After more than ten years, an unlinked section of our “Manga Guide” finally has a full web page: the Dragon Ball GT Anime Comic! Check Out the Guide! From its debut with the Evil Dragons arc in the January 2014 issue of Saikyō Jump all the way through the end of the Baby arc a …
Shueisha has revealed the cover art for the upcoming debut three volumes of the Dragon Ball GT anime comic: Presented in full color (as opposed to the limited-color version from serialization), the three volumes are all due out this Wednesday (04 December 2019) for ¥1,000 each (plus tax), and will cover the entirety of the …
The long-running and oft-forgotten Dragon Ball GT anime comic — comprised of limited-color screen shots from the 1996-1997 television series displayed in manga format with dialog and narration bubbles — began back in the January 2014 issue of Shueisha’s Saikyō Jump magazine. Running as a tie-in with the Dragon Ball Heroes arcade game’s then-current “Evil …
The Dragon Ball GT anime comic — comprised of limited-color screen shots from the 1996-1997 television series displayed in manga format with dialog and narration bubbles — began back in the January 2014 issue of Shueisha’s Saikyō Jump magazine. Running as a tie-in with the Dragon Ball Heroes arcade game’s then-current “Evil Dragon Mission” updates, …
The upcoming 27th volume in the “ZARD CD & DVD Collection” series — an on-going release collecting assorted material from the late Izumi Sakai — is set to feature the “TV on-air ver.” of “Don’t you see!”, the second closing theme to the Dragon Ball GT television series. The version as used for broadcast featured …
The “Anime Comics” version of Dragon Ball GT began in the January 2014 issue of Saikyō Jump, and things continue onward in both last month’s February 2014 issue as well as the new March 2014 issue. In the 16-page second chapter (“Evil Dragons Arc, Part Two: The Two-Star Dragon Appears!”) from the February issue, we …
Originally teased last month, the “Anime Comics” — colloquially referred to as “animanga” — version of Dragon Ball GT has begun in the January 2014 issue of Saikyō Jump released earlier this month Japan. None of the original advertisements for the animanga made any indication of where in the series it might pick up with. …
After the conclusion of the Dragon Ball Z anime in 1996, Dragon Ball GT continued the franchise’s story with an original story developed by the team at Toei Animation. Running for a total of 64 episodes and one TV special, it was the shortest of the three TV series, bringing things to a close in …