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Introduction.

Dr. Slump Manga Series

Original Serializations

Dr. Slump manga chapter 1 title page
The Brief Return of Dr. Slump manga chapter 1 title page

Dr. Slump

Dr. Slump was a gag manga (comic) series created and illustrated manga artist Akira Toriyama. It is comprised of a total of 236 individual chapters, and began its run on 05 January 1980 in Weekly Shōnen Jump, a popular manga anthology magazine in Japan. The series was serialized from 1980 to 1984, and saw a continued lifespan in the form of additional theatrical films, a manga continuation, and separate anime/manga reboots. Dr. Slump was Toriyama's breakout hit, making him rich and famous (what must have felt like) overnight in Japan.

The Brief Return of Dr. Slump

Beginning midway through the second trial run of Shueisha's V-Jump magazine in 1993, a sequel manga penned by Takao Koyama and illustrated by Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru ran for 40 chapters into 1996. The series received a single bonus chapter for V-Jump Festival 1994, and four collected editions over the course of 1994-1996.

Dr. Slump (1997)

In conjunction with the corresponding reboot TV series in 1997, beginning in the December 1997 issue of Shueisha's V-Jump, a reboot manga penned by Takao Koyama and illustrated by Tadayoshi Yamamuro ran for ## chapters into ####. The series received a collected volume as part of the DVD box set of the 1997 TV series.

Collected Editions

Dragon Ball Manga Series

Original Serializations

Dragon Ball

"Dragon Ball" Manga Series Logo

Dragon Ball was originally a gag manga (comic) series created and illustrated by famed manga artist Akira Toriyama, that evolved into a martial arts action manga, becoming the standard to which all future shōnen manga would be compared. It is comprised of a total of 520 individual chapters, including one side-story, and began its run on 20 November 1984 in Weekly Shōnen Jump, a popular manga anthology magazine in Japan. The series was serialized from 1984 to 1995, remaining a staple in Japan for nearly ten and a half years.

Jaco the Galactic Patrolman

In July 2013, an 11-chapter series from Akira Toriyama entitled "Jaco the Galactic Patrolman" began publication in Weekly Shōnen Jump, with simultaneous worldwide distribution in English from Viz Media. Leading up to the series' premier it was teased as having possible connections with Dragon Ball, and was soon-after described as the "shocking revival of Dragon Ball!!"

Dragon Ball Super

The Dragon Ball Super manga series debuted in the August 2015 issue of V-Jump on 20 June 2015, two weeks prior to the premier of the Dragon Ball Super TV series. The manga series is written and illustrated by Toyotarō with supervision and guidance from original Dragon Ball author Akira Toriyama. While both the manga and TV series are based on the same general story developed by Toriyama, each is considered a separate entity not directly related to, or directly based on, the other. This is in contrast to the development of the original Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z TV series, which were nearly direct adaptations of the original Dragon Ball manga series.

Spin-off, Promotional, and Supplemental Manga

Continue adding series...

Toyotarō

In 2012, "Toyotarō" (とよたろう) joined the fold with his Dragon Ball Heroes: Victory Mission promotional comic in V-Jump. Toyotarō went on to pen a three-chapter introductory adaptation of the 2015 theatrical film Resurrection 'F', and was later tapped for the "comicalization" of Dragon Ball Super, all of which also ran in V-Jump. Toyotarō also penned a single-chapter promotional comic in support of the video game Dragon Ball XENOVERSE 2 in 2016, for which he made an appearance at New York Comic Con.

Dragon Ball Heroes: Victory Mission

The promotional mini-manga for the card-based arcade game Dragon Ball Heroes became more and more of a standard serialization as it continued onward. Chapters are of varying length with a focus on the then-current or upcoming additions (new cards, abilities, characters, etc.) to the arcade game.

Naho Ooishi

Dragon Ball SD Quarterly Chapter 1 by Naho Ooishi

Naho Ooishi (オオイシナホ) has contributed three Dragon Ball adaptations, with all of them being published in either V-Jump or Saikyō Jump. Her manga spin-offs have covered many different aspects of story telling, including straight-up adaptations of the original material, alternate re-tellings of the original material, and completely new stories.

Dragon Ball SD

Originally published as four quarterly chapters, the monthly re-launch of Saikyō Jump also led to a reboot of Naho Ooishi's Dragon Ball SD which re-tells the original manga's story with additional jokes and references for older fans that already know the plot. Several additional bonus chapters have appeared in various magazines and event attendee books that diverge from the standard story.

Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock

Penned as a "sequel" to the character's original TV special, Naho Ooishi's Episode of Bardock tied in with Dragon Ball Heroes marketing plans and game inclusions to promote a new Super Saiyan transformation for Goku's father and his battle against Chilled.

Dragon Ball: Heya! Son Goku and Friends Return!!

Following the completion of the "Jump Super Anime Tour 2008", and just prior to the animated special's release on DVD, Naho Ooishi adapted the special into a manga format. The manga adaptation was divided in half and released in two separate issues of V-Jump as smaller insert booklets.

Hiroshi Otogi

Yoshitaka Nagayama

Others

Manga Releases

Collected Volume Releases (Japan)

English Serialization (America)

English Collected Volume Releases (America)

Miscellaneous English Publications (America)