The Fusion Naming Formula
Every fusion in Dragon Ball follows the same recipe: take the front of one fighter's name and weld it to the back of the other's. Go-ku + Ve-geta gives Gogeta; Go-ten + Trun-ks gives Gotenks. This generator reverse-engineers that recipe — it splits both names at their natural syllable seams, joins every front-half/back-half combination in both orders, throws out the unpronounceable ones, and ranks what's left the way the series seems to: names that take roughly half of each parent and flow cleanly at the join score highest. That's why Gogeta comes out on top for Goku and Vegeta without the tool knowing any canon names.
Canon Fusions for Reference
Every named fusion in the series
| Fusion | Fused from | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Gogeta | Goku + Vegeta | Fusion Dance |
| Vegito | Vegeta + Kakarotto | Potara earrings |
| Gotenks | Goten + Trunks | Fusion Dance |
| Kefla | Kale + Caulifla | Potara earrings |
| Kibito Kai | Kibito + Supreme Kai | Potara earrings |
| Fused Zamasu | Goku Black + Zamasu | Potara earrings |
| Aka | Abo + Kado | Fusion Dance |
| Vegeku (proposed) | Vegeta + Goku | Rejected by Vegeta |
Vegeku never happened — Goku proposed it, Vegeta refused on principle.
Beyond Dragon Ball
The blend-two-names trick is useful anywhere: couple names, team names, D&D party mascots, pet names when the household can't agree, or a gamertag that merges your two mains. Because the generator works from syllable structure rather than a fixed character list, any two names fuse — try your own with a friend's and check both orders. And if you need to know which of the two fighters would actually win before fusing, the power level comparator settles it with canonical multipliers.