-toonworld4all- Dragon Ball Z - The History Of ... 〈PC EXTENDED〉

Long before King Vegeta, before Frieza, the Saiyans were not conquerors but hunted . Their planet was a penal colony for a forgotten galactic empire. The Oozaru transformation wasn’t a genetic weapon—it was a curse . A parasitic lunar entity called bonded with the first Saiyans, forcing the transformation to feed on terror. But one Saiyan, a nameless female warrior, broke the bond. She didn’t destroy the great ape—she broke its will . She taught her tribe to control the rage, to turn the curse into a fist.

They’re meant to be felt. Like a distant power level. Rising. Just out of sight.

He goes back. To the very first episode of Dragon Ball. To the day he met Bulma as a boy in the woods. He watches himself laugh, then turns away, fading into nothing.

What played was not an episode of Dragon Ball Z . -Toonworld4all- Dragon Ball Z - The History of ...

He never posted again. Today, you can find remnants of Toonworld4all on old hard drives, in shareware CDs from 1999, in the metadata of a forgotten torrent. A single GIF of Super Saiyan Goku blinking. A text file named “TRUTH.txt” that’s just a quote from Episode 125:

The year is 1998. Before streaming, before YouTube, before high-speed internet was a thing your parents paid extra for, there was the dial-up hum. And in that static-laced digital purgatory, there existed a legend: Toonworld4all .

Toonworld4all posted the first three minutes as a RealMedia file. The download took six hours. The forum exploded. Long before King Vegeta, before Frieza, the Saiyans

The admin of Toonworld4all—a guy who called himself “SaiyanSushi”—had contacts. A cousin in the Navy. A pen pal in a Tokyo video rental store that didn’t ask questions. But this tape was different. No Toei logo. No Fuji TV watermark. Just a black VHS with a single line of white tape: .

Toonworld4all vanished overnight. No backup. No archive.org snapshot. The forum threads turned into 404 errors.

It was the History of Z . The footage was rough. In-between frames. Pencil tests on cel sheets. It showed a planet that wasn’t Vegeta or Earth—a nameless world of grey deserts and three moons. A race of humanoid figures with tails, but their faces were wrong. Too many teeth. Eyes that wept light. A parasitic lunar entity called bonded with the

The last frame is black. The final subtitle: “The strongest warrior learns to end the story.” Two weeks after that description leaked, SaiyanSushi’s ISP received a cease-and-desist. Not from Toei. Not from Funimation. From a law firm that didn’t exist in any public registry. The letterhead was a single symbol: a red circle with a crack through it.

Not the 28th World Tournament. Not Uub. Something else.

And the answer is always the same silence. Because some histories aren’t meant to be archived.