Yeeeeah, gonna have to agree to disagree on Sabat's Vegeta. Like I said in my reply to jjgp earlier, his Vegeta has more or less remained almost exactly the same since 2002-3. Saying that he's "SIGNIFICANTLY less gruff" is just... well, I'm REALLY trying to be nice here, but that is just a completely absurd statement. He 100,000% still does the character with the same old absolutely UNBEARABLE grunty, strainy, gravelly, over-the-top cartoony WWE fake tough guy affectation that does the character ZERO favors. Quite frankly, whatever slight improvements Sabat might have made in terms of line delivery over the years are rendered COMPLETELY moot by how absolutely fucking stupid and grating his Vegeta voice still sounds. It's simply impossible to deliver naturalistic, believable lines when you're CONSTANTLY straining to sound like the ungodly lovechild of Randy Savage, Rex Kwon Do, and RFK, Jr.Scsigs wrote: Thu Apr 30, 2026 4:14 pm I very much disagree. The actors have significantly improved since Z. If you don't like the voices they use for their characters, that's fine, but their acting quality has improved significantly. I also don't think you're taking into account the actors that don't do those types of voices. Sabat's voices for Piccolo & Vegeta are also SIGNIFICANTLY less gruff than they used to be. Since Kai (although, the redub of Dead Zone even earlier for Piccolo), his Vegeta's way less gruff & he gave him an uppercrust accent to go with him being a prince while his Piccolo's been smoothed out to sounding more like his Zoro voice, which is very closer to his natural speaking voice. I also can't tell you how often I was annoyed at Sean Schemmel's performance as Goku in the Z dub. I genuinely have NO idea how anyone could think that performance was good outside of nostalgia. The voice tone hasn't changed much, but he now sounds much more confident in the role & I don't think he's missed a beat as the character since Kai. Say what you will about Schemmel himself, but his Goku is solid nowadays.
His Piccolo is slightly more tolerable (at the very least I don't wanna rip my eardrums out when I hear it like his Vegeta lmao), but it does still very much come across as WAY too tryhard (let's be real, damn near ALL of Sabat's roles do) and doesn't have that organic feel that Furukawa's delivery so effortlessly evokes.
Schemmel... eh, he's okay. He's tolerable I guess. I don't have any particularly strong feelings towards his performance one way or another anymore (well, at least with his Gokū... his Kaiō, however, is still complete and utter earrape just as it has been since 1999), but I think he still does have issues with some of the more serious and/or angry moments, ESPECIALLY his yells and Kiais, where he does still overact a bit too much in the old FUNimation style. But at the end of the day, neutral opinion or otherwise, he's just not my Son Gokū.
Oh come now, you know that's a sorry excuse. FUNimation already had a MASSIVE monopolistic STRANGLEHOLD on the US anime licensing industry even before the merger with Crunchyroll and RightStuf orchestrated by Sony. And in this post-FUNimation/Crunchyroll/RightStuf all merged into one massive conglomeration abomination under Sony all David Cronenberg/Brian Yuzna/Screaming Mad George style world? PFFFFFFFT. Yeah, ZERO question that they could ABSOLUTELY, EASILY afford a more eclectic home video output than they've been offering for the past ~decade. I'm preeeetty sure that they simply just don't care to anymore.As for FUNi only licensing certain types of anime more often than not, you can't really blame them for that. They're a business & they needed to make money. Most anime people outside of Japan & in the US watch or check out tends to be Shonen stuff or adjacent genres. While there's certainly a market for other genres, they're nowhere near as big as the one for Shonen.
Here's the thing though... despite FUNiCrunchy's licensing ouevre nowadays being significantly more narrow and shallow than their vastly more eclectic releases 20-odd years ago... I wouldn't mind that anywhere near as much if THERE WAS ANYONE ELSE FILLING THOSE SHOES.
Throughout the entirety of the 2000s, in addition to FUNimation picking up anything and everything they could in an attempt to finally establish themselves more firmly in the US anime market after YEEEAAARS of having Dragon Ball aaaaand... pretty much nothing else, you also had Pioneer/Geneon, ADV, Bandai Entertainment, Anime Works, as well as Manga Entertainment and U.S. Manga Corps to a slightly lesser degree, AALLLL licensing and releasing new anime left and fucking right, from a veritable multitude of different genres, demographics, and styles, regardless if if was a huge marquee title or not. Odds were 8 to 9 outta 10 back then that if an anime was even just BARELY moderately popular in Japan, ONE of those companies was bound to pick it up, give it an at least halfway-decent dub, and put out it out on DVD. And every goddamn one of them had been doing exactly that since least the early 90s, if not the late 80s, albeit on VHS obviously.
Compared to nowadays, though? Aside from FUNimation/Crunchyroll, who else is out there still regularly picking up new anime licenses? Sentai Filmworks hasn't picked up anything new in at least five years, and has spent that time since almost exclusively re-releasing formerly out-of-print titles of theirs from ten or so years ago (and even back when they were still picking up new titles regularly, the overwhelming majority of them were either worthless, disgustingly sexist ecchi garbage or SUPER generic, samey, forgettable slice of life comedies).
Discotek Media, for as much as I absolutely fucking adore them, traffic EXCLUSIVELY in older media, be it from 20 years ago or 50-60 years ago, a large quantity of which are re-releases of license rescues that were put out on DVD by one of the aforementioned companies (ADV, Pioneer, Bandai, etc.) during the 2000s.
Viz Media has probably picked up maybe two or three new series in the last 20 years, probably the most recent of which was Chainsaw Man a few years back, which is, well... just another generic, overrated, dime-a-dozen uber-popular action shōnen of the moment series lmao. Otherwise, they've proven that they're clearly quite content to just keep churning out 400 re-releases of Bleach, Naruto, Pokémon, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, InuYasha, Death Note, Ranma 1/2, and almost NOTHING the fuck else.
Aniplex of America and NIS of America similarly haven't licensed anything new in god fucking knows how long, and they aren't even bothering to put out any re-releases either like Sentai. Hell, NIS's most recent Blu-ray release was from ALLLLL the way the fuck back in 2021!! (and even THAT was a re-release of a title they originally put out on DVD back around 2010 or so!)
Like, yeah... nowadays, it's JUST FUNimation/Crunchyroll, and has been for the ENTIRETY of the current decade. THAT'S why I take such issue with their ridiculously narrow licensing output, because unlike 15-20 years ago, there's no longer ANYONE else picking up their slack (a slack that, again, they themselves didn't even have at that time).
Again, obviously none of this is in regards to the streaming side of things, where, yes, a HUGE number of new anime constantly get deals to be on Crunchyroll or Hulu or Netflix or Prime Video or whatever else have you. BUT, that's still to this day such a different kind of game entirely than the home video licensing side that it's pretty much fully irrelevant to the point being made.
At the end of the day, I like owning the anime I enjoy. And I am the kind of person that, if possible, would MUCH rather fill up my shelf space than my hard drive space, if you get my meaning. FUNimation/Crunchyroll, Viz, Sentai, Discotek, etc. all still VERY regularly put out physical media... and yet they're leaving SO. FUCKING. MANY series to instead just get thrown onto streaming and forgotten, a HUGE portion of which would ABSOLUTELY have gotten physical media releases in the landscape from 15-20 years ago.
So I have to just sit here and watch series I've enjoyed over the last few years such as Lazarus, Dorohedoro, Shabake, Journal with Witch, The Darwin Incident, Trillion Game, The Fable, Oedo Fire Slayers, Jouran: The Princess of Snow and Blood, etc. all go to stagnate and die on some streaming platform when once upon a time, really NOT all that long ago in the grand scheme of things, I might rather have been able to hold them in my own two hands and just put their discs into my Blu-ray player easy-peasy without having to worry about internet connection signal, buffering, compression, or whether or not it'll even still be available on a certain streaming platform next month. And it really, REALLY doesn't have to be that way at ALL, even just counting the current crop of licensing companies.
Absolutely right. GOD, I wish there were more people like you out there on the internet who actually understand that, I don't see it ANYWHERE NEAR enough. Scream it from the rooftops!!!
And another thing I wish more people understood... shōnen's a demographic primarily targeted towards elementary and middle school-aged boys, NOT 12-19 year old teenagers or whatever the way SO many people I've seen would like you to believe lmaooo. Obviously there's nothing inherently wrong with something being aimed mainly towards children in and of itself, nor is there with liking something of that nature (I mean... here we all are, the vast majority of us fully grown adults, on a Dragon Ball forum for chrissakes lmao), but I wish people would just be honest about that.

