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The first game in the Dragon Ball Z: Budokai series, it is based on the Japanese anime series Dragon Ball Z, part of the manga franchise Dragon Ball. It was published in Japan by Bandai and in North America by Infogrames, and was the first console Dragon Ball video game in five years since Dragon Ball GT: Final Bout (1997).
Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2, released as Dragon Ball Z 2 (ドラゴンボールZ2, Doragon Bōru Zetto Tsū) in Japan, is a fighting game and a sequel to Dragon Ball Z: Budokai and was developed by Dimps and published by Atari for the PlayStation 2 and GameCube. It was released for the PlayStation 2 in North America on December 4, 2003, and on the ...
Unlike PlayStation 2 Classics on the PS3, the PS4 and PS5 releases run at a higher resolution and may feature Trophies, [1] Remote Play and Share Play. [2] PlayStation 4 releases are also playable on PlayStation 5. There are 66 downloadable games out of the 4491 originally released for PlayStation 2. [a]
Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2, released as Dragon Ball Z2 (ドラゴンボールZ2, Doragon Bōru Z 2) in Japan, is a fighting video game developed by Dimps based upon the anime and manga series, Dragon Ball Z, it is a sequel to Dragon Ball Z: Budokai for the PlayStation 2 release in 2003 and Nintendo GameCube release in 2004.
In Japan, Dragon Ball Z 2 sold 584,183 copies. [17] In the United States, Budokai 2 sold 1.5 million copies [18] and was the fourth top video game rental of 2004. [19] The game sold a total of 2,084,183 copies in Japan and the United States. Both version have an aggregate score of 66/100 on Metacritic.
Dragon Ball FighterZ gameplay. It may surprise you to read this, but Dragon Ball Fighter Z does not have a native PS5 or Xbox Series port. The six-year-old fighting game has been going strong with ...
Louisville (5-2) fell 69-64 to Oklahoma in the Battle 4 Atlantis championship after trouncing then-No. 14 Indiana 89-61 and needing overtime to beat West Virginia 79-70 in the Bahamas.
Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi, released in Japan as Dragon Ball Z: Sparking! (ドラゴンボールZ Sparking!), is a series of fighting games developed by Spike based on the Dragon Ball franchise by Akira Toriyama. The series was published by Namco Bandai Games in Japan and Europe, and by Atari in North America and Australia until 2008.