Headline: The Vault of the Saiyans: Finding Dragon Ball Super on the Internet Archive
Opening Hook: For fans of Akira Toriyama’s legendary universe, Dragon Ball Super represents the canonical continuation of the Z saga. While modern streaming services offer high-definition access, the Internet Archive (archive.org) serves a different purpose: it is a digital library dedicated to preservation. For Dragon Ball Super, the Archive acts as a museum for out-of-print media, historical marketing, and fan-created documentaries.
If you can’t find what you need on archive.org: internet archive dragon ball super
Title: The “Whis’s Whispers” Tape – 2016
Date Captured: October 12, 2016
Source: Kanzenshuu user “TimeSkipVault”
Transcript excerpt (English fan-translation of Toyotaro’s alleged remarks): Headline: The Vault of the Saiyans: Finding Dragon
“Toriyama-sensei originally wrote Ultra Instinct as a one-time joke — ‘Goku moves without thinking, like a cat avoiding water.’ But I drew a rough panel of him standing still while punches passed through. Toriyama laughed, then said, ‘That’s not a joke. That’s the end of strength.’ So we kept it hidden until the Tournament of Power. But I wanted Vegeta to have a rival path — not calm, but volcanic. A form where rage becomes reflex. Toei said, ‘Save it.’ So it stayed in my notebook. Maybe one day.”
Then, the unproduced scene (read by fan “ChronoRaditz”): Title: The “Whis’s Whispers” Tape – 2016 Date
“FADE IN: Gravity Chamber – Night. Vegeta, shirt torn, bleeds from his brow. Whis watches through a monitor. Vegeta screams — not in anger, but in focus. A white-gold aura flickers, then cracks like lightning. He vanishes, reappears punching his own afterimage. Whis tilts his head. ‘Hmm. Not Ultra Instinct. Something… grittier. Call it Ego Instinct. Pride made motion.’ Vegeta smiles. ‘Then let’s never tell Kakarot.’ The aura dies. He collapses. Whis writes in a small notebook: ‘Subject shows divine error. Promising.’”
Why it’s interesting for the Archive:
You could upload a fictional “recording” (a spoken-word MP3 you make with voice and static effects) or just preserve the text as a fan-created historical document under the “Community Texts” collection. Either way, it fits the Archive’s love for odd, ephemeral, and debated fan culture relics.