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The Destroyer and His Angel: Why Vegeta Will Become Universe 7’s Next God of Destruction and Goku Will Become His Angel
There is a theory I cannot let go of, because Dragon Ball Super keeps putting the pieces on the table and then acting like we are not supposed to notice them.
Vegeta is being shaped into Universe 7’s next God of Destruction.
Goku is being shaped into his angel.
Not literally in the sense that Goku will suddenly grow white hair permanently, float around with a halo staff, and start speaking like Whis after taking one etiquette class too many. Although honestly, Dragon Ball has done stranger things and expected us to clap. But symbolically, narratively, spiritually, and thematically? Yes. The story has been building toward Vegeta as a destroyer figure and Goku as an angelic counterpart for years.
And the more you look at it, the more obvious it becomes.
Vegeta and Goku are no longer just rivals. They are not simply “the angry one” and “the cheerful one.” Dragon Ball Super has divided their paths into two divine philosophies. Vegeta is walking the path of destruction. Goku is walking the path of instinct. One is learning from Beerus. The other is learning from Whis. One is being drawn toward Hakai, pride, judgment, appetite, and necessary annihilation. The other is being drawn toward calm, movement without thought, guidance, neutrality, and divine technique.
That is not random.
That is not just “cool new forms for merchandise,” although obviously it is also that, because capitalism found the Dragon Balls first.
The divine structure of Universe 7 has always been a pair: God of Destruction and Angel. Beerus and Whis are not just two powerful beings hanging around together. They are a cosmic unit. Beerus destroys. Whis guides, trains, observes, and contains. Beerus acts through appetite, impulse, pride, irritation, and judgment. Whis acts through calm, distance, elegance, and terrifying competence.
Now look at Vegeta and Goku.
The parallel is right there, screaming in purple and silver.
Vegeta’s entire arc has been about destruction. Not just physical destruction, but moral destruction, emotional destruction, and the destruction of old identities. He begins as a destroyer in the worst possible sense. He kills casually. He conquers. He takes pride in being elite. He sees weakness as something beneath him. He arrives on Earth as a villain who believes power gives him the right to erase others.
Then Dragon Ball does something interesting.
It does not simply make Vegeta “good.”
It makes him wrestle with what destruction means.
That distinction matters.
Vegeta does not become Goku. He does not become soft in the same way. He does not lose his sharpness. He does not become pure-hearted sunshine with battle damage. He remains prideful, aggressive, intense, and deeply tied to the idea of power. But over time, the reason behind his power changes. The target of his destruction changes. The meaning of his violence changes.
Early Vegeta destroys because he wants domination.
Later Vegeta destroys to protect.
That is exactly why he fits the God of Destruction role better than anyone else.
A good God of Destruction cannot simply be a mindless killer. They are not supposed to destroy because they are evil. They destroy because destruction is part of cosmic balance. Universes need creation, but they also need removal. Rot must be cleared. Threats must be ended. Stagnation must be broken. Some things have to be erased so life can continue.
That is Vegeta’s arc in a cosmic uniform.
He is a man who knows what it means to destroy wrongly. He carries guilt. He remembers the people he killed. He remembers Namek. He remembers the Saiyans. He remembers his own cruelty. He has stood on both sides of destruction: the monster who uses it and the protector who understands its cost.
That is why Beerus training him feels so important.
Beerus does not train Goku in destruction. He trains Vegeta.
The story could have given Hakai training to Goku if it wanted. Goku is the main character. Goku gets everything eventually because apparently the universe has a punch-card loyalty program for him. But destruction energy is not framed as Goku’s path. It is Vegeta’s.
Vegeta’s Ultra Ego form is not just a power-up. It is a statement. It takes the philosophy of destruction and filters it through Vegeta’s personality. Ultra Ego grows through battle lust, damage, pride, and intensity. It is not calm. It is not detached. It is not angelic. It is hungry. It is violent. It is self-assertive. It is Vegeta leaning fully into the part of himself that Goku does not share.
That matters because Super has stopped treating Goku and Vegeta as two fighters chasing the same form. For a while, that was the pattern. Goku gets Super Saiyan, Vegeta follows. Goku ascends, Vegeta chases. Goku finds a new level, Vegeta refuses to be left behind because spite is apparently an energy source.
But now their paths have split.
Goku’s divine path is Ultra Instinct.
Vegeta’s divine path is Ultra Ego.
Goku follows the angels.
Vegeta follows the Destroyers.
The story is practically writing their job applications in neon ink.
And honestly, Vegeta as God of Destruction makes more sense than Goku ever would.
Goku is not a destroyer. He is a fighter. He loves combat, but he does not love judgment. He does not want to rule, balance, punish, evaluate, or make hard cosmic decisions. Goku can defeat enemies, but he does not naturally think in terms of universal order. He wants a good fight. He wants strong opponents. He wants people to improve. He gives villains chances they absolutely do not deserve, because Goku’s moral compass is basically “but what if they became fun to fight later?”
That is not God of Destruction behavior.
That is a cosmic HR complaint waiting to happen.
A God of Destruction has to make decisions Goku would avoid. They have to erase threats. They have to understand that mercy is not always wisdom. Goku is too open, too curious, too attached to potential. He spared Vegeta. He wanted to fight Frieza again. He constantly gives enemies room to return stronger. Sometimes that is beautiful. Sometimes it nearly gets everyone killed. Often both, because Dragon Ball has the moral complexity of a grenade with googly eyes.
Vegeta, on the other hand, understands consequences.
He was the consequence.
He knows what happens when monsters are allowed to roam free. He knows what unchecked pride becomes. He knows what cruelty does to worlds. He knows that some threats cannot be trained, befriended, or redeemed through sparring. Vegeta would not be merciful in the same reckless way Goku is. But because he has grown, he also would not be casually cruel like his younger self.
That balance is perfect for a destroyer.
Vegeta has the temperament for destruction, but the growth to give that destruction meaning.
He is proud enough to carry the role.
He is ruthless enough to perform it.
He is changed enough not to abuse it.
And perhaps most importantly, he understands what it means to protect a home.
Beerus is powerful, but detached. He likes Earth, mostly because the food is good, which is very on brand for a cat god who naps through cosmic responsibility. Vegeta, though, has become rooted in Earth. His wife is there. His children are there. His rival is there. His second life is there. He is no longer only the prince of a dead Saiyan race. He is a husband, father, protector, and warrior whose identity has expanded beyond bloodline and pride.
That makes him dangerous in the right way.
A God of Destruction who understands attachment might be better than one who only understands appetite.
And then there is Goku.
If Vegeta is being shaped into the destroyer, Goku is being shaped into the angelic counterpart.
Again, not necessarily an angel by birth or official species. Dragon Ball’s angels are their own beings, and Goku is still very much a Saiyan. But thematically? Goku has been moving toward the angelic role since Ultra Instinct entered the story.
Ultra Instinct is not just another transformation. It is a philosophy. It is movement without thought. It is calm under pressure. It is the body acting without emotional interference. It is not powered by rage like Super Saiyan. It is not fueled by pride like Vegeta’s path. It is not rooted in domination. It is rooted in clarity.
Who uses Ultra Instinct naturally?
Angels.
Who trains Goku in it?
Whis, an angel.
Who struggles with it because he cannot fully separate his Saiyan nature from calm divine instinct?
Goku.
That struggle is the point.
Goku is not becoming Whis. He is becoming Goku’s version of an angelic figure. He is learning guidance, flow, detachment, and instinct, but he cannot abandon his love of battle. That makes him messy, but also fascinating. He is not the perfect angel. He is the Saiyan who keeps reaching toward angelhood while still being deeply, stubbornly himself.
And that is why he would be the perfect angel to Vegeta’s Destroyer.
Because Goku has always been the person who brings Vegeta back from the edge.
Not through speeches. Please, these men would rather punch through dimensions than discuss feelings. But through presence. Through rivalry. Through belief. Through refusing to let Vegeta’s pride become a cage forever.
Goku is the reason Vegeta keeps climbing. Vegeta hates it, resents it, craves it, and depends on it. Goku gives Vegeta a horizon. Every time Vegeta thinks he has reached the top, Goku is there, smiling like an idiot, already chasing the next impossible thing. That infuriates Vegeta. It also saves him.
Their relationship already functions like Destroyer and Angel in miniature.
Vegeta is intensity. Goku is motion.
Vegeta is pride. Goku is freedom.
Vegeta is destruction. Goku is instinct.
Vegeta burns. Goku flows.
Vegeta carries the weight of identity. Goku slips past identity like it forgot to lock the door.
Together, they balance each other.
That is exactly what Universe 7’s divine pair should be.
Beerus and Whis are functional, but they are not emotionally transformative for each other. Whis guides Beerus, teases him, trains others, and keeps the cosmic order moving. But Beerus does not seem to grow much because of Whis. Their dynamic is old, stable, and amusing, but not evolving in a dramatic character sense.
Goku and Vegeta would be different.
Vegeta as God of Destruction would not be static. He would constantly be challenged by Goku’s presence. Goku as angelic guide would not be cold or distant. He would push Vegeta not by lecturing him, but by being the one person Vegeta cannot ignore.
Imagine it.
Vegeta becomes Universe 7’s God of Destruction. He takes the role seriously because of course he does. He acts like he was born for it, because he needs everyone to know he was born for it, even though half his emotional development came from losing fights to a cheerful farm boy with terrible manners.
And Goku, instead of becoming a destroyer himself, becomes the strange angelic companion who trains with him, travels with him, annoys him, guides him, and keeps him from turning into Beerus 2.0 with more family trauma.
It works almost too well.
The God of Destruction needs power, judgment, pride, and the willingness to erase.
The angel needs calm, technique, guidance, and the ability to remain just outside the destroyer’s emotional storm.
Vegeta and Goku fit those roles, but in a way that keeps their rivalry alive.
That is the key.
This theory does not end their rivalry. It perfects it.
If Vegeta becomes God of Destruction and Goku becomes his angel, they are not separated. They are bound together by cosmic duty. Their dynamic becomes permanent. The entire universe becomes their training ground, their responsibility, and their argument.
Vegeta would finally have a title worthy of his pride.
Goku would finally have a role that lets him keep growing without needing to rule.
Vegeta gets authority.
Goku gets freedom.
Vegeta gets destruction.
Goku gets instinct.
Vegeta gets the throne.
Goku gets the staff, metaphorically or literally, and probably uses it wrong within five minutes.
It also completes their character arcs better than simply making them stronger forever.
Dragon Ball has a power-scaling problem because every new threat has to be bigger, louder, shinier, and more absurd than the last. Eventually, “Goku and Vegeta get stronger” stops being enough. The story needs direction, not just escalation. Turning them into the next divine pair gives their growth a purpose.
Vegeta’s growth has always been about transforming pride into responsibility. Becoming God of Destruction would be the ultimate test of that. Can he hold destructive power without becoming the monster he once was? Can he judge without ego? Can he erase without cruelty? Can he protect without pretending he does not care?
That is Vegeta’s final exam.
Goku’s growth has always been about freedom, instinct, and the joy of surpassing limits. Becoming an angelic figure would test whether he can guide without dominating, observe without interfering too recklessly, and master Ultra Instinct not as a shiny form, but as a state of being. Can Goku become calm without losing himself? Can he help Vegeta without turning everything into a sparring match? Can he stand beside someone else’s authority without needing to be the hero every time?
That is Goku’s final exam.
Together, they become something more interesting than “two strongest mortals.”
They become the cosmic balance of Universe 7.
And this would also explain why Goku and Vegeta have been trained by Beerus and Whis specifically. Beerus and Whis are not just mentors in the general sense. They are models. They show what the roles look like. They show what divine partnership looks like. But Goku and Vegeta are not carbon copies of them. They would be the next evolution.
Beerus destroys because it is his job.
Vegeta would destroy because he understands the cost.
Whis guides because he is an angel.
Goku would guide because he cannot stop pushing people to become stronger.
That difference matters.
Goku as an angel figure would be hilarious, yes, because this is a man who has the table manners of a raccoon at a buffet. But it would also make emotional sense. Angels are detached observers, but Goku has always had a strange kind of non-attachment. He loves people, but he does not cling the way others do. He can leave. He can trust others to live their own lives. He does not obsess over control. He moves forward constantly. There is something almost angelic in that already, even when it is frustrating.
Goku’s greatest flaw as a family man becomes useful as a cosmic guide.
Again, Dragon Ball has jokes whether it means to or not.
And Vegeta’s greatest flaw, his pride, becomes useful as divine authority.
That is the beauty of the theory. It does not erase their flaws. It transforms them into roles.
Vegeta’s pride becomes sovereignty.
Goku’s restlessness becomes guidance.
Vegeta’s violence becomes balance.
Goku’s instinct becomes wisdom.
Vegeta’s need to surpass Goku becomes the drive to uphold a universe.
Goku’s need to chase strength becomes the drive to train and guide the destroyer who can actually keep up.
It would also be deeply satisfying for Vegeta specifically.
Vegeta began as a prince without a planet. A royal title attached to a dead world and a broken people. His entire identity was built around being elite, being Saiyan royalty, being above others. Then he spent most of the series being humbled, over and over, by Goku, by Frieza, by Cell, by Majin Buu, by gods, by his own family attachments, by the fact that power alone never gave him peace.
Becoming God of Destruction would not simply be “Vegeta gets a promotion.”
It would be the restoration and transformation of his kingship.
He would no longer be prince of a dead race.
He would be destroyer of a living universe.
That is huge.
But unlike the old Vegeta, this new Vegeta would not rule from emptiness. He would rule from experience. He knows loss. He knows humiliation. He knows love. He knows guilt. He knows what it means to be saved by the very planet he once tried to destroy. That gives his future destructive role emotional weight.
The destroyer must know what destruction costs.
Vegeta does.
And Goku as his angel would be the ultimate full-circle joke and triumph.
The low-class Saiyan who once humiliated the prince becomes the divine companion to the prince’s cosmic throne. Not above him exactly. Not below him. Beside him. Always beside him. Still annoying him. Still pushing him. Still smiling at the worst possible times. Still making Vegeta better by existing.
That is their whole relationship distilled into a divine structure.
Vegeta becomes stronger because Goku is there.
Goku becomes sharper because Vegeta refuses to fall behind.
As God and Angel, that dynamic becomes eternal.
There is also the matter of trust.
Vegeta would not accept just anyone as his angelic guide. He barely accepts help from people he likes, and he pretends he does not like most of them because emotional honesty would apparently kill him faster than Frieza ever could. But Goku? Goku is different. Vegeta may complain, insult him, dismiss him, and call him by his Saiyan name with the energy of a man filing a lifelong grievance, but he trusts Goku.
He trusts Goku’s strength.
He trusts Goku’s instincts.
He trusts Goku’s ability to rise.
He trusts Goku as the one person who will never let the ceiling stay where it is.
And Goku trusts Vegeta too.
That trust is not sentimental. It is better than sentimental. It is proven. They have fought enemies together that nobody else could handle. They have fused. They have literally become one being more than once. Dragon Ball could not make the metaphor louder if it handed them matching friendship bracelets that said “cosmic divorce pending.”
Fusion is important here because it proves that Goku and Vegeta can share power, identity, and purpose when the universe demands it. That kind of union is the extreme version of what a destroyer-angel pair represents. Separate beings, separate roles, one cosmic function. When they fuse, they become the ultimate warrior. When they separate, they remain the ultimate pair.
That makes a future divine partnership feel earned.
They are already more than rivals.
They are already more than friends.
They are already two halves of Universe 7’s strongest mortal engine.
Making them the new divine pair would simply formalize what the story has been doing all along.
It also makes sense as a successor structure.
Beerus will not be God of Destruction forever. Maybe he retires. Maybe he is replaced. Maybe some future arc forces a transition. The role exists, which means succession is possible. And if Universe 7 needs a new destroyer, who else makes sense?
Goku would refuse or ruin the job.
Frieza would be an absolute disaster, and not in the fun Beerus way. Giving Frieza divine destruction authority would be like handing a flamethrower to a wasp.
Piccolo has wisdom, but his arc is not tied to destruction in the same divine way.
Gohan has power, but he does not want that life.
Broly has destructive potential, but not the emotional control or philosophical arc for the role.
Vegeta is the obvious choice.
He has the power, the pride, the training, the destructive path, the moral growth, and the narrative weight.
And once Vegeta is destroyer, who fits beside him?
Not Whis forever. Whis belongs to Beerus’s era.
Not some random new angel we have no emotional connection to.
Goku.
Because if Vegeta gets the role that represents controlled destruction, Goku should get the role that represents guided instinct.
That is the ending that keeps their bond central.
Some people will say Goku cannot be an angel because angels are a specific race. Fair. Technically true. Very boring, but fair. But fandom theory does not have to mean “Goku becomes biologically identical to Whis.” It can mean Goku takes on the angelic function in relation to Vegeta. He becomes the guide, balance, counterpart, trainer, companion, and instinctive force beside the destroyer.
He becomes Vegeta’s angel in spirit.
And honestly, Dragon Ball runs on spiritual symbolism as much as official job descriptions. Super Saiyan was a legend before it was a form. God ki was a state before it was common. Ultra Instinct is as much philosophy as technique. Ultra Ego is as much identity as power. The story loves turning inner nature into outer transformation.
So why not take that to its final form?
Vegeta’s inner nature becomes God of Destruction.
Goku’s inner nature becomes Angel.
The destroyer and the angel.
The prince and the low-class warrior.
The rival and the guide.
The storm and the calm.
The ego and the instinct.
That is too good to ignore.
It also gives their friendship a mythic ending. Goku and Vegeta started as enemies fighting over Earth. They could end as the divine protectors of the universe that Earth belongs to. Vegeta once came to Earth to destroy and conquer. He would end as the one entrusted with destruction for the sake of balance. Goku once spared Vegeta because he wanted to fight him again. He would end as the one standing beside him forever, making sure Vegeta never stops growing.
That is beautiful.
Ridiculous, yes. But beautiful.
The best Dragon Ball ideas are usually both.
And maybe that is why this theory feels so right. It does not betray who Goku and Vegeta are. It elevates them. Vegeta does not become soft and harmless. He becomes destruction with conscience. Goku does not become serious and restrained in a boring way. He becomes freedom with purpose. They remain themselves, but their roles finally match the scale of their bond.
Vegeta was never meant to be Goku’s shadow forever.
Goku was never meant to sit on a throne.
Vegeta needs a throne that can survive him.
Goku needs a path with no walls.
God of Destruction and Angel gives them both exactly that.
Vegeta gets to be the one chosen for a divine role that is not just about being second to Goku. He gets his own path, his own authority, his own cosmic identity. And Goku gets to remain what he has always been: the impossible figure beside Vegeta, pushing him, irritating him, understanding him, and moving with a kind of divine instinct no one else can match.
So yes, I believe Vegeta will become Universe 7’s new God of Destruction.
And I believe Goku will become his angel.
Not because it is the safest theory.
Not because Dragon Ball always follows through perfectly on its symbolism, because let us not flatter the machine too much.
But because the pieces are there.
Vegeta is already walking Beerus’s road.
Goku is already walking Whis’s.
Vegeta’s power is destruction.
Goku’s power is instinct.
Vegeta needs a role worthy of his pride.
Goku needs a role worthy of his freedom.
Together, they are the balance Universe 7 keeps accidentally producing.
The destroyer and his angel.
The prince and his rival.
The god and the guide.
Still arguing.
Still training.
Still making each other stronger.
Still, somehow, the most important partnership in the universe.
And if that is not endgame, then frankly the cosmos has no taste.
hi hi good morning hi hi good morning good morning hi I JUST WOKE UP TO SEE. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL THING. SENT TO ME BY MY YOUNGER SIBLING (@/hakogyi). im having a disproportionate emotional response happy pride month hakai
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OC x Canon week days 1 and 2, I'm going to eventually make day 3!! It's something on Twitter that's going on this week (@/ ocxcanonweek on Twitter) : 3!! Im trying to recreate Tsubi's design so one day I'll post it if anyone minds