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The term “Kamehasutra” first emerged in the early 2000s as a pun on the series’ signature move, the (itself named after a Hawaiian king). Online forums, fan art communities, and early humor websites began circulating joke illustrations depicting Goku, Vegeta, Bulma, and others in exaggerated, sexually suggestive poses mimicking the classic Kama Sutra’s instructional diagrams.
For collectors, original print runs of such comics are incredibly rare. They were often produced in small quantities via home printers or local copy shops, stapled together, and sold for cash at conventions. A pristine copy of Kamehasutra 2 is a holy grail for the archivist of the bizarre—not because it is good art, but because it is a perfect time capsule of late-1990s/early-2000s internet culture, when parody laws were fuzzy and shame was optional.
This content is strictly non-canonical and often operates in a legal gray area, frequently facing takedowns from rights holders like Toei Animation. Influence on Popular Media and Parody Culture
"Kamehasutra" is a fan-made derivative that exists entirely outside the canon and official media landscape.
