Summary
- Dragon Ball GT is considered canon, according to an official timeline released by Shueisha.
- The timeline includes events from Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball Super, and Dragon Ball GT.
- Akira Toriyama, the creator of Dragon Ball, considers GT to be a minor part of the overall story and was involved in its production.
One of the biggest debates among the Dragon Ball fandom, whether the Dragon Ball GT anime series should actually be considered canon or not, has finally been answered. A timeline for the entire franchise's story provided by Shueisha itself and shown at a 2017 event caused a commotion among fans because it also includes the events in Dragon Ball GT.
Dragon Ball GT is an anime that came out in 1996, one year after the end of the Dragon Ball manga. Due to the incredible success of the anime adaptation of Akira Toriyama's masterpiece, Toei Animation decided to create a new anime based on an original story, with character design by Toriyama.
GT was never considered part of Dragon Ball's canon, but because the anime's story picks five years after the manga's ending, and it uses the same characters, a decades-long debate began between fans who consider GT canon, and those who don't. The debut of Dragon Ball Super, the actual, official sequel to the original series, should have cleared the air because it's a completely different story from GT, but things are not so simple.
Dragon Ball's Publisher Made GT Canon With An Official Timeline
In 2022, thanks to fans such as @DBGTLegacy, pictures resurfaced on the internet from the 2017 edition of an event called Dragon Ball Tenkaichi Budosai, a Japanese festival dedicated to the franchise, which included an exhibit on the history of Dragon Ball. Shueisha, the publisher of the manga, provided an Official Dragon Ball Timeline Board that included Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball Super, and Dragon Ball GT, complete with pictures of the most famous characters from the anime, such as Super Saiyan 4 Gogeta, and Goku and Vegeta's future descendants. This is possible because Dragon Ball Super takes place immediately after the end of Z, while GT was set five years later, so the timeline is still coherent, for now.
According to the timeline, Dragon Ball GT takes place between the years 789 and 889 of the Dragon Ball calendar (for reference, the battle with Frieza on Namek takes place in 762). This is, however, not the first time that GT has been considered part of the franchise's canon. In 2013, a timeline was included in the Chouzenshuu 4: Dragon Ball Super Encyclopedia, an illustrated book guide to the franchise, that was identical to the timeline used for the Akira Toriyama: The World of DRAGON BALL art exhibition held in Tokyo and Osaka. Both timelines included the events in Dragon Ball GT, so the one used in 2017's Budosai is just further confirmation that, according to Toriyama and Shueisha, who own the franchise, the much-maligned anime is indeed canon.
Even Akira Toriyama Considers GT "Canon"
In fact, one of the reasons why many fans don't want to consider GT as part of the canon is that the anime is the least appreciated part of the Dragon Ball saga, bringing significant changes to popular characters and introducing new ones that were scarcely successful.
Perhaps the best possible answer to GT's canonicity is that the series actually takes place in a parallel universe, a concept that was introduced in Dragon Ball Super. Super Saiyan 4 also appears in Super Dragon Ball Heroes, a manga set in an alternate universe. Until there is an official statement of the opposite by Toriyama or Shueisha, fans of Dragon Ball should consider Dragon Ball GT's story as part of the franchise's canon, as this official timeline proves.
All episodes of Dragon Ball GT are currently streaming on Crunchyroll!
Source: @DBGTLegacy.