
Staff Officer Black pushes his Battle Jacket to its limit, raining blasts, missiles, and mechanical punches on Goku across the rooftops of Red Ribbon Headquarters. Goku turns the fight into a mocking game, punches straight through the cockpit, then collects the last two Dragon Balls hidden inside the base.
Black opens up with an energy blast from the Battle Jacket's arm cannon, then swats Goku through an outer wall and out onto the terrace. Bursting through the ceiling, he hovers overhead and fires another blast down at the ground, convinced he has finally flattened the intruder. His celebration is short lived. Goku is perched on top of a nearby tower, sticking his tongue out in contempt. He leaps directly onto the front of the suit and clings there, forcing Black to swing his own huge mechanical hand into his own face when he tries to swat him off.
Dangling from a guardrail on the cockpit's belly, Goku keeps laughing while Black rockets higher into the sky. Leaning forward, the Battle Jacket fires an enormous missile from its back. Goku springs up and kicks the warhead off course, banging up his leg but detonating the missile harmlessly in the distance. Embarrassed and running out of tricks, Black tries to retreat through the clouds. Goku is faster. He hurls himself off the roof, dives straight through the armored chest of the Battle Jacket, and the whole machine explodes behind him in midair.
Safe on Kinto-Un, Goku slips back into the ruined building and pockets the final two Dragon Balls he came for, collecting Red Ribbon's entire stockpile in one trip. With the command structure gone, the army crushed, and the vault empty, he turns for home while Yamcha's rescue team is still racing toward the base to help him, unaware that the battle is already over and the young warrior has taken the whole organization apart on his own.
Looking for more on The Triumph!? The Dragon Ball Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.
View on FandomThis 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:
Browse our episode guides:
Official resources:
Come listen to some Dragon Ball R&B.
Daddy Jim Headquarters maintains this encyclopedia across 13 languages. If you spot an error, a translation issue, or something that doesn't look right, let us know.