PhantomSaiyan wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 12:56 pm
JulieYBM wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 10:38 am
Hell changed. Things change. Places change. People change
Yeah. Change is the only constant in life. However, when things change, when places change, when people change, it's because of a logical and coherent succession of events that brings us from one point, to the next step of that subject's evolution, not because writers made up stuff, then forgot about it, or willingly chose to ignore what they established, life isn't like that.
And sometimes, we aren't there to see that change happen. It just
is. Would I maybe include something to note said change if I were writing? Probably? Maybe? I don't know, I also haven't watched Dragon Ball GT in over a decade.
PhantomSaiyan wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 12:56 pmJulieYBM wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 10:38 am
Dragon Ball GT breaks the rules of Dragon Ball up to thet point and does so by grounding some of these broken rules in basic storytelling, like the death of characters and the impossibility of overcoming certain things in life.
Whenever I get the itch for this type of storytelling you're describing, I can think of hundreds of franchises not named Dragon Ball. Why woul
Because it's good and useful.
Dragon Ball GT was part of a 508 episode run of television with multiple lead creatives working on said project over a decade of time in a changing world and changing industry. There just isn't anything surprising about change or ignoring older episodes nobody had watched in half a decade-plus. It's good, actually, to give your audience new and different things, especially if you're reminding them of parts of life that they're trying to escape.
PhantomSaiyan wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 12:56 pmJulieYBM wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 10:38 am
I don't think that Dragon Ball GT went far enough
Earlier in the thread you also said you wanted characters to suffer even worse fates in GT or something along those lines (sorry I can't find the exact quote right now, I tried looking but there's a lot of posts here) why so much sadism for DB characters

I get that new things in the franchise are a breath of fresh air (when done well imo) but if it loses too much of it's identity, then I have no reason to watch it over the thousand other anime or media in general that already do those tropes way better.
If I'm gonna watch Dragon Ball, I want to at least see a Dragon Ball esque type of storytelling
My entire existence is an insult to our society, so you'll forgive me if I'm just not affected by shaking up the status quo in general, let alone in what is just a silly cartoon from 1996-1997. It's not a big issue to look back and go, "Yeah, they should have leaned on the gas a little more here." Kill off the human characters and keep them dead! Get that core cast of characters down to only the new ones. People die and things change, audiences should know this and the arts shouldn't be used as a vehicle to escape reality, it's a place to acknowledge it and reflect on how to change it.
For all of Toriyama talking about silliness like 'poison' his brand and its spin-offs sure do wind up conforming to expectations a lot.
Also...what does it even matter? You can create a million different stories—
Dragon Ball or not—all unconnected from one another, so why not do something a bit more bittersweet for
Dragon Ball GT's ending? It's not like any future project was obligated to follow up on it.