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Warning: Contains spoilers for Dragon Ball Daima episode #6.Anime have often had notoriously poor handlings of LGBTQ+ content, and Dragon Ball is no exception. While it never engaged in it that often, the original series had a few notable jokes that can come across as homophobic, and while they were mostly products of Dragon Ball originating in the 1980s, it makes for bad representation from the series, regardless.
Dragon Ball has never had a good relationship with LGBTQ+ representation, but Dragon Ball Daima has put in the work to change that. Dragon Ball Daima episode #6 contained more lore on the Glinds, the demon race of Shin and the Kais, and surprisingly, Dragon Ball Daima used the new lore surrounding Shin and the Kais to put some positive LGBTQ+ representation in Dragon Ball. That’s great to see, especially when considering the franchise’s poor history with the subject, and overall, it’s something that can mean a lot for anime, as a whole.
Dragon Ball's Kais Are Officially LGBTQ+ Characters
In Dragon Ball Daima episode #6, Shin went into detail about the origins of the Glinds, which led to Panzy, who had only just met Shin, to confirm that Degesu and Arinsu were his brother and sister. Shin confirmed as much, but when he spoke about Arinsu, he briefly mentioned that while he calls Arinsu his sister, Glinds technically don’t have defined genders. That means that Dragon Ball Daima episode #6 reveals that Glinds i.e. the Kais exist somewhere on the LGBTQ+ spectrum, with Shin’s specific wording implying they’re something along the lines of asexual, gender fluid or nonbinary.
This technically isn’t the first time Dragon Ball has approached that sort of subject matter, however. Back in Dragon Ball Z’s Namek saga, Namekians were established as a race of male-presenting asexual beings, but that was largely played off as a joke centered around Bulma being confused by Namekian biology. By comparison, Shin’s comments are played far more seriously, and because of that, Dragon Ball Daima’s reveal that the Kais don’t have defined genders is Dragon Ball’s first serious attempt at adding LGBTQ+ content to Dragon Ball, even if it was fairly brief in the grand scheme of things.
Dragon Ball Daima's LGBTQ+ Representation Makes Up For Some Of The Anime's Worst Jokes
Why Some Of Dragon Ball's Humor Hasn't Aged Well
Something worth noting about Dragon Ball Daima’s LGBTQ+ representation is that it’s a clear turnaround from some of the more negative examples in the original series. In the Red Ribbon Army saga, Bulma and Krillin derided General Blue as being gay for rejecting Bulma’s advances, and in the epilogue, Trunks fought against a stereotypical gay man in the World Martial Arts Tournament. Examples like that are both very rare and largely products of when Dragon Ball was written, but it doesn’t change that Dragon Ball has an unfortunate history with content that can be interpreted as homophobic in nature.
Those moments and others are what make this recent bit of LGBTQ+ representation so great to see. While those moments and others never factored that much into the larger story, they’ve still been points of criticism against Dragon Ball for some, and because of that, Dragon Ball Daima introducing positive LGBTQ+ representation with Shin and the Kais can be seen as the franchise making a more honest effort at representation after historically being bad at it. Whether that was intentional or a coincidence is unclear, but it’s still great to see something like that so late into the franchise, regardless.
Why Dragon Ball's LGBTQ+ Representation Is A Big Deal
Dragon Ball Daima’s LGBTQ+ representation was a major surprise, and it was a big deal to see, as well. Dragon Ball is one of the biggest anime franchises in the world, if not the biggest, and it’s long since reached the point where even the smallest things that happen with it reach countless people worldwide. Because of that, a franchise as massive as Dragon Ball introducing positive LGBTQ+ representation through the Kais can be seen as a major turning point for LGBTQ+ representation in anime, and anything that can do that is always great to have, no matter the medium.
Anime is still only slowly becoming more open to LGBTQ+ representation outside of demographic-based stories like yaoi and yuri stories, so even with Dragon Ball being as big as it is, it’s unlikely to invoke major change anytime soon. However, the fact that there’s positive representation at all is still great to see, so Dragon Ball Daima’s LGBTQ+ representation is nothing but a net positive for representation in anime, despite being small in the grand scheme of things, and this will surely go down as one of the things that made Dragon Ball Daima such a special series to watch.

Dragon Ball DAIMA is the fifth overall series in the action-adventure anime franchise. It features most of the classic cast as de-aged versions of themselves, including Goku, Vegeta, and Bulma. The series was announced at NYCC 2023, with creator Akira Toriyama returning to handle DAIMA's run.
- Seasons
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