Dragon Ball Here
Dragon Ball is not high art. It has plot holes you could fly a Capsule Corp ship through. But it is essential art. It captured the feeling of being a kid on a summer afternoon, convinced that if you just trained hard enough, you could shoot a laser from your palms.
Tenshinhan, who once gave Goku the fight of his life, ends his run sacrificing himself against Buu to buy 30 seconds. Piccolo, the reincarnation of evil, becomes a babysitter. The show doesn’t mock them; it honors them. They are the proof that hard work has a ceiling, but friendship doesn’t. dragon ball
Unlike Western heroes who carry the burden of guilt (Batman) or responsibility (Superman), Goku is pure id. He gives Cell a Senzu bean because he wants Cell to try harder. He spares Vegeta because he wants a rematch. His selfishness is so absolute that it circles back into a strange form of virtue. He forces his enemies to become better people simply because they can’t beat him. Dragon Ball is not high art
Before Goku, shonen protagonists were often wise, mature, or destined for greatness. Goku was a feral child who thought girls were “weird” and only fought because it was fun. That’s the genius of Akira Toriyama: Saving the world is just a side effect. It captured the feeling of being a kid
It taught a generation that losing is okay, that rivals are better than friends, and that the only real sin is stopping your journey. As long as there is a stronger guy over that hill, the story isn't over.