"Ugh! Hey, what's this, Easter?! This is no outfit; it's a costume! And I look ridiculous in it, Oolong!" |
The Bunny Costume (バニーコスチューム Banī Kosuchūmu) is a revealing outfit for females that resembles a bunny.
Overview[]
The costume has six pieces: a black headband with black rabbit ears (known as Bunny Ears), a white shirt collar with a red bowtie, a black leotard with a white cotton rabbit tail, a pair of blue tights, a pair of red high heels with ankle-straps, and a pair of white shirt cuffs.
Usage[]
Oolong had stored this in his House-Wagon. Bulma had no choice but to wear this as it was the only clean clothes around that fit her. When Master Roshi extinguishes Fire Mountain with the Kamehameha, Oolong is forced by Bulma to briefly Shapeshift into Bulma wearing the Bunny costume to fool Master Roshi, who wanted to touch Bulma's breasts as payment for extinguishing the flames on Fire Mountain, however her plan backfires when Oolong (in Bulma's form) goes overboard and ends up exposing her breasts to Roshi, angering Bulma. The costume also made people in Monster Carrot's Village think that Bulma was part of the Rabbit Mob.
Two random women are also seen wearing them in one of Master Roshi's daydreams.
In the Dragon Ball Z episode "Closing In", there is a billboard showing three women wearing a bunny costume, albeit without the blue tights, red bowtie, and ankle-straps. Also, their high heels are black and the bunny ears are white.
In Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection ‘F’ and Dragon Ball Super, along with the Angels of Hell there is an attractive female fairy wearing a traditional black colored bunny costume.
During the Universe Survival Saga, Master Roshi asks Puar to help him overcome his perversion by shapeshifting into an attractive young girl, as Oolong refused to do so due to being traumatized by the time when he transformed into Bulma wearing a bunny costume for Roshi. Puar reluctantly agrees and shapeshifts into a dark-blue haired girl wearing a red bunny costume. Puar is forced to remain in this form while being chased around by an amorous Roshi.
Other media[]
In Dragon Ball: Adventure Special, Bulma is depicted wearing different outfits selected by the main cast one of which being her wearing a Bunny costume with Panties on her head. This Bunny costume has a different design and color scheme compared to the one she wears in the main series. The design resembles the lingerie that Master Roshi tricked Launch into wearing though with the addition of bunny ears. The design's similarities make sense as Master Roshi is the one that suggests the outfit.
In Dr. Slump, Penguin Village Middle School has a gentleman's club which has a blonde woman wearing this costume, but instead of blue tights, the woman has fish nets. Additionally on the title card for "How Adorable! The Lovely Middle-aged Trio", Senbei Norimaki, Kon Kimidori, & Kurikinton Soramame can be seen crossdressing in Bunny costumes.
Video Game Appearances[]
Bulma is seen wearing it in Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure and Dragon Ball: Origins.
In Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2, one of the six costumes Bulma can be seen wearing at the capsule shop is the Bunny costume.
Bulma wearing the Bunny costume is featured in Dragon Ball Z: Dokkan Battle and Dragon Ball Legends as a playable character. Bulma wearing the Bunny costume also appears as a support item in Dokkan Battle as well. In Dokkan Battle, she is called Bulma (Bunny) when wearing the Bunny costume. Additionally, the "Puff-Puff!" summon screen features Oolong as Bulma (Bunny) performing the Puff-Puff gesture with Roshi based upon the scene from the Emperor Pilaf Saga.
In Dragon Ball Legends, Bunny Girl Bulma (Youth) appears as a playable GRN "Sparking" character, numbered DBL16-06S. Like other playable versions of Bulma (Youth), she fights with an Uzi sub-machine gun, Rocket Launcher, and Surprise Blaster. She can also take advantage of the outfit's sex appeal as part of her Special Skill Blow A Kiss.
In Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot, the Bunny Ears portion of the costume appears as a Memorial Spot Event Item that can be found near the farmhouse in the southeastern part of the Central Plains Area after the completion of the Saiyan Saga. The item unlocks two entries in the Z-Encyclopedia, the Bunny Ears item entry and the Memorial Spot entry "Beware the... Bunny Girl?" which provides a history on the bunny ears and how it led to Bulma being mistaken as a member of the Rabbit Mob. The memorial spot picture shows Bulma wearing the ears while trying on the Arabian Costume in the village the Rabbit Mob terrorized.
Trivia[]
- The bunny costume is rather infamous for its role as the official uniform for the female workers at the Playboy Mansion in real life.
- However, when it became popular in Japan, it lost much of its association with Playboy and is accordingly referred to simply as the "bunny suit" or "bunny girl outfit". As shown in Dragon Ball and related media, it is not uncommon for the bunny costume to appear in manga, anime, and/or video games due to said popularity in Japan.
- The suit is also popularly depicted in anime and manga fan art and merchandise, even for characters who are never seen wearing it in official works. Bunny suits are most frequently worn by female characters, but they are occasionally worn by male characters, usually for comic effect (Oolong shapeshifting as Bulma wearing one technically counts especially when he initially messed up her body proportions, though in most cases it simply involves males wearing them as a form of crossdressing).
- Oolong appears in the form of Bulma wearing the Bunny Costume during the infamous scene from the Emperor Pilaf Saga that the sexual term Puff Puff originates from.
- In the dub for the scene where Bulma is forced to wear the bunny costume, she at one point asks sarcastically if it was Easter, alluding to the Easter Bunny, a mythical character that is purported to deliver Easter Eggs during the Easter holiday season.
- The line could also be seen as a tongue-in-cheek way to draw the viewers' attention (especially younger veiwers) away the costume's risque nature (and it being a form of fan service), by ironically associating it with both the Easter holiday & by extension the Easter Bunny.
- The same outfit features prominently as the attire for female Jesters in Dragon Quest III, a game whose series is also produced by Akira Toriyama. In other games in the Dragon Quest series, it's often worn by girls working at bars or Casinos.
- Interestingly, both Oolong and Puar have shapeshifted into women wearing Bunny costumes yet both are male in their true forms. Though Puar is considered female in the English dub, Akira Toriyama has gone on record to confirm Puar is male in the original manga and Japanese anime thus both instances count as gender bending being among the few examples of it in the series.
- In addition to being traumatized by his past experience transforming into Bulma, Oolong could have also refused Master Roshi's request to in Dragon Ball Super on the grounds of wanting to avoid upsetting Bulma or worse her husband Vegeta if they found out about it. However as shown by Puar, Oolong could have transformed into a different female wearing the Bunny costume if he had been willing to help Master Roshi. Puar likely elected to use the form of a female wearing the Bunny costume that was not based on Bulma or any other female friends/associates out of respect and/or to avoid upsetting them should they find out.
Gallery[]
References[]
- ↑ Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot, 2020