Talk:Baltigo

Where did we get the nicely colored anime picture from? I don't keep up on the anime because it's show and really really poorly drawn. Was it in a recent episode?


 * Daniel


 * It's from the Episode Dragon showed up ... 324 or so? I'm just wondering why the article is placed on Paladego when Oda gave us Barutigo in Katakana. Vartigo seems to me more possible since the English "v" is transcribed to Katakana with a Kana from the "b" line. -- [ defchris ] · [ Diskussion ] · 08:46, September 8, 2009 (UTC)

Where does this Paladego come from ? It's quite far away from the katakana. I would understand Vertigo or Baltigo but Paladego ??? Kdom 20:11, June 25, 2010 (UTC)

I agree with the rest Vertigo is so much better than Paladego and it's nearer to Barutigo.Change it.If not until the official romanization of that word come out, just stick with the original katakana like "Jozu".218.186.10.237 23:38, June 25, 2010 (UTC)

Yes, "Paladego" is quite wrong. I think Baltigo is best. --Klobis 02:32, June 26, 2010 (UTC)

VERTIGO, not Baltigo.
It's meant to be Vertigo. Vertigo in Japanese is "バ––ティゴ" (http://jisho.org/words?jap=&eng=vertigo&dict=edict). There's an added "ru" probably to add the "r" sound back in so it is phonetically closer. It's meant to fit in with the theme of Dragon being a revolutionary and turning the world upside down.

If you look at the convresation above, there has been discussion on this already, and it was decided that Baltigo is the best translation to go with. Also, you definition of vertigo is wrong. It has nothing to do with being upside down, that's inversion. Vertigo has to do with feeling dizzy. Sign your posts next time. 01:47, November 9, 2011 (UTC)