At least there are spin-offs where it’s not so pathetic…
Yamcha was introduced as a really cool Dragon Ball character, but he turned out to be a huge disappointment., and his last words make him more pathetic. It seems that after the success of the most recent movie with the arrival of Frieza has raised several doubts about the next heroes who could return, we recommend you read the last chapters of this work that are available on the online service of MangaPlus by Shueisha
In Akira Toriyama’s Dragon Ball chapter 215, the Z Fighters faced off against Nappa and Vegeta, although it was no secret that they were no match for the Saiyans. So, the villains decided to let their goblin-like minions known as the Saibamen do the initial fighting for them. While the Saibamen were strong, Tien took down the first of them with fairly little effort, so Yamucha decided to jump into the ring next. At first, Yamucha does a pretty good job of fighting off the Saiyan-controlled monster, though at the critical moment of the fight, he lets his guard down only to say:These monsters are not as fearsome as they seem. I’ll clean up the other four by myself” and he definitely doesn’t.. Yamcha allows the Saibaman to attach to him, at which point the Saibaman detonates, killing Yamcha in an instant.
Yamcha was so confident that he could take down all the Saibamen at once even though the one he was fighting wasn’t depressed and the fact that he was killed by one is almost karmic. Not only was the irony of Yamucha’s death painfully apparent, but the situation is made even more pathetic given what happens immediately after.. Krillin steps forward and does what Yamucha said he was going to do by killing the rest of the Saibamen in one blast. If the likes of Tien and Krillin can make quick work of these creatures, that makes the loss of Yamcha totally inexcusable.
In the early days of Dragon Ball, Yamcha was fighting on essentially the same level as the other Z Fighters on Earth, and prior to the Saiyan invasion, he was trained by the Kami himself, who is literally the God of Earth. So, by all accounts, Yamcha should have survived much longer than we sawwhich makes the fact that he was killed in this way so infuriating.
Yamcha’s death led to the infamous image of the Z Fighter crushed lifeless in a crater, sparking decades of memes targeting the character.. Just when Dragon Ball fans thought Yamcha couldn’t get any worse, it comes to light that the last thing he said were empty words of overconfidence that he couldn’t back up in the slightest, meaning that Dragon Ball’s last words of Yamcha only reinforced his pathetic ending.
Yamcha is still one of the most pathetic characters in Dragon Ball Z
Yamcha is perhaps the most disappointing character in the entire Dragon Ball universe. Mainly due to his undeniable and pathetic death that came after he was groomed to be as badass a fighter as Goku himself, though Yamcha’s humiliation doesn’t end there like his last words do. his embarrassing death even more hilarious. Yamcha made his first appearance in Akira Toriyama’s Dragon Ball chapter 7, and from the beginning, Yamcha gave the impression that he was someone he couldn’t mess with.
Yamcha was a desert bandit who robbed passers-by with nothing more than a huge sword and his superior fighting skill.. While initially a villain, Yamcha eventually became a trusted member of the first incarnation of the Z Fighters who bravely fought in various World Martial Arts Tournaments and even defeated Goku when the Saiyan was in his Great Ape form. Everything about Yamcha in his early Dragon Ball history made it seem like he would be a real contender as one of the world’s strongest, but he fails to live up to his own expectations in the most pathetic way possible.