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Dragon Ball Z: Bukū Tōgeki

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Dragon Ball Z: Dramatic War in the Skies
Japan
Dragon Ball Z: Bukū Tōgeki Title Screen
USA
Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic Warriors North American Title Screen
ドラゴンボールZ 舞空闘劇
Doragon Bōru Zetto Bukū Tōgeki
"Dragon Ball Z: Dramatic War in the Skies"

Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic Warriors
Release Date 26 March 2004 (JP)
22 June 2004(NA)
27 August 2004 (EU)
Genre Fighting
Developer Cavia
Arc System Works
Publisher Banpresto (JP)
Atari (NA)
Bandai (EU)
Rating CERO A (JP)
ESRB Teen (NA)
PEGI 7 (EU)
v · d · e

Dragon Ball Z: Bukū Tōgeki ("Dragon Ball Z: Dramatic War in the Skies"), also known as Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic Warriors in America is a fighting game developed by Cavia and published by Banpresto for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance originally released 26 March 2004 in Japan.

Bukū Tōgeki would be the first of only two Dragon Ball titles developed in Japan for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance, the other being Dragon Ball: Advance Adventure released the same year.

Gameplay

Bukū Tōgeki is a sprite based fighting game, focusing primarily on sky battles. Taking place in large open areas, the fighters are able to fly and dash through the air in all directions to maneuver around their opponent. Along with basic light and heavy attacks, fighters can also charge their energy and unleash Ki attacks. The fighter's position relative to their opponent during the battle affects their special attack.

The game also supports Tag-Team battles with up to three team members, each of which can be tagged out seamlessly during battle.

Goku fights against Freeza on Planet Namek

Game Modes

Story: Play through various arcs of the Dragon Ball Z anime, or special what-if scenarios.

Z Battle: Standard Arcade mode, where you fight against 8 characters in order.

Challenge: Build a team and fight against other specially selected teams.

Free Battle: Standard battle against computer opponents.

Training: Access in-game tutorials or practice with no limits.

Link vs. Battle: Fight against other players using the Game Boy Advance Link Cable.

Options: Change game options, access the shop to buy new characters and what-if stories, and view rankings.

Story

The game features a story mode covering the Freeza Arc, the Cell Arc and the Majin Buu Arc of the Dragon Ball story. Each playable character also has their own what-if story scenario.

Characters

Sprite Name Forms Notes Status
Son Goku
Super Saiyan TBD TBD
Son Gohan
Super Saiyan 2
Potential Unlocked
TBD TBD
TBD Piccolo
NA TBD TBD
TBD Kuririn
TBD TBD
Vegeta
Super Saiyan TBD TBD
Trunks
Super Saiyan TBD TBD
TBD Ginyu
NA TBD TBD
Freeza
True Form TBD TBD
No. 20
(Dr. Gero)
NA TBD TBD
No. 18
NA TBD TBD
Cell
Perfect Form TBD TBD
Majin Boo
Good Form
Evil Form
TBD TBD
Gotenks
Super Saiyan 3 TBD TBD

Codes & Secrets

TBD

Merchandise

On 31 March 2004 Shueisha released a Banpresto official V-Jump series Strategy Guide [1] for Dragon Ball Z: Bukū Tōgeki in Japan.

Releases

Box Art from Banpresto release of Dragon Ball Z: Bukū Tōgeki

Domestic Release

Dragon Ball Z: Dramatic War in the Skies was originally released 26 March 2004 in Japan. The game was later re-released under Banpresto's BEST on 23 March 2006 in Japan.

International Release

The game was released in North America on 22 June 2004 and Europe on 27 August 2004 as Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic Warriors.

Domestic Media Coverage

TBD

Commercials & Trailers

Dragon Ball Z: Bukū Tōgeki 2004 TV Commercial (Japan)

Legacy

TBD

Additional Notes

TBD

Game Credits

TBD

References

  1. "Dragon Ball Z: Dramatic War in the Skies (Bukū Tōgeki)". Dragon Ball Z: Dramatic War in the Skies. Japan: Shueisha, 31 March 2004. ISBN 4-08-779283-8.