While Frieza’s power has grown exponentially since his resurrection in Dragon Ball Super, he will never be able to use his most powerful attack, one he learned in Dragon Ball GT. Dragon Ball GT was erased from continuity after the release of Dragon Ball Super. While there are few similarities between the two Dragon Ball Z sequel series, they actually both give fans a glimpse at Frieza’s afterlife. However, like everything else in the respective sagas, Frieza’s separate hells couldn’t be more different, which is why his most powerful technique is off limits to him in Dragon Ball Super.
In Dragon Ball Super Chapter 32 by Akira Toriyama and Toyotarou, all of the events of “Golden Frieza Saga” including Frieza’s resurrection that had previously only been seen in the anime is revealed to be canon in the manga as well. In this chapter, Goku travels to Earth Hell to retrieve Frieza for the Tournament of Power. When Goku gets there, he notices that hell is just Frieza wrapped in a cocoon hanging in a tree with stuffed animals and fairies surrounding him, singing songs and playing tricks. Goku comments that he thought hell would be a lot scarier, and Frieza tells him that, to him, this is the worst kind of punishment he could ever imagine.
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In Dragon Ball GT episode 43, Goku also travels to hell and meets Frieza, but this version of the underworld is much more like the version Dragon Ball Super’s Goku had in his mind. Dragon Ball GT’s hell is cavernous and terrifying, but for Frieza, it was much better than the afterlife he was sent to in Dragon Ball Super. In GT, Frieza was able to roam free rather than being wrapped in a cocoon, giving him a chance to become
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