While I was home during my Thanksgiving college break, I took the opportunity to look through my Daizenshuu for rare and interesting facts. I decided to do this because of the “What does ‘Daizenshuu’ meant to you?” thread and the various other discussions we’ve had about the Daizenshuu on these boards. The Daizenshuu are rare books and very few fans outside of Japan have them, so I want to do what I can to help make the information in them available to more people. That and there’s a few things in there that puzzle me and I want to see if someone else might be able to shed a little light on it for me.
(I don’t really know whether or not ‘Daizenshuu’ on its own should be capitalized, but I’m going to stop doing so from here on out because it’s annoying me)
Basically I’ve gone through them looking for anything that I think is interesting and that you probably wouldn’t know if you didn’t have them. I’ve generally left out things that, while only found in the daizenshuu, are already well known among fans, such as the battle powers from Daizenshuu 7. For this reason I’ve ignored the interviews with Toriyama entirely, since there are numerous translations of them available on the internet.
Obviously my findings are by no means complete, since there is an absurd amount of information in the daizenshuu and anything short of a full translation would leave something out. I’m also limited by the fact that I only have the hardcover daizenshuu, 1-7. If anyone who owns the softcover daizenshuu wants to contribute anything, feel free. Actually, anybody who has any of the daizenshuu and wants to contribute something from them is welcome to.
Are you ready? Then let’s begin!
Daizenshuu 1: Complete Illustrations
OK, so what information could I possibly find in a daizenshuu that’s just pictures, especially since I already said I was leaving out the Toriyama interview? Well, at the back of this daizenshuu, after the pictures but before the interview, is a sort of index of every image in the book. Under each image is a sentence or so describing the image, telling what it was drawn for, and giving other tidbits. None of this information is earth-shattering, but if you’re a fan of Toriyama’s artwork you might find some of it interesting.
For instance, for Piece 76, which is a group picture of the RR Army era cast all running happily, the notes say that the original picture was lost and they had to use the issue of Jump it in appeared as a source.

Pieces 41 and 42 show Goku holding an anime cell of himself and listening to a record playing, respectively (Piece 42 is the logo used for the Daizenshuu EX podcast). According to the notes, Toriyama drew these in response to receiving an anime cell and a record of the anime theme (presumable Makafushigi Adventure at this point) as a gift. You can see both of these pictures if you go to the Daizenshuu EX homepage; they're on the right sidebar.
The big thing I want to mention is something called the Catchphrase Grand Prix. It is noted several times throughout the image index notes that Toriyama drew some pieces for this. Apparently it was a contest which involved the various Jump manga artists drawing a picture based on a particular phrase, Exploding Dog-style. I think the idea was that readers would send in catchphrases, and the winner’s catchphrase would be the one that the mangaka drew a picture of. However, I’ve been unable to find much information on this so far.
Anyway, do you know the picture where Goku, Piccolo, and Gohan are all dressed up in ancient Chinese, Journey to the West style clothing? This is Piece 140, and according to the notes it was drawn by Toriyama for the Catchphrase Grand Prix. The catchphrase this piece was based on is “最っ勇気!!”. This translates out to “Maximum Courage!!” or something like that, but the joke is that the characters are read as ‘saiyyuki’, which is a pun on ‘saiyuuki’, the Japanese name for Journey to the West. So we get a picture of everyone dressed as Journey to the West characters and looking brave.

The next Catchphrase Grand Prix picture is Piece 190, which shows Trunks and everyone wearing Saiyan armor, with Trunk’s time machine in the back ground. The catchphrase this time was “Mirai wa…tourai.”, or ‘The future…is arriving’. Therefore, we get Trunks and his time machine. (It would seem that the catchphrases often involve wordplay)

The last piece of these pieces I noticed, though there probably were others, was Piece 262. This is a Buu era picture of the cast, with Gohan in the middle looking weirdly happy. The notes say that this was the last picture Toriyama drew for the Catchphrase Grand Prix, though it fails to say what the catchphrase actually was. (I should also note that Vegeta is oddly wearing his Cell era clothing in this picture)

Piece 100, a cover page which shows Goku and Gohan riding on a short-legged dinosaur through heavy jungle, is notable because at the top instead of ‘Dragon Ball’ it says ‘Dagon Ball’. The notes for this image describe this as ‘charming’. This was corrected in the kanzenban release and (I think) the Viz graphic novel edition, making the original incorrect version something of a rarity. (‘Dagon Ball’ sounds like a crossover between Dragon Ball and the works of H.P. Lovecraft, which would be either amazingly awesome or really, really dumb)

On the subject of altered images, there’s Piece 192, which is the infamous ‘Everyone flipping off Cell’ image. Of course, Viz edited out all the middle fingers, making the original something you won’t see in America, though you can find it outside of the daizenshuu. I just want to note that in fact everyone isn’t flipping Cell off, just Kuririn, Tenshinhan, Yamcha, and Trunks. For some reason I find it amusing that none of the androids are flipping him off, since it seems like they have the most reason to do so.
There's a piece that shows #16, #17, and #18, with a giant image of Goku's face in the background (unfortunately I can't tell from my awful handwriting what number this piece is). The notes say that Toriyama put Goku in there because this was the part of the story when he was still unconcious from his heart virus, and he wanted to include him in the title page since he wouldn't be in the story. Something like that, anyway (damn handwriting).

Daizenshuu 1 includes the complete spine image illustration (that picture that is spread over the spines of the tankoubon volumes). If you have the tankoubon volumes or the Viz graphic novels, you might have noticed that this image is never actually completed! Volume 42’s spine image (DBZ vol.26 for Viz) shows SSJ Goku’s legs with his feet partially cut off. Daizenshuu 1 includes that missing snippit of Goku’s feet, labeling it as ‘unused’.

So that’s it for Daizenshuu 1. Jiminy Mosachrist, I wrote this much already and I’m only done with the first daizenshuu?! I’ll have to continue this later.
Edit: Images added, courtesy of Saiyan, who is awesome.