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Was It Necessary? How Dragon Ball Complicated Its Story with Time Travel

Few series have managed to reinvent themselves like Dragon Ball. What began as a tale filled with childhood adventures has evolved into epic cosmic battles, universe-destroying deities, and, of course, time travel. If a certain iconic movie could handle it, why not Goku? But as the series journeyed deeper into the concept of time travel, it crafted a labyrinth of timelines, paradoxes, and invented mechanics that even the sharpest of minds might struggle to untangle.

A “Trunksada” changed everything

When Future Trunks travels back in time to warn Goku about impending android threats, the result is a Pandora’s box of narrative complexity. His visit spawns at least four distinct timelines, each spiraling into its own chaos and consequences. Then comes Cell, who also takes a trip through time, eliminating Trunks in one timeline, stealing his time machine, and arriving in yet another—confusing, isn’t it? Just think about it: two time machines can coexist within the same timeline, yet they often defy basic timing logic.

The time police arrived late (and without a ticket)

Enter the Galactic Patrol in Dragon Ball Super, introducing a cosmic law that makes time travel illegal. But what about Trunks? With a twist of fate, no one arrests him because that law didn’t exist when he made his leap. Not that this halts the series from layering on exceptions. Whis can rewind time, the Kai have their own Time Rings, and deities can alter the past across entire universes—simply because they can. What happened to narrative clarity? In this universe, it seems that battles come first and questions later.

The electrofluid, the rings, and other elaborate entanglements

Time travel in Dragon Ball relies on a host of peculiar factors: a mysterious blue fluid, absurd charging times (we’re talking eight months!), and time machines that are often exclusive to specific universes. Yet, the script conveniently overlooks these rules when it needs a character to appear where they shouldn’t be. And what about all those inventions from earlier sagas? Anything connected to Dr. Slump or Omori, the scientist who met Bulma’s sister, seems to vanish from the narrative as if science only progresses when it’s convenient for the plot.

Future Trunks: 17 years, 20, or just another oversight?

The age of Trunks and the duration of his time travel become yet another puzzle begging for resolution. Supposedly, he traveled 17 years into the past, yet he was 17 at the time, creating a contradiction. How can you jump back 17 years when you’re already that age? And those eight months for charging his machine seem to have completely slipped everyone’s minds. This is a storyline flaw so blatant that even the characters appear unsure about their ages or which timeline they belong to.

The verdict: plenty of power, little control

It’s clear that Dragon Ball isn’t a rigid science fiction series, and that’s perfectly acceptable. Yet, by inserting time travel without a strong framework, it has tangled its narrative to the point where rules are invented, broken, and forgotten. Trunks remains an iconic character, his saga undeniably epic, and audiences can still recall Vegeta’s Final Flash with fervor. But pondering over how time operates in Dragon Ball? Well, it might be wiser not to.

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