Internet | Archive Dragon Ball Super New
In recent weeks, users discovered a hidden interactive animation within the Internet Archive's audio player. When playing specific files (often audiobooks, old radio shows, or fan uploads of Dragon Ball soundtracks), if you manipulate the playback speed or toggle the visualizer, the waveform display can transform into an animation of Goku in his Ultra Instinct form (white/silver hair and aura) dodging obstacles or moving at high speed.
Why Dragon Ball Super? The connection comes from the "Ultra Instinct" transformation introduced in the Dragon Ball Super anime (specifically the Tournament of Power arc). The "Easter egg" visualizer mimics the "dodge" mechanic of Ultra Instinct—where the user's body moves on its own without thinking. This aligns perfectly with the Internet Archive's open-source code culture, where developers often hide pop-culture references in software. internet archive dragon ball super new
This is the Kamehameha-shaped elephant in the room. The Internet Archive hosts user-uploaded content. While the platform removes files upon DMCA request, much of the "new" Dragon Ball Super content (stream rips, fan translations) exists in a legal grey area. In recent weeks, users discovered a hidden interactive
As of late 2024/early 2025, rumors of Dragon Ball Super Season 2 (adapting the Moro Arc) are at a fever pitch. Toei has teased "major announcements." This is the Kamehameha-shaped elephant in the room
When that new season drops, the Internet Archive will become the primary repository for:
The Internet Archive preserves digital artifacts—web pages, books, audio, video, and software—to provide long-term public access. It accepts user uploads and crawls public webpages, creating snapshots and collections intended for education, research, and cultural preservation. Because it hosts user-contributed content, material available there can range from clearly public-domain works to copyrighted items uploaded by volunteers.