Has Toriyama lost his touch?
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Has Toriyama lost his touch?
After the mess that is DragonBall Super you have to wonder if and when Toriyama lost his touch. Flanderization of characters, no sense of stakes or progression and weak cop-out endings (Resurrection F) are just a handful of the problems the current product has. I get why TOEI want his name involved with projects, since it makes it more "authentic" but it seems that it isn't synonymous with quality.
When did he lose his touch? Looking back, the Son Goku returns special was entertaining and felt like DragonBall but Battle of Gods was when quality started to dip. While still an entertaining movie, it felt like a step back.
Resurrection F was....well....a mess and from then on we saw sporadic highlights, mostly infused with nostalgia.
When did he lose his touch? Looking back, the Son Goku returns special was entertaining and felt like DragonBall but Battle of Gods was when quality started to dip. While still an entertaining movie, it felt like a step back.
Resurrection F was....well....a mess and from then on we saw sporadic highlights, mostly infused with nostalgia.
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
God, I hope not. Losing your ability to feel things would suck!
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
I mean, Toriyama has gotten worse, but all of your reasons are lame and boring.
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Was Toriyama ever actually good? Does one or two cool ideas mean good?Shaddy wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 10:51 am I mean, Toriyama has gotten worse, but all of your reasons are lame and boring.
Actually, we do know that his art has gotten worse. He's outright said that he can't draw dynamic panels anymore.
Thread over everyone!
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
No.
In fact, in many ways, Super is better and more original than DBZ.
In fact, in many ways, Super is better and more original than DBZ.
Akira Toriyama, DBS vol.4 joint interview with ToyotaroAt his core Zamasu is good like Shin, though I guess you could say he was so fastidious that it backfired. But you know, for this "Future Trunks Arc" you had to depict Zamasu and Trunks' inner conflict, right? If this was back when I was drawing the manga myself then I doubt if I could have done it. I mean, I'm not very good at depicting the characters' psychology on the page. So this all came together because now I only have to think up the story. [...] On my own, I doubt I would have been able to express Zamasu's fall to the dark side.
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
I think the OP is being overdramatic and obviously better or worse is subjective but name one thing about Super that is more original than DBZ.SupremeKai25 wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 11:18 am No.
In fact, in many ways, Super is better and more original than DBZ.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Toriyama does bring quality, BOG, ROF and DBS:Broly are the higgest grossing Dragon Ball films and Super was a success (even tho some people say otherwise but hey, they have the right to dream).
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Piccolo playing a major role in the new movie andMasenkoHA wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 11:21 amI think the OP is being overdramatic and obviously better or worse is subjective but name one thing about Super that is more original than DBZ.SupremeKai25 wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 11:18 am No.
In fact, in many ways, Super is better and more original than DBZ.
Spoiler:
Meanwhile DBZ in the Buu arc treated Piccolo like a babysitter and battle spectator.
This is simply the most recent thing that Super did better than DBZ, the treatment of Piccolo...
Akira Toriyama, DBS vol.4 joint interview with ToyotaroAt his core Zamasu is good like Shin, though I guess you could say he was so fastidious that it backfired. But you know, for this "Future Trunks Arc" you had to depict Zamasu and Trunks' inner conflict, right? If this was back when I was drawing the manga myself then I doubt if I could have done it. I mean, I'm not very good at depicting the characters' psychology on the page. So this all came together because now I only have to think up the story. [...] On my own, I doubt I would have been able to express Zamasu's fall to the dark side.
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
RoF sucked, sure. But the manga and Broly have been pretty good, and this new movie is yet to be seen, so if he lost it around 2014-15, he found it again by 2017.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
I don't think it's fair to cite DBS for his shortcomings since he only partially involved with the story, not even in a "the buck stops with him" way.
I don't think his current artstyle looks bad at all tbh.
I don't think his current artstyle looks bad at all tbh.
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Rest in Peace, Toriyama-san
Rest in Peace, Toriyama-san
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
That has nothing to do with originality.SupremeKai25 wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 11:33 amPiccolo playing a major role in the new movie andMasenkoHA wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 11:21 amI think the OP is being overdramatic and obviously better or worse is subjective but name one thing about Super that is more original than DBZ.SupremeKai25 wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 11:18 am No.
In fact, in many ways, Super is better and more original than DBZ.
Spoiler:
Meanwhile DBZ in the Buu arc treated Piccolo like a babysitter and battle spectator.
This is simply the most recent thing that Super did better than DBZ, the treatment of Piccolo...
And Piccolo had a more prominent role in the Saiyan-Cell arcs than all of Super.
Last edited by MasenkoHA on Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Between 2013 and 2014. Notice that everything went downhill after the release of Movie 14 and the closure of Dragon Ball Online. There should be a villain called "2013/2014" for the characters to deal with (and use the Dragon Balls to resurrect the fallen one!).Jord wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 10:44 amAfter the mess that is DragonBall Super you have to wonder if and when Toriyama lost his touch. (...) When did he lose his touch?
People do overestimate the involvement of the original author for some reason. Yet, we continue to get more and more examples of that being indeed not the case. See the latest Terminator movie.Jord wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 10:44 am I get why TOEI want his name involved with projects, since it makes it more "authentic" but it seems that it isn't synonymous with quality.
"Authenticity" means little in the grand scheme of things, so I don't know the point of always screaming "hey the original author is here!". If it's doomed to fail, it will fail regardless (in terms of quality, obviously).
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
DBZ was starting to decline after the Freeza arc (oldhead opinion, I know) and it became obvious by the Majin Boo arc. Toriyama lost interest in the franchise a long time but only starting writing stuff for it again because Evolution pissed him off that much.
Last edited by DBZAOTA482 on Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
fadeddreams5 wrote:Goku didn't die in GT. The show sucked him off so much, it was impossible to keep him in the world of the living, so he ascended beyond mortality.DBZGTKOSDH wrote:... Haven't we already gotten these in GT? Goku dies, the DBs go away, and the Namekian DBs most likely won't be used again because of the Evil Dragons.
jjgp1112 wrote: Sat Jul 18, 2020 6:31 am I'm just about done with the concept of reboots and making shows that were products of their time and impactful "new and sexy" and in line with modern tastes and sensibilities. Let stuff stay in their era and give today's kids their own shit to watch.
I always side eye the people who say "Now my kids/today's kids can experience what I did as a child!" Nigga, who gives a fuck about your childhood? You're an adult now and it was at least 15 years ago. Let the kids have their own experience instead of picking at a corpse.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Currently, he seems to be most focused on the DBS films, and those have been great. I even enjoyed ROF, at least, parts of it. So I'd say he still has his touch. Yes, the DBS anime is gigantic mess where the filler episodes are somehow the highlight, but lets not blame him for that.
Also, it's not exactly new at this point, but the Jaco manga was fantastic.
Also, it's not exactly new at this point, but the Jaco manga was fantastic.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
It's a fair point to say that... well, the entity "Dragon Ball Super" isn't an exclusive Toriyama work. Some of it starts with him, some of it doesn't, and none of it ends with him.
If you want to talk about Toriyama's "touch" and if he still has it, then you really have to start and end with Jaco. That's the sole piece of post-serialization DB media that Toriyama wrote and drew himself.
He wrote movie scripts and did character designs, so Resurrection 'F' and Broly are the next two pieces you'd be able to a little more comprehensively assign as CLOSE to being exclusively Toriyama works... but even then, it's really not. He literally wrote "and then a big fight happens" in his script for Resurrection 'F', leaving it to the Toei staff to work out. You can't pin the choreography on him, for example, in there.
So I think it's kind of a non-starter conversation, because Toriyama's involvement isn't even remotely close to the same today as it was during his actual writing and drawing of the original series. It's a separate conversation to have, but it's not the one you're saying it is.
If you want to talk about Toriyama's "touch" and if he still has it, then you really have to start and end with Jaco. That's the sole piece of post-serialization DB media that Toriyama wrote and drew himself.
He wrote movie scripts and did character designs, so Resurrection 'F' and Broly are the next two pieces you'd be able to a little more comprehensively assign as CLOSE to being exclusively Toriyama works... but even then, it's really not. He literally wrote "and then a big fight happens" in his script for Resurrection 'F', leaving it to the Toei staff to work out. You can't pin the choreography on him, for example, in there.
So I think it's kind of a non-starter conversation, because Toriyama's involvement isn't even remotely close to the same today as it was during his actual writing and drawing of the original series. It's a separate conversation to have, but it's not the one you're saying it is.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
If you want to be pithy about, perhaps you can say it's not an issue of Toriyama losing his touch, but that he's touching something elseVegettoEX wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:32 pm It's a fair point to say that... well, the entity "Dragon Ball Super" isn't an exclusive Toriyama work. Some of it starts with him, some of it doesn't, and none of it ends with him.
If you want to talk about Toriyama's "touch" and if he still has it, then you really have to start and end with Jaco. That's the sole piece of post-serialization DB media that Toriyama wrote and drew himself.
He wrote movie scripts and did character designs, so Resurrection 'F' and Broly are the next two pieces you'd be able to a little more comprehensively assign as CLOSE to being exclusively Toriyama works... but even then, it's really not. He literally wrote "and then a big fight happens" in his script for Resurrection 'F', leaving it to the Toei staff to work out. You can't pin the choreography on him, for example, in there.
So I think it's kind of a non-starter conversation, because Toriyama's involvement isn't even remotely close to the same today as it was during his actual writing and drawing of the original series. It's a separate conversation to have, but it's not the one you're saying it is.

Thinking about Jaco just has me wanting more Toriyama manga one-shots or short series, DB-related or not. I do have a copy of Manga Theater sitting unread on the shelf, so at least I can scratch that itch in some way.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Why not include BOG in this list? I was under the impression he rewrote most if not all of that film too.VegettoEX wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:32 pm It's a fair point to say that... well, the entity "Dragon Ball Super" isn't an exclusive Toriyama work. Some of it starts with him, some of it doesn't, and none of it ends with him.
If you want to talk about Toriyama's "touch" and if he still has it, then you really have to start and end with Jaco. That's the sole piece of post-serialization DB media that Toriyama wrote and drew himself.
He wrote movie scripts and did character designs, so Resurrection 'F' and Broly are the next two pieces you'd be able to a little more comprehensively assign as CLOSE to being exclusively Toriyama works... but even then, it's really not. He literally wrote "and then a big fight happens" in his script for Resurrection 'F', leaving it to the Toei staff to work out. You can't pin the choreography on him, for example, in there.
So I think it's kind of a non-starter conversation, because Toriyama's involvement isn't even remotely close to the same today as it was during his actual writing and drawing of the original series. It's a separate conversation to have, but it's not the one you're saying it is.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Sure, he did, but it wasn't built on original concepts from him (I guess you could say the same about Broly), and he wasn't involved from the start. I'm really just being pedantic and overly segmented here, but sure, you're right.capsulecorp wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 1:59 pm Why not include BOG in this list? I was under the impression he rewrote most if not all of that film too.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Some fans would say he lost his touch by the Cell and Buu sagas since he admit to getting burned out. Anything coming after that could be good and unlikely to be a major improvement. IMO the same could be said of any artist. I don't think there has been an artist, writer, musician, etc who returned to their work decades later and created something better than when they were in their prime. Maybe there are some exceptions but I can't think of any off the top of my head.
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Re: Has Toriyama lost his touch?
Whenever stuff is left for other's ideas and interpretations, things fluctuate between ok and "iffy"; when Toriyama goes and does things himself (draw, design and write), the series shine. In my opinion.