DBZ Yaoi BL Hub
Welcome to DBZ Yaoi BL Hub — a living archive dedicated to DBZ Yaoi, Saiyan BL, fanfiction, fanart, doujinshi, scanlations and fandom history.
Created to preserve old web treasures and celebrate new works, this hub gathers rare stories, restored artwork, classic doujinshi and modern Saiyan BL creations in one place.
Explore legendary pairings such as:
✓ Truhan Gohan x Trunks
✓ Kakavege Goku x Vegeta
✓ VegeKaka Vegeta x Goku
✓ Piccohan Piccolo x Gohan
✓ Adult Truten aged-up Goten x Trunks
Dive into a curated collection of:
✓ Rare DBZ yaoi doujinshi and scanlations
✓ Classic and modern Saiyan BL fanfiction
✓ Restored fanart and old web archive treasures
✓ AI Saiyan Studio creations and visual experiments
✓ Time Machine memories from BL fandom history
Preserving the pioneers. Restoring the classics. Creating the next great Saiyan BL works.
What makes it so effective is that the pin-up energy never erases the tragedy underneath. Majin Vegeta is theatrical, yes, but the performance comes from a wounded place: pride trying to become untouchable again, desire disguised as arrogance, weakness buried under the fantasy of being “Pure Evil.” That is why the image carries such strong VegeKaka subtext. It feels like Vegeta posing not for the world, but for Kakarot — daring him to look, daring him to react, daring him to prove that the prince can still command his attention.
There is also something very old-web about the boldness of it. Maetel does not make Majin Vegeta subtle or cleanly heroic. She lets him be vain, dangerous, flirtatious, damaged, and magnetic all at once. That complexity is what makes the portrait worth preserving: not just a sexy solo Saiyan image, but a visual fragment of Vegeta’s most unstable performance of power, where villainy becomes theater and pride becomes invitation.
Do you read this more as a solo Majin Vegeta pin-up, or as one of those archive pieces where the entire pose feels like a challenge thrown directly at Kakarot?
Lord Truhan — Saiyan BL Archive curator
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