill" is used in its literal sense, when Krillin jokes that his wife will kill him if he leaves without telling her. Previous episodes had carefully avoided the word, making this a small but significant shift in localization standards.

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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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  • Manga chapter pages: Jump Comics volume covers, credited to Shueisha and Akira Toriyama.

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