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Pokémon White (J) (NDS)

Pokémon White (J) (NDS)

Pokémon Black Version (Japanese: ポケットモンスター ブラック Pocket Monsters Black) and Pokémon White Version (Japanese: ポケットモンスター ホワイト Pocket Monsters White) are the primary paired versions of the upcoming Generation V. They will be, like Generation IV’s games, on the Nintendo DS. Black and White, at this stage, appear to follow the trends set up by previous [...]

Pokémon Black (J) (NDS)

Pokémon Black (J) (NDS)

Pokémon Black Version (Japanese: ポケットモンスター ブラック Pocket Monsters Black) and Pokémon White Version (Japanese: ポケットモンスター ホワイト Pocket Monsters White) are the primary paired versions of the upcoming Generation V. They will be, like Generation IV’s games, on the Nintendo DS. Black and White, at this stage, appear to follow the trends set up by previous [...]

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Gok u is a linear action adventure that pretty much follows the cartoon’s plotline to a tee.

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku II

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku II

One of the big non-Nintendo released Game Boy Advance titles released in 2002 was Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku , a game that showed just how rabid fans of the Dragon Ball Z animated series can be. The GBA game was only slightly better than mediocre, and looked like it was somewhat rushed to fill in the gap as soon as Infogrames/Atari scored the license. Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku II builds upon the brand and design established in last year’s original, but the development team improved almost every aspect of the first game in the series, with a much larger quest with loads more variety, enhanced graphics and audio, and tighter action during battle sequences.

Dragon Ball Z – The Legacy of Goku I & II

Dragon Ball Z – The Legacy of Goku I & II

Atari brings Dragon Ball Z fans two games in one with DRAGON BALL Z: GOKU 1 & 2, which contains the full versions of the previously released RPGs Legacy of Goku 1 and II. Together, the games present a condensed storyline from the anime and introduce many of the famous DRAGONBALL Z characters.

Dragon Ball Z – Taiketsu

Dragon Ball Z – Taiketsu

Dragon Ball Z: Taiketsu is a 2D fighting game based on Akira Toriyama’s manga-turned-anime series, and it is downright awful. Atari showed how willing it was to turn a quick buck off the Dragon Ball Z name earlier this year when it released the 8-year-old Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22 for the PlayStation, and Taiketsu is as offensively bad.

Dragonball Z: Bukuu Tougeki

Dragonball Z: Bukuu Tougeki

After the atrocity of Dragonball Z: Taiketsu, the last game to use and abuse the DBZ license you would probably be skeptical of Atari’s upcoming Dragonball Z: Supersonic Warriors. First of all, it is not made by the same team that did Taiketsu.

Dragon Ball Z – Supersonic Warriors

Dragon Ball Z – Supersonic Warriors

The Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic Warriors (ドラゴンボールZ 舞空闘劇, Doragon Bōru Zetto Bukū Tôgeki ? ) series is a series of fighting games based on the popular anime series Dragon Ball . The first game, Dragon Ball Z Supersonic Warriors was developed by Arc System Works and released for the Game Boy Advance on June 22, 2004

Dragon Ball – Advance Adventure

Dragon Ball – Advance Adventure

Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure (ドラゴンボール アドバンス アドベンチャー, Doragon Bōru Adobansu Adobenchā ? ) is a Game Boy Advance video game based on the Dragon Ball manga and anime series. The game contains 30 playable characters (counting all modes in the game altogether), which is unusually large for a game of this caliber

Dragon Ball Z – Buu’s Fury

Dragon Ball Z – Buu’s Fury

Dragon Ball Z: Buu’s Fury marks the third and final game in the Legacy of Goku series. Set during the final sagas of the Dragon Ball Z storyline, this game picks up where the second game in the series left off, right after the conclusion of the Cell Games

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