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This list contains known album titles from both Japanese and American releases of anime music from all iterations of the Dragon Ball franchise. [1]The Dragon Ball Z Hit Song Collection series and the Dragon Ball Z Game Music series have each their own lists of albums with sections, due to length, each individual publication is thus not included in this article.
Dragon Ball Z Game Music is a series of soundtracks of various video games based on the popular anime series Dragon Ball Z for the Famicom, Super Famicom, PlayStation, and Saturn consoles. They were produced from 1993 to 1996. Most, with some exceptions, were distributed by Forte Music Entertainment, and were released in Japan only.
Japanese idols in anime and manga (3 C, 108 P) P. ... Pages in category "Music in anime and manga" The following 147 pages are in this category, out of 147 total.
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Dragon Ball Z picks up five years after the end of the Dragon Ball series, with Son Goku now a young adult and father to his son, Gohan.. A humanoid alien named Raditz arrives on Earth in a spacecraft and tracks down Goku, revealing to him that he is his long-lost older brother and that they are members of a near-extinct elite alien warrior race called Saiyans (サイヤ人, Saiya-jin).
The Korean title for the song "손오공" (Son O-gong) refers to both the Monkey King Sun Wukong, a mythological character from the classic Chinese novel Journey to the West, [7] and Son Goku, the protagonist of the Japanese anime series Dragon Ball Z, whose character is also largely based on Sun Wukong. [8]
DVD home video releases of the Dragon Ball anime series have topped Japan's sales charts on several occasions. [18] [19] In the United States, the Dragon Ball Z anime series sold over 25 million DVD units by January 2012. [20] As of 2017, the Dragon Ball anime franchise has sold more than 30 million DVD and Blu-ray units in the United States. [1]
Super Saiyan Goku using the Kamehameha wave against Hirudegarn in Budokai Tenkaichi 3. The games use a "behind-the-back" third-person camera perspective. Similar to the Super Famicom-released Dragon Ball Z: Legendary Super Warriors (2002), special forms are treated as their own character, with varying stats, movesets, and fighting styles.