Iizuka says Shadow the Hedgehog wasn't inspired by Vegeta, but fans have receipts that say otherwise

Key art for Sonic X Shadow Generations
(Image credit: Sonic Team)

Sega might've declared 2024 the Year of Shadow, but Shadow the Hedgehog has been enjoying the adoration of preteens entering their edgy red-and-black phase since he first declared himself the ultimate lifeform back in 2001. And who could blame them? Shadow's like the Platonic ideal of the hero's dark mirror archetype: He's grumpy, he's a reluctant hero, he's constantly proclaiming his superiority, he's got hair spikes with an arrogant upward sweep where the carefree locks of his lighthearted counterpart might droop downwards. Actually, now that I think about it, that sounds a hell of a lot like a certain prince of all space warriors I know… 

(Image credit: Sonic Team, Bandai Namco)

Toe to tip, that's a Vegeta—as long as you're not counting that brief period where Shadow had all those guns. I'm certainly not the first one who's noticed the similarities. Do a quick google, and you'll find that fans have been arguing about whether Vegeta inspired Shadow about as long as they've been debating whether Super Saiyan Goku inspired Super Sonic (probably, though apocrypha claims Toriyama never complained about it). But while it might seem obvious to you and me that Shadow's got some Vegeta in him, Sonic Team director Takashi Iizuka says otherwise.

Over the weekend at Anime Expo 2024, Sega held a panel to promote Sonic x Shadow Generations, during which Iizuka was asked about the inspirations that informed Shadow's design and character during the development of Sonic Adventure 2. Answering via translator, Iizuka said Shadow's role as a dark rival to Sonic was influenced by '90s American antiheroes, citing Spawn in particular, which would account for some of the general red-and-black edginess. However, panel host Zeno Robinson said he'd asked Iizuka about the long-held assumption that Shadow was inspired by Vegeta, which Iizuka had denied. Iizuka reiterated that denial for the crowd, correcting the record by emphatically shaking his head. Sonic Team, it seems, is a no-Vegeta zone.

Unless, of course, you look at Sega's own concept art materials. Shortly after the panel aired, fans on Twitter refuted Iizuka's Vegeta denial, and they had evidence to prove it. In 2017, Sega paired with publisher Cook & Becker to release the official Sonic the Hedgehog 25th Anniversary Art Book. The book collected concept art and official illustrations dating back to 1991—including early concepts for Shadow from the development of Sonic Adventure 2. Included on one page of early concept sketches, some of which were shown during the Anime Expo 2024 panel, are a series of character development notes, the final line being "ベジータ," or "Bejīta"—or as we'd write it in English, "Vegeta."

More bizarre is that, according to Twitter user @GeoffItaliano, Sega presented that same concept art at the Sonic x Shadow Generations event at Anime Expo, except there's allegedly a small placard conspicuously placed directly over where the Vegeta bullet point would be. I can maybe understand not wanting to publicly confirm that your character was influenced by another IP, but this seems like a particularly clumsy effort from the Sonic Team party censors. Just imagine how Vegeta feels. Goku's already better at everything, and now he's being written out of Sonic the Hedgehog history? Is there no justice to be found for Saiyan princes? 

News Writer

Lincoln started writing about games while convincing his college professors to accept his essays about procedural storytelling in Dwarf Fortress, eventually leveraging the brainworms from a youth spent in World of Warcraft to write for sites like Waypoint, Polygon, and Fanbyte. After three years freelancing for PC Gamer, he joined on as a full-time News Writer in 2024, bringing an expertise in Caves of Qud bird diplomacy, getting sons killed in Crusader Kings, and hitting dinosaurs with hammers in Monster Hunter.