Torishima gives his opinion on Dragon Ball Daima and says he would make a Vegeta story

Discussion specifically regarding the "Dragon Ball Daima" TV series premiering October 2024, including individual threads for each episode.
User avatar
kprison
Newbie
Posts: 23
Joined: Sun Feb 08, 2026 5:59 pm

Re: Torishima gives his opinion on Dragon Ball Daima and says he would make a Vegeta story

Post by kprison » Wed Mar 18, 2026 10:33 pm

The Dark Knight wrote: Wed Mar 18, 2026 9:58 pm This pretty much applies to any series that's continued beyond its original ending...
I think late 20th century sci-fi proves this is not true. Star Trek and Battle Star Galactica come to mind. Both were brought back and surpassed all previous incarnations.

There's just a limit to how far you can push any particular form, whether it be stories, or visuals, or music. That limit is in flux, it can change along with culture to some extent, but you will eventually hit it, and once you do it becomes little more than a museum.

Trek also happens to be a good example of this in modern day, it did come back and thrived in the 80's and 90's, but now it's the same thing. They've tried turning it into an epic drama, they've tried the Marvel formula, they've tried imitating the version of it that did work, and none of it hits. It has a good episode here and there but it's not impacting anything culturally on a serious level. Just temporary social media commentary followed by permanent irrelevance.

User avatar
Chuquita
Namekian Warrior
Posts: 15277
Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2004 2:16 am
Location: Somewhere

Re: Torishima gives his opinion on Dragon Ball Daima and says he would make a Vegeta story

Post by Chuquita » Thu Mar 19, 2026 1:09 am

I agree.

You can only loop the same scenario and iterate variations of it so many times before you run out of meaningful things to say. Eventually you'll have your favorite version of it and that's that.

At least, until you yourself change enough where your perspective has shifted and you can come at the same story from your current, more experienced/older point of view. Part of why I think I'm still around this fandom is because the characters age over the course of the story and it changes how I see them as I age.


There's plenty of anime-only DB I enjoy and count in my own head-canon (a shout-out to the anime version of the Goku vs Majin Vegeta fight. And the driving episode.), but with the original author having passed away, it really does feel like--to me anyway--DB is effectively dead.

The current official crew left behind who are in charge of making new official DB works don't inspire confidence in me. I'm not looking forward to Beerus and watching Takahashi, Tate, and Tsuji get their artstyles obliterated in the name of modern Yamamuro. (If Super Kai can prove my doubts misplaced, I'll be impressed.) Super was a roller coaster of good and bad art, but to lose the peaks with the valleys just so the art is uniform across the board--and replaced by Yamamuro's current, stiff artstyle of all things, feels like a disservice. I don't know.
On hiatus.

User avatar
PhantomSaiyan
Beyond-the-Beyond Newbie
Posts: 408
Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2025 4:32 pm
Location: A Dark Future

Re: Torishima gives his opinion on Dragon Ball Daima and says he would make a Vegeta story

Post by PhantomSaiyan » Thu Mar 19, 2026 12:46 pm

kprison wrote: Wed Mar 18, 2026 7:32 pm What he probably means is that Dragon Ball is creatively dead, which has been true for a long time. All the new stuff does is imitate the formula of the original run, but the original production and cultural context is gone, so it's all out of touch. It's a corpse that they dress up and dance around like a marionette. It's a Michael Jackson hologram concert.
No, that is not what he meant, what he means is pretty clear and I've explained it already in this thread, and it's not what you said at all.

What he said is that when he and Toriyama worked on the story they didn't care about teaching any lesson to the reader, and conceptualized the manga like the old Tom and Jerry cartoons where the point of them was just to entertain the viewer without caring for being deep or having any morals or thematic message.

That's it, he did not mean that the franchise was creatively dead.

User avatar
Kenji
Beyond Newbie
Posts: 129
Joined: Wed Nov 26, 2025 9:17 am

Re: Torishima gives his opinion on Dragon Ball Daima and says he would make a Vegeta story

Post by Kenji » Fri Mar 20, 2026 9:38 am

Even Tom and Jerry had bits of social commentary once in a while.
There's an episode where Jerry leaves Tom's house to go live in the big city, has an awful time, and decides There's No Place Like Home.
Another episode has both of them committing suicide because they lost everything trying to impress a girl who didn't love them back.
Yet another had Tom's owner replacing him with a mechanical cat due to the perceived notion the automation era was perfect, only to call "the old-fashioned method" back when said cat starts malfunctioning.

More infamously, "The Night Before Christmas" was created to oppose World War II, and there's an episode where Jerry spits on Hitler's face. You could only wish modern film & cartoon makers would do a similar gag with Trump's face in it.

User avatar
PhantomSaiyan
Beyond-the-Beyond Newbie
Posts: 408
Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2025 4:32 pm
Location: A Dark Future

Re: Torishima gives his opinion on Dragon Ball Daima and says he would make a Vegeta story

Post by PhantomSaiyan » Fri Mar 20, 2026 11:21 am

Kenji wrote: Fri Mar 20, 2026 9:38 am Even Tom and Jerry had bits of social commentary once in a while.
There's an episode where Jerry leaves Tom's house to go live in the big city, has an awful time, and decides There's No Place Like Home.
Another episode has both of them committing suicide because they lost everything trying to impress a girl who didn't love them back.
Yet another had Tom's owner replacing him with a mechanical cat due to the perceived notion the automation era was perfect, only to call "the old-fashioned method" back when said cat starts malfunctioning.

More infamously, "The Night Before Christmas" was created to oppose World War II, and there's an episode where Jerry spits on Hitler's face. You could only wish modern film & cartoon makers would do a similar gag with Trump's face in it.
Indeed, very true.

I think Torishima just brought up that example in conversation to make a point quickly without much nuance since the majority of Tom and Jerry was typical cat chases the mouse cartoon gags, or he might not have remembered those instances, it can happen when you're referencing something you watched long ago, maybe even before you were able to pick up on bits of social commentary.

But yeah Tom and Jerry absolutely had instances where concrete social messages were conveyed

Post Reply