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Dragon Ball shared worldview

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Hello, this CRT will aim to combine the cosmologies of the multiple Dragon Ball continuities into one; a shared worldview if you will. Just to be clear, this is NOT making all the events from each continuity canon, nor the characters.

For starters, this scan goes over Akira Toriyama's involvment with Daima; how he set up the world and lore for this story to take place in. In this case, characters like Rymus and the Supreme Demon king we've seen in flashbacks will be canon, and already are, but this won't always apply and will be case-by-case as will be demonstrated with further examples. The key point to take away here is the mention of the worldview. The mention of worldview creating a link to the setting and story of Dragon Ball is essential to note. Also, we actually already use this same logic with the current standards for the Demon Realm. Of how the events may not be canon to the main continuity of Super (at least for right now), the overall world structure is. One of the major goals for this project was discovering and exploring the mysteries and secrets of the world of Dragon Ball, a sort of overarching story/narrative that applies even if the actual events aren't canon. In a way, it can be thought of as events that could have happened in other storylines but they didn't. There is also another scan that describes the World of Dragon Ball as "continuing to expand". Also, the scans talk about the concept of the “World of Dragon Ball,” and how it encompasses the manga, the anime, and the other forms of media. They all become one within Chozenshuu 4. The reason this is important is because in the next scan, it talks about the different films and how they, "share the same worldview yet never intersect". Just to reiterate, this is important because of the Daima scan by Toriyama. It also talks about how Daima is revealing more of the World of Dragon Ball, despite not following the same events from Super. This means that the movies, Toei, Dragon Ball Super Manga and Anime all have the same cosmological elements yet are separated by the different stories that contain them. This is very blatant and is clearly Toriyama's vision on what the Dragon Ball world should be and currently is. The cosmological elements we see in every continuity are basically part of the same overarching Dragon Ball world; an "umbrella" of Dragon Ball if you will. There are also scans of Toriyama taking the theatrical films to be, "in a different dimension from the main story of the comic", which means they exist as part of the world but are separated by different events, and in this case, characters almost like branched timelines in a way. More scans of being called "events of a parallel world" as well. Even the movies use Toriyama's original work and world to create different stories, but in the same world.

Now, we said that we'll demonstrate case-by-case when characters are canon from alternate media are canon and so this is another example. In the latest chapter of Dragon Ball Super Manga, Olibu from the Otherworld tournament in the Dragon Ball Z anime was shown as a statue. Not just Olibu, but if you read that chapter as whole several "nobodies" from that same Anime-only arc actually appear to be canonized. This makes these character officially part of the main continuity. Olibu was a character that was only introduced in the Otherworld tournament saga; this adds precedence that this is an arc that could have happened in the main world, even if we don't consider it part of the "main continuity". Even if you think it's not the "same Olibu", that's fine. That is still consistent with our idea above, that these events could have happened in the main story and our argument that nevertheless they still do share the same Worldview. Additionally, this aligns with Toyotaro's thoughts on the matter of "canon" in Dragon Ball (Question 14). Through a recent interview involving Torishima and Toyotaro, Toyotaro stated that he believes, "Everything is canon" in Dragon Ball simply because it's Dragon Ball. Now this doesn't mean that literally everything must be canon no matter what, that evidently doesn't work. However, this does add consistency to the idea that Toyotaro And Toriyama both have this similar view of the work. It was said they both worked on the Dragon Ball Super manga (Question 6); they would consider all the continuities to share the same world based on Toyotaro's words. For more info on Torishima's words, it's said by him that continuity really does not matter. He even laughed at the idea of "canon" and was at first confused of what it even meant until it was clarified further that it was just, "chronological events". Torishima goes on to tell us how Toriyama forgot about character continuity at times and decided to not stress over it while making stories the fans would enjoy. This is Torishima telling us "canon" is just sort of irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. This is very consistent with the statements thus far. The point is, as far as the overall World of Dragon Ball goes, continuity is sort of irrelevant. They're the same worlds, with some differences that have been shown. Each new story is just a different way of viewing the same world as the Daima statement implies.

Toriyama also checked on the plot and scripts for the Toei DBZ anime at times. Even going as far to make locations for fillers to take place, such as the otherworld tournament. Just proving that even these elements for filler, are just extra elements to the entire overarching world of Dragon Ball. They have no reason to be separate. Here is a guide that goes over Toriyama's involvement with fillers, how many sections were, "filled with Toriyama's ideas". With Daima, Toriyama is doing what he's done in the past, just with more involvement. The new lore and cosmology we got does indeed apply to all continuities. For the proposal, unless contradicted, all continuities of Dragon Ball, except for games (besides Kakarot) like Heroes, would share the same world and cosmology elements. Some of those contradictions we have would be the exception. For example, infinite universe is currently accepted for the Toei verse, but not for the Dragon Ball Super continuity. This means that we would simply keep the size of the universe separate for that aspect, unless it's accepted later of course. This CRT does inspire a decent amount of change for the DBS manga and anime. Such as Heaven having a definitive size, additional proof of space-time separation for the dimensions of the Macrocosm. Not to mention the Dimension of Swirling Lights being something that applies across all continuities, though that should of already been obvious. In theory, this should be a relatively easy thread. Toriyama has made it clear, through recent statements of what the Dragon Ball world is. Even though the aspect of "canon" may not exist to people like Toriyama and Toyotaro, (since its all "Dragon Ball" to them), continuities are still treated as separate. Despite this, as the evidence and statements provided above, they all are still under the umbrella of the Dragon Ball world.

If this idea for some reason seems absurd to you, it definitely should be acknowledged that this used to be an accepted thing for the Dragon Ball cosmology here a while back. However, back then this idea was backed up by less than ideal evidence requiring the canonization of every continuity including GT, this however is not that. Instead, now we have superior evidence that is based on the word and views of Toriyama and his successor who worked alongside him (Toyotaro). The entire work is really just view as "Dragon Ball". Continuities do exist like we've said here, but "Canon" does not. At least not in the conventional sense. This is especially true of the world; Daima is all the proof you'd ever need to get behind this idea. And instead of forcing an evidently flawed conclusion of canonizing entire continuities that may not work well, we're only "equalizing" or canonizing the idea of a Worldview for Dragon Ball.

Emphasizing my earlier point more, I want to reiterate that the cosmology will be the same across continuities UNLESS CONTRADICTED. I already used infinite universe as an example. That will be an aspect that will be kept separate unless it is also accepted in the future for both DBS continuities. Another example is the portrayal of hell in GT. It looks quite different from even Toei DBZ and obviously DBS. This will just be something that only applies to GT in terms of aesthetic only. Naturally, they are still conceptually the same cosmology, at least in terms of the Hell portion I mentioned. This is because GT follows Toei events. It would need to be proven that Hell is different enough that it warrants a legitimate contradiction beyond art style, since the Toriyama memo directly shows that he specifically designed these elements of the Afterlife himself. Every contradiction that is found would follow this same logic, even though there aren't many, if any that can inherently be proven to contradict sharing the same world. So arguments among the lines of, "but we didn't see this particular location, so it doesn't exist" wouldn't work here since it's still a shared cosmology and world, especially with author intent.

To make it easier to understand. Currently our approach with the cosmology is this; we inherently assume they're all separate and ONLY things that are very explicitly and clearly stated by multiple sources including the authors themselves are assumed to apply to every continuity particularly the current canon. This approach however, while sufficient in the past, leaves a lot to be desired today with all the recent evidence and interviews we've had and it's clear that this is no longer a suitable approach with Dragon Ball.

Instead, we now propose the alternative approach. Given the evidence we have, we shall assume that all of these cosmologies are more or less inherently the same, and every contradiction can just be dealt with case-by-case and that will only apply to said contradiction only, not the entire cosmology. This is a lot easier than it may sound at first, provided the evidence we've shared, we mustn't deny ourselves the ability to be nuanced and look at every element on its own. Not unlike what we used to do in the past, but now with a different goal altogether. It should be clear that this does not make the other continuities tangible timelines inside of the multiverse, so please refrain from bringing that up.


Finally; in order to address some potential counterarguments pre-emptively and in order to prevent the thread from being too cluttered. Any and all arguments of the nature "but this isn't canon you can't say that!!!" or anything resembling "but why didn't we see this location/event/character(s) if they exist???" shall not be entertained nor arguments along the lines of "but movies/Toei/GT are non-canon!!!". This is very clearly not the goal of this thread, we aren't canonizing everything and we have gone out of our way to establish this clearly and argue in great detail what we are proposing, so please respect that effort and do not present these pointless red-herrings, they serve nothing but to stonewall a thread. Instead, only arguments with genuine criticism of evidence or arguments criticizing our logic shall be entertained.




Agree: DarkDragonMedeus

Neutral: Damage3245, Nierre (Leaning towards agreeing)

Disagree:
 
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Does this CRT apply to the elements unique of the cosmology from the games of Dragon Ball too?
I assume you're talking about Heroes? No not really honestly. The only game that's relevant here is Kakarot and really that was already sort of accepted as semi-canon for the most part anyway. This is more so to establish the general idea of a composite or shared cosmology for Dragon Ball that we already used to have but using far stronger evidence and even WoG too. Heroes-exclusive cosmological elements such as CoT or stuff, that will not be canonized.
 
Firstly, I want to say that the OP is well-written and well-sourced. It's a lot, lot better than most threads I see on here. I'll give it the proper evaluation it deserves and I'm not going to look into any elements like potential upgrades or scaling changes or whatever. I'll just focus on the OP itself, and this isn't a vote from me voting one way or the other, this is partly me acting as Devil's Advocate and responding to the evidence of the OP.

And also I don't need half a dozen people all responding to my post, I doubt I'll be super-heavily involved in the thread, I just want to say my piece and the OP can respond.

For starters, this scan goes over Akira Toriyama's involvment with Daima; how he set up the world and lore for this story to take place in. In this case, characters like Rymus and the Supreme Demon king we've seen in flashbacks will be canon, and already are, but this won't always apply and will be case-by-case as will be demonstrated with further examples. The key point to take away here is the mention of the worldview. The mention of worldview creating a link to the setting and story of Dragon Ball is essential to note. Also, we actually already use this same logic with the current standards for the Demon Realm. Of how the events may not be canon to the main continuity of Super (at least for right now), the overall world structure is. One of the major goals for this project was discovering and exploring the mysteries and secrets of the world of Dragon Ball, a sort of overarching story/narrative that applies even if the actual events aren't canon. In a way, it can be thought of as events that could have happened in other storylines but they didn't.

The statement of the events "could have happened" in the main contuity's cosmology implies that the films are meant to explore events that could plausibly have taken place within the mainline continuity. But this immediately runs into problems. We know, for instance, that the original Broly and Paragus cannot coexist with their Dragon Ball Super counterparts. If the guiding principle is “these stories could have happened if the characters actually existed,” then why is this same standard not applied consistently to elements of the cosmology? "If this part of the cosmology from the movie existed in the main story, then the events could've happened" carries the same weight as saying if the non-canon characters existed, it would've played out the same. All of them could be equally non-canon; the characters, the events and the cosmology. I just don't see why we'd make an exception for the latter.

There is also another scan that describes the World of Dragon Ball as "continuing to expand".

This seems more like a meta-textual reference to me, than an actual comment on the expanding cosmology of the series;

"The grand story of Dragon Ball, spanning the entirety of the 519 chapters of the original story, continues to expand infinitely through anime-original episodes and the adventures of Goku and his friends in the theatrical films."

"Even after the manga ended, the World of Dragon Ball continues to expand in various forms, such as anime and theatrical films. In this book, let's explore the numerous titles along with their history."

The franchise of Dragon Ball is expanding through anime-original episodes and theatrical films. When it mentions the world expanding, that has no bearing on the world of the original manga. You could make this kind of statement for any filler or non-canon product for any series; the world of Naruto is expanded by filler episodes and anime-original movies but it doesn't necessarily mean anything. Non-canon Dragon Ball video games also expand the Dragon Ball world too; but not every game is being proposed to be included in this.

Also, the scans talk about the concept of the “World of Dragon Ball,” and how it encompasses the manga, the anime, and the other forms of media. They all become one within Chozenshuu 4. The reason this is important is because in the next scan, it talks about the different films and how they, "share the same worldview yet never intersect". Just to reiterate, this is important because of the Daima scan by Toriyama. It also talks about how Daima is revealing more of the World of Dragon Ball, despite not following the same events from Super. This means that the movies, Toei, Dragon Ball Super Manga and Anime all have the same cosmological elements yet are separated by the different stories that contain them. This is very blatant and is clearly Toriyama's vision on what the Dragon Ball world should be and currently is. The cosmological elements we see in every continuity are basically part of the same overarching Dragon Ball world; an "umbrella" of Dragon Ball if you will. There are also scans of Toriyama taking the theatrical films to be, "in a different dimension from the main story of the comic", which means they exist as part of the world but are separated by different events, and in this case, characters almost like branched timelines in a way. More scans of being called "events of a parallel world" as well. Even the movies use Toriyama's original work and world to create different stories, but in the same world.

Toriyama explicitly saying that he is like an audience member for the movies and the movies are no more than being in a "different dimension" then that's not an indication that the movies and manga are deeply tied together. Of course being a spin-off of the Dragon Ball series means that they're going to be using some of the original manga's setting for convenience; but it doesn't mean something invented for the sake of the movie is intended to exist in the original source. If the movie universe is distinct enough from the main series to contain original characters liek Broly and Cooler, then it can contain original cosmological elements too. It's just as separated by canon from the main series as the events and characters are.

"It can be said to be the events of a parallel world" is clearly metaphorical. We know that it is not canonically a parallel world. Treating it that it is supposed to literally be that and therefore the cosmology is identical between them is a reach.

Now, we said that we'll demonstrate case-by-case when characters are canon from alternate media are canon and so this is another example. In the latest chapter of Dragon Ball Super Manga, Olibu from the Otherworld tournament in the Dragon Ball Z anime was shown as a statue. Not just Olibu, but if you read that chapter as whole several "nobodies" from that same Anime-only arc actually appear to be canonized. This makes these character officially part of the main continuity. Olibu was a character that was only introduced in the Otherworld tournament saga; this adds precedence that this is an arc that could have happened in the main world, even if we don't consider it part of the "main continuity". Even if you think it's not the "same Olibu", that's fine. That is still consistent with our idea above, that these events could have happened in the main story and our argument that nevertheless they still do share the same Worldview.

The characters being canonized by appearing as statues is not the same thing as "these events could've happened in the main story." In its current state in the manga, it is nothing more than a cameo or an easter egg. It has no further implications on anything within the Otherworld Tournament Saga in relation to the main series.

Additionally, this aligns with Toyotaro's thoughts on the matter of "canon" in Dragon Ball (Question 14). Through a recent interview involving Torishima and Toyotaro, Toyotaro stated that he believes, "Everything is canon" in Dragon Ball simply because it's Dragon Ball. Now this doesn't mean that literally everything must be canon no matter what, that evidently doesn't work. However, this does add consistency to the idea that Toyotaro And Toriyama both have this similar view of the work. It was said they both worked on the Dragon Ball Super manga (Question 6); they would consider all the continuities to share the same world based on Toyotaro's words. For more info on Torishima's words, it's said by him that continuity really does not matter. He even laughed at the idea of "canon" and was at first confused of what it even meant until it was clarified further that it was just, "chronological events". Torishima goes on to tell us how Toriyama forgot about character continuity at times and decided to not stress over it while making stories the fans would enjoy. This is Torishima telling us "canon" is just sort of irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. This is very consistent with the statements thus far. The point is, as far as the overall World of Dragon Ball goes, continuity is sort of irrelevant. They're the same worlds, with some differences that have been shown. Each new story is just a different way of viewing the same world as the Daima statement implies.

If "canon" is irrelevant in the grand scheme of things, then why exactly is that supposed to strengthen the "shared cosmology" argument? If there is an indifference to continuity from the authors, with them forgetting characters, changing backstories of characters (i.e. Broly), revising the lore of the setting in different pieces of media, then that doesn't seem like there is an strict attempt to preverse a unified cosmology among all Dragon Ball products; it suggests that the authors just don't care in keeping it consistent. These statements to me don't directly prove the idea of all continuities sharing the same consistent world. There are always going to be shared elements naturally; the major characters, the Dragon Balls, martial arts fighting and Ki blasts, and yes, some general concepts like an after-life and a Demon World and multiple Universes.... But sharing some of those things doesn't prove it's intended to take place within the same consistent world. You acknowledge there's differences, but that those differences have no bearing on the cosmology as a whole.

Toriyama also checked on the plot and scripts for the Toei DBZ anime at times. Even going as far to make locations for fillers to take place, such as the otherworld tournament. Just proving that even these elements for filler, are just extra elements to the entire overarching world of Dragon Ball. They have no reason to be separate. Here is a guide that goes over Toriyama's involvement with fillers, how many sections were, "filled with Toriyama's ideas". With Daima, Toriyama is doing what he's done in the past, just with more involvement. The new lore and cosmology we got does indeed apply to all continuities. For the proposal, unless contradicted, all continuities of Dragon Ball, except for games (besides Kakarot) like Heroes, would share the same world and cosmology elements. Some of those contradictions we have would be the exception. For example, infinite universe is currently accepted for the Toei verse, but not for the Dragon Ball Super continuity. This means that we would simply keep the size of the universe separate for that aspect, unless it's accepted later of course. This CRT does inspire a decent amount of change for the DBS manga and anime. Such as Heaven having a definitive size, additional proof of space-time separation for the dimensions of the Macrocosm. Not to mention the Dimension of Swirling Lights being something that applies across all continuities, though that should of already been obvious. In theory, this should be a relatively easy thread. Toriyama has made it clear, through recent statements of what the Dragon Ball world is. Even though the aspect of "canon" may not exist to people like Toriyama and Toyotaro, (since its all "Dragon Ball" to them), continuities are still treated as separate. Despite this, as the evidence and statements provided above, they all are still under the umbrella of the Dragon Ball world.

An idea for a location for a filler spawning from the mind of Akira Toriyama isn't the same thing as Toriyama intended for such locations to potentially exist within the mainstream series. As you've noted, Toriyama frequently doesn't care about canon itself; so if he designed something on a whim, that doesn't necessarily have broader cosmological implications for the entire franchise. It also feels inconsistent to argue that “continuities are treated as separate” while at the same time asserting that all cosmological elements across media are unified unless contradicted. If the continuities are genuinely separate, then cosmological elements should be considered no different to characters or plotlines; to do otherwise risks cherrypicking what suits us.

Emphasizing my earlier point more, I want to reiterate that the cosmology will be the same across continuities UNLESS CONTRADICTED. I already used infinite universe as an example. That will be an aspect that will be kept separate unless it is also accepted in the future for both DBS continuities. Another example is the portrayal of hell in GT. It looks quite different from even Toei DBZ and obviously DBS. This will just be something that only applies to GT in terms of aesthetic only. Naturally, they are still conceptually the same cosmology, at least in terms of the Hell portion I mentioned. This is because GT follows Toei events. It would need to be proven that Hell is different enough that it warrants a legitimate contradiction beyond art style, since the Toriyama memo directly shows that he specifically designed these elements of the Afterlife himself. Every contradiction that is found would follow this same logic, even though there aren't many, if any that can inherently be proven to contradict sharing the same world. So arguments among the lines of, "but we didn't see this particular location, so it doesn't exist" wouldn't work here since it's still a shared cosmology and world, especially with author intent.

To me, this section comes across as an attempt to shift the burden of proof for this topic. What you're essentially saying for this proposal is:

“We assume all continuities share the same cosmology by default, unless you can prove otherwise with explicit contradictions.”

But what you're doing is assuming that the positive claim "All of these elemnents of DB cosmology exist in each of these continuities" is automatically true and requesting that it be disproven, even though proving that something does not exist is inherently harder than proving that it does exist. If an element of cosmology isn't shown or acknowledged explicitly within the work... then we can't really know for certain anything concrete about it. A reason for it not being shown or acknowledged could legitimately be that it doesn't exist within the continuity. It just seems fairer to me to actually expect more explicit evidence that something exists within a continuity that to demand evidence that it doesn't exist.
 
Given that there's already so many differences between the anime and manga (at least from what I have seen, on-site and elsewhere), I think this view of Dragon Ball's continuity makes sense to me.

You cited multiple sources by the authors of the series and I'm very inclined to agree that they'd both share the same basic setting (with a few exceptions, as you've mentioned). I'll have to keep reading in case anyone tries arguing against this, though. But so far it seems really sound imo.
 
And also I don't need half a dozen people all responding to my post, I doubt I'll be super-heavily involved in the thread, I just want to say my piece and the OP can respond.
That's fine and all but we'd still appreciate a solid, unambiguous evaluation. It's hard to constantly call mods to evaluate threads especially when there's so many threads requiring attention.
The statement of the events "could have happened" in the main contuity's cosmology implies that the films are meant to explore events that could plausibly have taken place within the mainline continuity. But this immediately runs into problems. We know, for instance, that the original Broly and Paragus cannot coexist with their Dragon Ball Super counterparts. If the guiding principle is “these stories could have happened if the characters actually existed,” then why is this same standard not applied consistently to elements of the cosmology? "If this part of the cosmology from the movie existed in the main story, then the events could've happened" carries the same weight as saying if the non-canon characters existed, it would've played out the same. All of them could be equally non-canon; the characters, the events and the cosmology. I just don't see why we'd make an exception for the latter.
Well let me put your mind at ease. It actually IS applied to cosmology in a certain way. Whenever we encounter outright contradictions in cosmologies (similar to contradictions in story such as Z Broly and Super Broly existing at the same time) we will automatically disqualify those and choose the safer route. Case in point, we actually have a few examples of this here. For instance, and while not argued here, we know that the Demon Realm from Heroes and Demon Realm from Daima are two ENTIRELY different structures. Even though both have heavy Toriyama involvement, the fact that we have a dedicated canon counterpart to contradict its existence means we choose the latter. Another example that's in this thread is the infinite universe stuff. It's accepted for Toei but is contradicted for oen reason or another in canon/Super, so we're gonna discount those too. So yeah, we are actually doing that. And if you have more such outright contradictions in the same way as these or how DBS and DBZ Broly existing at the same time isn't feasible we'd like to see more of those. One benefit of doing this also is that this leaves room for future contradictions to be addressed as well.
This seems more like a meta-textual reference to me, than an actual comment on the expanding cosmology of the series;

"The grand story of Dragon Ball, spanning the entirety of the 519 chapters of the original story, continues to expand infinitely through anime-original episodes and the adventures of Goku and his friends in the theatrical films."

"Even after the manga ended, the World of Dragon Ball continues to expand in various forms, such as anime and theatrical films. In this book, let's explore the numerous titles along with their history."

The franchise of Dragon Ball is expanding through anime-original episodes and theatrical films. When it mentions the world expanding, that has no bearing on the world of the original manga. You could make this kind of statement for any filler or non-canon product for any series; the world of Naruto is expanded by filler episodes and anime-original movies but it doesn't necessarily mean anything. Non-canon Dragon Ball video games also expand the Dragon Ball world too; but not every game is being proposed to be included in this.
Both can be true, it can be a meta-textual reference and also be true that it is an expansion of the Worldview of Dragon Ball. It's not at all uncommon for authors (and yes, that includes Kishimoto though I won't debate that heavily here) to expand their work with new ideas that they didn't implement in their manga or original work but are shown in anime or movies or other spin-off material, be it specific characters or events or more general narrative-level stuff that applies more broadly. And well we have brought a lot of evidence here to show you exactly that and exactly how Toriyama did this with movies, anime and even the games. In fact there's actually even a statement that says exactly this; that many ideas in the anime are stuff Toriyama added to make his world more vivid, I'll see if I can find it later.
Toriyama explicitly saying that he is like an audience member for the movies and the movies are no more than being in a "different dimension" then that's not an indication that the movies and manga are deeply tied together.
Okay, I have to address something here. This statement gets misinterpreted badly almost every single time. Toriyama being an "audience member" is just.... not true and I hope I don't need to explain why. The guy basically designed half of the popular Z movie characters that we see, you don't do that as an audience member. It'd be lovely if we could though, I have some fantastic ideas for DB but an audience member can't do that, this is why I believe this statement shouldn't be misinterpreted because not only is it evidently false (at least in the way it's used), but the way it's used is also pretty much to shut down any discourse regarding these movies being included in the world of DB.

Also "deeply tied" isn't exactly the right term to use here; because we're not arguing that they are. They can't be deeply tied or else we'd be arguing they're canon. What we're demonstrating here is that despite being "different dimensions" as Toriyama calls them, they are still very much just an extension of the main comic with events that plausibly could have happened in the main comic as well. The idea is that the general "world" is still the same even if specific events are different, and in such cases we've already shown that they'll be disqualified automatically.
Of course being a spin-off of the Dragon Ball series means that they're going to be using some of the original manga's setting for convenience; but it doesn't mean something invented for the sake of the movie is intended to exist in the original source. If the movie universe is distinct enough from the main series to contain original characters liek Broly and Cooler, then it can contain original cosmological elements too. It's just as separated by canon from the main series as the events and characters are.
And we are not saying that the movie setting can or must exist in the manga universe; as for cosmological elements, that's true only if you can show that certain elements do in fact contradict the main manga, a few examples of which I've already given here. I don't think that's an unreasonable proposition, because in the worst case scenario when you don't have something solid that contradicts either, the argument would be "well I don't feel like they can be the same" which just becomes an argument from incredulity and goes against the evidence we've given too. If you don't find the evidence convincing though, then I'd like to know why and what I can present to convince you.
"It can be said to be the events of a parallel world" is clearly metaphorical. We know that it is not canonically a parallel world. Treating it that it is supposed to literally be that and therefore the cosmology is identical between them is a reach.
I.... don't know how that's metaphorical Damage.... because at this point Toriyama had a well-established concept of a parallel world in Dragon Ball. Parallel worlds, by definition (and because we can literally see the movies or the anime) are equivalent cosmologically with the differences being treated case-by-case (different events, timelines, etc). The only difference here however is that we're not arguing that these exists as parallel timelines. Then again, even if it were metaphorical in some sense, that's fine too because that still ties into how Toriyama viewed Dragon Ball as a whole, but I don't believe that this was metaphorical there's really no way to prove that.
The characters being canonized by appearing as statues is not the same thing as "these events could've happened in the main story." In its current state in the manga, it is nothing more than a cameo or an easter egg. It has no further implications on anything within the Otherworld Tournament Saga in relation to the main series.
Actually that's not entirely true. I read the chapter a while ago and, while I don't remember everything, I do know. This whole sequence was actually going over some of Earth's old, legendary heroes that have come and gone and Olibu was shown there. Now, tell me something, what did King Kai tell Goku when he first introduce him to Olibu? Yeah, I mean the intent is pretty clear here Damage, this is Toyotaro basically screaming in our face that he's including this in the manga (because he evidently is a GT fanboy). Again, the idea isn't that everything is suddenly canon, it's just a piece of evidence to show that our interpretation of this "World of Dragon Ball" is backed by a lot of canon evidence as well. And to be honest, I don't know what better way would be to imply that an event happened in the manga other than literally showing the character in the very context that he was first introduced.
If "canon" is irrelevant in the grand scheme of things, then why exactly is that supposed to strengthen the "shared cosmology" argument? If there is an indifference to continuity from the authors, with them forgetting characters, changing backstories of characters (i.e. Broly), revising the lore of the setting in different pieces of media, then that doesn't seem like there is an strict attempt to preverse a unified cosmology among all Dragon Ball products; it suggests that the authors just don't care in keeping it consistent. These statements to me don't directly prove the idea of all continuities sharing the same consistent world. There are always going to be shared elements naturally; the major characters, the Dragon Balls, martial arts fighting and Ki blasts, and yes, some general concepts like an after-life and a Demon World and multiple Universes.... But sharing some of those things doesn't prove it's intended to take place within the same consistent world. You acknowledge there's differences, but that those differences have no bearing on the cosmology as a whole.
Well.... you basically agreed with us there. Yes, it doesn't mean they take place in the same world. It means that the worlds that they take place in are more or less the exact same. And you basically sort of agreed there even if it isn't a full agreement with our specific interpretation of this concept. And, it's not just that the authors don't care about canon (well, tbh they don't yeah but that's a different topic), the idea here was to show that these inconsistencies which may seem major to us (and yes in many cases they are pretty major) are generally meaningless as far as the idea of the world of Dragon Ball goes. Like seriously, take Daima for example. The fact that SSJ4 exists and it DIDN'T get reconciled into Super (anime or manga), ignoring the fact that it ended on a stupid cliffhanger, is basically just Toriyama himself giving a big fat middle finger to the entire concept of canon or continuity, the guy literally just did what he liked. Now this can mean two things, either we discard the concept of canon completely, and I'm not being rhetorical here I do think that this could be a worthwhile debate if you wanna have it, and we just create our own mix-match canon as Toyotaro and Torishima said, or we can go and look at other evidence and see that all of this can exist if we accept the idea that the "World of Dragon Ball" can house these seemingly irreconcilable ideas within the same worldview of sorts.

Now you tell me, if you accept that something needs to be done here given these statements, which do you prefer? I have a hunch that you at least agree that the latter seems less cumbersome and less prone to massive error than the former even if you don't agree with our conclusion.
An idea for a location for a filler spawning from the mind of Akira Toriyama isn't the same thing as Toriyama intended for such locations to potentially exist within the mainstream series. As you've noted, Toriyama frequently doesn't care about canon itself; so if he designed something on a whim, that doesn't necessarily have broader cosmological implications for the entire franchise. It also feels inconsistent to argue that “continuities are treated as separate” while at the same time asserting that all cosmological elements across media are unified unless contradicted. If the continuities are genuinely separate, then cosmological elements should be considered no different to characters or plotlines; to do otherwise risks cherrypicking what suits us.
The reason we say continuities are separate is because.... it is quite literally impossible for example for GT to take place after Super. It simply isn't possible. That contradiction is evidently NOT the same as say, Princess Snake's castle and its location and it being unexplored in DBS. We're arguing that such elements can still exist unless contradicted because they're not the same, I don't believe it is cherrypicking, we're capable of nuance and I think treating everything case-by-case is a far better and more responsible position than a blanket "everything is canon!!!" or "nothing is canon!!!". If something contradicts its existence, doesn't even need to be a direct one really even an implication would work, we'll simply remove it, simple as.
To me, this section comes across as an attempt to shift the burden of proof for this topic. What you're essentially saying for this proposal is:

“We assume all continuities share the same cosmology by default, unless you can prove otherwise with explicit contradictions.”
I'll modify this a bit and say that even explicit contradictions aren't strictly necessary. If you can debate with indirect ones too that's fine, it'd be unfair of us to demand explicit evidence to debunk our claims while claiming that we don't need to provide explicit evidence for our own though I do believe what we have provided is pretty darn explicit already.
But what you're doing is assuming that the positive claim "All of these elemnents of DB cosmology exist in each of these continuities" is automatically true and requesting that it be disproven, even though proving that something does not exist is inherently harder than proving that it does exist. If an element of cosmology isn't shown or acknowledged explicitly within the work... then we can't really know for certain anything concrete about it. A reason for it not being shown or acknowledged could legitimately be that it doesn't exist within the continuity. It just seems fairer to me to actually expect more explicit evidence that something exists within a continuity that to demand evidence that it doesn't exist.
And we have provided evidence for why these elements should more or less exist and also have given the argument as to why explicit contradictions aren't as unfair of a demand as it may sound because the authors WILL outright contradict something as they often do with Dragon Ball if a concept needs to be reintroduced into the canon differently. At worst, it would also be equally as unfair to demand literal flashbacks (this is as explicit as evidence can get) of certain stuff to accept them as canon or as existing in the main world, and what would happen is we'd basically reject the whole idea because such evidence is largely scare and go back to square one when we have mountains of evidence that it's not that simple and that we need to treat it differently than we do now which is your current position.

Lastly, you're right about the authors' indifference part, and we're saying that it means something. When they say that these contradictions or continuities don't matter, that "It's all Dragon Ball" still, we're saying the exact same thing and we're offering additional evidence to show what this means beyond just a metaphorical statement.
 
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Read this while having a prostrate exam, I agree
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While it makes sense at first glance, I'm not sure if we can say the World of void exists in the Toeiverse, or if the Sugoroku space exists in Super.

Those seem to be kinda an strecht tbh
 
Dragon Ball's Original Manga, Toei/Movies/GT, Anime/Manga Super and Daima sharing the same cosmology (at least for U7 and the other universes) make sense and this isn't directly disproven or contradicted across the franchise.

Sure events/characters to certain series are not canon to each other but for the most part the Living World, Afterlife/Other World and Kaioshin Realm don't display significant differences to the point that they should be consider complete different locations.

Unlike something like the Demon World, as Daima's version and Heroes/Xeno's version are far too different.

The only exception i can think of its GT's Hell but again the design technically contradict the original Anime too not just Super, and its could be possible that its just a different part of the same realm.
 
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Toriyama also checked on the plot and scripts for the Toei DBZ anime at times. Even going as far to make locations for fillers to take place, such as the otherworld tournament.
This is fairly common in the industry. Should every verse be able to update their material’s cosmology with unique concepts the creators created for works outside their main canon?

And there is also the issue of ignoring chronology. Not the chronology of the story but the chronology of the real world. It’s obvious that when the creator was making earlier stories he saw the cosmology as different than when he created future works. The vision of the cosmology naturally changed as the creator told different stories and lend his hand in the other stories.

You would essentially be retconning previous works to just pretend that the past iterations of the cosmology are the same as the more modern one. Why? How will this help accurately index the series on this wiki?
 
This is fairly common in the industry. Should every verse be able to update their material’s cosmology with unique concepts the creators created for works outside their main canon?
"Every verse" is not our concern here. If you think there are other verses that can provide equivalent or superior evidence for something like this then by all means make a CRT for them.
And there is also the issue of ignoring chronology. Not the chronology of the story but the chronology of the real world. It’s obvious that when the creator was making earlier stories he saw the cosmology as different than when he created future works. The vision of the cosmology naturally changed as the creator told different stories and lend his hand in the other stories.
Sure, and we've included provisions within the CRT and in latter arguments to deal with any such changes in the future as well. Like I said, this leaves massive rooms for any and all contradictions to be dealt with case-by-case without having to make any blanket, incorrect statements that fly against evidence we presented. That's the best way to deal with them.
You would essentially be retconning previous works to just pretend that the past iterations of the cosmology are the same as the more modern one. Why? How will this help accurately index the series on this wiki?
Well good thing we aren't pretending nor do we have to when we have in-verse and WoG statements outright stating this and more so this is by and large an irrelevant concern. The goal of this thread is to establish a composited cosmology, nothing more and nothing less. It's neither a radical nor a new idea and the way we're doing it leaves room for any future changes as well.
 
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