Dragon Ball fans used to make jokes about Dragon Ball GT all the time. They recognized it as a soulless cash grab and a cheap follow-up to Dragon Ball Z. They rightfully bashed everything about it, including the story, the characters, and the art. It was a poor continuation of the Dragon Ball franchise in every respect imaginable. However, the franchise was eventually graced with a new series: Dragon Ball Super. This new sequel to DBZ made fans reevaluate how they felt about GT.Super is as much of a soulless cash grab as GT. However, what separates the two is where the quality of each of them lies. Both series have things about their story and presentation that do and don’t work. However, while GT ended after 64 episodes, Super went on for more than twice that long and is expected to someday return with more. Is there something that makes one series better than the other, or have Dragon Ball fans grown complacent? To answer that question, it is necessary to look closely at both series and understand what makes an ideal successor to the Dragon Ball name.GT isn’t usually remembered fondly, but it did have its merits. For one thing, the general ideas behind the show were good on paper; a search for the Dragon Balls across the galaxy rather than a single planet, a fight against an alien parasite with a vendetta against the Saiyans, another revenge match against all the former villains of the series, and a final arc where the Dragon Balls themselves are the villains. Anyone who heard these would be plots for future Dragon Ball Arcs would have been ecstatic.RELATED: How The Dragon Ball Super Manga is Leaving Dragon Ball GT Behind
Dragon Ball fans used to make jokes about Dragon Ball GT all the time. They recognized it as a soulless cash grab and a cheap follow-up to Dragon Ball Z. They rightfully bashed everything about it, including the story, the characters, and the art. It was a poor continuation of the Dragon Ball franchise in every respect imaginable. However, the franchise was eventually graced with a new series: Dragon Ball Super. This new sequel to DBZ made fans reevaluate how they felt about GT.
Super is as much of a soulless cash grab as GT. However, what separates the two is where the quality of each of them lies. Both series have things about their story and presentation that do and don’t work. However, while GT ended after 64 episodes, Super went on for more than twice that long and is expected to someday return with more. Is there something that makes one series better than the other, or have Dragon Ball fans grown complacent? To answer that question, it is necessary to look closely at both series and understand what makes an ideal successor to the Dragon Ball name.
GT isn’t usually remembered fondly, but it did have its merits. For one thing, the general ideas behind the show were good on paper; a search for the Dragon Balls across the galaxy rather than a single planet, a fight against an alien parasite with a vendetta against the Saiyans, another revenge match against all the former villains of the series, and a final arc where the Dragon Balls themselves are the villains. Anyone who heard these would be plots for future Dragon Ball Arcs would have been ecstatic.
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