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==Additional Sun Wukong References in Dragon Ball Media==
==Additional Sun Wukong References in Dragon Ball Media==
[[File:Manabu-yamashita-bwfc-8-nycc-2018-cropped.jpg|250px|thumb|Photograph from New York Comic Con 2018 showcasing Manabu Yamashita's Bandai World Figure Colosseum contribution]]
[[File:Manabu-yamashita-bwfc-8-nycc-2018-cropped.jpg|250px|thumb|Photograph from New York Comic Con 2018 showcasing Manabu Yamashita's Bandai World Figure Colosseum contribution]]
[[File:Shfiguarts-goku-jttw-announcement.jpg|250px|thumb|Promotional image for the "SON GOKU 〈ONWARDS TO ADVENTURE〉" S.H.Figuarts release]]
Likely in reference to the aforementioned 1989 ''[[Weekly Shōnen Jump]]'' illustration, [[Son Gohan]] is depicted in Sun Wukong's attire and holding ''[[Nyoi-Bō]]'' in the closing shot to "[[Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!]]," the first closing theme to the ''Dragon Ball Z'' television series.
Likely in reference to the aforementioned 1989 ''[[Weekly Shōnen Jump]]'' illustration, [[Son Gohan]] is depicted in Sun Wukong's attire and holding ''[[Nyoi-Bō]]'' in the closing shot to "[[Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!]]," the first closing theme to the ''Dragon Ball Z'' television series.


Goku figure in Wukong outfit based on 1989 drawing; sculpted by Manabu Yamashita for the Bandai World Figure Colosseum line  
'''TO DO:''' Goku figure in Wukong outfit based on 1989 drawing; sculpted by Manabu Yamashita for the Bandai World Figure Colosseum line  
 
The "SON GOKU 〈ONWARDS TO ADVENTURE〉" figure releasing '''23 October 2026''' is modeled off of the ''Journey to the West'' illustration Akira Toriyama provided for the "Catchphrase Grand Prix" (キャッチフレーズグランプリ) in the 1989 #23 issue of ''Weekly Shonen Jump'', featuring Goku, Piccolo, Gohan, and Kuririn dressed up as Wukong, Sandy, Pigsy, and Tripitaka, respectively.


==Performance==
==Performance==

Revision as of 12:13, 5 February 2026

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Sun Wukong
孫悟空 (Son Gokū)
Personal Data
Aliases Great Sage, Equal to Heaven
v · d · e

The monkey king Sun Wukong is one of the main characters from the 16th century Chinese novel Journey to the West by Wu Cheng'en, and serves as the underlying basis for the character that ultimately became Son Goku, the main protagonist of Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball franchise.

Though he shares a history of development tracking back to Journey to the West, Son Goku from Dragon Ball is a distinct character from Sun Wukong.

Biography

TBD

Name

Initially known as the "stone monkey" (石猴 Shí Hóu) and later as the "handsome monkey king" (美猴王 Měi Hóuwáng), "Sun Wukong" (孫悟空 Sūn Wùkōng) is one of the monkey king's various titles, given to him by his first master, the Taoist monk Subodhi:[1]

The Patriarch laughed and said, "Though your features are not the most attractive, you do resemble a monkey (hu-sun) that feeds on pine seeds. This gives me the idea of deriving your surname from your appearance. I intended to call you by the name 'Hu.' Now, when the accompanying animal radical is dropped from this word, what's left is a compound made up of the two characters, ku and yüeh. Ku means aged and yüeh means female, but an aged female cannot reproduce. Therefore, it is better to give you the surname of 'Sun'. When the accompanying radical is dropped from this word, we have the compound of tzŭ and hsi. Tzŭ means a boy and hsi means a baby, so that the name exactly accords with the Doctrine of the Baby. So your surname will be 'Sun'." When the Monkey King heard this, he was filled with delight. "Splendid! Splendid!" he cried, kowtowing. "At least I know my surname. May the Master be even more gracious! Since I have receive the surname, let me be given also a personal name, so that it may facilitate your calling and commanding me." The Patriarch said, "Within my tradition are twelve characters which have been used to name the pupils according to their divisions. You are one who belongs to the tenth generation." "Which twelve characters are they?" asked the Monkey King. The Patriarch said, "They are: wide (kuang), great (ta), wise (chih), intelligence (hui), true (chên), conforming (ju), nature (hsing), sea (hai), sharp (ying), wake-to (wu), complete (yüan), and awakening (chüeh). Your rank falls precisely on the word 'wake-to' (wu). You will hence be given the religious name 'Wake-to-Vacuity' (wu-k'ung). All right?" "Splendid! Splendid!" said the Monkey King, laughing: "henceforth I shall be called Sun Wu-k'ung."
The Journey to the West Volume 1, Translated and Edited by Anthony C. Yu (page #)

Subsequent adventures and shenanigans result in the empty and degrading title/position of "Keeper of the Heavenly Horses" (弼馬溫 Bìmǎwēn, a sly homophone of 避馬瘟 bìmǎwēn or "to prevent horse's disease", intended to insult Wukong without him knowing it), followed by Wukong's own self-proclaimed title of "Great Sage, Equal to Heaven" (齊天大聖 Qítiān Dàshèng).

The same Chinese characters of 孫悟空 pronounced as Sūn Wùkōng in Chinese are pronounced as Son Gokū in Japanese. Because the name is taken directly from its source material, various other "Son Goku" (or simply "Goku") characters exist throughout other — even sometimes contemporary — manga and anime series that likewise take inspiration from or otherwise adapt Journey to the West. Some of these include, but are not limited to:

  • Jan Kūgo (anagram of "Gokū") from Yugo Serikawa and Leiji Matsumoto's SF Saiyūki Starzinger
  • Gokū Furinji, from Buichi Terasawa's Midnight Eye Goku
  • Son Gokū, from Kazuya Minekura's Saiyuki
  • Gokū, from Jōji Arimori and Romu Aoi's Asobotto Senki Gokū

Similarly, many video game characters follow the same pattern based on the same source material, including (but not limited to):

  • The unnamed main character built out of breakable blocks, from the 1979 arcade game Monkey Magic by Nintendo
  • SonSon, from the 1984 video game SonSon by Capcom
  • Sun Wukong, from the 1986 video game Ganso Saiyūki: Super Monkey Daibōken by Techno Quest
  • Sun Wukong (or "Wu Kong" or "Mike Chen"), from the 1988 video game Chūka Taisen
  • Goku, from the 1989 video game Famicom Mukashibanashi: Yūyūki by Nintendo
  • SonSon (Son Goku), from the 1989 video game SonSon II by Capcom
  • Wukong, from the 1996 video game Legend of Wukong by Ming Technology Co., Ltd
  • Son Goku, from the 1999 video game Saiyuki: Journey West by Koei
  • Kongo, from the 1999 video game Monkey Magic by Sunsoft
  • Monkey, from the 1999 video game Monkey Hero by Take-Two Interactive
  • SonSon III (granddaughter of the original SonSon), from the 2000 video game Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes by Capcom
  • Son Goku, from the 2007 video game Saiyūki: Kinkaku Ginkaku no Inbō by D3PUBLISHER
  • Monkey, from the 2010 video game Enslaved: Odyssey to the West by Ninja Theory
  • Wukong, a 2011 addition to the 2009 video game League of Legends by Riot Games
  • Sun Wukong, from the 2019 video game Sun Wukong VS Robot by Bitca
  • Sun Wokong, from the 2019 video game Monkey King: Hero is Back by THQ Nordic
  • Qitian Dasheng, a 2019 dungeon boss addition to the 2010 video game Final Fantasy XIV by Square Enix
  • Wukong, from the 2019 video game Wukong by Gammera Nest SL
  • Wukong, from the 2019 video game Unruly Heroes by Magic Design Studios
  • Sun Wukong, from the 2024 video game Black Myth: Wukong by Game Science

Dragon Ball Production

Adapted Tripitaka, Sun Wukong, and Zhu Bajie characters by Akira Toriyama in his first draft along the road to developing Dragon Ball; other than Tripitaka being changed into a western-looking girl, the other two are still very much heavily inspired by their original Journey to the West versions at this point.[2]
Near-final, recognizable Dragon Ball characters by Akira Toriyama in his third draft along the road to developing Dragon Ball.[2]

Origin in Journey to the West

Like several elements within early Dragon Ball[3][4], Son Goku finds his inspiration in Journey to the West, a classical Chinese folk novel published in the 16th century by Wu Cheng'en.

Pre-Dragon Ball

Between the Dragon Boy and The Adventure of Tongpoo prototype publications in 1983 and Dragon Ball's first publication in November 1984, Akira Toriyama developed drafts of the Dragon Ball stories with his editor Kazuhiko Torishima. The early drafts elaborated on the original Dragon Boy concept, incorporating elements from Journey to the West.[3][5] Having decided on a young female companion (no doubt shaped by both Dragon Boy and specifically The Adventure of Tongpoo), a western-style girl took the role of Tripitaka. Toriyama's design of Son Goku was literally that of the Monkey King himself, complete with the head decoration and staff. Zhu Bajie came over mostly intact as well, complete with his trademark rake.[2] In these early stages, it was indeed still a somewhat-faithful adaptation of Journey to the West, and was in fact rejected for being so faithful.[6]

In Toriyama's third pass — which moved through both pilot and final manuscripts — story details began to take form, as well as the names for other supporting characters. At this point, only Son Goku retains his original name from Journey to the West.[2]

Dragon Ball

Son Goku was retained into the final version of the manga. While Dragon Ball's Son Goku is similar to the original Sun Wukong in some ways (most notably Kinto'un, Nyoi-Bō, and the Great Ape transformation likely being an allusion to Wukong's ability to transform), by and large the characters are completely unrelated.

Sun Wukong Artwork by Akira Toriyama

Drawing from an interstitial page in the sixth collected volume of the Dragon Ball manga featuring Sun Wukong and Son Goku
Akira Toriyama's Showa vs. Heisei: Anime, Tokusatsu, Manga Hero & Heroine Top 20 celebratory drawing and comment

A side-by-side drawing of "the original Son Goku" (元祖孫悟空 Ganzo Son Gokū)[7] and Son Goku from Dragon Ball was included on an interstitial page in the sixth collected volume of the Dragon Ball manga in 1986.[8] This drawing was featured as the Dragon Ball Official Site's 153rd entry in its The Nearly Complete Works of Akira Toriyama ongoing weekday column in August 2018.[7]

Akira Toriyama provided a full-color drawing of Son Goku, Son Gohan, Kuririn, and Piccolo — depicted as stand-ins for Sun Wukong, Zhu Bajie, Tripitaka, and Sha Wujing, respectively, with appropriate clothing and accessories — for the "Catchphrase Grand Prix" feature in the 1989 No. 23 issue of Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump in Japan. The illustration received full-page reprints in Akira Toriyama - The World[9] and Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 1 ("The Complete Illustrations"),[10] a quarter-page reprint in the Dragon Ball Chōgashū ("A Visual History"),[11] and a small reprint for the "Dragon Ball Secret File" feature in the 30th Anniversary Super History Book.[12] Viz repurposed this same image as the cover artwork for their fourth monthly issue of the "Dragon Ball Z"-branded comic release in June 1998.

In 2014, Stephen Chow's own fandom of Dragon Ball led to Akira Toriyama drawing Sun Wukong for poster artwork for Chow's film Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons, which Toriyama also provided a glowing comment for.[13] This drawing was featured as the 153rd entry in The Nearly Complete Works of Akira Toriyama in May 2018.[14]

The mightiest fun in the galaxy, far surpassing the walls of expectations and common sense!!

This is the first perfect popcorn-movie I've seen in a long time!

Intense energy that makes you not care about the trivial details! Masterful allocation of seriousness and comedy! Shamelessly cheap-looking staging! Calculated story developments! This is the pinnacle of my ideal in popcorn-movies! I have nothing to gain through this flattery, so it's 100% no exaggeration, no nothing.

Due to the nature of my profession, I have a bad habit where when I watch a movie, I always end up thinking about subsequent plot developments, but in spite of this movie having the motif of the famous Journey to the West, I couldn't predict where it was going at all. Not even stupid established concepts like film theory or rules hold true. As a result of this wonderful betrayal, it is a properly magnificent, new Journey to the West that only its birthplace could deliver, and I'm positively moved at how it's punctuated by the director's usual themes of "love" and "little gags."

It really comes across on the screen that the director was able to complete the movie exactly according to his passion and vision. When we're inundated with big blockbuster movies that are all long on visuals but short on ambition or individuality, pandering to audiences for the sake of box-office earnings, how thrilled I would have been at its delightfulness for this fact alone! It was just the greatest Journey to the West, so much so that I don't even know how to express it!!

Incidentally, the characters' individual traits and the casting of the actors were also wonderful, and I was especially impressed at the acting skill of the person who played Sun Wukong, who at first could seem like an unexpected choice, appearance-wise.
— Akira Toriyama

In 2017, Toriyama provided another side-by-side drawing (along with a celebratory comment) of Sun Wukong and Son Goku for the television special program Showa vs. Heisei: Anime, Tokusatsu, Manga Hero & Heroine Top 20, where Dragon Ball's own Son Goku was ultimately named the number one hero:[15][16][17]

Even though I knew that battle manga went over well with readers of shōnen manga, I still stubbornly decided to do a Journey to the West adventure manga. Since it'd be a bit drab to just leave things as-is, I changed the monkey to a human with a tail and started off a modified version of Journey to the West where they search for the seven Dragon Balls.

But sure enough it didn't get very popular, so I had no choice but to obediently change course to a battle-centric manga. Afterwards I got rid of the tail (it was in the way) and so in the end only the name "Son Goku" remained.

Thank you very much for selecting that Goku as the number one strongest hero!!
— Akira Toriyama

Additional Sun Wukong References in Dragon Ball Media

Photograph from New York Comic Con 2018 showcasing Manabu Yamashita's Bandai World Figure Colosseum contribution
Promotional image for the "SON GOKU 〈ONWARDS TO ADVENTURE〉" S.H.Figuarts release

Likely in reference to the aforementioned 1989 Weekly Shōnen Jump illustration, Son Gohan is depicted in Sun Wukong's attire and holding Nyoi-Bō in the closing shot to "Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!," the first closing theme to the Dragon Ball Z television series.

TO DO: Goku figure in Wukong outfit based on 1989 drawing; sculpted by Manabu Yamashita for the Bandai World Figure Colosseum line

The "SON GOKU 〈ONWARDS TO ADVENTURE〉" figure releasing 23 October 2026 is modeled off of the Journey to the West illustration Akira Toriyama provided for the "Catchphrase Grand Prix" (キャッチフレーズグランプリ) in the 1989 #23 issue of Weekly Shonen Jump, featuring Goku, Piccolo, Gohan, and Kuririn dressed up as Wukong, Sandy, Pigsy, and Tripitaka, respectively.

Performance

Notable Appearances

References

  1. Wu Cheng'en. Yu, Anthony C. The Journey to the West Volume 1. USA: The University of Chicago Press, 1977. ISBN 0-226-97150-3.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "BEFORE DRAGON BALL". Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 2: Story Guide. Japan: Shueisha, 04 August 1995. ISBN 4-08-782752-6. (p. 90)
  3. 3.0 3.1 Toriyama, Akira. "The Making of Dragon Ball". Bird Land Press 15. November 1984.
    Kanzenshuu Translations Archive: Bird Land Press 15 - "The Making of Dragon Ball"
  4. "Akira Toriyama Super Interview". Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 2: Story Guide. Japan: Shueisha, 04 August 1995. ISBN 4-08-782752-6. (pp. 261-265)
    Kanzenshuu Translations Archive: Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 2: Story Guide - "Akira Toriyama Super Interview"
  5. "Kazuhiko Torishima On Shaping The Success Of 'Dragon Ball' And The Origins Of 'Dragon Quest'" (15 October 2016). Forbes. Retrieved: 02 October 2020.
  6. "TBD". Dragon Ball: Adventure Special. Japan: Shueisha, 18 November 1987. (p. TBD)
  7. 7.0 7.1 "【鳥山明ほぼ全仕事】 平日更新24時間限定公開! 2018/08/23" (23 August 2018). Dragon Ball Official Site. Retrieved: 23 October 2018.
  8. Toriyama, Akira. Dragon Ball Volume 3: The Tenka'ichi Budōkai Begins!!. Japan: Shueisha, 10 June 1986. ISBN 4-08-851833-0. (p. TBD)
  9. "Dragon Ball". Akira Toriyama - The World. Japan: Shueisha, 15 January 1990. ISBN 4-08-858130-X). (p. 34)
  10. "1989". Dragon Ball Daizenshuu 1: Complete Illustrations. Japan: Shueisha, 25 June 1995. ISBN 4-08-782751-8. (p. 73)
  11. "1989". Dragon Ball Chōgashū. Japan: Shueisha, 09 May 2013. ISBN 978-4-08-782520-6. (p. 55)
  12. "The PERIOD of DRAGON BALL: EPISODE 1989-1992". 30th Anniversary: Dragon Ball Chōshishū –Super History Book–. Japan: Shueisha, 21 January 2016. ISBN 978-4-08-792505-0. (p. 52)
  13. "Akira Toriyama Draws Sun Wukong in Support of Chow Film" (07 November 2014). Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 30 August 2021.
  14. "【鳥山明ほぼ全仕事】 平日更新24時間限定公開! 2018/05/31" (31 May 2018). Dragon Ball Official Site. Retrieved: 31 May 2018.
  15. "昭和VS平成!?マンガ、アニメ、特撮のヒーロー&ヒロイントップ20発表" (21 August 2017). Natalie. Retrieved: 30 August 2021.
  16. "New Translations: “Showa vs. Heisei!?” Special, “Resurrection ‘F'” Anime Comic, and “Dr. Slump” Volume 18 Akira Toriyama Comments" (14 September 2017). Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 30 August 2021.
  17. "Kanzenshuu Translations Archive: Showa vs. Heisei: Anime, Tokusatsu, Manga Hero & Heroine Top 20" (14 September 2017). Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 30 August 2021.