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  2. Goku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goku

    Son Goku [nb 20] is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the Dragon Ball manga series created by Akira Toriyama.He is based on Sun Wukong (known as Son Goku in Japan and Monkey King in the West), a main character of the classic 16th-century Chinese novel Journey to the West, combined with influences from the Hong Kong action cinema of Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee.

  3. Warmachine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warmachine

    Warmachine is a tabletop steampunk [1] wargame originally produced by Privateer Press but currently under the ownership of Steamforged Games.. The game is played with white metal, plastic, and resin miniatures representing military characters from the Iron Kingdoms setting.

  4. Masako Nozawa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masako_Nozawa

    Masako Nozawa (Japanese: 野沢 雅子, Hepburn: Nozawa Masako, born October 25, 1936) is a Japanese actress. Beginning work as a child actress at the age of three, by the time she became an adult, voice acting had inadvertently become her main occupation.

  5. Sangokushi Taisen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangokushi_Taisen

    Sangokushi Taisen (Japanese: 三国志大戦) is a hybrid physical and digital collectible card game for the arcade, on the Chihiro arcade board. It is a real-time strategy-based game set in the Three Kingdoms period of Chinese history and the 14th century Chinese novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong.

  6. Dragon Ball Collectible Card Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_Ball_Collectible...

    The game features exclusive artwork from the Dragon Ball anime (Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT). The original game ended in 2009 and Bandai launched an all-new card game in 2017 called the Dragon Ball Super CCG. This game consists of cards from Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball GT, Dragon Ball Super and Super Dragon Ball ...

  7. Cultural impact of Dragon Ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_impact_of_Dragon_Ball

    The neologism puff-puff, coined by Akira Toriyama in Dragon Ball, is frequently used in the Dragon Quest video game series, which he was the lead artist of. [50] Due to the term's usage in Dragon Ball and Dragon Quest, it has also been referenced in games such as 3D Dot Game Heroes, [51] Yakuza: Like a Dragon, [52] and Final Fantasy XIV. [53]

  8. Monkey Typhoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_Typhoon

    Monkey Typhoon, known in Japan as Assobot Robot Goku (Japanese: アソボット戦記五九, Hepburn: Assobotto Senki Gokū, lit. "The War Chronicles of Goku the Assobot") , is a Japanese mixed-media project created by Avex Inc. , consisting of a manga series and an anime television series.

  9. Dragon Ball (manga) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_Ball_(manga)

    Son Goku, a monkey-tailed boy, and Bulma, a teenage girl, travel to find the seven Dragon Balls, which summon the dragon Shenlong to grant the user one wish. Their journey leads to the desert bandit Yamcha, who later becomes an ally; Chi-Chi, whom Goku unknowingly agrees to marry; and Pilaf, an impish man who seeks the Dragon Balls to fulfill his desire to rule the world.