शकुनिरुवाच धनंजयो वासुदेवो भीमसेनो युधिष्ठिर: । नकुल:ः सहदेवश्न द्रुपदश्च सहात्मजै:,शकुनि बोला--राजन्! अर्जुन, श्रीकृष्ण, भीमसेन, युधिष्ठिर नकुल, सहदेव तथा पुत्रोंसहित ट्रपद--इन्हें देवता भी युद्धमें परास्त नहीं कर सकते। ये सब-के-सब महारथी, महान् धनुर्धर, अस्त्रविद्यामें निपुण तथा युद्धमें उन््मत्त होकर लड़नेवाले हैं
śakunir uvāca—dhananjayo vāsudevo bhīmaseno yudhiṣṭhiraḥ | nakulaḥ sahadevaś ca drupadaś ca sahātmajaiḥ ||
Shakuni said: “O King, Dhananjaya (Arjuna), Vasudeva (Krishna), Bhimasena, Yudhishthira, Nakula, Sahadeva, and Drupada together with his sons—these cannot be defeated in battle even by the gods. All of them are great chariot-warriors, mighty archers, skilled in the science of weapons, and they fight with fierce, battle-mad intensity.”
दुर्योधन उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical and practical danger of arrogance: when a ruler ignores sober counsel and underestimates capable, united opponents—especially those aligned with a powerful moral and strategic center (Krishna)—his choices tend toward self-destruction.
In the Sabha Parva context of court politics and looming conflict, Shakuni addresses Duryodhana and lists the principal Pandava allies (including Krishna and Drupada with his sons), emphasizing their battlefield superiority and warning that they are virtually unbeatable.