If you want to see the Imgur gallery version, go here! Also, Chapter 366 is the only Chapter in the manga to not use a logo at ANY point! Oh and please excuse some of the names, I don't know the actual names for a lot of these fonts.
Son Goku Arc
Spoiler:
Shenlong Straight
Date: 1984-11-20
This is the first logo used for the manga, and is the one used for the opening titles of the Dragon Ball anime. It’s a very plain logo, but is most famous for the use of the happy Shenlong, a defining feature for both the Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z anime logos. This logo would also be used on the posters for the first two Dragon Ball movies, and in the films themselves due to using the original intro.
The Shenlong icon is only used in the first use of the logo. In its final appearance, Chapter 31, the logo has diagonal stripes inside the lettering, but only in the Tankobon edition.
Chapters: 1, 4-5, 7, 24, 31
Shenlong Shuffle
Date: 1984-11-27
The second logo used in the manga, this features Shenlong twisting and shuffling the letters, grabbing the One-Star Ball in his mouth to represent the O in “Dragon”. One of the most recognisable logos in the franchise, it would mainly be used for title pages whose artwork depicted something immediately related to the story at hand, and would be used all the way to the Saiyan arc. It would also be used as the logo for the third Dragon Ball movie, Mystical Adventure.
This logo appeared on Chapters 121 and 229, but only in the Tankobon editions. It also had alternate colouring on Chapter 44, 57 and 75’s title pages. This final use of this logo was Chapter 254, shortly after Vegeta’s defeat.
Chapters: 2-3, 6, 8-9, 11-18, 20-23, 24-26, 28-30, 32, 35-44, 45-65, 67, 69, 71, 73-77, 79-83, 85, 88-90, 92, 94-95, 97-100, 102-104, 107-109, 112-114, 116-126, 128-129, 132-133, 135-139, 141-148, 150-154, 156-161, 164-165, 167-169, 172, 174-176, 179-180, 182, 185-186, 188-189, 191, 193, 194-195, 197-198, 201, 207, 210-211, 215-216, 219-222, 224, 227, 229-231, 233, 235-236, 242, 254.
Simple Straights
Date: 1985-02-05
The most basic form of the logo, using a very geometric and plain font. This logo bounces back and forth between two very similar fonts, with slightly different R, G an N shapes.
The first use of this logo was on the hot air balloon in Chapter 10’s artwork. The third use of this logo, for Chapters 110 and 111, had each letter in a different colour of the rainbow. This logo also appeared on the side of the van depicted in Chapter 130’s title page.
Chapters: 10, 68, 72 110-111, 130, 181, 183, 190, 192, 196, 206, 213-214 218, 223, 225-226
Helvetica Buzz
Date: 1985-04-09
A Helvetica-type logo which used diagonal cuts to give a “buzzed” feel to the logo. This is the first logo to be used on a single page.
Chapter: 19
Eurostyle
Date: 1985-04-16
So-named because of this logo’s similarity to the Eurostyle font, this logo first appeared in the Weekly Shonen Jump title page for Chapter 19. It’s simply the words “Dragon Ball” written in the font, often with the “letter balls” underneath or otherwise placed nearby. This logo would be the first “secondary” logo that would occasionally appear instead of the Shenlong Shuffle logo, up until the end of the Red Ribbon arc, but it would make occasional appearances later on.
For Chapter 27, the font was unstretched. In the Chapter 70 logo, the word Ball was tilted down on an angle. For Chapter 300, the text was stretched vertically higher than it normally is. For Chapter 363, the letters were spaced much more far apart than normal.
Chapters: 20, 33-34, 66, 70, 78, 86, 91, 93, 96, 173, 177, 300, 315, 363, 462
Date: 1984-11-20
This is the first logo used for the manga, and is the one used for the opening titles of the Dragon Ball anime. It’s a very plain logo, but is most famous for the use of the happy Shenlong, a defining feature for both the Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z anime logos. This logo would also be used on the posters for the first two Dragon Ball movies, and in the films themselves due to using the original intro.
The Shenlong icon is only used in the first use of the logo. In its final appearance, Chapter 31, the logo has diagonal stripes inside the lettering, but only in the Tankobon edition.
Chapters: 1, 4-5, 7, 24, 31
Shenlong Shuffle
Date: 1984-11-27
The second logo used in the manga, this features Shenlong twisting and shuffling the letters, grabbing the One-Star Ball in his mouth to represent the O in “Dragon”. One of the most recognisable logos in the franchise, it would mainly be used for title pages whose artwork depicted something immediately related to the story at hand, and would be used all the way to the Saiyan arc. It would also be used as the logo for the third Dragon Ball movie, Mystical Adventure.
This logo appeared on Chapters 121 and 229, but only in the Tankobon editions. It also had alternate colouring on Chapter 44, 57 and 75’s title pages. This final use of this logo was Chapter 254, shortly after Vegeta’s defeat.
Chapters: 2-3, 6, 8-9, 11-18, 20-23, 24-26, 28-30, 32, 35-44, 45-65, 67, 69, 71, 73-77, 79-83, 85, 88-90, 92, 94-95, 97-100, 102-104, 107-109, 112-114, 116-126, 128-129, 132-133, 135-139, 141-148, 150-154, 156-161, 164-165, 167-169, 172, 174-176, 179-180, 182, 185-186, 188-189, 191, 193, 194-195, 197-198, 201, 207, 210-211, 215-216, 219-222, 224, 227, 229-231, 233, 235-236, 242, 254.
Simple Straights
Date: 1985-02-05
The most basic form of the logo, using a very geometric and plain font. This logo bounces back and forth between two very similar fonts, with slightly different R, G an N shapes.
The first use of this logo was on the hot air balloon in Chapter 10’s artwork. The third use of this logo, for Chapters 110 and 111, had each letter in a different colour of the rainbow. This logo also appeared on the side of the van depicted in Chapter 130’s title page.
Chapters: 10, 68, 72 110-111, 130, 181, 183, 190, 192, 196, 206, 213-214 218, 223, 225-226
Helvetica Buzz
Date: 1985-04-09
A Helvetica-type logo which used diagonal cuts to give a “buzzed” feel to the logo. This is the first logo to be used on a single page.
Chapter: 19
Eurostyle
Date: 1985-04-16
So-named because of this logo’s similarity to the Eurostyle font, this logo first appeared in the Weekly Shonen Jump title page for Chapter 19. It’s simply the words “Dragon Ball” written in the font, often with the “letter balls” underneath or otherwise placed nearby. This logo would be the first “secondary” logo that would occasionally appear instead of the Shenlong Shuffle logo, up until the end of the Red Ribbon arc, but it would make occasional appearances later on.
For Chapter 27, the font was unstretched. In the Chapter 70 logo, the word Ball was tilted down on an angle. For Chapter 300, the text was stretched vertically higher than it normally is. For Chapter 363, the letters were spaced much more far apart than normal.
Chapters: 20, 33-34, 66, 70, 78, 86, 91, 93, 96, 173, 177, 300, 315, 363, 462
21st TB to Piccolo Daimao
Spoiler:
Rounded
Date: 1985-10-01
This logo is a very unique one, as it uses a font with very round and geometric linework where the D, A and B have lines that don’t connect where they might be expected to.
This logo’s use for Chapter 44 is only present for the Tankobon release.
Chapters: 44, 84
Stroke
Date: 1986-08-12
This logo uses a “stroke” look that makes it look somewhat handwritten. This is the first Dragon Ball logo to use lowercase lettering rather than uppercase.
Chapters: 87, 101
3D Shuffle
Date: 1986-12-19
The design for this logo is all the letters drawn with depth, being shuffled in the air (in Chapter 105, the implication is that the masked warrior has hit them from below). Much like Simple Straights, the font used for this logo varies between a few similar fonts, as well as the placement and orientation of the letters.
Chapter: 105, 115, 127, 270
Grid Shuffle
Date: 1987-01-05
This logo takes the lettering used in the Shenlong Shuffle logo and places each letter inside a square on a grid, with the others being filled with characters and title page information.
Chapter: 106
Japanese Squares
Date: 1987-05-30
A rather rare logo, this depicts the Dragon Ball logo in Japanese text inside squares.
A shuffled variant of this logo appears on the title page for Chapter 262.
Chapters: 131, 262
Date: 1985-10-01
This logo is a very unique one, as it uses a font with very round and geometric linework where the D, A and B have lines that don’t connect where they might be expected to.
This logo’s use for Chapter 44 is only present for the Tankobon release.
Chapters: 44, 84
Stroke
Date: 1986-08-12
This logo uses a “stroke” look that makes it look somewhat handwritten. This is the first Dragon Ball logo to use lowercase lettering rather than uppercase.
Chapters: 87, 101
3D Shuffle
Date: 1986-12-19
The design for this logo is all the letters drawn with depth, being shuffled in the air (in Chapter 105, the implication is that the masked warrior has hit them from below). Much like Simple Straights, the font used for this logo varies between a few similar fonts, as well as the placement and orientation of the letters.
Chapter: 105, 115, 127, 270
Grid Shuffle
Date: 1987-01-05
This logo takes the lettering used in the Shenlong Shuffle logo and places each letter inside a square on a grid, with the others being filled with characters and title page information.
Chapter: 106
Japanese Squares
Date: 1987-05-30
A rather rare logo, this depicts the Dragon Ball logo in Japanese text inside squares.
A shuffled variant of this logo appears on the title page for Chapter 262.
Chapters: 131, 262
Shuffled Family
Spoiler:
These logos use the same font from the Simple Straights logo and generally shuffles the letters rotation, in addition to a more cartoony aesthetic. This logo family would replace the Eurostyle logo as the occasional replacement for the main Shenlong Shuffle logo starting with the Piccolo Daimao arc. This logo family would eventually be used for the basis of the Dragon Ball Z logo.
This family has several variants, and the exact placement and orientation of the letters can vary in each one.
Shuffled Shadow
Date: 1987-05-23
In Chapter 130, the drop shadow lays above the text, while in Chapter 229, it’s placed below. When originally used for Chapter 229, Toriyama mis-spelled the title of his manga as “Dagon Ball” (no R). This was corrected, but then accidentally used for the first five editions of the Kanzenban.
Chapters: 130, 229
Shuffled Classic
Date: 1987-06-21
This logo would receive the honour of being the logo to appear on the final Chapter in the manga, 519. This is the logo Funimation adapted for their logo for the original anime.
For Chapter 149, the letters altered between red and blue colouring, while for 272 it was blue and cyan. In Chapter 140, the letters compress and appear to fall on the right side. For Chapter 155, it was entirely green. In Chapter 178, the letters are laid sideways in a slight arch. This logo also appears on the side of the vehicle on the Chapter 228 artwork. In Chapters 262 and 371, it had an outline added.
Chapters: 134, 140 149, 155, 162-163, 166, 171, 178, 187, 199-200, 202-204, 208-208, 212, 217, 228, 232, 234, 237-238, 246-247 262, 255-256, 272, 287, 313, 319, 353, 371, 398, 411, 461 501, 519.
Shuffle Sweep
Date: 1988-08-09
Similar to Shuffle Arc, only with a thicker outline, more perspective, and a more condensed placement of the letters. The version of this logo from Chapter 404 is what would be used for the Dragon Box Z logo.
For Chapter 312, this logo would have a drop shadow added to it.
Chapters: 187, 286, 293, 312, 404
Shuffle Arch
Date: 1990-10-16
This logo presents the lettering in a more typical arch layout. It’s another rare logo to render the title as the singular “Dragonball”, and also appears on only one title page.
Chapter: 296
This family has several variants, and the exact placement and orientation of the letters can vary in each one.
Shuffled Shadow
Date: 1987-05-23
In Chapter 130, the drop shadow lays above the text, while in Chapter 229, it’s placed below. When originally used for Chapter 229, Toriyama mis-spelled the title of his manga as “Dagon Ball” (no R). This was corrected, but then accidentally used for the first five editions of the Kanzenban.
Chapters: 130, 229
Shuffled Classic
Date: 1987-06-21
This logo would receive the honour of being the logo to appear on the final Chapter in the manga, 519. This is the logo Funimation adapted for their logo for the original anime.
For Chapter 149, the letters altered between red and blue colouring, while for 272 it was blue and cyan. In Chapter 140, the letters compress and appear to fall on the right side. For Chapter 155, it was entirely green. In Chapter 178, the letters are laid sideways in a slight arch. This logo also appears on the side of the vehicle on the Chapter 228 artwork. In Chapters 262 and 371, it had an outline added.
Chapters: 134, 140 149, 155, 162-163, 166, 171, 178, 187, 199-200, 202-204, 208-208, 212, 217, 228, 232, 234, 237-238, 246-247 262, 255-256, 272, 287, 313, 319, 353, 371, 398, 411, 461 501, 519.
Shuffle Sweep
Date: 1988-08-09
Similar to Shuffle Arc, only with a thicker outline, more perspective, and a more condensed placement of the letters. The version of this logo from Chapter 404 is what would be used for the Dragon Box Z logo.
For Chapter 312, this logo would have a drop shadow added to it.
Chapters: 187, 286, 293, 312, 404
Shuffle Arch
Date: 1990-10-16
This logo presents the lettering in a more typical arch layout. It’s another rare logo to render the title as the singular “Dragonball”, and also appears on only one title page.
Chapter: 296
Piccolo Jr. to Namek
Spoiler:
Two-Tone
Date: 1988-04-12
The Two-Tone logo uses a tall font that often is an outline with the upper half being slightly shaded, and comes from the logo for the original Tankobon release that started alongside Chapter 41. In a few instances the word Ball is moved for better composition with the artwork or flavour text. Starting with the Namek arc it replaced Shenlong Shuffle as the de facto logo, but would eventually be replaced by the Japanese, Capital Serifs and Android Stencil logos during the Android/Cell Arc.
Its first appearance was Chapter 170, where it was completely filled in with black. Chapter 239 shows the logo with the bottom half being shaded rather than the upper half. In Chapter 241, the shading is triangular. Chapters 248 and 249 use no shading at all! Chapter 305 had this logo added for the Kanzenban edition, with no shading. In Chapter 327, every other letter is fully shaded while the rest aren’t at all.
Chapters: 170, 239-241, 243-245, 248-253, 257-261, 263-269, 271, 273-275, 277-285, 288-292, 294, 298, 301-302, 305, 310, 314, 317, 320, 322, 325, 327, 335, 337, 342, 344
Japanese
Date: 1988-06-19
Similar to the Gadgetron and Shenlong Plain logos, only here the text is entirely in Japanese. Who knows what it might say!
Chapter: 184
Serif Stroke
Date: 1988-12-19
This logo uses a rather “stock”-looking font. It’s notable for two things: it’s only the second logo to use lower-case lettering, and it’s the first to spell the title as “Dragonball” rather than “Dragon Ball”.
Chapter: 205
Japanese Orb Shuffle
Date: 1989-05-13
Shuffled balls with the Dragon Ball title written out in Japanese. This is the third and final logo that is written exclusively in Japanese.
Chapter: 228
Oriental
Date: 1990-05-29
This logo is so-named because it uses a font that ever so vaguely looks like Japanese scripture strokes. This design was used occasionally during the late Frieza and early Android arcs, but it would also be used much later for the logo of Dragon Ball Minus Bonus Chapter of Jaco the Galactic Patrolman.
This logo was presented in an arch layout for Chapter 311.
Chapter: 276, 307, 311, 321, 324, 332-333, 336, 338, 340, 517, DB-.
Straight Squash
Date: 1990-10-09
So-named because the font is clearly squashed slightly to make it look like the Gadgetron and Shenlong Plain logos. The most distinctive part of this logo is the “foot” in the G, a first for the manga logos. This logo would become the new “occasional replacement” logo similar to Shenlong Plain, Shuffled and Eurostyle before it.
For Chapter 304, the first letters of Dragon and Ball were drop capped, meaning they were much larger than all the other letters. In Chapter 330, this logo would be un-squashed.
Chapter: 295, 299, 303-304, 306, 309, 316, 318, 328, 330-331, 339
Tall and Plain
Date: 1990-10-23
Similar to the original Two-Tone logo, only it uses a different font.
Chapter: 297, 326
Date: 1988-04-12
The Two-Tone logo uses a tall font that often is an outline with the upper half being slightly shaded, and comes from the logo for the original Tankobon release that started alongside Chapter 41. In a few instances the word Ball is moved for better composition with the artwork or flavour text. Starting with the Namek arc it replaced Shenlong Shuffle as the de facto logo, but would eventually be replaced by the Japanese, Capital Serifs and Android Stencil logos during the Android/Cell Arc.
Its first appearance was Chapter 170, where it was completely filled in with black. Chapter 239 shows the logo with the bottom half being shaded rather than the upper half. In Chapter 241, the shading is triangular. Chapters 248 and 249 use no shading at all! Chapter 305 had this logo added for the Kanzenban edition, with no shading. In Chapter 327, every other letter is fully shaded while the rest aren’t at all.
Chapters: 170, 239-241, 243-245, 248-253, 257-261, 263-269, 271, 273-275, 277-285, 288-292, 294, 298, 301-302, 305, 310, 314, 317, 320, 322, 325, 327, 335, 337, 342, 344
Japanese
Date: 1988-06-19
Similar to the Gadgetron and Shenlong Plain logos, only here the text is entirely in Japanese. Who knows what it might say!
Chapter: 184
Serif Stroke
Date: 1988-12-19
This logo uses a rather “stock”-looking font. It’s notable for two things: it’s only the second logo to use lower-case lettering, and it’s the first to spell the title as “Dragonball” rather than “Dragon Ball”.
Chapter: 205
Japanese Orb Shuffle
Date: 1989-05-13
Shuffled balls with the Dragon Ball title written out in Japanese. This is the third and final logo that is written exclusively in Japanese.
Chapter: 228
Oriental
Date: 1990-05-29
This logo is so-named because it uses a font that ever so vaguely looks like Japanese scripture strokes. This design was used occasionally during the late Frieza and early Android arcs, but it would also be used much later for the logo of Dragon Ball Minus Bonus Chapter of Jaco the Galactic Patrolman.
This logo was presented in an arch layout for Chapter 311.
Chapter: 276, 307, 311, 321, 324, 332-333, 336, 338, 340, 517, DB-.
Straight Squash
Date: 1990-10-09
So-named because the font is clearly squashed slightly to make it look like the Gadgetron and Shenlong Plain logos. The most distinctive part of this logo is the “foot” in the G, a first for the manga logos. This logo would become the new “occasional replacement” logo similar to Shenlong Plain, Shuffled and Eurostyle before it.
For Chapter 304, the first letters of Dragon and Ball were drop capped, meaning they were much larger than all the other letters. In Chapter 330, this logo would be un-squashed.
Chapter: 295, 299, 303-304, 306, 309, 316, 318, 328, 330-331, 339
Tall and Plain
Date: 1990-10-23
Similar to the original Two-Tone logo, only it uses a different font.
Chapter: 297, 326
Frieza to Cell
Spoiler:
Capital Serifs
Date: 1991-01-14
Named for the serifed font that’s written in all capitals. There you have it. It would be italicized sometimes though! During the Android/Cell arc, this would become the fourth “occasional substitute” logo, to compliment Android Stencil, although it would be used as the main logo in the early Cell Games portion.
Chapter: 308, 329, 341, 343, 345, 348, 350, 356, 359-360, 364, 385, 387-388, 390-397, 399-400, 403, 405, 407, 412-414, 416, 418-420
Modern Vertical Squash
Date: 1991-04-27
A very unique-looking logo that squashes the letters of a modern-looking font to an extreme degree.
Chapter: 323
Superman
Date: 1991-06-23
This logo is named after the 3D text that gradually squashes across the word, very much like the Superman logo (or is that Sourman?). This is the second logo to depict Dragon Ball as a single word, “Dragonball”.
Chapter: 334
Android Stencil
Date: 1991-10-22
Named for the logo’s font using a stencil-like look with no serifs. This would become the main logo for the Android/Cell arc, until the Cell Games where it swapped with Capital Serifs to be the secondary logo.
For Chapter 354, the logo gained a drop shadow. This logo appears on the title page for the Trunks rhe Story extra chapter, with one section of each letter coloured red and the other turquoise.
Chapter: 346-347, 349, 351-352, 354-355, 357-358, 361-362, 365, 368-370, 372-384, 386, 387, 389, 402, 406, 415
Gadgetron Lean
Date: 1992-03-31
A variant on the Simple Straights logo, this one has differently-shaped As that slope to the right, and is otherwise named due to the G being the same one used for the Gadgetron logo in the Ratchet & Clank series. Starting with the Buu arc, this would become the fifth “occasional replacement” logo, usually when the title page used original artwork rather than story content panels.
This logo was added to Chapter 401 in the Kanzenban edition, which originally had no logo at all.
Chapter: 367, 401, 408-410, 417, 456-457, 467, 486, 494, 497
Date: 1991-01-14
Named for the serifed font that’s written in all capitals. There you have it. It would be italicized sometimes though! During the Android/Cell arc, this would become the fourth “occasional substitute” logo, to compliment Android Stencil, although it would be used as the main logo in the early Cell Games portion.
Chapter: 308, 329, 341, 343, 345, 348, 350, 356, 359-360, 364, 385, 387-388, 390-397, 399-400, 403, 405, 407, 412-414, 416, 418-420
Modern Vertical Squash
Date: 1991-04-27
A very unique-looking logo that squashes the letters of a modern-looking font to an extreme degree.
Chapter: 323
Superman
Date: 1991-06-23
This logo is named after the 3D text that gradually squashes across the word, very much like the Superman logo (or is that Sourman?). This is the second logo to depict Dragon Ball as a single word, “Dragonball”.
Chapter: 334
Android Stencil
Date: 1991-10-22
Named for the logo’s font using a stencil-like look with no serifs. This would become the main logo for the Android/Cell arc, until the Cell Games where it swapped with Capital Serifs to be the secondary logo.
For Chapter 354, the logo gained a drop shadow. This logo appears on the title page for the Trunks rhe Story extra chapter, with one section of each letter coloured red and the other turquoise.
Chapter: 346-347, 349, 351-352, 354-355, 357-358, 361-362, 365, 368-370, 372-384, 386, 387, 389, 402, 406, 415
Gadgetron Lean
Date: 1992-03-31
A variant on the Simple Straights logo, this one has differently-shaped As that slope to the right, and is otherwise named due to the G being the same one used for the Gadgetron logo in the Ratchet & Clank series. Starting with the Buu arc, this would become the fifth “occasional replacement” logo, usually when the title page used original artwork rather than story content panels.
This logo was added to Chapter 401 in the Kanzenban edition, which originally had no logo at all.
Chapter: 367, 401, 408-410, 417, 456-457, 467, 486, 494, 497
Buu Arc
Spoiler:
Buu Arc Shuffle
Date: 1993-05-11
Another variant on the Shuffled-style logo, this logo overlaps the word Dragon and Ball. It’s been split off on its own from the main Shuffle family as this logo would become the primary and easily most common logo starting with the Buu arc, and is almost always used with title pages that are also the first actual page of the manga.
Chapter 452 and 482’s version of this logo is condensed and much more stylized.
Chapters: 421-445, 447-455, 458-460, 463-466, 468-485, 487-493, 495-496, 498-500, 502-511, 513-517, 518
Capital Serif Corners
Date: 1993-11-09
This logo uses a similar font to Capital Serifs, only the corners are angled rather than rounded.
Chapter: 446
Ben-Hur
Date: 1995-03-28
Named for its similarity to the Ben Hur logo, this logo is the third time the title has been written as the singular “Dragonball”. Here it’s in 3D, and is part of a platform that the heroes stand on that is supported by Fat Buu.
This is the final logo variant used for the manga, as well as the last logo to be used for a single title page in the original manga prints.
Chapter: 512
Comb Blocks
Date: 2003-04-04
This unique logo uses bold lettering with comb-like line cuts, giving a distinct late 80s/early 90s look. This logo’s first and only appearance was the Kanzenban edition of Chapter 121, and is the second logo to only appear on a single title page.
In real-world chronology, this is the final logo to be used for a single title page.
Chapter: 121
Date: 1993-05-11
Another variant on the Shuffled-style logo, this logo overlaps the word Dragon and Ball. It’s been split off on its own from the main Shuffle family as this logo would become the primary and easily most common logo starting with the Buu arc, and is almost always used with title pages that are also the first actual page of the manga.
Chapter 452 and 482’s version of this logo is condensed and much more stylized.
Chapters: 421-445, 447-455, 458-460, 463-466, 468-485, 487-493, 495-496, 498-500, 502-511, 513-517, 518
Capital Serif Corners
Date: 1993-11-09
This logo uses a similar font to Capital Serifs, only the corners are angled rather than rounded.
Chapter: 446
Ben-Hur
Date: 1995-03-28
Named for its similarity to the Ben Hur logo, this logo is the third time the title has been written as the singular “Dragonball”. Here it’s in 3D, and is part of a platform that the heroes stand on that is supported by Fat Buu.
This is the final logo variant used for the manga, as well as the last logo to be used for a single title page in the original manga prints.
Chapter: 512
Comb Blocks
Date: 2003-04-04
This unique logo uses bold lettering with comb-like line cuts, giving a distinct late 80s/early 90s look. This logo’s first and only appearance was the Kanzenban edition of Chapter 121, and is the second logo to only appear on a single title page.
In real-world chronology, this is the final logo to be used for a single title page.
Chapter: 121