Dragon Ball Gt Season 1 -

Season One of Dragon Ball GT doesn’t begin with a battle. It begins with a wish.

The first few episodes were a fever dream of alien oddballs. They fought the —a parasitic blob that nearly melted Trunks into jelly. They landed on a machine planet called M-2, ruled by the paranoid Dr. Myuu and his cybernetic masterpiece, Rilldo —a living metal monster who could turn entire cities into his own body.

Before Shenron could even yawn, a sleepy miscalculation occurred. The Eternal Dragon, black as obsidian and crackling with crimson lightning, misheard the childish plea. “Your wish… is for the ‘World to be Dominated by a child’?”

Goku, now small but still grinning, slung a magical Power Pole over his back. “A road trip! I’m in.” dragon ball gt season 1

But Goku, even as a child, was still Goku. After unlocking a raw, primal version of Super Saiyan (the blonde hair now too heavy for his tiny frame, forcing him to learn control), he shattered Rilldo’s core with a desperate Kamehameha.

“Father!” Trunks screamed via communicator, watching Vegeta—no, Baby-Vegeta —level a city with a wave of his hand.

Pilaf didn't read the fine print. “I wish for world domination!” he squeaked. Season One of Dragon Ball GT doesn’t begin with a battle

Pan gasped. Trunks’s hand went to his chest. The episode ended on a freeze-frame of Goku’s horrified, youthful face.

“If we don’t gather them all,” Bulma explained, her face pale, “Earth implodes. And the only way to activate them again is to find them… and speak Namekian.”

The true horror of Season One, however, wasn’t Rilldo. It was the reveal. They fought the —a parasitic blob that nearly

It was about losing Earth.

Trunks, the cocky young businessman, was forced to tag along. And Pan, Goku’s hot-headed, impulsive granddaughter, stowed away on their tiny spaceship. The trio blasted off into the unknown.