If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy.
The Spy x Family manga just paid tribute to Dragon Ball's Akira Toriyama in its latest chapter
Is the seeming Dragon Ball reference in Spy X Family chapter 105 a coincidence? We think not.
Popverse's top stories of the day
- How Disney+'s What If...? is the moonshot for the next 50 years of Marvel Studios & the MCU
- Watch: Dune: Prophecy's Desmond Hart explained: His secret identity, his past, and his possible future [SPOILERS]
- Dune: Prophecy's Desmond Hart explained: His secret identity, his past, and his possible future [SPOILERS]
When someone as influential as Akira Toriyama dies, it has a habit of hanging over the people who looked up to them. Fans all over the world paid tribute to Toriyama and his Dragon Ball franchise in the wake of his death earlier this year, but it looks like Tatsuya Endo snuck his own memorial to the iconic mangaka into the most recent chapter of Spy x Family.
We’re going to discuss some minor spoilers for Chapter 105 of Spy x Family ahead, though we’ll be leaving out most of the plot details. The chapter focuses heavily on Franky, Twilight’s informant and general lacky throughout the manga. To save a fellow WISE contact, he breaks into where they’re being interrogated wearing a gas mask and holding a bouquet of flowers that are a lot more than they seem.
The image feels pretty random until you remember that the mask Franky is wearing is suspiciously similar to the avatar Toriyama often used for himself when answering fan mail or presiding as the supreme being of the Dragon Ball universe (usually to comedic effect). The character is usually referred to as Tori Bot and has shown up in Dragon Ball, Dr. Slump, and other anime as a tribute to the influence Toriyama has had on the industry. Seeing Franky and Tori Bot side-by-side makes the similarities particularly striking.
It could be a completely unrelated reference, of course, but I don’t think that’s the case. From the shape of the eye holes to canister at the front of the mask all the way to how Franky's ears poke out the side of the mask, it all looks very similar to Tori Bot's design. Thanks to the Spy x Family fanbook, we know that Tatsuya Endo, like many manga creators who grew up reading and watching Dragon Ball, is a huge fan of Akira Toriyama’s work, so it makes sense that they would slip this tribute into the pages of Spy x Family. The manga has been tackling some pretty heavy plots since Toriyama’s passing on March 1, 2024, so this was probably Endo’s first opportunity to include this image of Franky dressed up as his favorite creator.
So far, Tatsuya Endo hasn’t publically acknowledged that this is a direct reference to Tori Bot and Akira Toriyama, but it feels fitting. Toriyama usually used the avatar to poke fun at himself and the manga industry in general, so Franky – Spy x Family’s resident comic relief character – is the perfect person to don the mask and pay tribute to the man who had such a huge impact on manga and pop culture around the world.
Each week, Popverse's resident anime expert Trent Cannon runs down the latest and, dare we say "greatest," in anime and manga in Popverse Jump. Some recent columns have included...
- Why the finales of My Hero Academia, Jujutsu Kaisen, and One Piece feel like the end of an era in manga
- Why is One Piece more popular now that the anime is 25 years old? We asked around and found out
- Dan Da Dan is weird, profoundly inappropriate, and the perfect anime this season
- Why One Piece's Monkey D. Luffy is the perfect anime hero for the dark times ahead
- 40 years after its debut, Dragon Ball is a pop culture force like few others
- Dan Da Dan's most emotionally devastating sequence proves that sometimes words aren't necessary
- Gnosia, the "Among Us meets Everything Everywhere All at Once" visual novel is getting an anime adaptation that needs to be as weird as possible
- Assassination Classroom is a Shonen anime well worth revisiting, ten years on
- Sony is making big moves to own the anime industry by buying Kadokawa, publisher of Oshi no Ko, Sword Art Online, and Konosuba
Follow Popverse for upcoming event coverage and news
Find out how we conduct our review by reading our review policy
Let Popverse be your tour guide through the wilderness of pop culture
Sign in and let us help you find your new favorite thing.
Comments
Want to join the discussion? Please activate your account first.
Visit Reedpop ID if you need to resend the confirmation email.