Adventure 2 -yamamotodoujinshi- | Bulma

Suddenly, Chi-Chi wishes for a self-cleaning kitchen—it appears. Krillin subconsciously wishes for his hair back—it regrows for one panel, then vanishes. The narrative descends into chaotic, beautiful anarchy. Yamamoto is making a pointed argument: the centralized, patriarchal wish (immortality, resurrection of the king, domination) is a tool of control. Bulma’s distributed wish-system is a form of narrative democratization.

Bulma Adventure 2 ends not with a battle, but with a patent office. Bulma, sitting in a floating chair, files 1,400 interdimensional patents. Goku asks if she wants to fight. She replies, "I’ve already won. Your fight is just the afterimage." Bulma Adventure 2 -YamamotoDoujinshi-

In a key sequence, she faces a rampaging Bio-Warrior created by a rogue Red Ribbon remnant. While Goku and Vegeta debate power levels (a running gag—their speech bubbles are filled with illegible numbers), Bulma deploys the Phase-Shift Bangle , which does not fight the warrior but changes the frequency of its cellular cohesion, causing it to dissolve into a puddle of non-toxic glycerin. Yamamoto is making a pointed argument: the centralized,

Yamamoto visually represents this as a "negative power level": a stat bar that reads "0" but is surrounded by a halo of complex formulas. The paper argues this is a feminist critique of the Shonen power pyramid: true dominance lies not in the capacity for destruction, but in the capacity to redefine the rules of destruction. Bulma, sitting in a floating chair, files 1,400

The most controversial and intellectually dense chapter of BA2 is the "Shenron Interrupt." After collecting all seven balls, the Z-Fighters expect Bulma to wish for eternal youth. Instead, she uses her Decoupler to extract the wish-core and injects it into the Earth’s geomagnetic field. The result: no single wish is granted, but the capacity for small, autonomous wishes becomes a universal law.

Yamamoto’s art style is crucial here: cold, precise, architectural linework for Bulma’s inventions, contrasting with the fluid, explosive action lines of the male fighters. This visual dichotomy is the "Yamamoto Lens."

The doujinshi remains niche, dismissed by purists as "non-canon smut." However, this paper posits that the "Yamamoto Lens"—the fusion of hard logic, systemic subversion, and the erotic as a tool rather than a reward—offers a viable blueprint for a post-Shonen hero. Bulma does not become a Super Saiyan. She becomes something more dangerous in the Dragon Ball universe: the person who writes the user manual for reality itself.