Jinzoningen MULE wrote:I was being hyperbolic, but I'd say it's a general rule for creative output as a whole, at least in modern storytelling.
Read more small press stuff then (or watch or listen to content put out by smaller artists and publishers, depending on the medium). There's a wide, wide world of narrative art that's concerned with commercial potential as a secondary element, if one at all.
It's easy to lose track of that discussing a commercially driven mega-franchise like
Dragon Ball, but material that captures mass attention is a drop in the bucket of professionally published creative content. You don't even have to dive too far into the worlds of books/films to escape it.
And even Toriyama was once a show-offy artist drawing largely for personal amusement, hoping to strike it big with the kind of content he enjoyed. That attitude even managed to come through
Dragon Ball's original run, despite its editorially mandated beginnings. I bring that up to point out that there is a difference between the core story that brought us onto this forum and the kind of future promotional fiction we seem destined to get; it needn't be glibly accepted taken as a given. This isn't just
Dragon Ball as usual.