Dragon Ball Z is known for its epic fights between Super Saiyan warriors and intergalactic aliens capable of destroying entire planets with ease. That formula is whtat made DBZ so immensely popular, but unfortunately for fans of some of the more grounded, human characters, it didn’t leave much room for their parts in the story.Even though Dragon Ball Super takes the series’ bombastic fights to even greater, more God-like proportions, it ironically manages to reincorporate the human characters into the story in ways that DBZ never could. While Krillin and Master Roshi will never become Super Saiyans or gain new transformations like Orange Piccolo, they’ve found a way to remain relevant and fill in their own niche in Dragon Ball Super. Whether it’s Bulma’s humorously complicated friendship with Beerus, or Mai’s actual love story with Trunks, Dragon Ball Super is doing more for its human characters than DBZ ever did.The Frieza Saga still found space for Bulma and Krillin to have some sort of role early in the arc, but in the Cell Saga, the humans were treated like fodder for Cell and his Cell Jrs to beat up on. The only character other than the saiyans who made any substantial impact on the fight was Piccolo, but even he was slowly becoming obsolete. By the time Majin Buu came along, the humans had essentially all retired from mortal combat, and Bulma was hardly seen at all. The clearest indication of what became of the humans in the transition from DB to DBZ is the complete disappearance of one of the main human characters, Launch. Launch was infamously forgotten by Akira Toriyama early in the part of the manga that would later become labeled “Z”, and that’s as telling a sign as any that the humans had already become irrelevant.
Dragon Ball Z is known for its epic fights between Super Saiyan warriors and intergalactic aliens capable of destroying entire planets with ease. That formula is whtat made DBZ so immensely popular, but unfortunately for fans of some of the more grounded, human characters, it didn’t leave much room for their parts in the story.
Even though Dragon Ball Super takes the series’ bombastic fights to even greater, more God-like proportions, it ironically manages to reincorporate the human characters into the story in ways that DBZ never could. While Krillin and Master Roshi will never become Super Saiyans or gain new transformations like Orange Piccolo, they’ve found a way to remain relevant and fill in their own niche in Dragon Ball Super. Whether it’s Bulma’s humorously complicated friendship with Beerus, or Mai’s actual love story with Trunks, Dragon Ball Super is doing more for its human characters than DBZ ever did.
The Frieza Saga still found space for Bulma and Krillin to have some sort of role early in the arc, but in the Cell Saga, the humans were treated like fodder for Cell and his Cell Jrs to beat up on. The only character other than the saiyans who made any substantial impact on the fight was Piccolo, but even he was slowly becoming obsolete. By the time Majin Buu came along, the humans had essentially all retired from mortal combat, and Bulma was hardly seen at all. The clearest indication of what became of the humans in the transition from DB to DBZ is the complete disappearance of one of the main human characters, Launch. Launch was infamously forgotten by Akira Toriyama early in the part of the manga that would later become labeled “Z“, and that’s as telling a sign as any that the humans had already become irrelevant.
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