Gohanks
| This page is incomplete. Kanzenshuu wiki team members are aware that they must edit this page to add missing information and complete it. |
| Gohanks | |
|---|---|
| ゴハンクス (Gohankusu) | |
|
Game Gohanks (Design)Design Gohanks (Game) | |
| English Name(s) | Gohanks (Bandai Namco) |
| Name Pun | Son Gohan + Trunks |
| Game Debut | Dragon Ball Fusions |
| Japanese VA | Masako Nozawa + Takeshi Kusao |
Gohanks is a fusion of Son Gohan and Trunks in the Dragon Ball franchise. A fusion character of this name was initially designed by a then-fifteen-year-old Kentaro Yabuki (who would later rise to prominence as the author of manga series such as Black Cat and To Love-Ru) as a Weekly Shōnen Jump contest submission in 1995. Gohanks was later re-imagined by Bandai Namco for the Dragon Ball Fusions and Dragon Ball Heroes video games in 2016, both in a younger "EX" form and an older "Future" form.
Biography

The "EX" version of Gohanks the result of fusion of the younger Son Gohan and younger present-day Trunks using Bulma's Metamo-Ring. Perhaps due to Gohan's influence, this super cool young fighter may be more mature than Gotenks.[1] The "Future" version Gohanks is the result of the Metamoran fusion dance with the alternate, older versions of Son Gohan and Trunks, master and student from a desperate future. He sports a scar carved into his left eye courtesy of Gohan.[2]
Name
Gohanks' name is a clear combination of Son Gohan (孫悟, Gohan) and Trunks (トランクスン, Torankusu), in line with other similar combinations of character names for fusions.
Production

The 1995 No. 13 issue of Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump (published 28 February 1995 in Japan alongside chapter 508 of the original manga)... contest information... shows screen from anime episode...
The 1995 No. 19 issue of Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump (published 11 April 1995 in Japan alongside chapter 514 of the original manga)... contest winners...
Yabuki recounted his contest submission experience in the supplemental "Dragon Ball Children" pamphlet that accompanied Dragon Ball's seventh kanzenban in June 2003:[3][4]
Speaking of which, my debut in Jump wasn't with my own manga, but with Dragon Ball. Around the end of my third year in junior high, there was a "Fusion Contest" promotion in Jump, where you had to create an original character by making any two characters from Dragon Ball do Fusion. I fused together my favorite characters at the time, teenage Gohan and teenage Trunks, to create a character called "Gohanks"; I drew an illustration and sent it in. Then, I got an award called the "Cool Prize" (heh), and it ran, relatively large, in the color pages of Jump. That experience really moved me.
— Kentaro Yabuki
A completely new re-imagining of Gohanks by Bandai Namco was revealed as a forthcoming playable character in Dragon Ball Fusions and Dragon Ball Heroes in the July 2016 issue of Shueisha's V-Jump magazine.[2]
Performance
Gohanks is played in the standard dual-voice role in Dragon Ball Fusions and Dragon Ball Heroes by Masako Nozawa and Takeshi Kusao (as Son Gohan and Trunks, respectively).
Notable Appearances


Kentaro Yabuki's original concept appears exclusively in the 1995 No. 13 issue of Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump.
"EX Gohanks" appears both in Dragon Ball Fusions on the Nintendo 3DS as well as various Dragon Ball Heroes game versions, including Dragon Ball Heroes: Ultimate Mission X on the Nintendo 3DS. In arcades, he debuted in...
The "Future" version of Gohanks appears in various Dragon Ball Heroes game versions, including Dragon Ball Heroes: Ultimate Mission X on the Nintendo 3DS. In arcades, he debuted in...
In Ultimate Mission X, players may encounter Gohanks in the game's story mode by challenging the recent Jump Victory Carnival Dragon Ball Heroes tournament champion, who can be found flying around the map. Players may also unlock Gohanks in the story mode's 4-3 portal by...
Notes
TBD
References
- ↑ "キャラクター ピリリン". dbpf.bn-ent.net. Retrieved: 15 January 2019.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Dragon Ball Park Monthly". V-Jump, July 2016. Japan: Shueisha, 21 May 2016. (p. 84)
- ↑ Toriyama, Akira. Dragon Ball Kanzenban Volume 7. Japan: Shueisha, 04 March 2003. ISBN 4-08-873450-5.
- ↑ "Translations Archive: Dragon Ball Children Volume 7 — Kentarō Yabuki". Kanzenshuu. Retrieved: 24 January 2019.
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||