In the story, Doraemon’s Anywhere Door broke, stranding him in a blank, white dimension. The final panel was empty—just a speech bubble from a pixelated Doraemon: “I’ll be waiting here until you draw the way out.”
Media outlets called it “The Phantom Panel.” Theories ran wild on social video platforms. A popular VTuber dedicated a whole stream to analyzing the drawing, claiming the “white dimension” was a metaphor for the internet itself.
That night, Nobita’s son, Takeru, an avid fan of retro pop media, found the notebook. He photographed the empty final panel and tweeted it: “Dad’s old Doraemon comic ends on a cliffhanger. Can AI finish it?” Doraemon Xxx Picture
Then, the real entertainment spectacle began.
Nobita Nobi, now a frazzled 35-year-old office worker, was cleaning his childhood closet when he found it: a dusty, yellowed manga notebook. Inside were crudely drawn panels of "Adventure Doraemon," a homemade comic he and Shizuka had sketched in fourth grade. In the story, Doraemon’s Anywhere Door broke, stranding
“Doraemon!” the digital Nobita cried. “If you can see this… eat a Dora-Yaki and push the reset button on your ear!”
A famous streaming service announced an emergency live special: “Can the 22nd Century Save Nobita?” Using deepfake tech and voice synthesis from old episodes, they recreated young Nobita. On live TV, he reached out his hand toward the screen. That night, Nobita’s son, Takeru, an avid fan
Doraemon climbed out. Not a hologram. Not a cosplayer. Him.