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Adding transformations and lots of other stuff
Adding some SSJ2 specifics, some other video game notes
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Gogeta makes his video game debut in 1995's ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22]]'' on the Sony PlayStation<ref>{{Cite videogame|Game=c19}}</ref>; the 2003 North American release of the game mistakenly refers to him as "Vegito". The character makes regular appearances in ''Dragon Ball'' video games after this point.
Gogeta makes his video game debut in 1995's ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22]]'' on the Sony PlayStation<ref>{{Cite videogame|Game=c19}}</ref>; the 2003 North American release of the game mistakenly refers to him as "Vegito". The character makes regular appearances in ''Dragon Ball'' video games after this point.
Super Saiyan Gogeta is seen facing [[Broli]] in the opening animation to 2004's ''[[Dragon Ball Z 3]]'', while Super Saiyan 4 Gogeta is seen facing ''[[Yi Xing Long]]'' in the opening animation to 2011's ''[[Dragon Ball: Ultimate Blast]]''.


==Transformations==
==Transformations==
Line 88: Line 90:
===Super Saiyan===
===Super Saiyan===


In the twelfth ''Dragon Ball Z'' film, Goku and Vegeta finally perform the fusion dance correctly to form Gogeta, who appears immediately in Super Saiyan form. In ''Dragon Ball Super: Broly'', the two first form Gogeta in an non-transformed state before ramping up to Super Saiyan.
In the twelfth ''Dragon Ball Z'' film, Goku and Vegeta finally perform the fusion dance correctly to form Gogeta, who appears immediately in Super Saiyan form. In ''Dragon Ball Super: Broly'', the two first form Gogeta in an non-transformed state before ramping up to Super Saiyan. Gogeta appears in Super Saiyan form in most of his subsequent video game inclusions.
 
===Super Saiyan 2===
[[File:heroes_card_JPJ-21.jpg|thumb|150px|Super Saiyan Gogeta ''[[Dragon Ball Heroes]]'' card [[JPJ-21]] with a Super Saiyan 2 transformation]]
Gogeta reaches Super Saiyan 2 in the ''[[Dragon Ball Heroes]]'' card-based video game through various actions. Through the [[JPJ-21]] promotional card (originally distributed with the September 2014 issue of [[Shueisha]]'s ''[[V-Jump]]'' magazine that July), for example, Gogeta will transform into Super Saiyan 2 during the second round while also receiving a boost of 3000 to power.


===Super Saiyan 3===
===Super Saiyan 3===
[[File:heroes_card_HG3-CP4.jpg|thumb|150px|Super Saiyan 3 Gogeta ''[[Dragon Ball Heroes]]'' card HG3-CP4]]
[[File:heroes_card_HG3-CP4.jpg|thumb|150px|Super Saiyan 3 Gogeta ''[[Dragon Ball Heroes]]'' card [[HG3-CP4]]]]
As part of the "Sparking Campaign" alongside the "Galaxy Mission 3" update, Gogeta received a [[Super Saiyan 3]] transformation in ''Dragon Ball Heroes'' in 2012. The August 2012 issue of [[Shueisha]]'s ''[[V-Jump]]'' magazine heavily promoted this transformation, and included three cards (a Super Saiyan 3 Vegeta card and a Super Saiyan 3 Goku card, alongside a Super Saiyan 3 Gotenks card) allowing players to access the form.<ref>{{Cite web|URL=http://www.kanzenshuu.com/2012/06/21/super-saiyan-3-gogeta-coming-to-dragon-ball-heroes/|Website=Kanzenshuu|Title="Super Saiyan 3 Gogeta Coming to 'Dragon Ball Heroes'"|Date=21 June 2012|AccessDate=11 January 2019}}</ref> The character received his first individual card already in the Super Saiyan 3 transformation, [[HG3-CP4]], that same update.
As part of the "Sparking Campaign" alongside the "Galaxy Mission 3" update, Gogeta received a [[Super Saiyan 3]] transformation in ''Dragon Ball Heroes'' in 2012. The August 2012 issue of [[Shueisha]]'s ''[[V-Jump]]'' magazine heavily promoted this transformation, and included three cards (a Super Saiyan 3 Vegeta card and a Super Saiyan 3 Goku card, alongside a Super Saiyan 3 Gotenks card) allowing players to access the form.<ref>{{Cite web|URL=http://www.kanzenshuu.com/2012/06/21/super-saiyan-3-gogeta-coming-to-dragon-ball-heroes/|Website=Kanzenshuu|Title="Super Saiyan 3 Gogeta Coming to 'Dragon Ball Heroes'"|Date=21 June 2012|AccessDate=11 January 2019}}</ref> The character received his first individual card already in the Super Saiyan 3 transformation, [[HG3-CP4]], that same update.



Revision as of 09:25, 13 January 2019

This page is incomplete.
Kanzenshuu wiki team members are aware that they must edit this page to add missing information and complete it.
Gogeta
ゴジータ (Gojīta)
Film
Gogeta (Film)
DBGT
Gogeta (DBGT)
English Name(s) Gogeta (FUNimation)
Gogeta (Bandai Namco)
Gogeta (Toei)
Name Pun Son Goku + Vegeta
Anime Debut Dragon Ball Z Movie 12
Japanese VA Masako Nozawa + Ryō Horikawa
Funimation VA Sean Schemmel + Christopher R. Sabat
v · d · e

Gogeta, the Metamoran dance-based fusion of Son Goku and Vegeta, is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball franchise. Gogeta originally debuted in the twelfth Dragon Ball Z theatrical film in 1995.[1] A character of the same name was used in Super Saiyan 4 form in the Dragon Ball GT television series in 1997.[2] Gogeta's original design was adapted by Akira Toriyama[3] for the 2018 theatrical film Dragon Ball Super: Broly.[4]

Biography

The ultimate warrior, Gogeta is the result of fusion between Son Goku and Vegeta using the special dance Goku learned from the people of Planet Metamor. Gogeta's clothing is the native garb of these people.[5] Gogeta's design features Goku's bangs and Vegeta's facial expressions.[6] All of Gogeta's abilities, such as his power and speed, are given a super upgrade courtesy of the fusion. However, perhaps due to Vegeta's influence, it seems his personality becomes a little bad. The failed attempt, Veku, is extremely weak, but his bad personality itself is the same.[7]

Dragon Ball Z Movie 12

TBD

Dragon Ball GT

TBD

Dragon Ball Super: Broly

TBD

Name

Veku Dragon Ball Heroes card HJ8-39

Gogeta's name is a clear combination of Goku (悟空, Gokū) and Vegeta (ベジータ, Bejīta) into Gogeta (ゴジータ, Gojīta), in line with other similar combinations of character names for fusions.

The character's name has been transliterated as "Gozita" in the past; this is likely due to the placement of the ジ (ji) character in katakana as part of the "z-" syllable row (za, ji, zu, ze, zo). All modern materials now use "Gogeta".

An incomplete, failed version of the fusion appears in the twelfth Dragon Ball Z theatrical film, named by the Southern Kaiō as not a "Gogeta", but a "Veku" (ベクウ, Bekū), itself a separate combination of Vegeta (ベジータ, Bejīta) and Goku (悟空, Gokū). This failed version subsequently also appears in Dragon Ball Super: Broly. Early merchandise such as Carddass cards labeled this failed fusion under the "Gogeta" name[8], while subsequent releases and merchandise would stick with "Veku" as a standard name.

Production

Chapter 502's original serialization notes "Gogeta" as appearing next chapter
Gogeta and "Veku" designs from Daizenshuu 6

The idea for fusion in the Dragon Ball series was suggested by Masakazu Katsura, fellow manga artist and friend to Akira Toriyama, who was struggling with a way to power-up his heroes beyond the (by then) traditional and standard Super Saiyan transformations.[9] Gotenks, a fusion of Son Goten and the present-timeline Trunks, debuts in chapter 480 of the manga, originally serialized in July 1994.

The twelfth Dragon Ball Z film — The Rebirth of Fusion!! Goku and Vegeta, written by Takao Koyama and directed by Shigeyasu Yamauchi with character designs by Tadayoshi Yamamuro — debuted in March 1995 featuring Gogeta.

Following this usage of fusion in the film, Toriyama once again struggled with what to do in the manga, ultimately using the Kaiōshin earrings — up to that point simply drawn as decoration — as another fusion method.[9] From this, Vegetto was created, debuting in chapter 503 of the manga in January 1995. Promotional splash text at the bottom of chapter 502 states that the reader would see the birth of "Gogeta" in the following chapter, though the character explicitly names himself "Vegetto" (ベジット, Bejītto) in chapter 503; it is unknown whether this was a misprint or perhaps indicates a last-minute name change decision. Said text is present in the original Weekly Shōnen Jump 1995 No. 7 issue as well as volume 18 of the Dragon Ball manga's "Digest Edition" (Sōshūhen) re-release from January 2017.[10][11]

In addition to the standard, "complete" fusion, two "failed" versions were also developed and designed: a "fat" version and a "skinny" version.[7][12] The fat version is labeled as the 失敗作(ベクウ) version — literally the "Failed Work (Veku)" version[7] — while the skinny version is also noted as a version of Veku.[12] The fat version does appear in the twelfth Dragon Ball Z film, though the skinny version does not. Both the fat and skinny versions do make appearances in Dragon Ball Super: Broly.

Performance

Gogeta is played in all media by the standard dual-voice role of Masako Nozawa and Ryō Horikawa (as Son Goku and Vegeta, respectively).

Notable Appearances

Gogeta faces Ginyu in his debut video game appearance, Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22

Gogeta appears in three pieces of animation:

Gogeta makes his video game debut in 1995's Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22 on the Sony PlayStation[13]; the 2003 North American release of the game mistakenly refers to him as "Vegito". The character makes regular appearances in Dragon Ball video games after this point.

Super Saiyan Gogeta is seen facing Broli in the opening animation to 2004's Dragon Ball Z 3, while Super Saiyan 4 Gogeta is seen facing Yi Xing Long in the opening animation to 2011's Dragon Ball: Ultimate Blast.

Transformations

Super Saiyan

In the twelfth Dragon Ball Z film, Goku and Vegeta finally perform the fusion dance correctly to form Gogeta, who appears immediately in Super Saiyan form. In Dragon Ball Super: Broly, the two first form Gogeta in an non-transformed state before ramping up to Super Saiyan. Gogeta appears in Super Saiyan form in most of his subsequent video game inclusions.

Super Saiyan 2

Super Saiyan Gogeta Dragon Ball Heroes card JPJ-21 with a Super Saiyan 2 transformation

Gogeta reaches Super Saiyan 2 in the Dragon Ball Heroes card-based video game through various actions. Through the JPJ-21 promotional card (originally distributed with the September 2014 issue of Shueisha's V-Jump magazine that July), for example, Gogeta will transform into Super Saiyan 2 during the second round while also receiving a boost of 3000 to power.

Super Saiyan 3

Super Saiyan 3 Gogeta Dragon Ball Heroes card HG3-CP4

As part of the "Sparking Campaign" alongside the "Galaxy Mission 3" update, Gogeta received a Super Saiyan 3 transformation in Dragon Ball Heroes in 2012. The August 2012 issue of Shueisha's V-Jump magazine heavily promoted this transformation, and included three cards (a Super Saiyan 3 Vegeta card and a Super Saiyan 3 Goku card, alongside a Super Saiyan 3 Gotenks card) allowing players to access the form.[14] The character received his first individual card already in the Super Saiyan 3 transformation, HG3-CP4, that same update.

Super Saiyan 4

Goku and Vegeta fuse in Super Saiyan 4 form to create Super Saiyan 4 Gogeta.[2] The resulting fusion has red hair and a bit of a childish personality. With ten times the power of a single Super Saiyan 4, Gogeta is capable of defeating Yi Xing Long with a single finger. The character's "dream attack" combines the Big Bang Attack and Kamehameha[15], creating the Big Bang Kamehameha.

Super Saiyan God Super Saiyan

TBD

EX Gogeta

EX Gogeta in Dragon Ball Fusions

In addition to the standard dance fusion-resulting Gogeta, using Bulma's special Metamo-Ring in 2016's Dragon Ball Fusions on the Nintendo 3DS allows Son Goku and Vegeta to fuse into "EX Gogeta" (character no. 120).[16] Players may face Goku and Vegeta in a series of late-game battles (Sub-Event: "Four Fists Are Better Than Two") that sees the two progress up through various forms, including Super Saiyan 4 and Super Saiyan God Super Saiyan, before fusing into EX Gogeta.

Players may then fuse their own characters to create EX Gogeta, provided the three requirements are met:

  • Goku (Adult) is over level 60
  • Vegeta is over level 60
  • Sub-event "Four Fists Are Better Than Two" is cleared

Goku and Vegeta's EX Fusion form. Their personalities are completely opposite, but they are both Saiyans, so their lust for strength is immense.
— EX Gogeta in-game character profile, Dragon Ball Fusions


Additional Information

Akira Toriyama's drawing of Gogeta from 2006's "Dragon Box: The Movies"
Fansub translation of Gogeta in Dragon Ball Z Movie 12

Prior to the character's revival for 2018's Dragon Ball Super: Broly theatrical film, Akira Toriyama is known to have only drawn Gogeta once: to accompany his introductory message for 2006's "Dragon Box: The Movies" home video DVD box set.

The fansub group "Anime Densetsu no Kaitakusha" adapted Gogeta's line in the twelfth Dragon Ball Z film as "I am not Goku nor Vegeta. I am the instrument of your defeat."[17] While a somewhat liberal translation of the original dialog[note 1], this line became well-known enough that it made its way into the 2004 Webfoot Technologies Game Boy Advance game, Dragon Ball Z: Buu's Fury; FUNimation's home video release of the respective film (with its own separate English dub dialog and accurate subtitle translation track) would not be out until March 2006.

Notes

  1. A conservative translation of the line would perhaps be, "I am neither Goku nor Vegeta... I am the one who will defeat you!"

References

  1. Dragon Ball Z: The Rebirth of Fusion!! Goku and Vegeta. Japan: 1995 Toei Anime Fair (Spring). 04 March 1995.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Fusion!! The Ultimate Super Gogeta". Dragon Ball GT. Episode 60. Japan: Fuji TV, 22 October 1997.
  3. "2018 'Dragon Ball Super' Theatrical Film Revealed as Broli Movie" (09 July 2018). Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 11 January 2019.
  4. Dragon Ball Super: Broly. Japan: Formal Nationwide Theatrical Debut. 14 December 2018.
  5. Anime J Wing Act.15. Weekly Shōnen Jump, 1995 #28. Japan: Shueisha, June 1995. (pp. ##)
  6. "DBZ the Movies No. 12". Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 6: Movies & TV Specials. Japan: Shueisha, 04 December 1995. ISBN 4-08-782756-9. (p. #)
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Jump Anime Library 1: Dragon Ball Z Movie 12. Japan: Shueisha, 03 June 1995. (pp. 58, 71)
  8. Daizenshuu 9 page? check and add
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Akira Toriyama Super Interview". Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 6: Movies & TV Specials. Japan: Shueisha, 04 December 1995. ISBN 4-08-782756-9. (p. #)
  10. Dragon Ball Chapter 502: "Is This Gonna Work?! The Potara Fusion!". Dragon Ball Digest Edition — Super Goku Legend, Legend 18: Majin Boo Arc (Part 3). Japan: Shueisha, 13 January 2017. ISBN 978-4-08-111182-4. (p. #)
  11. @VegettoEX (08 March 2018). Twitter. Retrieved: 09 January 2019.
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Character Design Materials". Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 6: Movies & TV Specials. Japan: Shueisha, 04 December 1995. ISBN 4-08-782756-9. (p. 189)
  13. Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22. Japan: Bandai. Sony PlayStation. 28 July 1995.
  14. "Super Saiyan 3 Gogeta Coming to 'Dragon Ball Heroes'" (21 June 2012). Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 11 January 2019.
  15. "GT Characters". Dragon Ball GT: Perfect File Volume 2. Japan: Shueisha, 17 December 1997. ISBN 4-08-874090-4. (p. 15)
  16. Dragon Ball Fusions. Japan: Bandai, Ganbarion. Nintendo 3DS. 04 August 2016.
  17. Jawdrahb (Re: Here is the Real Story of Dragonball Fansubs...) (29 January 2012). Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 10 January 2019.