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unusual facts about Dragon Ball: Origins 2


Dragon Ball: Origins 2

It was also revealed that the game would give the players the ability to play as not only Son Goku, but also Bulma, Kuririn, and Yamcha.


Christopher Sabat

He is best known for his voice work on a number of characters, including Vegeta and Piccolo, in the Dragon Ball franchise.

Dragon Ball series - Vegeta, Piccolo, Yamcha, Kami/Hero, Mr. Popo, Omega Shenron, Zarbon (Z), Recoome, Burter( Z), Jeice (Z), Shenron, Porunga, Ultimate Shenron, Super Gogeta , Moori, various

Daphne Gere

She has been cast as Maron in Dragon Ball Z (though the voice was later redubbed by Leah Clark in the Remastered Box Set), and sung the closing songs to both Blue Gender and Dragon Ball.

Dragon Ball Collectible Card Game

Warrior cards are the characters who fight in the game, such as Goku, Piccolo, Vegeta, Frieza, and Cell.

Dragon Ball GT

The first being Dragon Ball: Final Bout in 1997 for the PlayStation, which received international releases that same year, making it the first Dragon Ball game to be released in North America.

Dragon Ball Z: Harukanaru Densetsu

Players choose from one of the four main character, Goku, Gohan, Piccolo, and Vegeta.

Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler

Goku, Gohan, Krillin, Piccolo, Oolong, Yajirobe and Master Roshi arrive and encounter an army of strange, large, silent robots.

Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure

Clearing Goku's Story Mode once unlocks the ability to play Story Mode with Krillin.

Dragon Ball: Complete Song Collection

In 2003 Columbia reissued the Complete Song Collection with new licensed artwork and the Makafushigi Adventure! remix track, making the album's track list identical to disc one of the Great Complete Collection set.

Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock

The film was released internationally in October 2012 as a subtitled extra to the Xbox 360 video game Dragon Ball Z: For Kinect.

Dragon Ball: Mystical Adventure

Goku throws the final ball into the moat, and asks Shenron to resurrect Bora.

Dragon Ball: Original USA TV Soundtrack Recording

Dragon Ball: Original USA TV Soundtrack Recording is the official domestic US soundtrack from the anime Dragon Ball released in 1995.

Dragon Ball: Origins

The game allows players, with stylus and touchscreen, to take on the role of series protagonist Son Goku who must journey with Bulma to find the seven mythical Dragon Balls, and later train under the martial arts teacher Master Roshi to compete in the 21st Tenkaichi Budokai.

Dragon Ball: Raging Blast 2

The game comes with a remake of the OVA Dragon Ball Z Side Story: Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans, now retitled Dragon Ball: Plan to Eradicate the Super Saiyans.

Giving the possibility that the storyline from The History of Trunks and Trunks: The Story might be in the game's story mode in some form.

Dragon Ball: Saikyō e no Michi Original Soundtrack

#ドラゴンボールの秘密~神龍~
Doragon Bōru no Himitsu~Shenron~/The Secret of the Dragon Balls: Shenlong

The album also includes a cinematic version of the GT opening theme song "Dan Dan Kokoro Hikareteku" by the band Field of View.

Dragon Ball: Sleeping Princess in Devil's Castle

An alternative English dub was produced in France by AB Groupe and released in English speaking markets in Europe.

They fight Lucifer, and Goku uses the Kamehameha blast to destroy Lucifer's Princess-powered laser cannon (the full-moonlight is to be used to destroy the sun, and begin the Reign of Darkness), and kills Lucifer.

The owner of the castle, Lucifer, pretends to treat her as a guest, until it becomes time to awaken the Sleeping Princess.

An English dub by Funimation was released on home video in 1997, though an alternative English dub was also released in Europe from AB Groupe sometime in the early 2000s.

Dragon Ball: The Path to Power

When the situation seems just about hopeless, Roshi decides to use his legendary Kamehameha wave.

Fábio Lucindo

His best known works for dubbing in anime are the characters: Shinji Ikari in Neon Genesis Evangelion, Shaoran (Cardcaptor Sakura), Ash Ketchum (Pokémon), Krillin (Dragon Ball), Kiba Inuzuka (Naruto), Arnold in Hey Arnold!, Takuya Kanbara (Digimon Frontier) and Ichigo Kurosaki (Bleach).

Game One

The channel has shown several Japanese anime on a regular basis, such as Fairy Tail, Naruto, Naruto Shippuden, Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball Z Kai and Eyeshield 21.

Gamera

Gamera has made an appearance in Toriyama's manga, Dragon Ball.

Gen Fukunaga

Fukunaga's uncle, Nagafumi Hori, was one of the producers for Dragon Ball, he approached Gen about bringing the series over to America.

Haji's Kitchen

In 2003, Haji's songs Day After Day and Lost were featured in the Dragon Ball Z feature film Dragon Ball Z: Broly – The Legendary Super Saiyan with a third, Notch unreleased.

Rudolf Pap

To bring something new to this event, Pap created a short film - a crossover with the characters of his two biggest inspirations - Sailor Moon and Dragon Ball.

Then he started to try to do animations when he was 10 - inspired by Sailor Moon and Dragon Ball.

Sean Schemmel

Schemmel is best known for voicing teen and adult Goku, the protagonist of the Dragon Ball metaseries.

Semic Interprint

In 1999 the company introduced the first manga published in Hungary, namely Dragon Ball, Video Girl Ai and Sailor Moon.

Sprite comic

Sprite comics frequently use characters from well-known games such as Sonic, Super Mario Bros., Final Fantasy, Mortal Kombat, Metroid, The Legend of Zelda, Pokémon, Mega Man, and Dragon Ball.

Takayoshi Tanimoto

Tanimoto performed "Dragon Soul" the opening and "Yeah! Break! Care! Break!" the ending theme songs for Dragon Ball Kai, the revised and reanimated version of the anime series Dragon Ball Z.

The Hero Of Konoha

The Hero Of Konoha in beginning was a website only for Naruto arts and news, but very soon after that Dragon Ball popped up.

Tien Shinhan

Tenshinhan appears in the Dragon Ball movies Dragon Ball: Mystical Adventure, Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might, Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound, Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks, and briefly in flashbacks in Dragon Ball Z: Bardock – The Father of Goku.

Tobal No. 1

The game's mechanics were designed with the aid of fighter game designer Seiichi Ishii, while all the characters were designed by Akira Toriyama of Dragon Ball fame.

Yoshio Sawai

Because of the nature of his series, he has often written Bo-bobo version parodies of other authors' manga, including Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball, Yudetamago's Kinnikuman, Kazuki Takahashi's Yu-Gi-Oh!, and Tsugumi Ohba's and Takeshi Obata's Death Note.


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